Wesley Collected Works Vol 11
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-11-198 |
| Words | 400 |
Can any hide himself in
secret places that I shall not see him? Do not I fill heaven
and earth? Whither wilt thou go then from his Spirit? Or whither
wilt thou flee from his presence? If thou go up into heaven,
God is there: If thou go down into hell, he is there also. If thou take the wings of the morning, and remain in the
uttermost parts of the sea; even there his hand shall touch
thee, and his right hand shall hold thee. God seeth thee now; his eyes are upon thee; he observes
all thy thoughts; he compasseth thy path; he counteth all
thy steps; he is 2cquainted with all thy ways; by him thy
actions are weighed; nor is there a word in thy tongue but
he knoweth it altogether. And does not power belong unto God; yea, all power in
heaven and in earth? Is he not able, even while thou
readest or hearest these words, to crush thee into nothing? Can he not just now crumble thee into dust; or bid the
earth open and swallow thee up? O do not set him at
nought ! do not provoke him thus I do not fly in his face! Can he not, in a moment, cast forth his lightnings and tear
thee; shoot out his arrows and consume thee? What
hinders him from cutting thee off this instant; sending thee
now, now, quick into hell? Would God do thee any wrong therein? What! in giving
thee the request of thy own lips? What words were those
thou spakest but now? Did not God hear? Why, thou
didst pray to God to send thee to hell ! Thou didst ask him
to damn thy soul! How, art thou in love with damnation? Art thou in haste to dwell with everlasting burnings; to be
day and night tormented in that flame, without a drop of
water to cool thy tongue? Dost thou pray for this? I pray God it may never be
either my lot or thine. Alas, my brother? What, if God
take thee at thy word ' What, if he say, Be it unto thee
even as thou wilt! What, if he give thee thy wish, and let
thee drop into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his
angels! I had rather thou shouldest go to the paradise of God. Hadst not thou?