Treatise Plain Account Of The People Called Methodists
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-plain-account-of-the-people-called-methodists-010 |
| Words | 352 |
1. As the society increased, I found it required still
greater care to separate the precious from the vile. In order
to this, I determined, at least once in three months, to talk
with every member myself, and to inquire at their own mouths,
2, as well as of their Leaders and neighbours, whether they grew
in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. At
these seasons I likewise particularly inquire whether there be
any misunderstanding or difference among them; that every
hinderance of peace and brotherly love may be taken out of
the way. 2. To each of those of whose seriousness and good conversa
tion I found no reason to doubt, I gave a testimony under my
own hand, by writing their name on a ticket prepared for that
purpose; every ticket implying as strong a recommendation of
the person *o whom it was given as if I had wrote at length, “I
believe the bearer hereof to be one that fears God and works
righteousness.”
3. Those who bore these tickets, (these avu/8oNa or tes
serae, as the ancients termed them, being of just the same
force with the ervatoxal avatarukat, commendatory letters
mentioned by the Apostle,) wherever they came, were acknow
ledged by their brethren, and received with all cheerfulness. These were likewise of use in other respects. By these it
was easily distinguished, when the society were to meet apart,
who were members of it, and who not. These also supplied
us with a quiet and inoffensive method of removing any dis
orderly member. He has no new ticket at the quarterly visi
tation; (for so often the tickets are changed;) and hereby it
is immediately known that he is no longer of the community. TV. The thing which I was greatly afraid of all this time,
and which I resolved to use every possible method of pre
venting, was, a narrowness of spirit, a party zeal, a being
straitened in our own bowels; that miserable bigotry which
makes many so unready to believe that there is any work of
God but among themselves.