Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-182 |
| Words | 394 |
I begin with the
love of God, the fountain of all that holiness without which
we cannot see the Lord. And what is it that has a more
natural tendency to destroy this than idolatry? Consequently,
every doctrine which leads to idolatry, naturally tends to
destroy it. But so does a very considerable part of the avowed
doctrine of the Church of Rome. Her doctrine touching the
worship of angels, of saints, the Virgin Mary in particular, -
touching the worship of images, of relics, of the cross, and,
above all, of the host, or consecrated wafer,--lead all who
receive them to practise idolatry, flat, palpable idolatry; the
paying that worship to the creature which is due to God alone. Therefore they have a natural tendency to hinder, if not
utterly destroy, the love of God. Secondly. The doctrine of the Church of Rome has a
natural tendency to hinder, if not destroy, the love of our
ueighbour. By the love of our neighbour, I mean universal
benevolence; tender good-will to all men. For in this
respect every child of man, every son of Adam, is our neigh
bour; as we may easily learn from our Lord’s history of the
good Samaritan. Now, the Church of Rome, by asserting
that all who are not of her own Church, that is, the bulk of
mankind, are in a state of utter rejection from God, despised
and hated by Him that made them; and by her bitter (I
might say, accursed) anathemas, devoting to absolute, ever
lasting destruction, all who willingly or unwillingly differ from
her in any jot or tittle; teaches all her members to look upon
them with the same eyes that she supposes God to do; to
regard them as mere fire-brands of hell, “vessels of wrath,
fitted for destruction.” And what love can you entertain for
such? No other than you can believe God to have for them. Therefore, every anathema denounced by the Church of Rome
against all who differ from her, has a natural tendency, not
only to hinder, but utterly destroy, the love of our neighbour. Thirdly. The same doctrine which devotes to utter destruc
tion so vast a majority of mankind, must greatly indispose us
for showing them the justice which is due to all men. For
how hard is it to be just to them we hate?