Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-069 |
| Words | 365 |
I have at length gone through your whole performance,
weighed whatever you cite from my writings, and shown at
large how far those passages are from proving all, or any part,
of your charge. So that all you attempt to build on them, of
the pride and vanity of the Methodists; of their shuffling and
prevaricating; of their affectation of prophesying; laying claim
to the miraculous favours of Heaven; unsteadiness of temper;
unsteadiness in sentiment and practice; art and cunning;
giving up inspiration and extraordinary calls; scepticism, in
fidelity, Atheism; uncharitableness to their opponents; con
tempt of order and authority; and fierce, rancorous quarrels
with each other; of the tendency of Methodism to undermine
morality and good works; and to carry on the good work of
Popery:--All this fabricfalls to the ground at once, unless you
can find some better foundation to support it. (Sections iii. vi.; ix., xi.--xv.; xviii.-xxi.)
50. These things being so, what must all unprejudiced men
think of you and your whole performance? You have ad
Vanced a charge, not against one or two persons only, but indis
criminately against a whole body of people, of His Majesty’s
subjects, Englishmen, Protestants, members, I suppose, of your
own Church: a charge containing abundance of articles, and
most of them of the highest and blackest nature. You have
prosecuted this with unparalleled bitterness of spirit and acri
mony of language; using sometimes the most coarse, rude,
scurrilous terms, sometimes the keenest sarcasms you could
devise. The point you have steadily pursued in thus prose
cuting this charge, is, First, to expose the whole people to the
hatred and scorn of all mankind; and, next, to stir up the
civil powers against them. And when this charge comes to
be fairly weighed, there is not a single article of it true ! The passages you cite to make it good are one and all such as
prove nothing less than the points in question; most of them
such as you have palpably maimed, corrupted, and strained to
a sense never thought of by the writer; many of them such
as are flat against you, and overthrow the very point they are
brought to support.