Wesley Corpus

Treatise Life And Death Of John Fletcher

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typetreatise
YearNone
Passage IDjw-treatise-life-and-death-of-john-fletcher-024
Words397
Catholic Spirit Universal Redemption Reign of God
It is true, his weak and long afflicted body proclaimed him to be human. But the graces which so eminently filled and adorned his soul, manifested him to be divine. And long before his happy spirit returned to God that gave it, that which was human seemed in a great measure to be “swallowed up of life.” O what a loss did Trevecka sustain, what an irreparable loss, when he left it ! 12. “But why then did he leave it? Why did he give up an office, for which he was so perfectly well qualified? which he executed so entirely to the satisfaction of all the parties wherewith he was concerned, and in which it had pleased God to give so manifest a blessing to his labours? Perhaps it would be better, in tenderness to some persons, eminent for piety and usefulness, to let that matter remain still under the veil which forgiving love has cast over it. But if it be thought that justice to his character, and to the cause which from that time he so warmly espoused and so ably defended, requires some light to be cast upon it, it may be the most inoffensive way to do it in his own words.” It will be proper to observe here, for the better understand ing of the following letter, that some time before Mr. Fletcher quitted Trevecka, Mr. Benson had been discharged from his office there; not for any defect of learning or piety, or any fault found with his behaviour; but wholly and solely because he did not believe the doctrine of absolute predestination. 13. “The following is an exact copy of all that is material in a letter he wrote to me, in consequence of my dismission from the office I had been in : “‘DEAR SIR, June 7, 1771. “‘THE same post brought me yours, and two from my Lady, and one from Mr. Williams, the new Master. Those contained no charges but general ones, which with me go for nothing. If the procedure you mention is fact, and your letter is a fair account of the transaction and words relative to your discharge, a false step has been taken. I write this post to her Ladyship on the affair, with all possible plainness. If the plan of the College is overthrown, I have nothing more to say to it.