Treatise Farther Appeal Part 2
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-farther-appeal-part-2-025 |
| Words | 400 |
“And the one hundred and ninth Canon binds you to pre
sent all manner of vice, profaneness, and debauchery, requiring
you faithfully to present all and every the offenders in adul
tery, whoredom, drunkenness, profane swearing, or any other
uncleanness and wickedness of life. It is therefore a part of
that office to which you are solemnly sworn, to present, not only
all drunkenness and tippling, but profane swearing, lewdness,
and whatsoever else is contrary to Christian piety. So that
if you know any of your parishioners, be his quality or cir
cumstances what they will, that is guilty of any of these, you
are obliged to present him at the next visitation, or you are
yourselves guilty of perjury. And the twenty-sixth Canon
expresses such an abhorrence of a Churchwarden's neglect in
this matter, that it forbids the Minister, in any wise, to admit
you to the holy communion, ‘who, as the words of the Canon
are, ‘having taken your oaths to present all such offences in
your several parishes, shall, notwithstanding your said oaths,
either in neglecting or refusing to present, wittingly and will
ingly, desperately and irreligiously, incur the horrid guilt of
perjury.’”
And who is clear? I appeal to every Minister of a parish,
from one end of England to the other, how many Church
wardens have you known, in twenty, thirty, forty years, who
did not thus “desperately and irreligiously incur the horrid
guilt of perjury?”
10. I proceed to perjuries of another kind. The oath
taken by all Captains of ships, every time they return from a
trading voyage, runs in these terms:
“I do swear, that the entry above written, now tendered
and subscribed by me, is a just report of the name of my ship,
its burden, bulk, property, number and country of mariners,
the present Master and voyage; and that it doth farther contain
a true account of my lading, with the particular marks, num
bers, quantity, quality, and consignment of all the goods and
merchandises in my said ship, to the best of my knowledge;
and that I have not broke bulk, or delivered any goods out
of my said ship, since her loading in. So help me God.”
These words are so clear, express, and unambiguous, that
they require no explanation. But who takes this plain oath,
without being knowingly and deliberately forsworn ? Does one
Captain in fifty?