Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-072 |
| Words | 337 |
For you
say, “They were wilful, habitual liars.” And, if so, they
had not a grain of piety. Now, that the earlier Fathers were
not such has been shown at large; though, indeed, you
complimented them with the same character. Consequently,
whether these later Fathers are to be believed or no, we may
safely believe the former; who dared not to do evil that good
might come, or to lie either for God or man. 12. I had not intended to say anything more concerning
any of the miracles of the later ages; but your way of
accounting for one, said to have been wrought in the fifth, is
so extremely curious that I cannot pass it by. The story, it seems, is this: “Hunneric, an Arian Prince,
in his persecution of the orthodox in Afric, ordered the
tongues of a certain society of them to be cut out by the roots. But, by a surprising instance of God’s good providence, they
were enabled to speak articulately and distinctly without
their tongues. And so continuing to make open profession
of the same doctrine, they became not only Preachers, but
living witnesses, of its truth.” (Page 182.)
Do not mistake me, Sir: I have no design at all to vouch
for the truth of this miracle. I leave it just as I find it. But what I am concerned with is, your manner of accounting
for it. 13. And, First, you say, “It may not improbably be
supposed, that though their tongues were ordered to be cut
to the roots, yet the sentence might not be so strictly executed
as not to leave in some of them such a share of that organ as
was sufficient, in a tolerable degree, for the use of speech.”
(Page 183.)
So you think, Sir, if only an inch of a man’s tongue were
to be neatly taken off, he would be able to talk tolerably
well, as soon as the operation was over. But the most marvellous part is still behind.