Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-093 |
| Words | 372 |
For it does not
leave us to receive our notices of them by mere reflection from
the dull glass of sense; but resolves a thousand enigmas of the
highest concern by giving faculties suited to things invisible. O who would not wish for such a faith, were it only on these
accounts How much more, if by this I may receive the
promise, I may attain all that holiness and happiness ! 12. So Christianity tells me; and so I find it, may every
real Christian say. I now am assured that these things are
so: I experience them in my own breast. What Christianity
(considered as a doctrine) promised, is accomplished in my
soul. And Christianity, considered as an inward principle, is
the completion of all those promises. It is holiness and hap
piness, the image of God impressed on a created spirit; a
fountain of peace and love springing up into everlasting life. Section III. 1. And this I conceive to be the strongest
evidence of the truth of Christianity. I do not undervalue
traditional evidence. Let it have its place and its due honour. It is highly serviceable in its kind, and in its degree. And
yet I cannot set it on a level with this. It is generally supposed, that traditional evidence is weak
ened by length of time; as it must necessarily pass through
so many hands, in a continued succession of ages. But no
length of time can possibly affect the strength of this internal
evidence. It is equally strong, equally new, through the
course of seventeen hundred years. It passes now, even as
it has done from the beginning, directly from God into the
believing soul. Do you suppose time will ever, dry up this
stream ? O no ! It shall never be cut off:
Labitur et labetur in omne volubilis avum.*
2. Traditional evidence is of an extremely complicated
nature, necessarily including so many and so various consi
derations, that only men of a strong and clear understanding
can be sensible of its full force. On the contrary, how plain
* It flows on, and will for ever flow. 76 LETTER. To
and simple is this; and how level to the lowest capacity!