Wesley Corpus

Treatise Second Letter On Enthusiasm Of Methodists And Papists

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typetreatise
YearNone
Passage IDjw-treatise-second-letter-on-enthusiasm-of-methodists-and-papists-008
Words362
Assurance Catholic Spirit Universal Redemption
In your second, you cite (and murder) four or five lines. from one of my Journals, “as instances of the persuasive eloquence of the Methodist Preachers.” (Pages 1, 9.) But it unfortunately happens, that neither of the sentences you quote were spoke by any Preacher at all. You know full well the one was used only in a private letter; the other by a woman on a bed of sickness. 3. You next undertake to prove “the most insufferable pride and vanity of the Methodists.” (Section iii., p. 12, &c.) For this end you quote five passages from my Journals, and one from the Third Appeal. The first was wrote in the anguish of my heart, to which I gave vent (between God and my own soul) by breaking out, not into “confidence of boasting,” as you term it, but into those expressions of bitter sorrow : “I went to America to convert the Indians. But O ! who shall convert me?” (Vol. I. p. 74.) Some of the words which follow you have picked out, and very honestly laid before your reader, without either the beginning or end, or one word of the occasion or manner wherein they were spoken. Your next quotation is equally fair and generous: “Are they read in philosophy? So was I,” &c. (Ibid. p. 76, &c.) This whole “string of self-commendation,” as you call it, being there brought, ex professo, to prove that, notwith standing all this, which I once piqued myself upon, I was at that hour in a state of damnation | The third is a plain narrative of the manner wherein many of Bristol expressed their joy on my coming unexpectedly into the room, after I had been some time at London. (Vol.I. p. 311.) And this, I conceive, will prove the charge of high treason, as well as that of “insufferable pride and vanity.” You say, fourthly, “A dying woman, who had earnestly * Vol. VIII. pp. 205-209 of the present Edition.--EDIT. desired to see me, cried out, as I entered the room, ‘Art thou come, thou blessed of the Lord?’” (Ibid. p. 320) She did so. And what does this prove?