Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-033 |
| Words | 377 |
If they have called the Master of the house Beelzebub, how
much more shall they call them of his household?”
70. This only we confess, that we preach inward salvation,
now attainable by faith. And for preaching this (for no other
crime was then so much as pretended) we were forbid to preach
any more in those churches, where, till then, we were gladly
received. This is a notorious fact. Being thus hindered from
preaching in the places we should first have chosen, we now
declare the “grace of God which bringeth salvation,” in all
places of his dominion; as well knowing, that God dwelleth
not only in temples made with hands. This is the real, and it is
the only real, ground of complaint against us. And this we
avow before all mankind, we do preach this salvation by faith. And not being suffered to preach it in the usual places, we
declare it wherever a door is opened, either on a mountain, or
a plain, or by a river side, (for all which we conceive we have
sufficient precedent,) or in prison, or, as it were, in the house
of Justus, or the school of one Tyrannus. Nor dare werefrain. “A dispensation of the gospel is committed to me; and woe
is me, if I preach not the gospel.”
71. Here we allow the fact, but deny the guilt. But is every
other point alleged, we deny the fact, and call upon the world
to prove it, if they can. More especially, we call upon those
who for many years saw our manner of life at Oxford. These
well know that “after the straitest sect of our religion we
lived Pharisees;” and that the grand objection to us for all
those years was, the being righteous overmuch ; the reading,
fasting, praying, denying ourselves,--the going to church, and
to the Lord’s table,--the relieving the poor, visiting those that
were sick and in prison, instructing the ignorant, and labouring
to reclaim the wicked,--more than was necessary for salvation. These were our open, flagrant crimes, from the year 1729 to
the year 1737; touching which our Lord shall judge in thatday. 72. But, waving the things that are past, which of you now
convinceth us of sin?