Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-281 |
| Words | 396 |
No fair man, therefore, can
excuse himself thus, from acknowledging the work of God. Perhaps you will say, “He is not a natural fool, neither; but
he is so ignorant. He knows not the first principles of religion.”
It is very possible. But have patience with him, and he will
know them by and by; yea, if he be in earnest to save his
soul, far sooner than you can conceive. And, in the mean time,
neither is this an objection of any weight. Many, when they
begin to hear us, may, without any fault of ours, be utter
strangers to the whole of religion. But this is no incurable
disease. Yet a little while, and they may be wise unto salvation. Is the ignorance you complain of among this people (you
who object to the people more than to their teachers) of ano
ther kind? Do not they “know how in meekness to reprove
or instruct those that oppose themselves?” I believe what
you say: All of them do not; they have not put on gentle
ness and longsuffering. I wish they had : Pray for them
that they may ; that they may be mild and patient toward all
men. But what, if they are not? Sure, you do not make
this an argument that God hath not sent us! Our Lord
came, and we come, “not to call the righteous, but sinners to
repentance; ” passionate sinners, (such as these whereof you
complain,) as well as those of every other kind. Nor can it
be expected they should be wholly delivered from their sin as
soon as they begin to hear his word. 27. A greater stumbling-block than this is laid before you,
by those that “say and do not.” Such, I take it for granted,
will be among us, although we purge them out as fast as we
can; persons that talk much of religion, that commend the
Preachers, perhaps are diligent in hearing them; it may be,
read all their books, and sing their hymns; and yet no change
is wrought in their hearts. Were they of old time as lions in
their houses? They are the same still. Were they (in low
life) slothful or intemperate? Were they tricking or dishonest,
over-reaching or oppressive Or did they use to borrow and
not pay? The Ethiopian hath not changed his skin.