Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-070 |
| Words | 390 |
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. What can they think, but that this is the
most shocking violation of the Christian rule, “Thou shalt
love thy neighbour as thyself;” the most open affront to all
justice, and even common humanity; the most glaring insult
upon the common sense and reason of mankind, which has
lately appeared in the world? If you say, “But I have proved the charge upon Mr. Whitefield;” admit you have, (which I do not allow,) Mr. Whitefield is not the Methodists; no, nor the societies under
his care; they are not a third, perhaps not a tenth, part of
the Methodists. What then can excuse your ascribing their
faults, were they proved, to the whole body? You indict ten
men. Suppose you prove the indictment upon one, will you
therefore condemn the other nine? Nay, let every man bear
his own burden, since every man must give an account of
himself to God. I had occasion once before to say to an opponent, “You
know not to show mercy.” Yet that gentleman did regard
truth and justice. But you regard neither mercy, justice, nor
truth. To vilify, to blacken, is your one point. I pray God
it may not be laid to your charge 1 May He show you mercy,
though you show none ! I am, Sir,
Your friend and well-wisher,
To
IN ANSWER To HIS LORDSBIP's LATE LETTER. MY LoRD,
IN my late Letter to your Lordship I used no ceremony;
(I suppose it was not expected from one who was so deeply
injured;) and I trust I used no rudeness: If I did, I am ready
to ask your Lordship’s pardon. That Letter” related to a matter of fact published on your
Lordship's authority, which I endeavoured to falsify, and your
Lordship now again endeavours to support. The facts alleged are, First, that I told Mrs. Morgan, at
Mitchel, “You are in hell; you are damned already.” Secondly,
that I asked her to live upon free cost.