Treatise Principles Of A Methodist Farther Explained
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-principles-of-a-methodist-farther-explained-082 |
| Words | 304 |
I hereby openly retract it, and ask pardon of God and you. To draw toward a conclusion: Whosoever they are that
“despise me, and make no account of my labours,” I know that
they are “not in vain in the Lord,” and that I have not “fought
as one that beateth the air.” I still see (and I praise “the
Father of Lights, from whom every good and perfect gift de
scendeth”) a continual increase of pure religion and undefiled,
of the love of God and man, of the “wisdom ” which is “pure
and peaceable, gentle, and easy to be entreated, full of mercy,
and of good fruits.” I see more and more of those “who before
lived in a thorough contempt of God’s ordinances, and of all
duties, now zealously discharging their duties to God and man,
and walking in all his ordinances blameless.” A few indeed I
have seen draw back to perdition, chiefly through a fear of being
“righteous overmuch.” And here and there one has fallen into
Calvinism, or turned aside to the Moravians. But, I doubt not,
these “are in a better state” than they were before they heard
us. Admit they are in error, yea, and die therein, yet who dares
affirm they will perish everlastingly? But had they died in
gross sin, we are sure they had fallen into “the fire that
never shall be quenched.”
I have now considered, as far as my time would permit,
(not everything in your letter, whether of moment or no,
but,) those points which I conceived to be of the greatest
weight. That God may lead us both into all truth, and that
we may not drop our love in the pursuit of it, is the con
tinual prayer of,
everend Sir,
Your friend and servant for Christ’s sake,