Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-263 |
| Words | 396 |
I wish you would explain yourself a little on this head:--
Scire velin, verbo, pretium quotus arroget annus * *
How old do you require a man to be, before God should have
leave to speak by his mouth ? O my brethren, who could
have believed any serious man would once have named such
an argument as this; seeing both Scripture and reason teach,
that God herein “giveth account to none of his ways l”
But he worketh by whomsoever he will work; he showeth
mercy by whom he will show mercy. 6. “But there are only a few young heads.” I cannot but
observe here what great pains have been taken, what diligence
shown, to make and to keep them few. What arts have not
been used to keep back those, of the Clergy in particular,
who have been clearly convinced, from time to time, that they
ought to join hearts and hands in the work? On this occasion
it has been accounted meritorious to “say all manner of evil
of us falsely;” to promise them whatever their hearts
desired, if they would refrain from these men; and, on the other
hand, to threaten them with heavy things if ever they went
among them more. So that how fully soever they were con
vinced, they could not act according to their conviction, unless
* How old must a book be before it is good for anything? |
they could give up at once all thought of preferment either in
Church or State; nay, all hope of even a Fellowship, or poor
Scholarship, in either University. Many also have been
threatened, that if they went on in this way, what little they
had should be taken from them. And many have, on this
very account, been disowned by their dearest friends and
nearest relations: So that there was no possibility the num
ber of these labourers should ever be increased at all, unless
by those who could break through all these ties, who desired
nothing in the present world, who counted neither their for
tunes, nor friends, nor lives, dear unto themselves, so they
might only keep “a conscience void of offence toward God
and toward men.”
7. But what do you infer from their fewness? that, be
cause they are few, therefore God cannot work by them? Upon what scripture do you ground this?