Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-466 |
| Words | 376 |
But “complaints,” you say, “of their errors, come very ill
from you, because you have occasioned them.” Nay, if it were
so, for that very cause they ought to come from me. If I had
occasioned an evil, surely I am the very person who ought to
remove it as far as I can; to recover, if possible, those who
are hurt already, and to caution others against it. 14. On some of those complaints, as you term them, you
remark as follows:- “Many of those who once knew in whom
they had believed” (these are my words) “were thrown into
idle reasonings, and thereby filled with doubts and fears.”
(Page 13.) “This,” you add, “it is to be feared, has been too
much the case of the Methodists in general.--Accordingly we
find, in this Journal, several instances, not barely of doubts and
398 ANSWER. To
fears, but of the most desperate despair. This is the conse
quence of resting so much on sensible impressions.--Bad
men may be led into presumption thereby; an instance of
which you give, Vol. I. p. 295.”
That instance will come in our way again: “Many of those
who once knew in whom they had believed were thrown,” by
the Antinomians, “into idle reasonings, and thereby filled
with doubts and fears. This,” you fear, “has been the case
with the Methodists in general.” You must mean, (to make
it a parallel case,) that the generality of the people now termed
Methodists were true believers till they heard us preach, but
were thereby thrown into idle reasonings, and filled with
needless doubts and fears. Exactly contrary to truth in every
particular. For, (1) They lived in open sins till they heard
us preach, and, consequently, were no better believers than
their father the devil. (2.) They were not then thrown into
idle reasonings, but into serious thought how to flee from the
wrath to come. Nor, (3) Were they filled with needless
doubts and fears, but with such as were needful in the highest
degree, such as actually issued in repentance toward God and
faith in our Lord Jesus Christ. “Accordingly, we find in this Journal several instances of
the most desperate despair. (Ibid. pp. 261, 272,294.)”
Then I am greatly mistaken.