Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-005 |
| Words | 389 |
xii. 1, 2.) Nor is there any reason to believe, that the
rest of mankind were improved either in wisdom or virtue,
when “Lot and Abraham separated themselves, and Lot
pitched his tent toward Sodom.” (Gen. xiii. 11, 12.) Of
those among whom he dwelt it is particularly remarked,
“The men of Sodom” (and of all “the cities of the plain”)
“were wicked and sinners before the Lord exceedingly;”
(Gen. xiii. 13;) so that not even “ten righteous persons”
could be found among them : The consequence of which was,
that “the Lord rained upon them brimstone and fire from
the Lord out of heaven.” (Gen. xix. 24.)
5. We have no ground to suppose that the other inhabit
ants of the earth (Abraham, with his family and descendants,
excepted) had either the knowledge or the fear of God, from
that time till Jacob “went into Egypt.” This was then, as
well as for several ages after, the great seat of learning; inso
much that “the wisdom of the Egyptians” was celebrated
even to a proverb. And indeed for this end, as well as “to
save much people alive,” (Gen. l. 20,) did “God send Joseph
into Egypt,” even “to inform their Princes after his will,
and to teach their Senators wisdom.” And yet not long
after his death, as their King “knew not Joseph,” so his
people knew not God. Yea, they set him at defiance: They
and their King provoked him more and more, and “hardened
their hearts” against him; even after they had “seen his
wonders in Egypt,” after they had groaned under his repeated
vengeance. They still added sin to sin, till they constrained
the Lord to destroy them with an utter destruction; till the
divided “waters returned, and covered the chariots and
horsemen, and all the host of Pharaoh.”
6. Nor were the other nations who then inhabited the earth,
any better than the Egyptians; the true knowledge and spiritual
worship of God being confined to the descendants of Abraham. “He had not dealt so with other nations, neither had the Hea
thens knowledge of his laws.” (Psalm cxlvii. 20.) And in what
state were the Israelites themselves? How did they worship
the God of their fathers? Why, even these were “a stubborn
and rebellious generation, a generation that set not their heart
aright.