Treatise Word To A Smuggler
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-word-to-a-smuggler-004 |
| Words | 362 |
And does not your conscience condemn you for
stealing? Then your conscience is asleep. I pray God to
smite you to the heart, and awaken it this day ! 4. “Nay, but my soul is quite happy in the love of God;
therefore I cannot think it is wrong.” I answer, Wrong it
must be, if the Bible is right. Therefore either that love is
a mere delusion, a fire of your own kindling, or God may
have hitherto winked at the times of ignorance. But now
you have the means of knowing better; now light is offered
to you; and if you shut your eyes against the light, the
love of God cannot possibly continue. 5. “But I only buy a little brandy or tea now and then,
just for my own use.” That is, I only steal a little. God
says, “Steal not at all.”
6. “Nay, I do not buy any at all myself; I only send my
child or servant for it.” You receive it of them; do you
not? And the receiver is as bad as the thief. 7. “Why, I would not meddle with it, but I am forced
by my parent, husband, or master.” If you are forced by
your father or mother to rob, you will be hanged neverthe
less. This may lessen, but does not take away, the fault;
for you ought to suffer rather than sin. 8. “But I do not know that it was run.” No! Did not
he that sold it tell you it was? If he sold it under the
common price, he did. The naming the price was telling
you, “This is run.”
9. “But I do not know where to get tea which is not
run.” I will tell you where to get it; you may have it from
those whose tea is duly entered, and who make a conscience
of it. But were it otherwise, if I could get no wine but
what I knew to be stolen, I would drink water; yea, though
not only my health but my life depended upon it; for it is
better to die than to live by thieving. 10.