Wesley Corpus

Wesley Collected Works Vol 8

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typetreatise
YearNone
Passage IDjw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-410
Words319
Social Holiness Catholic Spirit Universal Redemption
Wesley; but still Mr. Maxfield and his adherents go under the general name of Methodists. 15. At present, those who remain with Mr. Wesley are mostly Church-of-England men.* They love her Articles, her Homilies, her Liturgy, her discipline, and unwillingly vary from it in any instance. Meantime, all who preach among ithem declare, “We are all by nature children of wrath:” But “by grace we are saved through faith;” saved both from ithe guilt and from the power of sin. They endeavour to live according to what they preach, to be plain Bible-Christians. Andthey meet together, at convenient times, to encourage one another therein. They tenderly love many that are Calvinists, * I have not been able to ascertain the precise time at which this tract was written. It notices the separation of Maxfield in 1763; and the seeond edition of it bears the date of 1765. It appears therefore to have been first published some time about 1764; and was probably intended to screen Mr. Wesley and his friends from the reproach attached to the conduct of those who separated from him.-EDIT. ADVICE TO THE METHODISTS. 35l though they do not love their opinions. Yea, they love the Antinomians themselves; but it is with a love of compassion only: For they hate their doctrines with a perfect hatred; they abhor them as they do hell-fire; being convinced nothing can so effectually destroy all faith, all holiness, and all good works. 16. With regard to these, Mr. Relly and his adherents, it would not be strange if they should grow into reputation. For they will never shock the world, either by the harshness of their doctrine, or the singularity of their behaviour. But let those who determine both to preach and to live the Gospel expect that men will say “all manner of evil of them.” “The servant is not above his Master, nor the disciple above his Lord.