Wesley Collected Works Vol 11
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-11-220 |
| Words | 370 |
O bring him out of all
His sanctified distress,
And by his name thy servant call,
And fill him with thy peace. Show him, almighty Lord,
That thou his Saviour art;
And speak the soul-converting word,
“My son, give me thy heart l”
18? 1. Do not you call yourself a Protestant? Why so? Do
you know what the word means? What is a Protestant? I suppose you mean one that is not a Papist. But what
is a Papist? If you do not know, say so; acknowledge you
cannot tell. Is not this the case? You call yourself a
Protestant; but you do not know what a Protestant is. You talk against Papists; and yet neither do you know what
a Papist is. Why do you pretend, then, to the knowledge
which you have not? Why do you use words which you do
not understand? 2. Are you desirous to know what these words, Papist and
Protestant, mean? A Papist is one who holds the Pope or
Bishop of Rome (the name papa, that is, father, was formerly
given to all Bishops) to be head of the whole Christian
Church; and the Church of Rome, or that which owns the
Pope as their head, to be the only Christian Church. 3. In a course of years, many errors crept into this
Church, of which good men complained from time to time. At last, about two hundred years ago, the Pope appointed
many Bishops and others to meet at a town in Germany,
called Trent. But these, instead of amending those errors,
established them all by a law, and so delivered them down
to all succeeding generations. 4. Among these errors may be numbered, their doctrine of
seven sacraments; of transubstantiation; of communion in
one kind only; of purgatory, and praying for the dead
therein; of veneration of relics; and of indulgences, or
pardons granted by the Pope, and to be bought for money. It is thought by some, that these errors, great as they are,
do only defile the purity of Christianity; but it is sure, the
following strike at its very root, and tend to banish true
religion out of the world:--
5. First. The doctrine of merit.