Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-437 |
| Words | 255 |
“Had they stood, can we think any of them would have died;
much less every one of them? And, especially, that half the
human race should have been doomed to die before seven
years old? before they reach the tenth part of the present age
of man, or have done anything in life worth living for?”
(Page 57.)
“But let us proceed to other miseries that attend us, and
hasten us down to the grave:--
“Think next of the multitudes that are racked day and night
by the gout and stone, the colic and rheumatism, and all man
ner of acute and painful diseases; and then say, Would a mer
ciful God have contrived these torments for sinless creatures? Think of the dismal scenes of war and bloodshed that have
by times overspread all nations. Cast your thought on a field
of battle, where thousands of men are destroyed like brute
beasts, and perish by sharp and bloody strokes, or by the fatal
engines of death. See thousands more lie on the cold ground,
with their flesh and limbs battered and torn, wounded and
panting in extreme anguish, till the murmuring soul takes its
flight. Are these the signals of their Maker’s love, and of his
image in which they were created?” (Page 58.)
“Think of the numbers that are swallowed up in the mighty
waters, by the rage of stormy winds and seas; review the mul
titudes which have been swept away by the pestilence, or con
sumed by the tedious agonies of famine.