Treatise Farther Appeal Part 2
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-farther-appeal-part-2-045 |
| Words | 398 |
Are they
ashamed when they have committed abomination;” when they
have openly profaned the day of the Lord; when they have
committed lewdness; or when they have uttered such curses
and blasphemies as are not heard of among the Heathens? Nay, “they are not at all ashamed, neither can they blush.”
And though God send unto them all his servants, rising up
early and sending them, yet “will they not hear; they harden
their neck; they do worse than their fathers.”
What, then, can “God do more for his vineyard which he
hath not done?” He hath long tried us with mercies,
“giving rain and fruitful seasons, filling us with the flour of
wheat.” But still “this revolting and rebellious people say
not, Let us now fear the Lord our God.” Nay, they gave him
no thanks for all his mercies; they did not even acknowledge
them to be his gift. They did not see the hand of God in any
of these things; they could account for them another way. O
ye unwise, when will ye understand? Know ye not yet, there
is a God that ruleth the world? What did ye see with your
eyes? Was the “race to the swift, or the battle to the
strong?” Have ye forgotten Dettingen already? Does not
England know that God was there? Or suppose your con
tinuance in peace, or success in war, be the mere result of
your own wisdom and strength; do ye command the sun and
the clouds also ? Can ye pour out or “stay the bottles of
heaven?” But let it all be nature, chance, anything,-so
God may have no hand in governing the earth ! 29. Will his judgments bring us to a better mind? Do we
“hear the rod, and Him that has appointed it?” Let us observe:
What fruit do we find in those who are “even consumed by
means of his heavy hand?” Let any one that desires to be
clearly satisfied herein visit the hospitals of this city. Let
him judge for himself how the patients there receive God’s
fatherly visitation; especially there, because mercy also is
mixed with judgment; so that it is evident “the Lord loveth
whom he chasteneth.” Go then into any ward, either of men
or women; look narrowly from one end to the other: Are they
humbling themselves under the hand of God?