Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-515 |
| Words | 395 |
“You was, indeed, authorized
to preach the gospel; but it was in the congregation to which
you should be lawfully appointed. Whereas you have many
years preached in places whereunto you was not lawfully
appointed; nay, which were entrusted to others, who neither
wanted nor desired your assistance.”
Many of them wanted it enough, whether they desired it or
no. But I shall not now debate that point. I rather follow
you to the First Part of the “Farther Appeal,” where this
objection is considered. 5. “Our Church,” it was said, “has provided against this
preaching up and down, in the ordination of a Priest, by
expressly limiting the exercise of the powers then conferred
upon him to the congregation where he shall be lawfully
appointed thereunto.”
I answered, (1.) “Your argument proves too much. If it
be allowed just as you propose it, it proves that no Priest, has
authority either to preach or administer the sacrament in any
other than his own congregation.” (Farther Appeal, p. 117.)
You reply, “Is there no difference between a thing’s being
done occasionally, and its being done for years together?” Yes,
a great one; and more inconveniences may arise from the latter
than from the former. But this is all wide : It does not touch
the point. Still, if our Church does expressly limit the excrcise
of the sacerdotal powers to that congregation whereunto each
Priest shall be appointed, this precludes him from exercising
those powers at all, in any other than that congregation. I answered, (2.) “Had the powers conferred been so limited
when I was ordained Priest, my ordination would have signified
just nothing. For I was not appointed to any congregation at
all; but was ordained as a member of that ‘College of Divines,”
(so our Statutes express it,) ‘founded to overturn all heresies,
and defend the catholic faith.’”
You reply, “I presume it was expected you should either
continue at your College, or enter upon some regular cure.”
Perhaps so; but I must still insist, that if my sacerdotal powers
had been then expressly limited to that congregation whereunto
I should be appointed, my ordination would have signified
nothing. I mean, I could never, in virtue of that ordination,
have exercised those powers at all; seeing I never was appointed
to any single congregation, at least not till I went to Georgia.