Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-459 |
| Words | 394 |
It is
the pain of hunger which makes food so relishing; the pain of
weariness that renders sleep so refreshing. And as for the
blessings of love and friendship, among neighbours and kindred,
do they not often produce as much vexationassatisfaction; not,
indeed, of themselves, but by reason of the endless humours
and follies, errors and passions, of mankind?” (Page 373.)
“Again: Do not the very pleasures of the body prove the
ruin of ten thousand souls? They may be used with
innocence and wisdom; but the unruly appetites and passions
of men continually turn into a curse what God originally
designed for a blessing.” (Page 374.)
“Think again how short and transient are the pleasures
of life in comparison of the pains of it! How vanishing the
sweetest sensations of delight! But, in many persons and
families, how many are the days, the months, the years, of
fatigue, or pain, or bitter sorrow ! What pleasure of the
animal frame is either as lasting, or as intense, as the pain
of the gout or stone? How small is the proportion of sensible
pleasure to that of pain, or trouble, or uneasiness! And
how far is it over-balanced by the maladies or miseries, the
fears or sorrows, of the greatest part of mankind |
“As for intellectual pleasures, how few are there in the
world who have any capacity for them ! and among those
few, how many differences and contentions! How many
crossing objections, bewildered inquiries, and unhappy
mistakes, are mingled with the enjoyment so that ‘He who
increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow,” saith the wisest of
men; and upon the whole computation, he writes on this
also, “Vanity and vexation of spirit.”
“To talk, then, of real happiness to be enjoyed in this life,
(abstracted from the foretaste of another,) is contrary to all the
common sense and experience of everythinking man. Without
this ‘taste of the powers of the world to come,” I know not what
wise man would willingly come into these scenes of mortality,
or go through them with any patience.” (Pages 376, 377.)
“What, to be trained up from infancy under so many una
voidable follies, prejudices, and wretched delusions, through the
power of flesh and sense! to be sunk into such gross ignorance
both of our souls, our better selves, and of the glorious Being
that made us!