Wesley Corpus

Treatise Remarks On Hills Review

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typetreatise
YearNone
Passage IDjw-treatise-remarks-on-hills-review-006
Words399
Free Will Catholic Spirit Religious Experience
I believe he will not affirm it. So any man of understanding may judge, before he opens his book, what manner of review it is likely to contain However, it must be owned that he and his faithful allies have been at the pains of looking into many of my writings. I say many; for I apprehend there are many more, which they have not so much as looked into; nor does it appear that they have seriously looked through any, so as to observe the scope and tenor of them. However, from those which he or they have, after a fashion, reviewed, abundance of objections are extracted. It is true, none of them (one only excepted) are new, and there is hardly one that has not been answered again and again. Yet since they are proposed in a new form, they may seem to demand a new answer. 10. The grand objection is, that I am inconsistent with myself. This, therefore, I shall particularly consider. The others, which flutter up and down the whole work, I can but just touch upon. Mr. H. opens the charge thus: “Saying and unsaying is nothing new with Mr. W., who has only shown himself consistent, by a regular series of inconsistencies.” (Page 3.) “How full are you of contradictions to yourself! how full of contrary purposes! How often do you chide with yourself! How oft do you fight with yourself!” (Title-page.) “Mr. W. seems well contented you should settle his creed. If you can, you will do in a few months what he himself has not been able to effect in near forty years.” “On this fluctuating ocean he has been tossed for so many years together.” (Page 20.) “All his Journals and Tracts are replete with proofs of his having been tossed from one system to another, and from one opinion to another, from the time of his ordniation to this present moment.” (Page 143.) “The most ignorant collier can immediately see his inconsistency with himself.” (Page 145.) He sums up the whole charge in the lively words of Mr. Cudworth, graced with the name of Mr. Hervey: “Contradic tion, didst thou ever know so trusty a friend, so faithful a devotee? Many people are ready enough to contradict others; but it seems all one to this gentleman whether it be another or himself, so he may but contradict.” 11.