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-010
Words393
Free Will Religious Experience Catholic Spirit
Had we been Dissenters of any kind, or even Low-Churchmen (so called), it would have been a greatstumbling-block in the way of those who are zealous for the Church. And yet had we continued in the impetuosity of our High-Church zeal, neither should we have been willing to converse with Dissenters, nor they to receive any good at our hands.” Sir, why did you break off your quotation in the middle of this paragraph, just at, “more unexceptionable on all accounts?” Was it not on purpose to give a wrong turn to the whole? to conceal the real and obvious meaning of my words, and put one upon them that never entered into my thoughts? 5. You have reserved your strong reason for the last, namely, my own confession: “Mr. Wesley says himself, ‘By the most infallible of proofs, inward feeling, I am convinced of pride, &c.’” Sir, be pleased to decipher that &c. Or I will spare you the pains, and do it myself, by reciting the whole sentence : “By the most infallible of proofs, inward feeling, I am con vinced, “(1.) Of unbelief, having no such faith in Christ as will prevent my heart from being troubled, which it could not be, if I believed in God, and rightly believed also in him. “(2.) Of pride throughout my life past, inasmuch as I thought I had what I find I have not.” (Vol. I. p. 72.) Now, Sir, you have my whole confession. I entreat you to make the best of it. But I myself “acknowledge three Methodists to have fallen into pride.” Sir, I can tell you of three more. And yet it will not follow, that the doctrines I teach “lead men into horrid pride and blasphemy.” 6. In the close of your fourth section, you charge me with “shuffling and prevaricating with regard to extraordinary gifts and miraculous powers.” Of these I shall have occasion to speak by and by. At present I need only return the compli ment, by charging you with gross, wilful prevarication, from the beginning of your book to the end. Some instances of this have appeared already. Many more will appear in due time. 7. Your fifth charges me with an “affectation of prophesy ing.” Your first proof of it is this:-- “It was about this time that the soldier was executed.