Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-177 |
| Words | 312 |
So that when its rage subsides, as it very soon does,
(but where it drives into downright madness,) the bias on the
will keeps abating, till all the former habitudes recover their
relaxed tone.” (Page 92.)
Never were reflections more just than these. And whoever
applies them to the matters of fact, which daily occur all over
England, and particularly in London, will easily discern, that
the changes now wrought cannot be accounted for by natural
causes: Not by superstition; for the manners are changed;
the whole life and conversation: Not by fanaticism; for these
changes are so lasting, “as to establish the new system into a
habit:” Not by mere reason; for they are sudden; therefore
they can only be wrought by the Holy Spirit. As to Savanarola’s being a fanatic, or assuming the person
of a Prophet, I cannot take a Popish historian’s word. And
what a man says on the rack proves nothing; no more than his
dying silent. Probably this might arise from shame, and con
sciousness of having accused himself falsely under the torture. “But how does the Spirit, as Comforter, abide with us for
ever? He abides with the Church for ever, as well personally
in his office of Comforter, as virtually in his office of Enlight
ener.” (Page 96.)
Does he not then abide with the Church personally in both
these respects? What is meant by abiding virtually # And
what is the difference between abiding virtually, and abiding
personally? “The question will be, Does he still exercise his office in the
same extraordinary manner as in the Apostles' days?”
(Page 97.)
I know none that affirms it. “St Paul has determined this
question. ‘Charity, says he, “never faileth: But whether
there be prophecies, they shall fail; whether there be tongues,
they shall cease; whether there be knowledge, it shall vanish
away.” (1 Cor. xiii.