Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-451 |
| Words | 383 |
“But I must observe,” you say, “that you fall not only
into inconsistencies, but into direct contradictions. You com
mend them for “loving one another in a manner the world know
eth not of;’ and yet you charge them with being “in the utmost
confusion, biting and devouring one another.’ You say, ‘They
caution us against natural love of one another; and had well
migh destroyed brotherly love from among us.”
“You praise them for “using no diversions, but such asbecome
saints; and for ‘not regarding outward adorning:” Yet you say
they ‘conform to the world in wearing gold and costly apparel;
and by joining in worldly diversions, in order to do good.’
“You call their discipline, ‘in most respects, truly excellent.”
I wish you had more fully explained yourself. I am sure it is
no sign of good discipline, to permit such abominations. And
you tell them yourself, ‘I can show you such a subordination
as answers all Christian purposes, and yet is as distant from
that among you as the heavens are from the earth.”
“You mention it as a good effect of their discipline, that
“every one knows and keeps his proper rank. Soon after, as
if it were with a design to confute yourself, you say, ‘Our
brethren have neither wisdom enough to guide, nor prudence
enough to let it alone.’
“And now, Sir, how can you reconcile these opposite descrip
tions?” (Ibid. pp. 21, 22.) Just as easily as those before, by
simply declaring the thing as it is. “You commend them.”
(the Moravians) “for loving one another; and yet charge them
with biting and devouring one another.” (Vol. I. pp. 245,256.)
Them / Whom ? Not the Moravians; but the English bre
thren of Fetter-Lane, before their union with the Moravians. Here, then, is no shadow of contradiction. For the two sen
tences do not relate to the same persons. “You say, ‘They had well-nigh destroyed brotherly love
from among us; partly by ‘cautions against natural love.”
(Ibid. p. 330.) It is a melancholy truth; so they had. But we
had then no connexion with them. Neither, therefore, does
this contradict their “loving one another in a manner the
world knoweth not of.”
“You praise them for using no diversions but such as become
saints;” (Ibid. p.