On Attending the Church Service
“The sin of the young men was very great.”
1 Sam. 2:17.
1. The corruption, not only of the heathen world, but likewise of
them that were called Christians, has been matter of sorrow and lamentation to
pious men, almost from the time of the apostles. And hence, as early as the
second century, within a hundred years of St. John’s removal from the earth, men
who were afraid of being partakers of other men’s sins, thought it their duty to
separate from them. Hence, in every age many have retired from the world, lest
they should be stained with the pollutions of it. In the third century many
carried this so far as to run into deserts and turn hermits. But in the
following age this took another turn. Instead of turning hermits, they turned
monks. Religious houses now began to be built in every Christian country; and
religious communities were established, both of men and women, who were entirely
secluded from the rest of mankind; having no intercourse with their nearest
relations, nor with any but such as were confined, generally for life, within
the same walls.
2. This spirit of literally renouncing the world, by retiring
into religious houses, did not so generally prevail after the Reformation. Nay,
in Protestant countries, houses of this kind were totally suppressed. But still
too many serious persons (chiefly incited thereto by those that are commonly
called “mystic writers”) were eager to seclude themselves from the world, and
run into solitude; supposing this to be the best, if not the only way, of
escaping the pollution that is in the world.
3. One thing which powerfully inclined them to separate from the
several churches, or religious societies, to which they had belonged, even from
their infancy, was the belief that no good was to be expected from the
ministration of unholy men. “What!” said they, “Can we think that a holy God
will bless the ministry of wicked men? Can we imagine that they who are
themselves strangers to the grace of God will manifest that grace to others? Is
it to be supposed that God ever did, or ever will, work by the children of the
devil? And if this cannot be supposed, ought we not to ‘come out from among them
and be separate?’” [2 Cor. 6:14]
4. For more than twenty years this never entered into the thought
of those that were called Methodists. But as more and more who had been brought
up Dissenters joined with them, the brought in more and more prejudice against
the Church. In process of time, various circumstances concurred to increase and
confirm it. Many had forgotten that we were all at our first setting out
determined members of the Established Church. Yea, it as one of our original
rules, that every member of our Society should attend the church and sacrament,
unless he had been bred among Christians of any other denomination.
5. In order, therefore, to prevent others from being puzzled and
perplexed, as so many have been already, it is necessary, in the highest degree,
to consider this matter thoroughly; calmly to inquire, whether God ever did
bless the ministry of ungodly men, and whether he does so at this hour. Here is
a plain matter of fact: If God never did bless it, we ought to separate from the
Church; at least where we have reason to believe that the minister is an unholy
man: If he ever did bless it, and does so still, then we ought to continue
therein.
6. Nineteen years ago, we considered this question in our public
Conference at Leeds, — Whether the Methodists ought to separate from the Church;
and after a long and candid inquiry, it was determined, nemine contradicente, that it was not expedient for them to
separate. The reasons were set down at large, and they stand equally good at
this day.
7. In order to put this matter beyond all possible dispute, I
have chosen to speak from these words, which give a fair occasion of observing
what the dealings of God in his Church have been, even from so early a period:
For it is generally allowed that Eli lived at least a thousand years before our
Lord came into the world. In the verses preceding the text we read, (1 Sam. 2:12.) “Now the sons of Eli were sons of
Belial; they knew not the Lord.” They were wicked to an uncommon degree. Their
profane violence, with respect to the sacrifices, is related with all its
shocking circumstances in the following verses. But (what was a greater
abomination still) “they lay with the women that assembled at the door of the
tabernacle of the congregation.”(1 Sam.
2:22.) On both these accounts, “the sin of the young men was very
great; and men abhorred the offering of the Lord.”
8. May I be permitted to make a little digression, in order to
correct a mistranslation in the twenty-fifth verse? In our translation it runs
thus: “They hearkened not unto the voice of their father, because the Lord would
slay them.” Ought it not rather to be rendered, “Therefore the Lord was about to
slay them?” [1 Sam. 2:25] As if he had
said, “The Lord would not suffer their horrid and stubborn wickedness to escape
unpunished; but because of that wickedness, he slew them both in one day, by the
hand of the Philistines.” They did not sin (as might be imagined from the common
translation) because God had determined to slay them; but God therefore
determined to slay them, because they had thus sinned.
9. But to return: Their sin was the more inexcusable because
they could not be ignorant of that dreadful consequence thereof, that, by reason
of their enormous wickedness, “men abhorred the offering of the Lord.” Many of
the people were so deeply offended, that if they did not wholly refrain from the
public worship, yet they attended it with pain; abhorring the Priests while they
honoured the sacrifice.
10. And have we any proof that the Priests who succeeded them
were more holy than them, than Hophni and Phinehas; not only till God permitted
ten of the tribes to be separated from their brethren, and from the worship he
had appointed; but even till Judah, as well as Israel, for the wickedness of the
priests, as well as the people, were carried into captivity?
11. What manner of men they were about the time of the
Babylonish captivity, we learn from various passages in the prophecy of
Jeremiah: From which it manifestly appears, that people and priests wallowed in
all manner of vices. And how little they were amended, after they were brought
back into their own land, we may gather from those terrible words in the
prophecy of Malachi: “And now, O ye priests, this commandment is for you. If ye
will not hear, and if ye will not lay it to heart, to give glory unto my Name,
saith the Lord of Hosts, I will send even a curse upon you, and I will curse
your blessings: Yea, I have cursed them already, because ye would not lay it to
heart. Behold, I will curse your seed, and I will spread dung upon your faces,
even the dung of your solemn feasts; and one shall take you away with it.”
(Mal. 2:1–3.)
12. Such were the priests of God in their several generations,
till he brought the great High Priest into the world! And what manner of men
were they during the time that he ministered upon earth? A large and particular
account of their character we have in the twenty-third chapter of St. Matthew;
[Matt. 23] and a worse character it would be difficult
to find in all the oracles of God. But may it not be said, “Our Lord does not
there direct his discourse to the priests, but to the Scribes and Pharisees?” He
does; but this is the same thing. For the scribes were what we now term Divines,
— the public teachers of the people. And many, if not most, of the Priests,
especially all the strictest sort of them, were Pharisees; so that in giving the
character of the Scribes and Pharisees he gives that of the Priests also.
13. Soon after the pouring out of the Holy Ghost on the day of
Pentecost, in the infancy of the Christian Church, there was indeed a glorious
change. “Great grace was then upon them all,” Ministers as well as people. “The
multitude of them that believed were of one heart and of one soul.” But how
short a time did this continue! How soon did the fine gold become dim! Long
before even the apostolic age expired, St. Paul himself had ground to complain,
that some of his fellow-labourers had forsaken him, having “loved the present
world.” And not long after, St. John reproved divers of the angels, that is, the
ministers, of the churches in Asia, because, even in that early period, their
“works were not found perfect before God.”
14. Thus did “the mystery of iniquity” begin to “work,” in the
Ministers as well as the people, even before the end of the apostolic age. But
how much more powerfully did it work, as soon as those master-builders, the
Apostles, were taken out of the way! Both Ministers and people were then farther
and farther removed from the hope of the gospel. Insomuch that when St. Cyprian,
about an hundred and fifty years after the death of St. John, describes the
spirit and behaviour both of the laity and clergy that were round about him, one
would be ready to suppose he was giving us a description of the present clergy
and laity of Europe. But the corruption which had been creeping in drop by drop,
during the second and third century, in the beginning of the fourth, when
Constantine called himself a Christian, poured in upon the church with a full
tide. And whoever reads the history of the church, from the time of Constantine
to the Reformation, will easily observe that all the abominations of the heathen
world, and, in following ages, of the Mahometans, overflowed every part of it.
And in every nation and city the Clergy were not a whit more innocent than the
laity.
15. “But was there not a very considerable change in the body of
the Clergy, as well as the laity, at the time of the glorious Reformation from
Popery?” Undoubtedly there was; and they were not only reformed from very many
erroneous opinions, and from numberless superstitious and idolatrous modes of
worship, till then prevailing over the Western Church, but they were also
exceedingly reformed with respect to their lives and tempers. More of the
ancient, scriptural Christianity was to be found, almost in every part of
Europe. Yet notwithstanding this, all the works of the devil, all ungodliness
and unrighteousness, sin of every kind, continued to prevail, both over Clergy
and laity, in all parts of Christendom. Even those Clergymen who most warmly
contended about the externals of religion were very little concerned for the
life and power of it; for piety, justice, mercy, and truth.
16. However, it must be allowed, that ever since the
Reformation, and particularly in the present century, the behaviour of the
Clergy in general is greatly altered for the better. And should it be granted,
that, in many parts of the Romish Church, they are nearly the same as they were
before, it must be granted likewise, that most of the Protestant Clergy are far
different from what they were. They have not only more learning of the most
valuable kind, but abundantly much more religion: Insomuch that the English and
Irish Clergy are generally allowed to be not inferior to any in Europe, for
piety, as well as for knowledge.
17. And all this being allowed, what lack they yet? Can anything
be laid to their charge? I wish calmly and candidly to consider this point, in
the fear and in the presence of God. I am far from desiring to aggravate the
defects of my brethren, or to paint them in the strongest colours. Far be it
from me to treat others as I have been treated myself; to return evil for evil,
or railing for railing. But, to speak the naked truth, (not with anger or
contempt, as too many have done,) I acknowledge that many, if not most, of those
that were appointed to minister in holy things, with whom it has been my lot to
converse in almost every part of England or Ireland, for forty of fifty years
last past, have not been eminent either for knowledge or piety. It has been
loudly affirmed, that most of those persons now in connexion with
me, who
believe it their duty to call sinners to repentance, having been taken
immediately from low trades, — tailors, shoemakers, and the like, — are a set of
poor, stupid, illiterate men, that scarce know their right hand from their left:
Yet I cannot but say, that I would sooner cut off my right hand, than suffer one
of them to speak a word in any of our chapels, if I had not reasonable proof
that he had more knowledge in the Holy Scriptures, more knowledge of himself,
more knowledge of God and of the things of God, than nine in ten of the
Clergymen I have conversed with, either at the Universities or elsewhere.
18. In the meantime, I gladly allow that this charge does not
concern the whole body of the Clergy. Undoubtedly there are many Clergymen in
these kingdoms, that are not only free from outward sin, but men of eminent
learning; and, what is infinitely more, deeply acquainted with God. But still I
am constrained to confess, that the far greater part of those Ministers I have
conversed with for above half a century, have not been holy men, not devoted to
God, not deeply acquainted either with God or themselves. It could not be said
that they set their “affections on things above, not on things of the earth;” or
that their desire, and the business of their lives, was, to save their own souls
and those that heard them.
19. I have taken this unpleasing view of a melancholy scene, —
of the character of those who have been appointed of God to be shepherds of
souls for so many ages, — in order to determine this question: “Ought the
children of God to refrain from his ordinances because they that administer them
are unholy men?” a question with which many serious persons have been
exceedingly perplexed. “Ought we not,” say they, “to refrain from the
ministrations of ungodly men? For is it possible that we should receive any good
from the hands of those that know not God? Can we suppose, that the grace of God
was ever conveyed to men by the servants of the devil?”
What saith the Scripture? Let us keep close to this, and we
shall not be misled. We have seen there what manner of men most of these have
been who have ministered in holy things for many ages. Two or three thousand
years ago, we read, “The sons of Eli were sons of Belial; they knew not the
Lord.” But was this a sufficient reason for the Israelites to refrain from their
administrations? It is true they “abhorred the offerings of the Lord” on their
account; and yet they constantly attended them. And do you suppose that Samuel,
holy as he was, ever advised them to do otherwise? Were not the priests, and
public teachers, equally strangers to God, from this time to that of the
Babylonish captivity? Undoubtedly they were. But did Isaiah, or any of the
Prophets, exhort them, for that cause, to forsake the ordinances of God? Were
they not equally ungodly from the time of the Babylonish captivity, to the
coming of Christ? How clearly does this appear, were there no other proof, from
the Prophecies of Jeremiah and Malachi! Yet did either Malachi, or Jeremiah, or
any other of the Prophets, exhort the people to separate themselves from these
ungodly men?
20. But, to bring the matter nearer to ourselves: Never were any
Priests, or public teachers, more corrupt, more totally estranged from God, than
those in the days of our blessed Lord. Were they not mere whited walls? Were not
those that were the best of them painted sepulchres; full of pride, lust, envy,
covetousness, of all ungodliness and unrighteousness? Is not this the account
which our Lord himself, who knew what was in man, gives of them? But did he
therefore refrain from that public service which was performed by these very
men, or did he direct his Apostles so to do? Nay, just the contrary: In
consequence of which, as he constantly attended them himself, so likewise did
his disciples.
21. There is another circumstance in our Lord’s conduct, which
is worthy of our peculiar consideration. He calls to him the twelve, and sends
them forth, two by two, to preach the gospel. (Mark
6:7.) And as they did not go the warfare at their own cost, the very
“devils were subject unto them.” Now, one of these was Judas Iscariot. And did
our Lord know that “he had a devil?” St. John expressly tells us he did. Yet he
was coupled with another of the Apostles, and joined with them all in the same
communion: Neither have we any reason to doubt but God blessed the labour of all
his twelve ambassadors. But why did our Lord send him among them? Undoubtedly
for our instruction: For a standing, unanswerable proof, that he “sendeth by
whom he will send;” that he can and doth send salvation to men even by those who
will not accept of it themselves.
22. Our Lord gives us farther instruction upon this head: In
Matthew 23:1–3, we have
those very remarkable words, “Then Jesus spoke to the multitude, and to his
disciples, saying, The scribes and Pharisees sit in Moses’ chair: All things,
therefore, whatsoever they bid you observe, observe and do; but do not according
to their works: For they say, and do not.” [Matt. 23:1–3] Of these very men, he gives the
blackest character in the following verses. Yet is he so far from forbidding
either the multitude, or his own disciples, to attend their ministrations, that
he expressly commands them so to do, even in those words, “All things whatsoever
they bid you observe, observe and do.” These words imply a command to hear them:
For how could they “observe and do what they bid them, if they did not hear it?
I pray consider this, ye that say of the successors of these ungodly men, “They
say, and do not; therefore, we ought not to hear them.” You see, your Master
draws no such inference; nay, the direct contrary. O be not wiser than your
Master! Follow his advice and do not reason against it!
23. But how shall we reconcile this with the direction given by
St. Paul to the Corinthians? “If any that is called a brother be a fornicator,
or covetous, or an idolater, or a railer, with such an one, no not to eat.”
(1 Cor. 5:11.) How is it reconcilable with that
direction in his Second Epistle, (2 Cor.
6:17, ) “Come out from the midst of them, and be ye separate, saith
the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing?” I answer, The former passage has no
relation at all to the present question. It does not concern Ministers, good or
bad. The plain meaning of it is, Have no intimacy with any that is called a
Christian, and lives in any open sin; — a weighty exhortation, which should be
much attended to by all the children of God. As little does the other passage
refer to Ministers or teachers of any kind. In this the Apostle is exhorting the
children of God to break off all intercourse with the children of the devil. The
words literally are, “Go out from the midst of them, and be ye separate, and
touch not the unclean thing;” intimating that they could not continue united
with them, without being more or less partakers of their sins. We may therefore
boldly affirm, that neither St. Paul, nor any other of the inspired writers,
ever advised holy men to separate from the Church wherein they were, because the
Ministers were unholy.
24. Nevertheless, it is true, that many pious Christians, as was
observed before, did separate themselves from the Church, some even in the
second, and many more in the third, century. Some of these retired into the
desert, and lived altogether alone; others built themselves houses, afterwards
termed convents, and only secluded themselves from the rest of the world. But
what was the fruit of this separation? The same that might easily be foreseen.
It increased and confirmed, in an astonishing degree, the total corruption of
the Church. The salt which was thus heaped up in a corner had effectually lost
its savour. The light which was put under a bushel no longer shone before men.
In consequence of this, ungodliness and unrighteousness reigned without control.
The world, being given up into the hands of the devil, wrought all his works
with greediness; and gross darkness, joined with all manner of wickedness,
covered the whole earth.
25. “But if all this wickedness was not a sufficient reason for
separating from a corrupt church, why did Calvin and Luther, with their
followers, separate from the Church of Rome?” I answer, They did not properly
separate from it; but were violently thrust out of it. They were not suffered to
continue therein, upon any other terms than subscribing to all the errors of
that Church, and joining in all their superstition and idolatry. Therefore this
separation lay at their door. With us it was not a matter of choice, but
of necessity: And if such necessity was now laid upon us, we ought to separate
from any Church under heaven.
26. There were not the same reasons why various bodies of men
should afterwards separate from the Church of England. No sinful terms of
communion were imposed upon them; neither are at this day. Most of them
separated, either because of some opinions, or some modes of worship, which they
did not approve of. Few of them assigned the unholiness either of the Clergy or
laity as the cause of their separation. And if any did so, it did not appear
that they themselves were a jot better than those they separated from.
27. But the grand reason which many give for separating from the
Church, namely, that the Ministers are unholy men, is founded on this assertion:
That the ministration of evil men can do no good; that we may call the
sacraments means of grace; but men who do not receive the grace of God
themselves cannot convey that grace to others. So that we can never expect to
receive the blessing of God through the servants of the devil.
This argument is extremely plausible, and is indeed the
strongest that can be urged. Yet before you allow it to be conclusive, you
should consider a few things.
28. Consider, First, Did the Jewish sacraments convey no saving
grace to the hearers, because they were administered by unholy men? If so, none
of the Israelites were saved from the time of Eli to the coming of Christ. For
their Priests were not a whit better than ours, if they were not much worse. But
who will dare to affirm this? which is no less, in effect, than to affirm, that
all the children of Israel went to hell for eleven or twelve hundred years
together!
29. Did the ordinances, administered in the time of our blessed
Lord, convey no grace to those that attended them? Surely then the Holy Ghost
would not have commended Zacharias and Elizabeth for walking in these
ordinances! If the ministrations of wicked men did no good, would our Lord have
commanded his followers (so far from forbidding them) to attend those of the
Scribes and Pharisees? Observe, again, the remarkable words: (Matt. 23:1.) “Then spake Jesus to the multitude,
and to his disciples, saying, The scribes and Pharisees sit in Moses’ seat,” —
are your appointed teachers; “all, therefore, whatsoever they bid you observe,
that observe and do.” Now, what were these Scribes and Pharisees? Were they not
the vilest of men? Yet these very men he commands them to hear. This command is
plainly implied in those words, “Whatsoever they command you to observe, that
observe and do.” For unless they heard what they said, they could not do it.
30. Consider, a little farther, the dreadful consequences of
affirming that wicked Ministers do no good; that the ordinances administered by
them do not convey saving grace to those that attend them. If it be so, then
well nigh all the Christians from the time of the Apostles to that of the
Reformation are perished! For what manner of men were well nigh all the Clergy
during all those centuries? Consult the history of the church in every age, and
you will find more and more proofs of their corruption. It is true, they have
not been so openly abandoned since; but ever since that happy period there has
been a considerable change for the better in the Clergy as well as the laity.
But still there is reason to fear that even those who now minister in holy
things, who are outwardly devoted to God for that purpose, (yea, and in
Protestant as well as Romish countries,) are nevertheless far more devoted to
the world, to riches, honour, or pleasure, (a few comparatively excepted,) than
they are to God: So that in truth they are as far from Christian holiness as
earth is from heaven. If then no grace is conveyed by the ministry of wicked
men, in what a case is the Christian world! How hath God forgotten to be
gracious! How hath he forsaken his own inheritance! O think not so! Rather say
with our own Church, (though in direct opposition to the Church of Rome, which
maintains, “If the Priest does not minister with a
pure intention,” which
no wicked man can do, “then the sacrament is no sacrament at all,”) the
unworthiness of the Minister doth not hinder the efficacy of God’s ordinance.
The reason is plain, because the efficacy is derived, not from him that
administers, but from Him that ordains it. He does not, will not suffer his
grace to be intercepted, though the messenger will not receive it himself.
31. Another consequence would follow from the supposition that
no grace is conveyed by wicked Ministers; namely, that a conscientious person
cannot be a member of any national Church in the world. For wherever he is, it
is great odds, whether a holy Minister he stationed there; and if there be not,
it is mere lost labour to worship in that congregation. But, blessed be God,
this is not the case; we know by our own happy experience, and by the experience
of thousands, that the word of the Lord is not bound, though uttered by an
unholy minister; and the sacraments are not dry breasts, whether he that
administers be holy or unholy.
32. Consider one more consequence of this supposition, should it
ever be generally received. Were all men to separate from those Churches where
the Minister was an unholy man, (as they ought to do, if the grace of God never
did nor could attend his ministry,) what confusion, what tumults, what
commotions would this occasion throughout Christendom! What evil-surmisings,
heart-burnings, jealousies, envyings, must everywhere arise! What censuring,
tale-bearing, strife, contention! Neither would it stop here; but from evil
words the contending parties would soon proceed to evil deeds; and rivers of
blood would soon be shed, to the utter scandal of Mahometans and Heathens.
33. Let us not then trouble and embroil ourselves and our
neighbours with unprofitable disputations, but all agree to spread, to the
uttermost of our power, the quiet and peaceable gospel of Christ. Let us make
the best of whatever ministry the Providence of God has assigned us. Near fifty
years ago, a great and good man, Dr. Potter, then Archbishop of Canterbury, gave
me an advice for which I have ever since had occasion to bless God: “If you
desire to be extensively useful, do not spend your time and strength in
contending for or against such things as are of a disputable nature; but in
testifying against open notorious vice, and in promoting real, essential
holiness.” Let us keep to this: Leaving a thousand disputable points to those
that have no better business than to toss the ball of controversy to and fro,
let us keep close to our point. Let us bear a faithful testimony, in our several
stations, against all ungodliness and unrighteousness, and with all our might
recommend that inward and outward holiness “without which no man shall see the
Lord!”