Treatise Remarks On Hills Review
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-remarks-on-hills-review-008 |
| Words | 385 |
affirms, ‘all true, all agree
able to the word of God,” then what are we to think of his
other works? They must be an adulteration of man’s devis
ing.” (Page 128.) “The same may be said of the Minutes:
If these be truly orthodox, upwards of forty volumes of the
Library must be throughly heterodox. And then there is
great reason to lament, that so many poor people's pockets
should be fleeced for what can do their souls no good.”
Peremptory enough ! But let us examine the matter more
closely: “Mr. W. affirms, that the Christian Library is “all
true, all agreeable to-the word of God.’” I do not; and I
am glad I have this public opportunity of explaining myself
concerning it. My words are, “I have made, as I was able,
an attempt of this kind. I have endeavoured to extract such
a collection of English divinity, as, I believe, is all true, all
agreeable to the oracles of God.” (Preface, p. 4.) I did
bclieve, and I do believe, every tract therein to be true, and
agreeable to the oracles of God. But I do not roundly affirm
this, (as Mr. H. asserts,) of every sentence contained in the
fifty volumes. I could not possibly affirm it, for two reasons:
(1.) I was obliged to prepare most of those tracts for the press,
just as I could snatch time in travelling, not transcribing
them; (none expected it of me;) but only marking the lines
with my pen, and altering or adding a few words here and there,
as I had mentioned in the preface. (2.) As it was not in my
power to attend the press, that care necessarily devolved on
others; through whose inattention a hundred passages were
left in, which I had scratched out; yet not so many as to make
up “forty volumes,” no, nor forty pages. It is probable too, I
myself might overlook some sentences which were not suitable
to my own principles. It is certain, the correctors of the
press did this, in not a few instances. I shall be much obliged
to Mr. H. and his friends, if they will point out all those
instances; and I will print them as an index expurgatorius
to the work, which will make it doubly valuable.