Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-050 |
| Words | 398 |
Other circumstances may concur, but the main reason is, be
cause you are not holy. It is impossible, in the nature of
things, that wickedness can consist with happiness. A
Roman Heathen tells the English Heathens, Nemo malus
felix : “No vicious man is happy.” And if you are not
guilty of any gross outward vice, yet you have vicious tem
pers; and as long as these have power in your heart, true
peace has no place. You are proud; you think too highly
of yourself. You are passionate; often angry without rea
son. You are self-willed; you would have your own will,
your own way, in everything; that is, plainly, you would rule
over God and man; you would be the governor of the world. You are daily liable to unreasonable desires: Some things you
desire that are no way desirable; others which ought to be
avoided, yea, abhorred, as least as they are now circumstanced. ...And can a proud or a passionate man be happy? O no ! ex
perience shows it is impossible. Can a man be happy who is
full of self-will? Not unless he can dethrone the Most High. Can a man of unreasonable desires be happy? Nay, they
“pierce” him “through with many sorrows.”
I have not touched upon envy, malice, revenge, covetous
ness, and other gross vices. Concerning these it is univer
sally agreed, by all thinking men, Christian or Heathen, that
a man can no more be happy while they lodge in his bosom,
than if a vulture was gnawing his liver. It is supposed, in
deed, that a very small part of mankind, only the vilest of
men, are liable to these. I know not that; but certainly this
is not the case with regard to pride, anger, self-will, foolish de
sires. Those who are not accounted bad men are by no means
free from these. And this alone (were they liable to no other
pain) would prevent the generality of men, rich and poor,
learned and unlearned, from ever knowing what happiness
IneallS. 15. You think, however, you could bear yourself pretty well;
but you have such a husband or wife, such parents and child
ren, as are intolerable ! One has such a tongue, the other so
perverse a temper! The language of these, the carriage of those,
is so provoking; otherwise you should be happy enough.