Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-031 |
| Words | 362 |
Under the head of conflicts with Satan, you observe farther,
“Mr. Wesley says, while he was preaching, the devil knew
his kingdom shook, and therefore stirred up his servants to
make a noise; that, September 18, the prince of the air made
another attempt in defence of his tottering kingdom; and that
another time, the devil’s children fought valiantly for their
master.” I own the whole charge; I did say all this. Nay,
and if need were, I should say it again. You cite one more instance from my Fourth Journal:
“The many-headed beast began to roar again.” So your head
is so full of the subject, that you construe even poor Horace's
bellua multorum capitum” into the devil |
These are all the combats and conflicts with Satan which
you can prove I ever had. O'Sir, without more and greater
conflicts than these, none shall see the kingdom of God. 11. In the following sections, you are equally out of your
element. The first of them relates to “spiritual desertions;”
(Section viii., p. 75, &c.;) all which you make the subject of
dull ridicule, and place to the account of enthusiasm. And
the case of all you give in the following words: “We may
look upon enthusiasm as a kind of drunkenness, filling and
intoxicating the brain with the heated fumes of spirituous
particles. Now, no sooner does the inebriation go off, but a
coldness and dulness takes place.”
12. As wildly do you talk of the doubts and fears incident to
those who are “weak in faith.” (Section ix., p. 79, &c.) I
cannot prevail upon myself to prostitute this awful subject, by
entering into any debate concerning it with one who is inno
cent of the whole affair. Only I must observe that a great part of
* Rendered by Boscawen,-“A many-headed beast.”--EDIT. what you advance concerning me is entirely wide of the ques
tion. Such is all you quote from the First, and a considerable
part of what you quote from my Second, Journal. This you
know in your own conscience; for you know I speak of myself
during the whole time, as having no faith at all.