Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-269 |
| Words | 389 |
Could that great work have been
promoted at all in many places, if laymen had not preached ? And yet how seldom do the very Papists urge this as an objec
tion against the Reformation l Nay, as rigorous as they are in
things of this kind, they themselves appoint, even in some of
their strictest Orders, that “if any lay-brother believes himself
called of God to preach as a Missionary, the Superior of the
Order, being informed thereof, shall immediately send
him away.”
In all Protestant Churches it is still more evident that ordi
nation is not held a necessary pre-requisite of preaching; for
in Sweden, in Germany, in Holland, and, I believe, in every
Reformed Church in Europe, it is not only permitted but
required, that before any one is ordained, (before he is admitted
even into Deacon’s Orders, wherever the distinction between
Priests and Deacons is retained,) he should publicly preach a
year or more ad probandum facultatem. And for this practice
they believe they have the authority of an express command of
God: “Let these first be proved; then let them use the office
of a Deacon, being found blameless.” (1 Tim. iii. 10.)
13. “In England, however, there is nothing of this kind; no
layman permitted to speak in public.” No! Can you be igno
rant, that in an hundred churches they do it continually? In
how many (particularly in the west of England) does the parish
clerk read one of the Lessons? (In some he reads the whole
Service of the Church, perhaps cv.cry Lord’s day.) And do not
other laymen constantly do the same thing, yea, in our very
cathedrals? which, being under the more immediate inspection
of the Bishops, should be patterns to all other churches. Perhaps it will be said, “But this is not preaching.” Yes,
but it is essentially such. For what is it to preach, but praedi
care verbum Dei; “to publish the word of God?” And this
laymen do all over England; particularly under the eye of
every Bishop in the nation. Nay, is it not done in the Universities themselves? Who
ordained that singing-man at Christ-Church; who is likewise
utterly unqualified for the work, murdering every Lesson he
reads? not even endeavouring to read it as the word of God,
but rather as an old song!