Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-042 |
| Words | 383 |
Do the generality of
Counsellors walk by this rule, and by the rules of justice,
mercy, and truth? Do they use their utmost endeavours, do
they take all the care which the nature of the thing will
allow, to be assured that a cause is just and good before they
undertake to defend it? Do they never knowingly defend a
bad cause, and so make themselves accomplices in wrong and
oppression? Do they never deliver the poor into the hand of
his oppressor, and see that such as are in necessity have not
right? Are they not often the means of withholding bread
from the hungry, and raiment from the naked, even when it
is their own, when they have a clear right thereto, by the law
both of God and man? Is not this effectually done in many
cases by protracting the suit from year to year? I have
known a friendly bill preferred in Chancery by the consent of
all parties; the manager assuring them, a decree would be
procured in two or three months. But although several
years are now elapsed, they can see no land yet; nor do I
know that we are a jot nearer the conclusion than we were
the first day. Now, where is the honesty of this? Is it not
picking of pockets, and no better? A Lawyer who does not
finish his client’s suit as soon as it can be done, I cannot
allow to have more honesty (though he has more prudence)
than if he robbed him on the highway. “But whether Lawyers are or no, sure the Nobility and
Gentry are all men of reason and religion.” If you think
they are all men of religion, you think very differently from
your Master, who made no exception of time or nation when
he uttered that weighty sentence, “How difficultly shall they
that have riches enter into the kingdom of heaven l’’ And
when some who seem to have been of your judgment were
greatly astonished at his saying, instead of retracting or soft
ening, he adds, “Verily I say unto you, It is easier for a
camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man
to enter into the kingdom of God.” You think differently
from St.