Wesley Corpus

Wesley Collected Works Vol 8

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typetreatise
YearNone
Passage IDjw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-208
Words393
Reign of God Catholic Spirit Universal Redemption
Let him judge for himself how the patients there receive God’s fatherly visitation; especially there, because mercy also is mixed with judgment; so that it is evident “the Lord loveth whom he chasteneth.” Go then into any ward, either of men or women; look narrowly from one end to the other: Are they humbling themselves under the hand of God? Are they trem bling under a sense of his anger? Are they praising him for his love? Are they exhorting one another not to faint when they are rebuked of him ? How do nine in ten of them spend the time, that important time, from morning to evening? Why, in such a manner, that you would not easily learn, from thence, whether they were Christians, Pagans, or Mahometans. Is there any deeper distress than this to be found? Is there a greater affliction than the loss of health? Perhaps there is, --the loss of liberty, especially as it is sometimes circum stanced. You may easily be convinced of this, by going into either Ludgate or Newgate. What a scene appears as soon as you enter ! The very place strikes horror into your soul. How dark and dreary ! How unhealthy and unclean How void of all that might minister comfort ! But this is little, compared to the circumstances that attend the being confined in this shadow of death. See that poor wretch, who was formerly in want of nothing, and encompassed with friends and acquaintance, now cut off, perhaps, by an unexpected stroke, from all the cheerful ways of men; ruined, forsaken of all, and delivered into the hands of such masters, and such companions! I know not, if, to one of a thinking, sensible turn of mind, there could be anything like it on this side hell. What effect then has this heavy visitation of God on those who lie under it for any time? There is perhaps an excep tion here and there; but, in general, they are abandoned to all wickedness, utterly divested of all fear of God, and all reverence to man; insomuch, that they commonly go out of that school completely fitted for any kind or degree of villany, perfectly brutal and devilish, thoroughly furnished for every evil word and work. 30. Are our countrymen more effectually reclaimed when danger and distress are joined ?