Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-466 |
| Words | 375 |
Yet, so
far I can see, certain and incontestable. Such, I fear, is the
case of those of the human race who cover at present the far
greatest part of the globe.” (Page 416.)
“Then I ran back in my thoughts four or five thousand
years, and said within myself, What multitudes, in every age
of the world, have been born in these deplorable circumstances! They are inured from their birth to barbarous customs and
impious practices; they have an image of the life of brutes and
devils wrought in them by their early education; they have
had the seeds of wretched wickedness sown, planted, and cul
tivated in them, by the savage instructions of those that went
efore them; and their own imitation of such horrible ex
amples has confirmed the mischief, long before they knew or
heard of the true God, if they have heard of Him to this day. Scarce any of them have admitted one thoughtful inquiry,
whether they follow the rules of reason, or whether they are
in the way of happiness and peace, any more than their parents
before them. As they are born in this gross darkness, so they
grow up in the vile idolatries, and all the shameful abomina
tions, of their country; and go on to death in the same course. Nor have they light enough, either from without or within,
to make them ask seriously, ‘Is there not a lie in my right
hand? Am I not in the way of destruction?’” (Page 417.)
“St. Peter says indeed, that ‘in every nation he that
feareth God and worketh righteousness is accepted of him;’
but if there were very few (among the Jews) who feared God,
very few in those learned nations of the Gentiles; how much
fewer, may we suppose, are in those barbarous countries, which
have no knowledge either divine or human l’’ (Page 419.)
“But would this have been the case of those unhappy na
tions, both of the parents and their children, in a hundred
long successions, had they been such a race of creatures as
they came out of the hand of the Creator? If those children
had been guiltless in the eye of God, could this have been
their portion?