Wesley Collected Works Vol 11
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-11-015 |
| Words | 317 |
Quo mare, quo tellus, correptaque regia caeli
Ardeat; et mundi moles operosa laboret 3+
What shall we do? do now, that none of these things
may come upon us unawares? We are wisely and diligently
• What security is there against all this, upon the infidel hypothesis ? But
upon the Christian, there is abundant security : For the Scripture prophecies arc
not yet fulfilled. + This quotation from Ovid is thus translated by Drydcn :
“When all his blazing worlds above shall burn,
And all the inferior globc to cinders turn ?"-En IT. providing for our defence against one enemy; with such a
watchful wisdom and active diligence, as is a comfort to every
honest Englishman. But why should we not show the same
wisdom and diligence in providing against all our enemies? And if our wisdom and strength be sufficient to defend us,
let us not seek any further. Let us without delay recruit our
forces, and guard our coasts against the famine, and murrain,
and pestilence; and still more carefully against immoderate
rains, and winds, and lightnings, and earthquakes, and
comets; that we may no longer be under any painful appre
hensions of any present or future danger, but may smile,
Secure, amidst the jar of elements,
The wreck of matter, and the crush of worlds ! But if our own wisdom and strength be not sufficient to
defend us, let us not be ashamed to seek farther help. Let
us even dare to own we believe there is a God; nay, and
not a lazy, indolent, epicurean deity, who sits at ease upon
the circle of the heavens, and neither knows nor cares what
is done below ; but one who, as he created heaven and
carth, and all the armies of them, as he sustains them all
by the word of his power, so cannot neglect the work of his
own hands.