Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-014 |
| Words | 400 |
I would desire those gentlemen who are so very severe
upon the Israelites for killing the children of the Canaanites,
at their entrance into the land of Canaan, to spend a few
thoughts on this. Not to insist, that the Creator is the
absolute Lord and Proprietor of the lives of all his creatures;
that, as such, he may at any time, without the least injustice,
take away the life which he has given; that he may do this in
whatsoever manner, and by whatever instruments, he pleases;
and consequently may inflict death on any creature by whom
he pleases, without any blame either to him or them;-not
to insist, I say, on this, or many other things which might
be offered, let us at present fix on this single consideration:
The Israelites destroyed the children for some weeks or
months; the Greeks and Romans for above a thousand years. The one put them out of their pain at once, doubtless by the
shortest and easiest way; the others were not so compas
sionate as to cut their throats, but left them to pine away by
a lingering death. Above all, the Hebrews destroyed only
the children of their enemies; the Romans destroyed their
own. O fair pattern indeed ! Where shall we find a parallel
to this virtue 2 I read of a modern, who took up a child that
fell from its mother’s womb, and threw it back into the flames. (Pure, genuine human nature !) And reason good,--for it
was the child of a heretic. But what evil, ye worthies of
ancient Rome, did ye find in your own children? I must
still say, this is without a parallel even in the Papal history. 16. They were implacable, unmerciful. Witness (one or
two instances of ten thousand) poor grey-headed Hannibal,
(whom, very probably, had we any other accounts of him than
those which were given by his bitterest enemies, we should have
reverenced as one of the most amiable of men, as well as the
most valiant of all the ancient Heathens,) hunted from nation to
nation, and never quitted, till he fell by his own hand. Wit
ness the famous suffrage, Delenda est Carthago; “Let Car
thage be destroyed.” Why? It was imperii aemula ; “the
rival of the Roman glory.” These were open, undeniable
evidences of the public, national placability and mercy of the
Romans.