Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-459 |
| Words | 393 |
Law, and a few other mystic writers. Yet I
never was “in the way of Mysticism” at all; this is another
mistake. Although I did not clearly see that we “are saved by
faith” till the year 1738, I then published the sermon on “Sal
vation by Faith,” every sentence of which I subscribe to now. 17. But he “was too scrupulous about using the word
condition.” (Page 143.) I was so, till I was convinced by
Dr. Church, that it was a very innocent word; and one that
none of the Reformers, English or foreign, objected to. All
this time I leaned towards Calvinism, though more in
expression than sentiment. “And now he fairly gives up
the necessity of a clear belief of justification by faith
alone!” That is, I say, A man may be saved, who is not
clear in his judgment concerning it. I do; I dare not
“rank Mr. Law, and all his admirers, among the hosts of
Diabolonians.” Nay, more: “I have proved that he makes
'man's righteousness the procuring cause of his acceptance
with God; and his salvation, from first to last, to depend
upon the intrinsic merit of his own unassisted works.” (Page
144.) I think Mr. H. “is now got to his ne plus ultra,”
unless he has a mind to prove that Mr. W. is an horse. 18. “I expect you will tell me that I have exposed Mr. W., particularly in the foregoing contrast. That Mr. W. is
exposed, I allow; but that I have exposed him, I deny.”
Who was it then? Why, “out of his own mouth all that I
have brought against him proceeds.”
Not so: All that I have wrote, except one sentence out of
an hundred and one, is well consistent with itself, provided
the words be taken in their plain, natural sense, and one
part of them in connexion with the other. But whoever will
use Mr. H.’s art of twisting and torturing words, may make
them say anything, and extract Pelagianism, Arianism, or
anything he pleases, out of anything that can be spoken. By
this art, he that cries out against Mr. F.’s art has found, that
is, created, above an hundred contradictions in my works,
and “could find abundance more.” Ay, five hundred; under
his forming hand contradictions spring up as quick as mush
rooms.