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The poetical works of John and Charles Wesley | ||
53
AN EPISTLE To the Reverend Mr. JOHN WESLEY,
By CHARLES WESLEY, Presbyter of the Church of England.
55
My first and last unalienable friend,
A brother's thoughts with due regard attend,
A brother, still as thy own soul beloved,
Who speak to learn, and write to be reproved:
Far from the factious undiscerning crowd,
Distress'd I fly to thee, and think aloud;
I tell thee, wise and faithful as thou art,
The fears and sorrows of a burden'd heart,
The workings of (a blind or heavenly) zeal,
And all my fondness for the Church I tell,
The Church whose cause I serve, whose faith approve,
Whose altars reverence, and whose name I love.
A brother's thoughts with due regard attend,
A brother, still as thy own soul beloved,
Who speak to learn, and write to be reproved:
Far from the factious undiscerning crowd,
Distress'd I fly to thee, and think aloud;
I tell thee, wise and faithful as thou art,
The fears and sorrows of a burden'd heart,
The workings of (a blind or heavenly) zeal,
And all my fondness for the Church I tell,
The Church whose cause I serve, whose faith approve,
Whose altars reverence, and whose name I love.
But does she still exist in more than sound?
The Church—alas! where is she to be found?
Not in the men, however dignified,
Who would her creeds repeal, her laws deride,
Her Prayers expunge, her Articles disown,
And thrust the Filial Godhead from His throne.
Vainest of all, their antichristian plea,
Who cry The temple of the Lord are we!
“We have the church, nor will we quit our hold.”—
Their hold of what? The altar? or the gold?
The altar's their's, who will not light the fire,
Who spurn the labour, but accept the hire;
Who not for souls, but their own bodies care,
And leave to underlings the task of prayer?
As justly might our christen'd heathens claim,
Thieves, drunkards, whoremongers, the sacred name;
Or rabble-rout succeed in their endeavour,
With High Church and Sacheverel for ever!
As Arians be for orthodox allow'd,
For saints the sensual, covetous, and proud,
And Satan's synagogue for the true church of God.
The Church—alas! where is she to be found?
Not in the men, however dignified,
Who would her creeds repeal, her laws deride,
Her Prayers expunge, her Articles disown,
And thrust the Filial Godhead from His throne.
56
Who cry The temple of the Lord are we!
“We have the church, nor will we quit our hold.”—
Their hold of what? The altar? or the gold?
The altar's their's, who will not light the fire,
Who spurn the labour, but accept the hire;
Who not for souls, but their own bodies care,
And leave to underlings the task of prayer?
As justly might our christen'd heathens claim,
Thieves, drunkards, whoremongers, the sacred name;
Or rabble-rout succeed in their endeavour,
With High Church and Sacheverel for ever!
As Arians be for orthodox allow'd,
For saints the sensual, covetous, and proud,
And Satan's synagogue for the true church of God.
Then let the zealous orthodox appear,
And challenge the contested character:
Those, who renounce the whole Dissenting tribe,
Creeds, Articles, and Liturgy subscribe;
Their parish church who never once have miss'd,
At schism rail, and hate a Methodist;
“The company of faithful souls” are these,
Who strive to 'stablish their own righteousness,
But count the faith Divine a madman's dream?
Howe'er they to themselves may pillars seem,
Of Christ, and of His church they make no part;
They never knew the Saviour in their heart.
And challenge the contested character:
Those, who renounce the whole Dissenting tribe,
Creeds, Articles, and Liturgy subscribe;
Their parish church who never once have miss'd,
At schism rail, and hate a Methodist;
“The company of faithful souls” are these,
Who strive to 'stablish their own righteousness,
But count the faith Divine a madman's dream?
Howe'er they to themselves may pillars seem,
Of Christ, and of His church they make no part;
They never knew the Saviour in their heart.
But those who in their heart have Jesus known,
Believers justified by faith alone,
Shall we not them the faithful people own?
In whom the power of godliness is seen,
Must we not grant the Methodists The men?
No: though we granted them from schism free,
From wild enthusiastic heresy,
From every wilful crime, and moral blot,
Yet still the Methodists The Church are not:
A single faculty is not the soul,
A limb the body, or a part the whole.
Believers justified by faith alone,
Shall we not them the faithful people own?
In whom the power of godliness is seen,
Must we not grant the Methodists The men?
57
From wild enthusiastic heresy,
From every wilful crime, and moral blot,
Yet still the Methodists The Church are not:
A single faculty is not the soul,
A limb the body, or a part the whole.
Whom then, when every vain pretender's cast,
With truth may we account The Church at last?
“All who have felt, deliver'd from above,
The holy faith that works by humble love;
All that in pure religious worship join,
Led by the Spirit, and the Word Divine,
Duly the Christian mysteries partake,
And bow to governors for conscience sake;”
In these the Church of England I descry,
And vow with these alone to live and die.
With truth may we account The Church at last?
“All who have felt, deliver'd from above,
The holy faith that works by humble love;
All that in pure religious worship join,
Led by the Spirit, and the Word Divine,
Duly the Christian mysteries partake,
And bow to governors for conscience sake;”
In these the Church of England I descry,
And vow with these alone to live and die.
Yet while I warmly for her faith contend,
Shall I her blots and blemishes defend?
Inventions added in a fatal hour,
Human appendages of pomp and power,
Whatever shines in outward grandeur great,
I give it up—a creature of the State,
Wide of the church, as hell from heaven is wide,
The blaze of riches, and the glare of pride,
The vain desire to be entitled Lord,
The worldly kingdom, and the princely sword.
Shall I her blots and blemishes defend?
Inventions added in a fatal hour,
Human appendages of pomp and power,
Whatever shines in outward grandeur great,
I give it up—a creature of the State,
Wide of the church, as hell from heaven is wide,
The blaze of riches, and the glare of pride,
The vain desire to be entitled Lord,
The worldly kingdom, and the princely sword.
But should the bold usurping spirit dare
Still higher climb, and sit in Moses' chair,
Power o'er my faith and conscience to maintain,
Shall I submit, and suffer it to reign?
Call it The Church, and darkness put for light,
Falsehood with truth confound, and wrong with right?
No: I dispute the evil's haughty claim,
The spirit of the world be still its name,
Whatever call'd by man, 'tis purely evil,
'Tis Babel, Antichrist, and Pope, and Devil!
Still higher climb, and sit in Moses' chair,
Power o'er my faith and conscience to maintain,
Shall I submit, and suffer it to reign?
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Falsehood with truth confound, and wrong with right?
No: I dispute the evil's haughty claim,
The spirit of the world be still its name,
Whatever call'd by man, 'tis purely evil,
'Tis Babel, Antichrist, and Pope, and Devil!
Nor would I e'er disgrace the Church's cause
By penal edicts, and compulsive laws,
(Should wicked powers, as formerly, prevail
To' exclude her choicest children from her pale,)
Or force my brethren in her forms to join,
As every jot and tittle were Divine,
As all her Orders on the mount were given,
And copied from the hierarchy of heaven.
Let others for the shape and colour fight
Of garments short or long, or black or white;
Or fairly match'd, in furious battle join
For and against the sponsors and the sign;
Copes, hoods, and surplices The Church miscall,
And fiercely run their heads against the wall:
Far different care is mine; o'er earth to see
Diffused her true essential piety,
To see her lift again her languid head,
Her lovely face from every wrinkle freed,
Clad in the simple, pure, primeval dress,
And beauteous with internal holiness,
Wash'd by the Spirit and the Word from sin,
Fair without spot, and glorious all within.
By penal edicts, and compulsive laws,
(Should wicked powers, as formerly, prevail
To' exclude her choicest children from her pale,)
Or force my brethren in her forms to join,
As every jot and tittle were Divine,
As all her Orders on the mount were given,
And copied from the hierarchy of heaven.
Let others for the shape and colour fight
Of garments short or long, or black or white;
Or fairly match'd, in furious battle join
For and against the sponsors and the sign;
Copes, hoods, and surplices The Church miscall,
And fiercely run their heads against the wall:
Far different care is mine; o'er earth to see
Diffused her true essential piety,
To see her lift again her languid head,
Her lovely face from every wrinkle freed,
Clad in the simple, pure, primeval dress,
And beauteous with internal holiness,
Wash'd by the Spirit and the Word from sin,
Fair without spot, and glorious all within.
Alas! how distant now, how desolate,
Our fallen Zion, in her captive state
Deserted by her friends, and laugh'd to scorn,
By inbred foes, and bosom vipers torn,
With grief I mark their rancorous despite;
With horror hear the clamorous Edomite;
“Down with her to the ground,” who fiercely cries,
“No more to lift her head, no more to rise!
Down with her to the pit, to Tophet doom
A church emerging from the dregs of Rome!
Can there in such a church salvation be?
Can any good come out of Popery?”
Ye moderate Dissenters—come and see!
Our fallen Zion, in her captive state
59
By inbred foes, and bosom vipers torn,
With grief I mark their rancorous despite;
With horror hear the clamorous Edomite;
“Down with her to the ground,” who fiercely cries,
“No more to lift her head, no more to rise!
Down with her to the pit, to Tophet doom
A church emerging from the dregs of Rome!
Can there in such a church salvation be?
Can any good come out of Popery?”
Ye moderate Dissenters—come and see!
See us, when from the Papal fire we came,
Ye frozen sects, and warm you at the flame,
Where for the truth our host of martyrs stood,
And clapp'd their hands, and seal'd it with their blood!
Behold Elijah's fiery steeds appear,
Discern the chariot of our Israel near!
That flaming car, for whom doth it come down?
The spouse of Christ?—or whore of Babylon?
For martyrs, by the Scarlet Whore pursued
Through racks and fires, into the arms of God.
These are the church of Christ, by torture driven
To thrones triumphant with their friends in heaven;
The church of Christ (let all the nations own),
The church of Christ and England—is but one!
Ye frozen sects, and warm you at the flame,
Where for the truth our host of martyrs stood,
And clapp'd their hands, and seal'd it with their blood!
Behold Elijah's fiery steeds appear,
Discern the chariot of our Israel near!
That flaming car, for whom doth it come down?
The spouse of Christ?—or whore of Babylon?
For martyrs, by the Scarlet Whore pursued
Through racks and fires, into the arms of God.
These are the church of Christ, by torture driven
To thrones triumphant with their friends in heaven;
The church of Christ (let all the nations own),
The church of Christ and England—is but one!
Yet vainly of our ancestors we boast,
We who their faith and purity have lost,
Degenerate branches from a noble seed,
Corrupt, apostatized, and doubly dead:
Will God in such a church His work revive!
It cannot be that these dry bones should live.
We who their faith and purity have lost,
Degenerate branches from a noble seed,
Corrupt, apostatized, and doubly dead:
Will God in such a church His work revive!
It cannot be that these dry bones should live.
60
But who to teach Almighty grace shall dare?
How far to suffer, and how long to spare?
Shall man's bold hand our candlestick remove,
Or cut us off from our Redeemer's love?
Shall man presume to say, “There is no hope:
God must forsake, for we have given her up;
To save a church so near the gates of hell,
This is a thing—with God impossible!”
How far to suffer, and how long to spare?
Shall man's bold hand our candlestick remove,
Or cut us off from our Redeemer's love?
Shall man presume to say, “There is no hope:
God must forsake, for we have given her up;
To save a church so near the gates of hell,
This is a thing—with God impossible!”
And yet this thing impossible is done,
The Lord hath made His power and mercy known,
Strangely revived our long forgotten hope,
And brought out of their graves His people up.
Soon as we prophesied in Jesu's name,
The noise, the shaking, and the Spirit came!
The bones spontaneous to each other cleaved,
The dead in sin His powerful word received,
And felt the quickening breath of God, and lived.
Dead souls to all the life of faith restored,
(The house of Israel now) confess the Lord;
His people and His church, out of their graves
They rise, and testify that Jesus saves,
That Jesus gives the multiplied increase,
While one becomes a thousand witnesses.
Nor can it seem to souls already freed
Incredible, that God should wake the dead,
Should farther still exert His saving power,
And call, and quicken twice ten thousand more,
Till our whole Church a mighty host becomes,
And owns the Lord, the Opener of their tombs.
The Lord hath made His power and mercy known,
Strangely revived our long forgotten hope,
And brought out of their graves His people up.
Soon as we prophesied in Jesu's name,
The noise, the shaking, and the Spirit came!
The bones spontaneous to each other cleaved,
The dead in sin His powerful word received,
And felt the quickening breath of God, and lived.
Dead souls to all the life of faith restored,
(The house of Israel now) confess the Lord;
His people and His church, out of their graves
They rise, and testify that Jesus saves,
That Jesus gives the multiplied increase,
While one becomes a thousand witnesses.
Nor can it seem to souls already freed
Incredible, that God should wake the dead,
Should farther still exert His saving power,
And call, and quicken twice ten thousand more,
Till our whole Church a mighty host becomes,
And owns the Lord, the Opener of their tombs.
Servant of God, my yokefellow and friend,
If God by us to the dry bones could send,
By us out of their graves His people raise,
By us display the wonders of His grace,
Why should we doubt His zeal to carry on
By abler instruments the work begun,
To build our temple that in ruins lay,
And reconvert a nation in a day,
To bring our Zion forth, as gold refined,
With all His saints in closest union join'd,
A friend, a nursing-mother to mankind?
If God by us to the dry bones could send,
61
By us display the wonders of His grace,
Why should we doubt His zeal to carry on
By abler instruments the work begun,
To build our temple that in ruins lay,
And reconvert a nation in a day,
To bring our Zion forth, as gold refined,
With all His saints in closest union join'd,
A friend, a nursing-mother to mankind?
Surely the time is come, for God to rise,
And turn upon our Church His glorious eyes,
To show her all the riches of His grace,
And make her throughout all the earth a praise:
For O! His servants think upon her stones,
And in their hearts His pleading Spirit groans:
It pitieth them to see her in the dust,
Her lamp extinguish'd, and her gospel lost:
Lost—till the Lord, the great Restorer came,
Extinguish'd—till His breath revived the flame:
His arm descending lifted up the sign,
His light appearing bade her rise and shine,
Bade her glad children bless the heavenly ray,
And shout the prospect of a gospel-day.
And turn upon our Church His glorious eyes,
To show her all the riches of His grace,
And make her throughout all the earth a praise:
For O! His servants think upon her stones,
And in their hearts His pleading Spirit groans:
It pitieth them to see her in the dust,
Her lamp extinguish'd, and her gospel lost:
Lost—till the Lord, the great Restorer came,
Extinguish'd—till His breath revived the flame:
His arm descending lifted up the sign,
His light appearing bade her rise and shine,
Bade her glad children bless the heavenly ray,
And shout the prospect of a gospel-day.
Meanest and least of all her sons, may I
Unite with theirs my faith and sympathy!
Meanest, and least—yet can I never rest,
Or quench the flame enkindled in my breast:
Whether a spark of nature's fond desire,
That warms my heart, and sets my soul on fire,
Or a pure ray from yon bright throne above,
That melts my yearning bowels into love;
Even as life, it still remains the same,
My fervent zeal for our Jerusalem;
Stronger than death, and permanent as true,
And purer love, it seems, than nature ever knew.
Unite with theirs my faith and sympathy!
Meanest, and least—yet can I never rest,
Or quench the flame enkindled in my breast:
Whether a spark of nature's fond desire,
That warms my heart, and sets my soul on fire,
Or a pure ray from yon bright throne above,
That melts my yearning bowels into love;
62
My fervent zeal for our Jerusalem;
Stronger than death, and permanent as true,
And purer love, it seems, than nature ever knew.
For her, whom her apostate sons despise,
I offer up my life in sacrifice,
My life in cherishing a parent spend,
Fond of my charge, and faithful to the end:
Not by the bonds of sordid interest tied,
Not gain'd by wealth or honours to her side,
But by a double birth her servant born:
Vile for her sake, exposed to general scorn,
Thrust out as from her pale, I gladly roam,
Banish'd myself to bring her wanderers home.
While the lost sheep of Israel's house I seek,
By bigots branded for a schismatic,
By real schismatics disown'd, decried,
As a blind bigot on the Church's side:
Yet well content, so I my love may show,
My friendly love, to be esteem'd her foe,
Foe to her order, governors, and rules:
The song of drunkards, and the sport of fools;
Or, what my soul doth as hell fire reject,
A Pope—a Count—and leader of a sect.
I offer up my life in sacrifice,
My life in cherishing a parent spend,
Fond of my charge, and faithful to the end:
Not by the bonds of sordid interest tied,
Not gain'd by wealth or honours to her side,
But by a double birth her servant born:
Vile for her sake, exposed to general scorn,
Thrust out as from her pale, I gladly roam,
Banish'd myself to bring her wanderers home.
While the lost sheep of Israel's house I seek,
By bigots branded for a schismatic,
By real schismatics disown'd, decried,
As a blind bigot on the Church's side:
Yet well content, so I my love may show,
My friendly love, to be esteem'd her foe,
Foe to her order, governors, and rules:
The song of drunkards, and the sport of fools;
Or, what my soul doth as hell fire reject,
A Pope—a Count—and leader of a sect.
Partner of my reproach, who justly claim
The larger portion of the glorious shame,
My pattern in the work and cause Divine,
Say is thy heart as bigoted as mine?
Wilt thou with me in the old Church remain,
And share her weal or woe, her loss, her gain,
Spend in her service thy last drop of blood,
And die—to build the temple of our God?
The larger portion of the glorious shame,
My pattern in the work and cause Divine,
Say is thy heart as bigoted as mine?
Wilt thou with me in the old Church remain,
And share her weal or woe, her loss, her gain,
Spend in her service thy last drop of blood,
And die—to build the temple of our God?
63
Thy answer is in more than words express'd,
I read it through the window in thy breast;
In every action of thy life I see
Thy faithful love, and filial piety.
To save a sinking Church, thou dost not spare
Thyself, but lavish all thy life for her:
For Zion's sake thou wilt not hold thy peace,
That she may grow, impatient to decrease,
To rush into thy grave that she may rise,
And mount with all her children to the skies.
I read it through the window in thy breast;
In every action of thy life I see
Thy faithful love, and filial piety.
To save a sinking Church, thou dost not spare
Thyself, but lavish all thy life for her:
For Zion's sake thou wilt not hold thy peace,
That she may grow, impatient to decrease,
To rush into thy grave that she may rise,
And mount with all her children to the skies.
What then remains for us on earth to do,
But labour on with Jesus in our view,
Who bids us kindly for His patients care,
Calls us the burden of His church to bear,
To feed His flock, and nothing seek beside,
And nothing know, but Jesus crucified?
But labour on with Jesus in our view,
Who bids us kindly for His patients care,
Calls us the burden of His church to bear,
To feed His flock, and nothing seek beside,
And nothing know, but Jesus crucified?
When first sent forth to minister the word,
Say, did we preach ourselves, or Christ the Lord?
Was it our aim disciples to collect,
To raise a party, or to found a sect?
No; but to spread the power of Jesus' name,
Repair the walls of our Jerusalem,
Revive the piety of ancient days,
And fill the earth with our Redeemer's praise.
Say, did we preach ourselves, or Christ the Lord?
Was it our aim disciples to collect,
To raise a party, or to found a sect?
No; but to spread the power of Jesus' name,
Repair the walls of our Jerusalem,
Revive the piety of ancient days,
And fill the earth with our Redeemer's praise.
Still let us steadily pursue our end,
And only for the faith Divine contend,
Superior to the charms of power and fame,
Persist through life, invariably the same:
And if indulged our heart's desire to see,
Jerusalem in full prosperity,
To pristine faith, and purity restored;
How shall we bless our good redeeming Lord,
Gladly into His hands our children give,
Securely in their mother's bosom leave,
With calm delight accept our late release,
Resign our charge to God, and then depart in peace!
And only for the faith Divine contend,
Superior to the charms of power and fame,
Persist through life, invariably the same:
And if indulged our heart's desire to see,
Jerusalem in full prosperity,
64
How shall we bless our good redeeming Lord,
Gladly into His hands our children give,
Securely in their mother's bosom leave,
With calm delight accept our late release,
Resign our charge to God, and then depart in peace!
FINIS.
The poetical works of John and Charles Wesley | ||