Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-551 |
| Words | 380 |
But who would not likewise desire to have some
acquaintance with those that followed them? with St. Chrysostom, Basil, Jerome, Austin; and, above all, the man
of a broken heart, Ephraim Syrus? Seventhly. There is yet another branch of knowledge highly
necessary for a Clergyman, and that is, knowledge of the world;
a knowledge of men, of their maxims, tempers, and manners,
such as they occur in real life. Without this he will be liable
to receive much hurt, and capable of doing little good; as he
will not know, either how to deal with men according to the
vast variety of their characters, or to preserve himself from
those who almost in every place lie in wait to deceive. How nearly allied to this is the discernment of spirits so
far as it may be acquired by diligent observation. And can
a guide of souls be without it? If he is, is he not liable to
stumble at every step? Eighthly. Can he be without an eminent share of prudence? that most uncommon thing which is usually called common
sense? But how shall we define it? Shall we say, with
the Schools, that it is recta ratio rerum agibilium particu
larium ?* Or is it an habitual consideration of all the
circumstances of a thing,
Quis, quid, ubi, quibus auxiliis, cur, quomodo, quando 2 +
and a facility of adapting our behaviour to the various
combinations of them? However it be defined, should it not
be studied with all care, and pursued with all earnestness of
application ? For what terrible inconveniences ensue, when
ever it is remarkably wanting ! Ninthly. Next to prudence or common sense, (if it be
not included therein,) a Clergyman ought certainly to have
some degree of good breeding; I mean address, easiness and
propriety of behaviour, wherever his lot is cast: Perhaps one
might add, he should have (though not the stateliness; for
he is “the servant of all,” yet) all the courtesy of a gentleman,
joined with the correctness of a scholar. Do we want a
pattern of this? We have one in St. Paul, even before Felix,
Festus, King Agrippa. One can scarce help thinking he
was one of the best bred men, one of the finest gentlemen in
the world.