Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-510 |
| Words | 379 |
“He is most marvellously curious in forbidding his
Preachers to say, My Lady.”
Were ever words so distorted and misrepresented ! The
words in the Minutes are:
“Do not imitate them (the Calvinists of Trevecka in
particular) in screaming, allegorizing, calling themselves
ordained, boasting themselves of their learning, the College,
or My Lady.” (Page 12.)
Is this “forbidding them to say, My Lady?” No more
than forbidding them to make a bow. 12. “A vast number of sluts had taken possession of the
preaching-houses,” (No; the preaching-houses were not in
question,) “and female servants, by courtesy called maids,”
(civil and kind ! But neither were servants in question,) “are
* “Behold the token "-EDIT. 450 ANswer. To MR. RowLAND HILL’s
filthy slovens in their persons, dress, and manoeuvres.” (See,
Mr. Hill understands French !) “So Mr. John gives the
public to understand.” (No, not Mr. John, but Mr. Hill. He goes on:) “And how is this mighty grievance to be
redressed? ‘Why, says this Solomon in a cassock,” (Is not
that witty?) “‘sluts are to be kept out, by not letting them
in.’” (Imposture Detected, p. 12.) And is all this wit bestowed
upon three poor lines? The words are just these:--
“Q. Complaint is made that sluts spoil our houses. How
then can we prevent this? “A. Let no known slut live in any of them.” (Minutes.)
What a colour does Mr. Hill put upon this ! But,
meantime, where is conscience? Where is honour? 13. “He denies the doctrines of the Church of England;”
(page 13;) that is, absolute predestination. Mr. Sellon has
abundantly proved, that this is no doctrine of the Church of
England. When Mr. Hill has answered his arguments, I will
give him some more. The objections against lay Preachers
(which come ill from Mr. Hill) I have largely answered in
the “Third Appeal to Men of Reason and Religion.” But
I know not that any lay Preachers in connexion with me,
either baptize children, or administer the Lord’s supper. I
never entreated anything of Bishop Erasmus, who had
abundant unexceptionable credentials as to his episcopal
character. Nor did he “ever reject any overture” made by
me. (Page 14.) Herein Mr. Hill has been misinformed. I
deny the fact; let him produce his evidence.