Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-599 |
| Words | 396 |
“Now, the knowledge of the Spirit of
God in yourself is as perceptible as covetousness.” Perhaps
so; for this is as difficultly perceptible as any temper of the
human soul. “And liable to no more delusion.” Indeed it
need not ; for this is liable to ten thousand delusions. You add: “His spirit is more distinguishable from all
other spirits, than any of your natural affections are from one
another.” (Page 199.) Suppose joy and grief: Is it more
distinguishable from all other spirits, than these are from one
another? Did any man ever mistake grief for joy? No, not
from the beginning of the world. But did none ever mistake
nature for grace? Who will be so hardy as to affirm this? But you set your pupil as much above the being taught by
books, as being taught by men. “Seek,” say you, “for help
no other way, neither from men, nor books; but wholly
leave yourself to God.” (Spirit of Love, Part II., p. 225.)
But how can a man “leave himself wholly to God,” in the
total neglect of his ordinances? The old Bible way is, to
“leave ourselves wholly to God,” in the constant use of all
the means he hath ordained. And I cannot yet think the
new is better, though you are fully persuaded it is. “There
are two ways,” you say, “ of attaining goodness and virtue;
the one by books or the ministry of men, the other by an
inward birth. The former is only in order to the latter.”
This is most true, that all the externals of religion are in
order to the renewal of our soul in righteousness and true
holiness. But it is not true, that the external way is one,
and the internal way another. There is but one scriptural
way, wherein we receive inward grace, through the outward
means which God hath appointed. Some might think that when you advised, “not to seek help
from books,” you did not include the Bible. But you clear up
this, where you answer the objection, of your not esteeming the
Bible enough. You say, “How could you more magnify John
the Baptist, than by going from his teaching, to be taught by
that Christ to whom he directed you? Now, the Bible can
have no other office or power, than to direct you to Christ.