Treatise Farther Appeal Part 1
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-farther-appeal-part-1-097 |
| Words | 393 |
Not by contributing
a penny a week, (the usual contribution in our societies,) and
letting that alone when they please, when there is any shadow
of reason to suppose they cannot afford it. You will not say
any are brought to beggary by this. Not by gifts to me; for I
receive none; save (sometimes) the food I eat. And public
collections are nothing to me. That it may evidently appear
they are not, when any such collection is made, to clothe the
poor, or for any other determinate purpose, the money is both
received and expended before many witnesses, without ever
going through my hands at all. And then, likewise, all possi
ble regard is had to the circumstances of those who contribute
anything. And they are told over and over, “If there be a
willing mind, it is accepted according to that a man hath.”
But where are all these families that have been brought to
beggary? How is it that none of them is forthcoming? Are
they all out of town Then, indeed, I am in no danger of
clearing myself from their indictment. It is the easiest thing of
a thousand, for one at Newcastle to say that I have beggared
him and all his kindred. If one of the long-bearded men on
Tyne-Bridge were to say so just now, I could not readily con
fute him. But why will you not bring a few of these to tell me
so to my face? I have not found one that would do this yet. They pray you would have them excused. I remember a man coming to me with a doleful countenance,
putting himself into many lamentable postures, gaping as wide
as he could, and pointing to his mouth, as though he would say
he could not speak. I inquired of his companion, what was the
matter; and was informed, he had fallen into the hands of the
Turks, who had used him in a barbarous manner, and cut out
his tongue by the roots. I believed him. But when the man
had had a cheerful cup, he could find his tongue as well as ano
ther. I reflected, How is it that I could so readily believe that
tale? The answer was easy: “Because it was told of a
Turk.” My friend, take knowledge of your own case.