Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-089 |
| Words | 398 |
Cover them with a veil of love, and look at the substance,--
his tempers, his holiness, his happiness. Can calm reason conceive either a more amiable or a more
desirable character? Is it your own? Away with names! Away with opinions ! I care not what you are called. I ask not (it does not deserve
a thought) what opinion you are of, so you are conscious to
72 LETTER. To
yourself, that you are the man whom I have been (however
faintly) describing. Do not you know, you ought to be such? Is the Governor
of the world well pleased that you are not? Do you (at least) desire it? I would to God that desire
may penetrate your inmost soul; and that you may have
no rest in your spirit till you are, not only almost, but
altogether, a Christian |
Section II. 1. The Second point to be considered is, What
is real, genuine Christianity? whether we speak of it as a
principle in the soul, or as a scheme or system of doctrine. Christianity, taken in the latter sense, is that system of
doctrine which describes the character above recited, which
promises, it shall be mine, (provided I will not rest till I
attain,) and which tells me how I may attain it. 2. First. It describes this character in all its parts, and that
in the most lively and affecting manner. The main lines of
this picture are beautifully drawn in many passages of the
Old Testament. These are filled up in the New, retouched
and finished with all the art of God. The same we have in miniature more than once; particularly
in the thirteenth chapter of the former Epistle to the Cor
inthians, and in that discourse which St. Matthew records as
delivered by our Lord at his entrance upon his public ministry. 3. Secondly. Christianity promises this character shall be
mine, if I will not rest till I attain it. This is promised both
in the Old Testament and the New. Indeed the New is, in
effect, all a promise; seeing every description of the servants
of God mentioned therein has the nature of a command; in
consequence of those general injunctions: “Be ye followers
of me, as I am of Christ:” (1 Cor. xi. 1) “Be ye followers
f them who through faith and patience inherit the promises.”
Teb.