Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-511 |
| Words | 395 |
But God has taught me better. For on Friday
and Saturday, when I was in the strongest pain, I never once
had one moment's desire of ease.” Add, “But only that
the will of God might be done.”
Neither has this any resemblance of “stoical insensibility.”
I never supposed that this person did not feel pain; (nor in
deed that there is any state on earth wherein we shall not feel
it;) but that her soul was filled with the love of God, and
thankfully resigned to his will. “Another instance is taken from one of your hymns, where
are these lines:-(Page 119.)
“Doom, if thou canst, to endless pains,
And drive me from thy face:’”
(Add,
“But if thy stronger love constrains,
Let me be saved by grace.”)
“This I thought the height of insensibility, extravagance, and
presumption. You see nothing of these in it. And yet you
explain yourself thus: ‘If thou canst deny thyself, if thou
canst forget to be gracious, if thou canst cease to be truth and
love: All which, in my opinion, is fixing the charge most
strongly upon you. For the supposition that Christ can do
these things”--Are you in earnest, Sir? Are you really
ignorant, that expressions of this kind do not suppose he can,
but quite the reverse? that they are one of the strongest
forms of obtestation, of adjuring God to show mercy, by all
his grace, and truth, and love? So far is this also from
proving the charge of “stoical insensibility.”
III. 1. I come now to consider the point of Church com
munion, of which you have spoke in the beginning of your
Treatise. In the entrance, you say, “We teach no other doc
trine than has always been taught in our Church. Our senti
ments concerning justification are reconcilable to our Articles,
Homilies, and Service. This I apprehend several of the
Methodists have been convinced of, and have therefore left our
communion entirely. You give us more instances than one of
this in your last Journal.” (Page 2.) No, not one. Nor did
I ever yet know one man who “therefore left the communion
of the Church,” because he was convinced that either her
Articles, Homilies, or Liturgy, opposed his sentiments con
cerning justification. Poor Mr. St-- and Mr. Simpson were
induced to leave it by reasons of quite another kind.