Wesley Corpus

The Reformation of Manners

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typesermon
Year1763
Passage IDjw-sermon-052-014
Words382
Repentance Social Holiness
With thee conversing, I forget All time, and toil, and care: Labour is rest, and pain is sweet, While thou, my God, art here. 8. What adds a still greater sweetness, even to labour and pain, is the Christian "love of our neighbour." When they "love their neighbour," that is, every soul of man, "as themselves," as their own souls; when "the love of Christ constrains" them to love one another, "even as he loved us;" when, as he "tasted death for every man," so they are "ready to lay down their life for their brethren;" (including in that number every man, every soul for which Christ died,) what prospect of danger will then be able to fright them from their "labour of love" What suffering will they not be ready to undergo to save one soul from everlasting burnings What continuance of labour, disappointment, pain, will vanquish their fixed resolution Will they not be 'Gainst all repulses steel'd, nor ever tired With toilsome day, or ill-succedding night So love both "hopeth" and "endureth all things:" So "charity never faileth." 9. Love is necessary for all the members of such a Society, on another account likewise; even because it "is not puffed up:" It produces not only courage and patience, but humility. And O how needful is this for all who are so employed! What can be of more importance, than that they should be little and mean and base and vile in their own eyes For, otherwise, should they think themselves anything, should they impute anything to themselves, should they admit anything of a Pharisaic spirit, "trusting in themselves that they were righteous, and despising others;" nothing could more directly tend to overthrow the whole design. For then they would not only have all the world, but also God himself, to contend with; seeing he "resisteth the proud, and giveth grace" only "to the humble." Deeply conscious, therefore, should every member of this society be of his own foolishness, weakness, helplessness; continually hanging, with his whole soul upon Him who alone hath wisdom and strength, with an unspeakable conviction that "the help which is done upon earth, God doth it himself;" and that it is He alone "who worketh in us, both to will and to do of his good pleasure."