Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-254 |
| Words | 387 |
As I hope for
salvation, I have eaten flesh in Lent l”
The same sort of conscience undoubtedly it was, which con
strained the late Most Christian King, in defiance of the most
solemn treaties, yea, of all ties, divine and human, most gra
ciously to murder so many thousands of his quiet, unresisting
subjects; to order his dragoons, wherever they found the Pro
testants worshipping God, to fall in upon them, sword in hand,
without any regard to sex or age. It was conscience, no ques
tion, which induced so many of the Dukes of Savoy, notwith
standing the public faith engaged over and over, to shed the
blood of their loyal subjects, the Vaudois, like water, to ravage
their fields, and destroy their cities. What but conscience could
move the good Catholics of a neighbouring kingdom, in the last
century,tomurder (according to their own account) two hundred
and fifteen thousand Protestants in six months? A costly sacri
fice this! What is a hecatomb, a hundred oxen, to two hun
dred thousand men? And yet what is even this to the whole
number of victims who have been offered up in Europe since
the beginning of the Reformation; partly by war, partly by the
Inquisition, and a thousand other methods of Romish cruelty? No less, within forty years, if the computation of an eminent
writer be just, than five-and-forty millions ! Such is the conscience, such the religion, of Romish Chris
tians! Of their Inquisition (the House of Mercy, as it is most
unfortunately called) I should give some account, but that it
has been largely described by others. Yet it may not be im
proper to give a specimen of that mercy which they show to
those under their care. At the Act of Faith, so called, which
was celebrated some years ago, when Dr. Geddes was in Por
tugal, a prisoner, who had been confined for nine years, was
brought out to execution. Looking up, and seeing, what he
had not seen for so long a time, the sun in the midst of
heaven, he cried out, “How can any one, who sees that
glorious creature, worship any but the God that made it?”
The Father who attended immediately ordered a gag to be
run through his lip, that he might speak no more.