Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-590 |
| Words | 399 |
With his Lordship, therefore, I have no
present concern; my business now is with you only: And seeing
you are “now ready,” as you express it, “to run a tilt,” I must
make what defence I can. Only you must excuse me from
meeting you on the same ground, or fighting you with the same
* In “A Letter to the Right Reverend the Lord Bishop of London.”
weapons: My weapons are only truth and love. May the
God of truth and love strengthen my weakness |
4. I wave what relates to Mr. V ’s personal character,
which is too well known to need my defence of it; as like
wise the occurrence (real or imaginary I cannot tell) which
gave birth to your performance. All that I concern myself
with is your five vehement assertions with regard to the peo
ple called Methodists. These I shall consider in their order,
and prove to be totally false and groundless. 5. The first is this: “Their whole ministry is an open and
avowed opposition to one of the fundamental articles of our
areligion.” (Page 4.) How so? Why, “the Twentieth Article
declares, we may not so expound one scripture, that it be
repugnant to another. And yet it is notorious, that the
Methodists do ever explain the word ‘faith’ as it stands in
some of St. Paul’s writings, so as to make his doctrine a
direct and flat contradiction to that of St. James.” (Page 5.)
This stale objection has been answered an hundred times,
so that I really thought we should have heard no more of it. But since it is required, I repeat the answer once more: By
faith we mean “the evidence of things not seen; ” by justi
fying faith, a divine evidence or conviction, that “Christ
loved me, and gave himself for me.” St. Paul affirms, that
a man is justified by this faith; which St. James never
denies, but only asserts, that a man cannot be justified by a
dead faith: And this St. Paul never affirms. “But St. James declares, ‘Faith without works is dead.”
Therefore it is clearly St. James's meaning, that a faith
which is without virtue and morality cannot produce salva
tion. Yet the Methodists so explain St. Paul, as to affirm
that faith without virtue or morality will produce salvation.”
(Page 6.) Where? in which of their writings?