Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-027 |
| Words | 346 |
that both alleged what was true; that in a point of so little
importance the Apostles varied themselves; some of them
observing it on the fourteenth day of the moon, and others
not. But, be this as it may, it can be no proof, either that
Polycarp was not a holy man, or that he was not favoured
with the extraordinary, as well as ordinary, gifts of the Spirit. 9. With regard to the narrative of his martyrdom, you
affirm, “It is one of the most authentic pieces in all primitive
antiquity.” (Page 124.) I will not vouch for its authenticity;
nor therefore for the story of the dove, the flame forming an
arch, the fragrant smell, or the revelation to Pionius. But
your attempt to account for these things is truly curious. You
say, “An arch of flame round his body is an appearance which
might easily happen, from the common effects of wind. And
the dove said to fly out of him, might be conveyed into the
wood which was prepared to consume him.” (Page 229.) How
much more naturally may we account for both, by supposing
the whole to be a modern fiction, wrote on occasion of that
account mentioned by Eusebius, but lost many ages ago! But
whatever may be thought of this account of his death, neither
does this affect the question, whether during his life he was
endued with the miraculous gifts of the Holy Ghost. 10. There is one of those whom you style apostolic Fathers
yet behind, of whom you talk full as familiarly as of the rest:
I mean, Hermas: “To whom,” you say, “ some impute the
fraud of forging the Sibylline books.” (Page 37.) It would
not have been amiss, if you had told us, which of the ancients,
whether Christian, Jew, or Heathen, ever accused him of this. If none ever did, some will be apt to think it is giving a
person but hard measure, to bring an accusation against him
which never was heard of till sixteen hundred years after his
death.