Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-029 |
| Words | 377 |
I assert the
fact still. “But if these, you say, ‘ are not miraculous cures,
all this is rank enthusiasm.”
“I will put your argument in form:
“He that believes those are miraculous cures which are not
is a rank enthusiast:
“But you believe those to be miraculous cures which are net:
“Therefore you are a rank enthusiast. “Before I answer, I must know what you mean by miracu
lous: If you term everything so which is ‘not strictly account
able for by the ordinary course of natural causes, then I deny
the latter part of the second proposition. And unless you can
make this good, unless you can prove the effects in question
are strictly accountable for by the ordinary course of natural
causes, your argument is nothing worth.” (First Letter to
Mr. Church, Vol. VIII. p. 412.)
Having largely answered your next objection relating to
what I still term “a signal instance of God’s particular provi
dence,” (Ibid. pp. 410,452) I need only refer you to those an
swers, not having leisure to say the same thing ten times over. Whether I sometimes claim, and sometimes disclaim, mira
cles, will be considered by and by. In your seventh section, you say, “I shall now give some
account of their grievous conflicts and combats with Satan.”
(Page 51, &c.) O Sir, spare yourself, if not the Methodists |
Do not go so far out of your depth. This is a subject you
are as utterly unacquainted with, as with justification, or the
new birth. But I attend your motions. “Mr. Wesley,” you say, “was
advised to a very high degree of silence. And he spoke to none
at all for two days, and travelling fourscore miles together. “The same whim,” you go on, “has run through several
of the religious orders. Hence, St. Bonaventura says, that
silence in all the religious is necessary to perfection. St. Agatho held a stone in his mouth for three years, till he had
learned taciturnity. St. Alcantara carried several pebbles in
his mouth, for three years likewise, and for the same reason. Theon observed a continual silence for thirty years. St. Francis observed it himself, and enjoined it upon his brethren. The rule of silence was religiously observed by St.