Treatise Second Letter On Enthusiasm Of Methodists And Papists
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-second-letter-on-enthusiasm-of-methodists-and-papists-037 |
| Words | 376 |
You assert, (5) “The Moravian Methodists trample down
morality, and multitudes of the Wesleyans have been in
fected.” The Moravian Methodists 1 You may as well say,
the Presbyterian Papists. The Moravians have no connexion
with the Methodists. . Therefore, whatever they do, (though
you slander them too,) they and not we are to answer for. The Methodists at present, blessed be God, are as little
infected with this plague (of condemning or neglecting good
works) as any body of people in England or Ireland. 38. From these loose assertions you proceed to quotations
from my writings, every one of which I shall consider, to
show that, not in one or two, but in every one, you are a
wilful prevaricator and false accuser of your neighbour. You say, First, “The Moravians.” Hold, good Sir! you
are out of the way already. You well know, the Moravians
are to answer for themselves. Our present question concerns
the Methodists only. You say, Secondly, “A general temptation prevails among
the societies of Methodists, of leaving off good works.” (Vol. I. p. 273.) Sir, you are wrong again. The societies of
Methodists are not there spoken of; but the single society
of Fetter-Lane. Among these only that temptation then
prevailed. You quote, Thirdly, as my words, “The poor, confused,
shattered society had erred from the faith.” My own words
are, “I told the poor, confused, shattered society, wherein
they had erred from the faith; ” (ibid. p. 274;) namely, with
regard to the ordinances; not in general, as your way of
expressing it naturally imports. Nor had all the society
erred even in this point. Many of them were still unshaken. You quote, Fourthly, “A woman of Deptford spoke great
words and true. She ordered Mr. Humphreys to leave off
doing good.”
Must not every reader suppose, as you have placed these
words, that they were all spoke at one time? and that the
“great words and true” were those whereby she “ordered
Mr. Humphreys to leave off doing good?”
What then must every honest man think of you, when he
observes, that one half of the sentence (which you thus art
fully put together) stands in another page, and at a consider
a le distance from the other?