Treatise Dialogue Predestinarian And Friend
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-dialogue-predestinarian-and-friend-006 |
| Words | 237 |
If
not, you say they are damned for not believing a lie. This consideration it was which forced Archbishop Usher
to cry out, “What would not a man fly unto, rather than
yield, that Christ did not die for the reprobates; and that
none but the elect had any kind cf title to him; and yet
many thousands should be bound in conscience to believe that
he died for them, and tied to accept him for their Redeemer
and Saviour? Whereby they should have believed that which
in itself is most untrue, and laid hold of that in which they
had no kind of interest.”
Pred.--But what then do you mean by the words, election
and reprobation? Friend.--I mean this: First, God did decree from the
beginning to elect or choose, in Christ, all that should believe
to salvation. And this decree proceeds from his own goodness,
and is not built upon any goodness in the creature. Secondly:
God did from the beginning decree to reprobate all who
should obstinately and finally continue in unbelief. Pred.--What then do you think of absolute, unconditional
election and reprobation? Friend.--I think it cannot be found in holy writ, and that
it is a plant which bears dismal fruit. An instance of which
we have in Calvin himself; who confesses that he procured
the burning to death of Michael Servetus, purely for differing
from him in opinion in matters of religion.