Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-003 |
| Words | 364 |
In the tenth you
say, “The Methodists act on the same plan with the Papists;
not, perhaps, from compact and design; but a similar con
figuration and texture of brain, or the fumes of imagination,
producing similar effects. From a commiseration of horror,
arising from the grievous corruptions of the world, perhaps
from a real motive of sincere piety, they both set out with warm
pretences to a reformation.” Sir, this is an uncommon thought,
--that sincere piety should arise from the “configuration and
texture of the brain l” as well as, that “pretences to a refor
mation” should spring from “a real motive of sincere piety l’’
4. You go on : “Both commonly begin their adventures
with field-preaching.” (Enthusiasm, &c., p. 11.) Sir, do you
condemn field-preaching toto genere, as evil in itself? Have a
care! or you (I should say, the gentleman that assists you)
will speak a little too plain, and betray the real motives of his
sincere antipathy to the people called Methodists. Or do you condemn the preaching on Hannam-Mount, in
particular, to the colliers of Kingswood? If you doubt whether
this has done any real good, it is a very easy thing to be in
formed. And I leave it with all impartial men, whether the
good which has in fact been done by preaching there, and which
could not possibly have been done any other way, does not
abundantly “justify the irregularity of it.” (Page 15.)
5. But you think I am herein inconsistent with myself. For I say, “The uncommonness is the very circumstance that
recommends it.” (I mean, that recommended it to the colliers
in Kingswood.) And yet I said, but a page or two before, “We
are not suffered to preach in the churches; else we should
prefer them to any places whatsoever.”
Sir, I still aver both the one and the other. I do prefer the
preaching in a church when I am suffered: And yet, when I
am not, the wise providence of God overrules this very cir
cumstance for good; many coming to hear, because of the
uncommonness of the thing, who would otherwise not
have heard at all. 6.