Wesley Corpus

Treatise Sufficient Answer To Theron And Aspasio

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typetreatise
YearNone
Passage IDjw-treatise-sufficient-answer-to-theron-and-aspasio-000
Words371
Christology Justifying Grace Works of Piety
A Sufficient Answer to Letters to the Author of Theron and Aspasio Source: The Works of John Wesley, Volume 10 (Zondervan) Author: John Wesley --- IT is not very material who you are. If Mr. Glass is still alive, I suppose you are he. If not, you are at least one of his humble admirers, and probably not very old: So your youth may in some measure plead your excuse for such a peculiar pertness, insolence, and self-sufficiency, with such an utter contempt of all mankind, as no other writer of the present age has shown. As you use no ceremony toward any man, so neither shall I use any toward you, but bluntly propose a few objections to your late performance, which stare a man in the face as soon as he looks in it. I object, First, that you are a gross, wilful slanderer. For, 1. You say of Mr. Hervey, “He shuts up our access to the divine righteousness, by holding forth a preliminary human one as necessary to our enjoying the benefit of it.” (Page 4.) Again: “You set men to work to do something, in order to make their peace with God.” (Page 9.) This is an absolute slander, founded on that poor pretence, that he supposes those who repent and believe, and none but those, to “enjoy the benefit of Christ's righteousness.” And has he not the warrant of Christ himself for so doing,--“Repent ye, and believe the gospel?” If this is “teaching man to acquire a righteousness of his own,” the charge falls on our Lord himself. You say, 2. “As to that strange something which you call faith, after all you have told us about it, we are at as great a loss to tell distinctly what it is, as when you began.” (Ibid.) This is another slander. You are at no loss (as will presently appear) to tell what Mr. Hervey means by faith. Whether it be right or wrong, his account of it is as clear and distinct as any that ever was given. You say, 3. “The popular Preachers” (so you term Arch bishop Tillotson, Dr. Lucas, Crisp, Doddridge, Watts, Gill; Mr. Guthrie, Boston, Erskine, Willison; Mr. Flavel, Marshal; Mr.