Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-022 |
| Words | 383 |
They speak much
of their beloved ones ; with whom they say they converse both
day and night. But their beloved ones teach them to eat and
drink from morning to night, and, in a manner, from night to
morning; for they rise at any hour of the night when they
wake, and eat and drink as much as they can, and sleep again. Their beloved ones likewise expressly command them to torture
and burn all their prisoners. Their manner of doing it is this:
They hold lighted canes to their arms and legs, and several parts
of their body, for some time, and then for a while take them
away. They also stick burning pieces of wood in their flesh;
in which condition they keep them from morning to evening. Such are at present the knowledge and virtue of the native
Heathens, over another fourth of the known world. 4. In Asia, however, we are informed that the case is widely
different. For although the Heathens bordering on Europe,
the thousands and myriads of Tartars, have not much to boast
either as to knowledge or virtue; and although the numerous
little nations under the Mogul, who retain their original Hea
thenism, are nearly on a level with them, as are the inhabitants
of the many large and populous islands in the eastern seas;
yet we hear high encomiums of the Chinese, who are as numer
ous as all these together; some late travellers assuring us, that
China alone has fifty-eight million of inhabitants. Now, these
have been described as men of the deepest penetration, the
highest learning, and the strictest integrity; and such doubtless
they are, at least with regard to their understanding, if we will
believe their own proverb: “The Chinese have two eyes, the
Europeans one, and other men none at all.”
And one circumstance, it must be owned, is much in their
favour, -they live some thousand miles off; so that if it were
affirmed, that every Chinese had literally three eyes, it would be
difficult for us to disprove it. Nevertheless, there is room to
doubt even of their understanding; nay, one of the arguments
often brought to prove the greatness, to me clearly demon
strates the littleness, of it; namely, the thirty thousand letters
of their alphabet.