Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-470 |
| Words | 392 |
I need not say anything to your last anecdote, since you
(for once 1) put a candid construction upon my words. If
I did speak them, which I can neither affirm nor deny,
undoubtedly my meaning was, (as yourself observe,) “Though
I have been holding forth the imputed righteousness of
Christ to a mixed congregation, yet I think it right to
caution you of the society how you abuse that doctrine,
which to some, who turn it into licentiousness, is a smooth
doctrine, of which you ought to beware.” (Page 61.) But
your friend, it seems, who gave you this account, did not put
so candid a construction on my words. You say, “He was so struck, as hardly to refrain from
speaking to you in the chapel. And from that hour he gave
up all connexions with you.” That is, he sought a pretence;
and he found one ! And now, what does all this amount to? Several persons,
who professed high things, degenerated into pride and
enthusiasm, and then talked like lunatics, about the time
that they renounced connexion with me for mildly reproving
them. And is this any objection against the existence of
that love which they professed, nay, and I verily believe,
once enjoyed? though they were afterward “moved from
their steadfastness.” Surely no more than a justified person’s
running mad, is an objection against justification. Every
doctrine must stand or fall by the Bible. If the perfection
I teach agree with this, it will stand, in spite of all the
enthusiasts in the world; if not, it cannot stand. 31. I now look back on a train of incidents that have
occurred for many months last past, and adore a wise and
gracious Providence, ordering all things well ! When the
Circular Letter was first dispersed throughout Great Britain
and Ireland, I did not conceive the immense good which God
was about to bring out of that evil. But no sooner did Mr. MR. HILL's REVIEw. 413
F.’s first Letters appear, than the scene began to open. And
the design of Providence opened more and more, when Mr. S.’s Narrative, and Mr. H.’s Letters, constrained him to
write and publish his Second and Third Check to Antino
mianism. It was then indisputably clear, that neither my
brother nor I had borne a sufficient testimony to the truth.