Treatise Address To The Clergy
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-address-to-the-clergy-019 |
| Words | 387 |
This was not your
motive of acting. It was not the desire of doing more good,
whether to the souls or bodies of men; it was not the love of
God: (You know it was not; your own conscience is as a
thousand witnesses.) But it was “the love of money,” and
“the desire of other things,” which animated you in this
pursuit. If, then, the word of God is true, you are in
darkness still: It fills and covers your soul. I might add, a larger income does not necessarily imply
a capacity of doing more spiritual good. And this is the
highest kind of good. It is good to feed the hungry, to
clothe the naked: But it is a far nobler good to “save
souls from death,” to “pluck” poor “brands out of the
burning.” And it is that to which you are peculiarly called,
and to which you have solemnly promised to “bend all your
studies and endeavours.” But you are by no means sure,
that, by adding a second living to your first, you shall be
more capable of doing good in this kind, than you would
have been had you laid out all your time, and all your
strength, on your first flock. “However, I shall be able to do more temporal good.”
You are not sure even of this. “If riches increase, they are
increased that eat them.” Perhaps your expenses may rise
proportionably with your income. But if not, if you have a
greater ability, shall you have a greater willingness, to do
good? You have no reason in the world to believe this. There are a thousand instances of the contrary. How many
have less will when they have more power ! Now they have
more money, they love it more; when they had little, they
did their “diligence gladly to give of that little; ” but
since they have had much, they are so far from “giving
plenteously,” that they can hardly afford to give at all. “But by my having another living, I maintain a valuable
man, who might otherwise want the necessaries of life.” I
answer, (1.) Was this your whole and sole motive in seeking
that other living? If not, this plea will not clear you from
the charge; your eye was not single.