Treatise Letter To Dr Conyers Middleton
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-dr-conyers-middleton-074 |
| Words | 398 |
+ Kaureo Savars opio 6evros kara raw ötöaakovrov, m oxals ouoMo'yevrov To ovoua
rs Xpiss, muets wavlaxs kai agraçoueða kal 515aokouev. El Be kai vuels ws ex8pot
evlevéeoffe rotoče tois Aoyous, s wheov tu 5vvagóe ts poveveiv.-Just. Mart. Apol. 1,
page 69. stands against you in full force. For such a public appeal to
their bitterest enemies must exclude all reasonable suspicion
of fraud, in the case of the primitive miracles. 6. You tell us, it is objected, Thirdly, “that no suspicion
of fraud can reasonably be entertained against those who
exposed themselves, even to martyrdom, in confirmation of
the truth of what they taught.” (Ibid.)
In order to invalidate this objection, you assert, that some
of the primitive Christians might expose themselves to
martyrdom, out of mere obstinacy; others, from a desire of
glory; others, from a fear of reproach; but the most of all,
from the hope of a higher reward in heaven; especially, as they
believed the end of the world was near, and that the Martyrs
felt no pain in death. “All which topics,” you say, “when
displayed with art, were sufficient to inflame the multitude to
embrace any martyrdom.” (Pages 200-204, 208.)
This appears very plausible in speculation. But fact and
experience will not answer. You are an eloquent man, and
are able to display any topic you please with art enough. Yet if you was to try, with all that art and eloquence, to
persuade by all these topics, not a whole multitude, but one
simple, credulous ploughman, to go and be shot through the
head; I am afraid, you would scarce prevail with him, after
all, to embrace even that easy martyrdom. And it might be
more difficult still to find a man who, either out of obstinacy,
fear of shame, or desire of glory, would calmly and
deliberately offer himself to be roasted alive in Smithfield. 7. Have you considered, Sir, how the case stood in our
own country, scarce two hundred years ago? Not a
multitude indeed, and yet not a few, of our own countrymen
then expired in the flames. And it was not a general
persuasion among them, that Martyrs feel no pain in death. That these have feeling, as well as other men, plainly
appeared, in the case of Bishop Ridley, crying out, “I cannot
burn, I cannot burn l” when his lower parts were consumed.