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-038 |
| Words | 399 |
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? and that I immediately subjoin
to the latter clause, “We talked largely with her, and she was
humbled to the dust, under a deep sense of the advantage
Satan had gained over her.”
You quote, Fifthly, a part of the following sentence, to
prove that I “undermine morality and good works:”
“His judgment concerning holiness is new. He no longer
judges it to be an outward thing, to consist either in doing no
harm, in doing good, or in using the ordinances of God.” (And
yet how strongly do I insist upon all these! Sir, do not you
know this?) “He sees it is the life of God in the soul, the
image of God fresh stamped on the heart.” It is so. Sir,
can you deny it? What then will you prove by this? You quote, Sixthly, part of these words:--
“They speak of holiness as if it consisted chiefly, if not
wholly, in these two points: First, the doing no harm :
Secondly, the doing good, as it is called; that is, the using the
means of grace, and helping our neighbour.” (Vol. I. p. 225.)
And this you term, “disparaging good works!” Sir,
these things, considered barely as to the opus operatum, are
not good works. There must be something good in the heart,
before any of our works are good. Insomuch that, “though
I give all my goods to feed the poor, and have not ” this, “it
profiteth me nothing.”
You observe, by the way, “The Mystic divinity was once
the Methodists’ doctrine.” Sir, you have stepped out of the
way, only to get another fall. The Mystic divinity was never
the Methodists’ doctrine. They could never swallow either
John Tauler or Jacob Behmen; although they often advised
with one that did. 39. You say, Seventhly, “I do not find that Mr. Wesley
has ever cited those express passages of St. James.” Sir,
what if I had not? (I mean in print.) I do not cite every
text from Genesis to the Revelation. But it happens I have. Look again, Sir; and, by and by, you may find where.