Letters 1756A
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | letter |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-letters-1756a-040 |
| Words | 396 |
Again: the doctrine that it is better and more profitable for the soul to lose its sense of the love of God than to keep it is not only unscriptural but naturally attended with the most fatal consequences. It directly tends to obstruct, if not destroy, the work of God in the heart, by causing men to bless themselves in those ways which damp the fervor of their affections, and to imagine they are considerably advanced in grace when they have grieved, yea quenched, the Spirit. Nay, but let all who now feel the love of God in their hearts, and ‘walk in the light as He is in the light,’ labor by every possible means to ‘keep themselves in the love of God.’ Let them be ever ‘fervent in spirit’; let them ‘rejoice evermore,’ and stir up the gift of God which is in them. And if at any time ‘coldness seizes upon them,’ let them be assured they have grieved the Spirit of God. Let them be affrighted; let them fear lest they sink lower and lower -- yea, into total deadness and hardness of heart. At the peril of their souls, let them not rest in darkness, but examine themselves, search out their spirits, cry vehemently to God, and not cease till He restores the light of His countenance.
5. If this doctrine of the profitableness of coldness above fervor directly tends to make believers easy while they are sliding back into unbelief, you have another which tends as directly to make them easy who never believed at all -- I mean, that of Christ in every man. What you advance on this head I desire next to consider, as the importance of it requires.
‘The birth of Christ is already begun in every one. Jesus is already within thee (whoever thou art), living, stirring, calling, knocking at the door of thy heart.’ (Spirit of Prayer, Part I. p. 55.)
‘Every man has Christ in his spirit, lying there as in a state of insensibility and death’ (Spirit of Love, Part II. p. 34).
But He is living, for all that. And though ‘in a state of insensibility,’ He is ‘stirring, calling, knocking at the door of the heart’!
‘Something of heaven’ (you use this phrase as equivalent with Christ) ‘lies in every soul in a state of inactivity and death’ (page 35).