Treatise Farther Appeal Part 3
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-farther-appeal-part-3-036 |
| Words | 367 |
But suppose field-preaching to be, in a case of this kind,
ever so expedient or even necessary, yet who will contest with
us for this province? May we not enjoy this quiet and unmo
lested ? Unmolested, I mean, by any competitors: For who is
there among you, brethren, that is willing (examine your own
hearts) even to save souls from death at this price? Would
not you let a thousand souls perish, rather than you would be
the instruments of rescuing them thus? I do not speak now
with regard to conscience, but to the inconveniences that must
OF REASON AND It ELIGION, 23]
accompany it. Can you sustain them, if you would 9 Can
you bear the summer sun to beat upon your naked head? Can you suffer the wintry rain or wind, from whatever
quarter it blows? Are you able to stand in the open air
without any covering or defence when God casteth abroad his
snow like wool, or scattereth his hoar-frost like ashcs? And
yet these are some of the smallest inconveniences which ac
company field-preaching. Far beyond all these, are the contra
diction of sinners, the scoffs both of the great vulgar and the
small; contempt and reproach of every kind; often more than
verbal affronts, stupid, brutal violence, sometimes to the hazard
of health, or limbs, or life. Brethren, do you envy us this
honour? What, I pray, would buy you to be a field-preacher? Or what, think you, could induce any man of common sense
to continue therein one year, unless he had a full conviction
in himself that it was the will of God concerning him ? Upon this conviction it is (were we to submit to these
things on any other motive whatsoever, it would furnish you
with a better proof of our distraction than any that has yet
been found) that we now do, for the good of poor souls, what
you cannot, will not, dare not do: And we desire not that
you should. But this one thing we may reasonably desire of
you,--Do not increase the difficulties, which are already so
great, that, without the mighty power of God, we must sink
under them.