Treatise Farther Appeal Part 2
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-farther-appeal-part-2-033 |
| Words | 399 |
Do not
destroy thy own soul with an everlasting destruction | 1t was
made for God. Do not give it into the hands of that old mur
derer of men! Thou canst not stupify it long. When it leaves
the body, it will awake and sleep no more. Yet a little while,
and it launches out into the great deep, to live, and think, and
feel for ever. And what will cheer thy spirit there, if thou hast
not a drop of water to cool thy tongue? But the die is not
yet cast: Now cry to God, and iniquity shall not be thy ruin. 18. Of old time there were also those that “were at ease in
Zion, that lay upon beds of ivory, and stretched themselves
upon their couches, that ate the lambs out of the flock, and
calves out of the stall.” But how inelegant were these ancient
epicures !“Lambs out of the flock, and calves out of the stall!”
Were these the best dainties they could procure? How have
we improved since Jeroboam’s time! Who can number the
varieties of our tables? or the arts we have “to enlarge the
pleasure of tasting?” And what are their couches, or beds
of ivory, to the furniture of our apartments? or their “chains,
and bracelets, and mantles, and changeable suits of apparel,”
to the ornaments of our persons? What comparison is there
between their diversions and ours? Look at Solomon in all his
glory, and yet may we not question, whether he was not an
utter stranger to the pleasures of the chase ? And, notwith
standing his forty thousand horses, did he ever see a race in
his life? He “made gardens, and orchards, and pools of
water; he planted vineyards, and built houses; ” but had he
one theatre among them all? No. This is the glory of later
times. Or had he any conception of a ball, an assembly, a
masquerade, or a ridotto ? And who imagines that all his
instruments of music, put together, were any more to be com
pared to ours, than his or his father’s rumbling Hebrew verses,
To the soft sing-song of Italian lays. In all these points, our pre-eminence over the Jews is much
every way.-
Yea, and over our own ancestors, as well as theirs. But is
this our glory, or our shame? Were Edward III.