Treatise Letter To Mr Baily
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-mr-baily-030 |
| Words | 299 |
15. Ought these things so to be? Are they right before
God or man? Are they to the honour of our nation? I
appeal unto Caesar; unto His gracious Majesty King George,
and to the Governors under him, both in England and Ireland. I appeal to all true, disinterested lovers of this their native
country. Is this the way to make it a flourishing nation? happy at home, amiable and honourable abroad? Men of
Ireland, judge | Nay, and is not there not some weight in
that additional consideration,--that this is not a concern
of a private nature? Rather, is it not a common cause ? If the dams are once broken down, if you tamely give up
the fundamental laws of your country, if these are openly
violated in the case of your fellow-subjects, how soon may
the case be your own | For what protection then have any
of you left for either your liberty or property? What security
for either your goods or lives, if a riotous mob is to be both
judge, jury, and executioner? 16. Protestants! What is become of that liberty of conscience
for which your forefathers spent their blood? Is it not an empty
shadow, a mere, unmeaning name, if these things are suffered
among you? Romans, such of you as are calm and candid
men, do you approve of these proceedings? I cannot think
you yourselves would use such methods of convincing us, if we
think amiss. Christians of all denominations, can you reconcile
this to our royal law, “Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy
self?” O tell it not in Gath ! Let it not be named among
those who are enemies to the Christian cause; lest that worthy
name whereby we are called be still more blasphemed among