The New Creation
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | sermon |
| Year | 1785 |
| Passage ID | jw-sermon-064-004 |
| Words | 204 |
11. It has been already observed that the calm, placid air will be no more disturbed by storms and tempests. There will be no more meteors, with their horrid glare, affrighting the poor children of men. May we not add, (though at first it may sound like a paradox,) that there will be no more rain It is observable that there was none in Paradise; a circumstance which Moses particularly mentions: (Gen. 2:5, 6:) "The Lord God had not caused it to rain upon the earth. -- But there went up a mist from the earth," which then covered up the abyss of waters, "and watered the whole face of the ground," with moisture sufficient for all the purposes of vegetation. We have all reason to believe that the case will be the same when paradise is restored. Consequently there will be no more clouds or fogs; but one bright, refulgent day. Much less will there be any poisonous damps, or pestilential blasts. There will be no Sirocco in Italy; no parching or suffocating winds in Arabia; no keen north-east winds in our own country,
Shattering the graceful locks of yon fair trees;
but only pleasing, healthful breezes,
Fanning the earth with odoriferous wings.