Treatise Remarks On Hills Farrago
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-remarks-on-hills-farrago-002 |
| Words | 397 |
and I, on the one hand, or Mr. Hill
on the other, has shown more “meekness and lowliness;” and
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which of us has expressed the greatest heat, and the most
cordial contempt of his opponent. Mr. H. adds: “Hereby Mr. Charles Wesley's Calvinism
is exposed by Mr. John.” Then that is exposed which
never existed; for he never was a Calvinist yet. And
“hereby,” Mr. H. says, “the ‘Christian Library’ is given
up as nothing.” Mere finesse ! Every one sees my meaning,
but those that will not see it: It is nothing to your purpose;
it proves nothing of what it is brought to prove. In the
same sense I set the word nothing over against the citations
from Mr. Baxter and Goodwin. 8. If Mr. Hill says he always was a Calvinist, I have no
right to contradict him. But I am sure he was of a widely
different temper from that he has shown in his late writings. I allow much to his belief, that, in exposing me to the
utmost of his power, he is doing God service. Yet I must
needs say, if I were writing against a Turk or a Pagan, I
durst not use him as Mr. Hill does me. And if I really am
(which will one day appear) employing all my time, and
labour, and talents (such as they are) for this single end, that
the kingdom of Christ may be set up on earth; then He
whom I serve in the gospel of his Son, will not commend him
for his present work. 9. But what makes Mr. Hill so warm against me? I still
believe it is for this chiefly,--because I am an Arminian, an
election-doubter. For, says he, the “good old Preacher
places all election-doubters” (that is, those who are not clear
in the belief of absolute predestination) “among the numerous
hosts of the Diabolonians. One of these being brought
before the Judge, the Judge tells him he must die.” (Review,
page 35.) That is, plainly, he must die eternally for this
damnable sin. I beg Mr. Hill to explain himself on this
head. Does he still subscribe to the sentence of this “good
old Preacher?” Are all election-doubters to be placed
among the Diabolonians? Is the sentence irreversibly passed,
that they must all die eternally? I must insist on Mr.