Treatise Principles Of A Methodist Farther Explained
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-principles-of-a-methodist-farther-explained-067 |
| Words | 325 |
(6.) This very difficulty occurred :
“Will not my speaking of this be boasting ? at least, will it
not be accounted so ?” They replied, “If you speak of it as
your own work, it will be vanity and boasting all over; but if
you ascribe it wholly to God, if you give him all the praise,
it will not. And if, after this, some will account it so still,
you must be content, and bear the burden.” (7.) I yielded,
and transcribed my papers for the press; only labouring, as
far as possible, to “render unto God the things which are
'God's;” to give him the praise of his own work. 2. But this very thing you improve into a fresh objection. If I ascribe anything to God, it is enthusiasm. If I do not (or
if I do) it is vanity and boasting, supposing me to mention it
at all. What then can I do to escape your censure? “Why,
be silent; say nothing at all.” I cannot, I dare not. Were
I thus to please men, I could not be the servant of Christ. You do not appear to have the least idea or conception of what
is in the heart of one whom it pleases Him that worketh all in
all to employ in a work of this kind. He is in nowise forward
to be at all employed therein; he starts back, again and again;
not only because he readily foresees what shame, care, sorrow,
reproach, what loss of friends, and of all that the world
accounts dear, will inevitably follow; but much more, because
he (in some measure) knows himself. This chiefly it is which
constrains him to cry out, (and that many times, in the bitter
ness of his soul, when no human eye seeth him,) “O Lord, send
by whom thou wilt send, only send not me! What am I? A
worm ! A dead dog!