Wesley Corpus

The Danger of Riches

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typesermon
Year1781
Passage IDjw-sermon-087-013
Words381
Reign of God
11. O ye that desire or endeavour to be rich, hear ye the word of the Lord! Why should ye be stricken any more Will not even experience teach you wisdom Will ye leap into a pit with your eyes open Why should you any more "fall into temptation" It cannot be but temptation, will beset you, as long as you are in the body. But though it should beset you on every side, why will you enter into it There is no necessity for this: it is your own voluntary act and deed. Why should you any more plunge yourselves into a snare, into the trap Satan has laid for you, that is ready to break your bones in pieces to crush your soul to death After fair warning, why should you sink any more into "foolish and hurtful desires" desires as inconsistent with reason as they are with religion itself; desires that have done you more hurt already than all the treasures upon earth can countervail. 12. Have they not hurt you already, have they not wounded you in the tenderest part, by slackening, if not utterly destroying, your "hunger and thirst after righteousness" Have you now the same longing that you had once, for the whole image of God Have you the same vehement desire as you formerly had, of "going on unto perfection" Have they not hurt you by weakening your faith Have you now faith's "abiding impression, realizing things to come" Do you endure, in all temptations, from pleasure or pain, "seeing Him that is invisible" Have you every day, and every hour, an uninterrupted sense of his presence Have they not hurt you with regard to your hope Have you now a hope full of immortality Are you still big with earnest expectation of all the great and precious promises Do you now "taste the powers of the world to come" Do you "sit in heavenly places with Christ Jesus" 13. Have they not so hurt you, as to stab your religion to the heart Have they not cooled (if not quenched) your love to God This is easily determined. Have you the same delight in God which you once had Can you now say, I nothing want beneath, above; Happy, happy in thy love!