Wesley Corpus

Wesley Collected Works Vol 8

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typetreatise
YearNone
Passage IDjw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-091
Words388
Pneumatology Religious Experience Assurance
Are the feelings now in question “properties peculiar to matter?” the feeling of peace, 78 A FAItTHER APPEAL TO MEN joy, love, or any feelings at all? I can no more understand the philosophy than the divinity of this. (3.) “That the Scriptures declare the operations of the Spirit are not subject to any sensi ble feelings.” You are here disproving, as you suppose, a propo sition of mine. But are you sure you understand it? By feel ing, I mean, being inwardly conscious of. By the operations of the Spirit, I do not mean the manner in which he operates, but the graces which he operates in a Christian. Now, be pleased to produce those scriptures which declare that a Christian cannot feel or perceive these operations. 3. Are you not convinced, Sir, that you have laid to my charge things which I know not? I do not gravely tell you (as much an enthusiast as you over and over affirm me to be) that I sensibly feel (in your sense) the motions of the Holy Spirit. Much less do I make this, any more than “convulsions, agonies, howlings, roarings, and violent contortions of the body,” either “certain signs of men’s being in a state of sal vation,” or “necessary in order thereunto.” You might with equal justice and truth inform the world, and the worshipful the magistrates of Newcastle, that I make seeing the wind, or feeling the light, necessary to salvation. Neither do I confound the extraordinary with the ordinary operations of the Spirit. And as to your last inquiry, “What is the best proof of our being led by the Spirit P” I have no exception to that just and scriptural answer which you your self have given,-“A thorough change and renovation of mind and heart, and the leading a new and holy life.” 4. That I confound the extraordinary with the ordinary operations of the Spirit, and therefore am an enthusiast, is also strongly urged, in a charge delivered to his Clergy, and lately published, by the Lord Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry. An extract of the former part of this I subjoin, in his Lord ship’s words: “I cannot think it improper to obviate the contagion of those enthusiastical pretensions, that have lately betrayed whole mul titudes either into presumption or melancholy.