Wesley Corpus

Wesley Collected Works Vol 10

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typetreatise
YearNone
Passage IDjw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-581
Words204
Means of Grace Works of Piety Free Will
Indeed, I should not dare to suffer it; as I am clearly persuaded the thing is wrong in itself, being not authorized either by any law of God, or by any law of the land. In consequence of which, I conceive, that either the clerk or the sexton may as well consecrate the church or the churchyard, as the Bishop. 7. With regard to the latter, the churchyard, I know not who could answer that plain question: “You say, this is consecrated ground, so many feet broad, and so many long. But pray how deep is the consecrated ground?”--“Deep ! What does that signify?” O, a great deal: For if my grave be dug too deep, I may happen to get out of the consecrated ground: And who can tell what unhappy consequences may follow from this? 8. I take the whole of this practice to be a mere relic of Romish superstition. And I wonder that any sensible Protestant should think it right to countenance it; much more, that any reasonable man should plead for the necessity of it ! Surely, it is high time now that we should be guided, not by custom, but by Scripture and reason. DUMFRIEs, May 14, 1788.