Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-278 |
| Words | 400 |
They would regard
nothing done in the usual way. All this was lost upon them. The ordinary preaching of the word of God, they would not
even deign to hear. So the devil made sure of these careless
ones; for who should pluck them out of his hand? Then God
was moved to jealousy, and went out of the usual way to save
the souls which he had made. Then, over and above what was
ordinarily spoken in his name in all the houses of God in the
land, he commanded a voice to cry in the wilderness, “Pre
pare ye the way of the Lord. The time is fulfilled. The king
dom of heaven is at hand. Repent ye, and believe the gospel.”
23. Consider coolly, if it was not highly expedient that
something of this kind should be. How expedient, were it
only on the account of those poor sinners against their own
souls who, to all human appearance, were utterly inaccessible
every other way ! And what numbers of these are still to be
found, even in or near our most populous cities ! What mul
titudes of them were, some years since, both in Kingswood,
and the Fells about Newcastle! who, week after week, spent
the Lord’s day, either in the alc-house, or in idle diversions,
and never troubled themselves about going to church, or to
any public worship at all. Now, would you really have
desired that these poor wretches should have sinned on till
they dropped into hell? Surely you would not. But by
what other means was it possible they should have been
plucked out of the fire? Had the Minister of the parish
preached like an angel, it had profited them nothing; for
they heard him not. But when one came and said, “Yonder
is a man preaching on the top of the mountain,” they ran in
droves to hear what he would say; and God spoke to their
hearts. It is hard to conceive anything else which could
have reached them. Had it not been for field-preaching, the
uncommonness of which was the very circumstance that
recommended it, they must have run on in the error of their
way, and perished in their blood. 24. But suppose field-preaching to be, in a case of this kind,
ever so expedient or even necessary, yet who will contest with
us for this province?