Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-376 |
| Words | 399 |
A. No, not by half the Assistants. (1.) Who has sent me
word, whether the other Preachers behave well or ill? (2) Who
has visited all the classes and regulated the Bands quarterly? (3.) Love-feasts for the Bands have been neglected: Neither
have persons been duly taken in and put out of the Bands. (4.) The societies are not half supplied with books; not even
with those above-mentioned. O exert yourselves in this! Be
not weary! Leave no stone unturned ! (5.) How few accounts
have I had, either of remarkable deaths, or remarkable conver
sions ! (6.) How few exact lists of the societies ! (7.) How
few have met the married and single persons once a quarter I
Q. 44. Are there any other advices which you would give
the Assistants? A. Several. (1.) Take a regular catalogue of your societies,
as they live in house-row. (2.) Leave your successor a particu
lar account of the state of the Circuit. (3) See that every
Band-Leader has the Rules of the Bands. (4.) Vigorously, but
calmly, enforce the Rules concerning needless ornaments,
drams, snuff, and tobacco. Give no Band-ticket to any man
or woman who does not promise to leave them off (5.) As
soon as there are four men or women believers in any place,
put them into a Band. (6.) Suffer no love-feast to last above
an hour and an half; and instantly stop all breaking the cake
with one another. (7.) Warn all, from time to time, that none
are to remove from one society to another without a certificate
from the Assistant in these words: (Else he will not be received
in other societies:) “A. B., the bearer, is amember of our society
in C.: I believe he has sufficient cause for removing.” I beg
every Assistant to remember this. (8.) Everywhere recommend
decency and cleanliness: Cleanliness is next to godliness. (9.)
Exhort all that were brought up in the Church, to continue
therein. Set the example yourself; and immediately change
every plan that would hinder their being at church at least two
Sundays in four. Carefully avoid whatever has a tendency to
separate men from the Church; and let all the servants in our
preaching-houses go to church once on Sunday at least. Is there not a cause? Are we not unawares, by little and
little, sliding into a separation from the Church?