Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-525 |
| Words | 376 |
How often do men
give themselves a loose in those things, wherein if God had left
them at liberty, they would have bound up themselves! And
is not this a repeating of our father’s folly, that men will rather
climb for forbidden fruit, than gather what Providence offers
to them, when they have God’s express allowance for it? “(2.) Is it not natural to us, to care for the body, at the
expense of the soul? This was one ingredient in the sin of
our first parents. (Gen. iii. 6.) O how happy might we be,
if we were but at half the pains about our souls, which we
bestow upon our bodies ! if that question, ‘What must I do
to be saved?” did but run near so often through our minds,
as those, ‘What shall we eat? What shall we drink? Wherewithal shall we be clothed ?”
“(3.) Is not every one by nature discontent with his present
lot, or with some one thing or other in it? Some one thing
is always missing; so that man is a creature given to change. If any doubt of this, let them look over all their enjoyments,
and, after a review of them, listen to their own hearts, and they
will hear a secret murmuring for want of something. Since
the hearts of our first parents wandered from God, their pos
terity have a natural disease, which Solomon calls, ‘the
wandering of desire; literally, ‘the walking of the soul.”
(Eccles. vi. 9.) This is a sort of diabolical trance, wherein
the soul traverseth the world, feeds itself with a thousand airy
nothings, snatcheth at this and the other imagined excellency;
goes here and there and everywhere, except where it should
go. And the soul is never cured of this disease till it takes
up its rest in God through Christ. “(4.) Do not Adam's children naturally follow his foot
steps, in ‘hiding’ themselves “from the presence of the Lord?”
(Gen. iii. 8.) We are just as blind in this matter as he was,
who thought to ‘hide himself from the presence of the Lord
among the trees of the garden. We promise ourselves more
security in a secret sin than in one that is openly committed.