Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-280 |
| Words | 386 |
But this one thing we may reasonably desire of
you,--Do not increase the difficulties, which are already so
great, that, without the mighty power of God, we must sink
under them. Do not assist in trampling down a little hand
ful of men, who, for the present, stand in the gap between
ten thousand poor wretches and destruction, till you find
some others to take their places. 25. Highly needful it is that some should do this, lest
those poor souls be lost without remedy: And it should re
joice the hearts of all who desire the kingdom of God should
come, that so many of them have been snatched already from
the mouth of the lion, by an uncommon, though not unlaw
ful, way. This circumstance, therefore, is no just excuse for
not acknowledging the work of God; especially, if we con
sider, that whenever it has pleased God to work any great
work upon the earth, even from the earliest times, he hath
stepped more or less out of the common way;--whether to
excite the attention of a greater number of people than might
otherwise have regarded it; or to separate the proud and
haughty of heart, from those of an humble, childlike spirit; the
former of whom he foresaw, trusting in their own wisdom, would
fall on that stone and be broken; while the latter, inquiring with
simplicity, would soon know of the work, that it was of God. 26. “Nay,” say some, “but God is a God of wisdom: And
it is his work to give understanding. Whereas this man is
one of them, and he is a fool. You see the fruits of their
preaching.” No, my friend, you do not. That is your mis
take. A fool very possibly he may be. So it appears by his
talking, perhaps writing too. But this is none of the fruits of
our preaching. He was a fool before ever he heard us. We
found and are likely to leave him so. Therefore his folly is
not to be imputed to us, even if it continue to the day of his
death. As we were not the cause, so we undertake not the
cure, of disorders of this kind. No fair man, therefore, can
excuse himself thus, from acknowledging the work of God.