Treatise Blow At The Root
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-blow-at-the-root-005 |
| Words | 372 |
It is you yourselves
that, by opposing the very end of his coming into the world,
are crucifying the Son of God afresh, and putting him to an
open shame. It is you that, by expecting to see the Lord
without holiness, through the righteousness of Christ, “make
the blood of the covenant an unholy thing,” keeping those
unholy that so trust in it. O beware ! for evil is before you. If those who name not the name of Christ, and die in their
sins, shall be punished seven-fold, surely you who thus make
Christ a minister of sin, shall be punished seventy-and-seven
fold. What; make Christ destroy his own kingdom? make
Christ a factor for Satan? set Christ against holiness? talk of
Christ as saving his people in their sins? It is no better than
to say, He saves them from the guilt, and not from the power,
of sin. Will you make the righteousness of Christ such a cover
for the unrighteousness of man? So that by this means, “the
unrighteous” of every kind “shall inherit the kingdom of God!”
Stop! Consider! What are you doing? You did run well: Who
hath bewitched you? Who hath corrupted you from the sim
plicity of Christ, from the purity of the gospel? You did know,
“He that believeth is born of God: And whosoever is born
of God sinneth not;” but while “he keepeth himself, that
wicked one toucheth him not.” O come back to the true,
the pure, the old gospel ! that which ye received in the begin
ning. Come back to Christ, who died to make you an holy
people, “zealous of good works.” “Remember from whence
you are fallen, and repent, and do the first works.” Your
“Father worketh hitherto:” Doye work; else your faith is vain. For “wilt thou know, O vain,” O empty “man, that faith
without works is dead?” Wilt thou know that “though I have
all faith, so as to remove mountains, and have not love, I am
nothing?” Wilt thou know, that all the blood and righteous
ness of Christ, unless “that mind be in thee which was in
Him,” and thou likewise “walk as Christ walked,” will only
increase thy damnation?