Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-154 |
| Words | 291 |
The same rule I follow now, both at London, Bristol,
and Newcastle-upon-Tyne; concluding the service at every
place, winter and summer, before six in the morning; and not
ordinarily beginning to preach till near seven in the evening. Now, do you who make this objection work longer, through
out the year, than from six to six? Do you desire that the
generality of people should? or can you count them idle that
work so long? Some few are indeed accustomed to work longer. These I
advise not to come on week-days; and it is apparent, that they
take this advice, unless on some rare and extraordinary occasion. But I hope none of you who turn them out of their employ
ment have the confidence to talk of my making them idle ! Do you (as the homely phrase is) cry wh-- first? I admire
your cunning, but not your modesty. So far am I from either causing or encouraging idleness, that
an idle person, known to be such, is not suffered to remain in
any of our societies; we drive him out, as we would a thief or a
murderer. “To show all possible diligence,” (as well as frugal
ity) is one of our standing rules; and one, concerning the
observance of which we continually make the strictest inquiry. 11. “But you drive them out of their senses. You make
them mad.” Nay, then they are idle with a vengeance. This
objection, therefore, being of the utmost importance, deserves
our deepest consideration. And, First, I grant, it is my earnest desire to drive all the
world into what you probably call madness; (I mean, inward
religion;) to make them just as mad as Paul when he was so
accounted by Festus.