2 lines
1.1 KiB
HTML
2 lines
1.1 KiB
HTML
<p>Here is an argument against a voluptuous luxurious life, taken from the ruin it brings upon men’s temporal interests. Here is 1. The description of an epicure: <i>He loves pleasure</i>. God allows us to use the delights of sense soberly and temperately, <i>wine to make glad the heart</i> and put vigour into the spirits, and <i>oil to make the face to shine</i> and beautify the countenance; but he that loves these, that sets his heart upon them, covets them earnestly, is solicitous to have all the delights of sense wound up to the height of pleasurableness, is impatient of every thing that crosses him in his pleasures, relishes these as the best pleasures, and has his mouth by them put out of taste for spiritual delights, he is an epicure, <a class="bibleref" title="2Tim.3.4" href="/passage/?search=2Tim.3.4">2 Tim. 3:4</a>. 2. The punishment of an epicure in this world: <i>He shall be a poor man</i>; for the lusts of sensuality are not maintained but at great expense, and there are instances of those who want necessaries, and live upon alms, who once could not live without dainties and varieties. Many a beau becomes a beggar.</p>
|