Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-176 |
| Words | 398 |
But “Jeshurun forsook God which made him, and lightly
esteemed the Rock of his salvation.” And did not England too? Ask ye of the generations of old, inquire from the rising of the
sun to the going down thereof, whether there was ever a people
called by his name, which had less of “God in all their
thoughts;” who, in the whole tenor of their behaviour, showed
so light an “esteem for the Rock of their salvation.”
Could there ever be stronger cause for God to cry out,
“Hear, O heavens, and give ear, O earth !” For hath he not
“nourished and brought us up” as his children? And yet,
how have we “rebelled against ’’ him | If Israel of old “did
not know God,” if his ancient people “did not consider,”
was this peculiar to them ? Are not we also under the very
same condemnation? Do we, as a people, know God? Do
we consider him as God? Do we tremble at the presence of
his power? Do we revere his excellent majesty? Do we
remember, at all times, “God is here ! He is now reading
my heart; He spieth out all my ways; there is not a word
in my tongue but He knoweth it altogether?” Is this the
character of us English Christians; the mark whereby we are
known from the Heathen? Do we thus know God; thus
consider his power, his love, his all-seeing eye? Rather, are
we not likewise a “sinful nation, who have forgotten him days
without number; a people laden with iniquity, continually
forsaking the Lord, and provoking the Holy One of Israel?”
2. There is indeed a wide difference in this respect between
the Jews and us: They happened (if I may so speak) to forget
God, because other things came in their way; but we design to
forget him; we do it of set purpose, because we do not like to
1emember him. From the accounts given by Jeremiah, we
have reason to believe that when that people were most deeply
corrupted, yet the greatest men in the nation, the Ministers
of State, the Nobles and Princes of Judah, talked of God some
times; perhaps, as frequently as upon any other subject. But
is it so among us? Rather, is it not a point of good-breeding
to put God far away, out of our sight?