Treatise Seasonable Address To Great Britain
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-seasonable-address-to-great-britain-007 |
| Words | 393 |
But rather let them wish, with an eminent
Prophet, (an admirable way of showing our love to our country,
and doing it the most effectual service 1) “O that my head
were waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears, that I might
weep day and night for the slain of the daughter of my people!”
and with Christ himself, the Inspirer of the Prophets, “when
he beheld the rebellious “city, weep over it!”
But, it may be, you are of a different complexion. You
“fear not the Lord, neither regard the operation of his
hands.” Your case, I fear, is too similar to his, who of old
said, “Who is the Lord, that I should obey him?” But He
is, though you know him not, the God of your life, your
health, your strength, and all your mercies. It is “through
him you live, move, and have your being; ” and is therefore
altogether worthy of all you have and all you are. “Acquaint
yourself with him, and be at peace; and thereby good shall
come unto thee,” Till this is the case, it is morally impossible
that you should be a true patriot, a real lover of your country. You may indeed assume the sounding title; but it is an
empty name. You may in word mightily contend for your
country’s good; but, while you are a slave to sin, you are an
enemy to God, and your country too. But let the time past
suffice. Be henceforth, not only in word, but in deed and in
truth, a patriot. Put away the accursed thing, the evil that
is found in you; so shall you love your country as your own
soul, and prevent the fearful end of both.-
That we may do this, and that it may please infinite Wisdom
to succeed our attempts, I would beg leave to pass from the
Second to the First cause. Here I would fix my foot, as on
a sure and solid foundation that will stand for ever. The
holy Scriptures give us ample accounts of the fall and rise
of the greatest monarchies. It is simply this: They rose
by virtue; but they fell by vice. “Righteousness” alone
“exalteth a nation; but sin is a reproach to any people.”
And this ever will be the case, till the end of all things.