Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-128 |
| Words | 394 |
It is immediate con
currence, or none at all. God, a Spirit, acts upon your spirit. Make it out any otherwise if you can. I cannot conceive how that harmless word immediate came
to be such a bugbear in the world: “Why, I thought you meant
such inspiration as the Apostles had; and such a receiving the
Holy Ghost as that was at the day of Pentecost.” I do, in
part: Indeed I do not mean, that Christians now receive the
Holy Ghost in order to work miracles; but they do doubtless
now “receive,” yea, are “filled with, the Holy Ghost,” in
order to be filled with the fruits of that blessed Spirit. And he
inspires into all true believers now, a degree of the same peace
and joy and love which the Apostles felt in themselves on that
day, when they were first “filled with the Holy Ghost.”
29. I have now considered the most material objections I
know, which have been lately made against the great doctrines
I teach. I have produced, so far as in me lay, the strength of
those objections, and then answered them, I hope, in the spirit
of meekness. And now I trust it appears, that these doctrines. are no other than the doctrines of Jesus Christ; that they are
all evidently contained in the word of God, by which alone I
desire to stand or fall; and that they are fundamentally the
same with the doctrines of the Church of England, of which I
do, and ever did, profess myself a member. But there remains one objection, which, though relating
to the head of doctrine, yet is independent on all that went
before. And that is, “You cannot agree in your doctrines
among yourselves. One holds one thing, and one another. Mr. Whitefield anathematizes Mr. Wesley; and Mr. Wesley
anathematizes Mr. Whitefield. And yet each pretends to be
led by the Holy Ghost, by the infallible Spirit of God! Every
reasonable man must conclude from hence, that neither one
nor the other is led by the Spirit.”
I need not say, how continually this has been urged, both in
common conversation and from the press: (I am grieved to
add, and from the pulpit too; for, if the argument were good,
it would overturn the Bible:) Nor, how great stress has been
continually laid upon it.