Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-066 |
| Words | 400 |
It were great
pity to disturb you in the enjoyment of it. A Seventh argument you ground on those words in the
“Plain Account of the People called Methodists: ” “It is a
point we chiefly insist upon, that orthodoxy or right opinions is
a very slender part of religion, if any part of it at all.” “The
plain consequence whereof is,” (so you affirm,) “that teaching
and believing the fundamental errors of Popery, with the whole
train of their abominations and idolatries, are of very little
moment, if any.” Strain again, Sir ; pull hard, or you will
never be able to drag this conclusion out of these premises. I assert, “(1.) That in a truly righteous man, right opinions
are a very slender part of religion. (2.) That in an irreligious,
a profane man, they are not any part of religion at all; such a
man not being one jot more religious because he is orthodox.”
Sir, it does not follow from either of these propositions, that
wrong opinions are not an hinderance to religion; and much
less, that “teaching and believing the fundamental errors of
Popery, with the whole train of their abominations and idol
atries,” (practised, I presume you mean, as well as taught and
believed,) “are of very little moment, if any.”
I am so far from saying or thinking this, that, in my
printed letter to a Priest of that communion, (did you never
read it, or hear of it before ?) are these express words: “I
pity you much, having the same assurance, that Jesus is the
Christ, and that no Romanist can expect to be saved, accord
ing to the terms of his covenant.” (Vol. I. p. 220.) Do you
term this “an extenuation of their abominations; a reducing
them to almost a mere nothing?”
47. You argue, Eighthly, thus: “The Methodist doctrine
of impressions and assurances holds equally for Popish enthu
siasts.” This needs no answer; I have already shown that
the Methodist doctrine in these respects is both scriptural
and rational. Your Ninth argument is, “Their sudden conversions stand
upon the same footing with the Popish.” You should say,
“are a proof that they are promoting Popery.” I leave you
to enjoy this argument also. But the dreadful one you reserve for the last; namely,
our “recommending Popish books. One is the Life of Mr. de Renty, of which Mr.