Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-466 |
| Words | 395 |
Well, now for the buskins ! Now, spirat tragicum
satis '+ “And this is the doctrine which is preached to
more than thirty thousand souls, of which Mr. W. has the
charge. Then I am sure it is high time, that not only the
Calvinist Ministers, but all that wish well to the interest of
Protestantism,” (so Mr. S. said before,) “should, in a body,
protest against such licentious tenets.” “Blow ye the
trumpet in Sion l’” Gird on your armour ! Make ye your
selves ready for battle ! Again the trumpet sounds:--A
* The only-begotten Son of God.-ED 1 T. + This quotation from Horace is thus translated by Francis :
“It breathes the spirit of the tragic scene.”--ED1T. MR. HILL's REVIEw. 409
crusadel An holy war! Down with the heretics! But hold ! What spirit are you of ? Are you followers of peace? Then
“bring forth your strong reasons; speak the truth in love,”
and we are ready to meet you. But really all this talk of my
licentious doctrine is a mere copy of Mr. H.’s countenance. He knows, and all in England know, (whoever have heard
my name,) that it is not too loose, but too strict, doctrine I
am constantly accused of. Therefore, all this bluster, about
my superseding the law, has not only no truth, but no colour,
no plausibility. And when Mr. H. calls so gravely for Dr. Crisp to “sweep away all my Antinomian rubbish,” shall we
laugh or weep? Cuivis facilis rigidi censura cachinni.*
Rather let us drop a tear on human infirmity. 27. So much for the First grand argument against perfec
tion, that it is “generally received in the Church of Rome.”
The Second is: “It was generally received among the
ranting Anabaptists in Germany.” (Page 49.) What author
of note testifies this? I allow no second-hand authority;
but desire to know what German historian of credit has
recorded it; and in what page of his works. When this is
ascertained, then we may observe, it proves just nothing. A Third argument against perfection is, that “it was main
tained by many wild Ranters in London.” Wild enough ! although no stress is to be laid on Mr. H.’s informations
concerning them; some of which are altogether false, and
the rest imperfect enough. But suppose they were all true,
what would follow?