Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-216 |
| Words | 395 |
Not by anything
new,--that is utterly needless; but barely by repeating the
answer which convinced a serious Clergyman many years
ago:
“TULLAMORE, May 4, 1748. “REvEREND SIR,
“I HAVE at present neither leisure nor inclination to enter
into a formal controversy; but you will give me leave just to
offer a few loose hints relating to the subject of our last night's
conversation :
“l. Seeing life and health are things of so great import
ance, it is, without question, highly expedient that Physicians
should have all possible advantages of learning and education. “2. That trial should be made of them by competent
judges, before they practise publicly. “3. That, after such trial, they be authorized to practise
by those who are empowered to convey that authority. REV. M. ft. FLEURY. 183
“4. And that, while they are preserving the lives of others,
they should have what is sufficient to sustain their own. . “5. But supposing a gentleman bred at the University in
Dublin, with all the advantages of education, after he has
undergone all the usual trials, and then been regularly autho
rized to practise:
“6. Suppose, I say, this Physician settles at for some
years, and yet makes no cures at all; but, after trying his
skill on five hundred persons, cannot show that he has healed
one; many of his patients dying under his hands, and the
rest remaining just as they were before he came :
“7. Will you condemn a man who, having some little skill
in physic, and a tender compassion for those who are sick or
dying all around him, cures many of those, without fee or
reward, whom the Doctor could not cure? “8. At least, did not, (which is the same thing as to the
case in hand,) were it only for this reason,--because he did
not go to them, and they would not come to him? “9. Will you condemn him because he has not learning,
or has not had an University education? “What then? He cures those whom the man of learning
and education cannot cure. “10. Will you object, that he is no Physician, nor has any
authority to practise? “I cannot come into your opinion. I think, Medicus est
qui medetur; ‘he is a Physician who heals;” and that every
man has authority to save the life of a dying man.