Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-431 |
| Words | 385 |
F. is still able to answer for
himself. But if he does, I would recommend to his
consideration the advice formerly given by a wise man to his
friend: “See that you humble not yourself to that man; it
would hurt both him and the cause of God.” It is pity but
he had considered it sooner, and he might have escaped some
keen reflections. But he did not; he imagined, when he
spoke or wrote in the simplicity of his heart, that his
opponents would have received his words in the same spirit
wherein they were spoken. No such matter; they turn
them all into poison; he not only loses his sweet words, but
they are turned into bitterness, are interpreted as mere sneer
and sarcasm | A good lesson for me ! I had designed to
have transcribed Mr. F.'s character of Mr. H., and to have
added a little thereto, in hope of softening his spirit: But I
see it is in vain; as well might one hope to soften
Inexorable Pluto, king of shades ! Since he is capable of putting such a construction, even upon
Mr. F.’s gentleness and mildness; since he ascribes even to
him “a pen dipped in gall,” what will he not ascribe to me? I have done, therefore, with humbling myself to these men,
to Mr. H. and his associates. I have humbled myself to them
for these thirty years; but will do it no more. I have done
with attempting to soften their spirits; it is all lost labour. Upon men of an ingenuous temper I have been able to fix an
obligation. Bishop Gibson, Dr. Church, and even Dr. Taylor,
were obliged to me for not pushing my advantage. But it is
not so with these: Whatever mercy you show, you are to
expect no mercy from them. Mercy did I say? Alas! I
expect no justice; no more than I have found already. As
they have wrested and distorted my words from the beginning,
so I expect they will do to the end. Mr. H.’s performance
is a specimen. Such mercy, such justice, I am to expect
3. And does Mr. H. complain of the unhappy spirit in
which Mr. F. writes? Many writers have done marvellously;
but thou excellest them all !