Treatise Letter To Dr Conyers Middleton
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-dr-conyers-middleton-088 |
| Words | 376 |
with all his wisdom and philosophy, . What points of knowledge did he gain *
That life is sacred all,--and vain :
Sacred, how high, and vain, how low,
[e could not tell; but died to know. 9. βHe died to know !β and so must you, unless you are
now a partaker of Christian faith. O consider this ! Nay,
and consider, not only how little you know of the immensity
of the things that are beyond sense and time, but how uncer
tainly do you know even that little ! How faintly glimmering
a light is that you have ! Can you properly be said to know
any of these things? Is that knowledge any more than bare
conjecture? And the reason is plain. You have no senses
suitable to invisible or eternal objects. What desiderata
then, especially to the rational, the reflecting, part of man
kind are these? A more extensive knowledge of things
invisible and eternal; a greater certainty in whatever know
ledge of them we have; and, in order to both, faculties
capable of discerning things invisible. 10. Is it not so? Let impartial reason speak. Does not
every thinking man want a window, not so much in his
neighbour's, as in his own, breast? He wants an opening
there, of whatever kind, that might let in light from eternity. He is pained to be thus feeling after God so darkly, so
uncertainly; to know so little of God, and indeed so little of
any beside material objects. He is concerned, that he must
see even that little, not directly, but in the dim, sullied glass
*
of sense; and consequently so imperfectly and obscurely,
that it is all a mere enigma still. 11. Now, these very desiderata faith supplies. It gives a
more extensive knowledge of things invisible, showing what
eye had not seen, nor ear heard, neither could it before enter
into our heart to conceive. And all these it shows in the clear
est light, with the fullest certainty and evidence. For it does not
leave us to receive our notices of them by mere reflection from
the dull glass of sense; but resolves a thousand enigmas of the
highest concern by giving faculties suited to things invisible.