Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-034 |
| Words | 395 |
And this
is no credit to you, if it does not. To that of Lucian and Celsus, you add the evidence
of Caecilius too, who calls, say you, these workers of miracles,
“a lurking nation, shunning the light.” Then they were
strangely altered all on a sudden; for you told us that, just
before, they were proving themselves cheats by a widely
different method,--by “calling out both upon Magistrates
and people, and challenging all the world to come and see
what they did l’’ (Page 20.)
I was not aware that you had begun “to throw together all
which the Fathers have delivered, concerning the persons said
to have been endued with those extraordinary gifts.” And it
seems you have made an end of it! And accordingly you
proceed to sum up the evidence; to “observe, upon the whole,
from these characters of the primitive wonder-workers, as given
both by friends and enemies, we may fairly conclude that the
gifts of those ages were generally engrossed by private Chris
tians, who travelled about from city to city to assist the ordinary
preachers, in the conversion of Pagans, by the extraordinary
miracles they pretended to perform.” (Page 24.)
Characters given both by friends and enemies / Pray, Sir,
what friends have you cited for this character? or what ene
mies, except only Celsus the Jew? (And you are a miserable
interpreter for him.) So, from the single testimony of such a
witness, you lay it down as an oracular truth, that all the
miracle-workers of the first three ages were “mere vagabonds
and common cheats,” rambling about from city to city, to
assist in converting Heathens, by tricks and imposture! And
this you ingeniously call, “throwing together all which the
Fathers have delivered concerning them !”
9. But, to complete all, “Here again,” you say, “we see a
dispensation of things ascribed to God, quite different from
that which we meet with in the New Testament.” (Page 24.)
We see a dispensation / Where? Not in the primitive
Church; not in the writings of one single Christian; not of
one Heathen; and only of one Jew; for poor Celsus had not
a second; though he multiplies, under your forming hand, into
ThE REV. D.R. MIDDLETON. 27
a cloud of witnesses. He alone ascribes this to the ancient
Christians, which you in their name ascribe to God.