Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-162 |
| Words | 391 |
I tell all men just the contrary. I may then safely leave all mankind to judge, whether a
single article of the charge against me has yet been made
good. So much for the first charge, that I am a madman. Now for the second, that I am a knave. 5. The proof is short: “Every enthusiast is a knave; but
he is an enthusiast; therefore he is a knave.” I deny both
the first and second proposition. Nay, the first is proved
thus: “Enthusiasm must always be accompanied with craft
and knavery.” (Page 213.) It is often so, but not always;
for there may be honest enthusiasts. Therefore the whole
account of that odd combination which follows is ingenious,
but proves nothing. (Pages 214-218.)
Yet I must touch upon one or two parts of it. “An en
thusiast thinks he is dispensed with in breaking, nay, that he
is authorized to break, the common laws of morality.” Does
every enthusiast? Then I am none; for I never thought any
such thing. I believe no man living is authorized to break,
or dispensed with in breaking, any law of morality. I know,
whoever (habitually) breaks one of the least of these, “shall
be called least in the kingdom of heaven.”
“Can any but an enthusiast believe, that he may use guile
to promote the glory of God?” Yes, ten thousand that are
no enthusiasts firmly believe this. How few do we find that
do not believe it! that do not plead for officious lies! How
few will subscribe to St. Augustine's declaration, (to which I
assent with my whole heart) “I would not tell a wilful lie,
to save the souls of the whole world !”
But to return: “‘The wisdom from above is without par
tiality and without hypocrisy.” Partiality consists in dispens
ing an unequal measure in our transactions with others;
hypocrisy, in attempting to cover that unequal measure by
prevarication and false pretences.”
The former of these definitions is not clear; the latter nei
ther clear nor adequate to the defined. Butlet this pass. My partiality is now the point. What
are the proofs of it? (1.) “His followers are always the chil
dren of God, his opposers the children of the devil.” (Page
220.) Neither so, nor so. I never affirmed either one or
the other universally.