Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-530 |
| Words | 386 |
The next ran thus: “Again,
you say, “I expounded out of the fulness that was given me.’”
(Remarks, p. 64.) I answered, “I mean, I had then a fuller,
deeper sense of what I spoke than I ordinarily have.” (Page
409.) But if you still think, “it would have been more decent to
have said, ‘According to the best of my power and ability, with
God’s assistance, I expounded;’” I will say so another time. With regard to the third instance of enthusiasm, youremarked,
“If you would not have us look on this as miraculous, there is
nothing in it worthy of being related.” (Remarks, p. 64.) I
answered, “It may be so. Let it pass, then, as a trifle not
worth relating; but still it is no proof of enthusiasm. For I
452 PRINCIPLES OF A METholoist
would not have you look upon it as miraculous, but as a signal
instance of God’s particular providence.” (Page 409.) How
friendly and generous is your reply l--“You seem ashamed of
it. I am glad you give this fooling up, and hope for the future
you will treat your readers better.” (Second Letter, p. 131.)
Sir, I am not ashamed of it; nor shall I ever give this fooling
up, till I give up the Bible. I still look upon this “as a signal
instance of God’s particular providence.” But “how is this con
sistent with yielding it to be a trifle?” (Ibid. p. 132.) My words
do not imply, that I yield it so to be. Being urged with the
dilemma, “Either this is related as miraculous,” (and then it is
enthusiasm,) “ or it is not worth relating; ” I answered, (to
avoid drawing the saw of controversy,) “Let it pass, then, as
a trifle not worth relating. But still” (if it be a trifle, which
I suppose, not grant) “it is no proof of enthusiasm. For I
would not have you look upon it as miraculous.”
And yet I believe I yielded too much, and what might too
much favour your assertion, that “there is a great difference
between particular providences and such extraordinary interpo
sitions.” Pray, Sir, show me what this difference is. It is a
subject that deserves your coolest thoughts. “I know no ground
to hope or pray for such immediate reliefs.