Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-455 |
| Words | 382 |
A creature of a more exalted kind
Was wanting yet; and then was man design'd:
Conscious of thought, of more capacious breast,
For empire form’d, and fit to rule the rest. Whether with particles of heavenly fire
The God of nature did his soul inspire,
And moulding up a mass in shape like ours,
Form'd a bright image of the all-ruling powers,
And while the mute creation downward bend
Their sight, and to their earthly mother tend,
Man looks aloft, and with erected eyes
Beholds his own hereditary skies.’
“Now, if man was formed in the image of God, certainly he
was a holy and a happy being. But what is there like holi
ness or happiness now found, running through this rank of
creatures? Are there any of the brutal kind that do not more
regularly answer the design of their creation? Are there any
brutes that we ever find acting so much below their original
character, on the land, in the water, or the air, as mankind
does all over the earth? Or are there any tribes among them,
through which pain, vexation, and misery are so plentifully
distributed as they are among the children of men?” (Pages
359, 360, 361.)
“Were this globe of earth to be surveyed from one end to
the other by some spirit of a superior order, it would be found
such a theatre of folly and madness, such a maze of mingled
vice and misery, as would move the compassion of his refined
nature to a painful degree, were it not tempered by a clear sight
of that wise and just Providence which strongly and sweetly
works in the midst of all; and will, in the end, bring good out
of all evil, and justify the ways of God with man.” (Page 362.)
A PARTICULAR VieW of ThE MISERIES OF MAN. “BUT, to wave for the present the sins and follies of man
kind, may we not infer from his miseries alone, that we are
degenerate beings, bearing the most evident marks of the
displeasure of our Maker?” (Page 863.)
“View the histories of mankind; and what is almost all his
tory but a description of the wretchedness of men, under the
mischiefs they bring upon themselves, and the judgments of the
great God?