Treatise Short Address To Inhabitants Of Ireland
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-short-address-to-inhabitants-of-ireland-000 |
| Words | 307 |
A Short Address to the Inhabitants of Ireland
Source: The Works of John Wesley, Volume 9 (Zondervan)
Author: John Wesley
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1. THERE has lately appeared (as you cannot be ignorant)
a set of men preaching up and down in several parts of this
kingdom, who for ten or twelve years have been known in
England by the title of Methodists. The vulgar in Ireland
term them Swaddlers;--a name first given them in Dublin
from one of them preaching on those words: “Ye shall find
the young child wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a
manger.”
2. Extremely various have been the reports concerning
them. Some persons have spoken favourably: But the gene
rality of men treat them in a different manner,-with utter
contempt, if not detestation; and relate abundance of things
in order to prove that they are not fit to live upon the earth. 3. A question, then, which you may maturally ask, is this:
“In what manner ought a man of religion, a man of reason,
a lover of mankind, and a lover of his country, to act on this
occasion?”
4. Before we can properly answer this, it should be inquired,
concerning the persons in question, what they are; what
they teach; and what are the effects which are generally
observed to attend their teaching. 5. It should first be inquired, what they are. And in order
to a speedy determination of this, we may set aside whatever
will admit of any dispute; as, whether they are good men or
bad, rich or poor, fools, madmen, and enthusiasts, or sober,
rational men. Now, waving all this, one point is indisputa
ble: It is allowed on all hands, they are men who spend all
their time and strength in teaching those doctrines, the nature
and consequences whereof are described in the following pages. 6.