Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-106 |
| Words | 358 |
“How
much more abominable and filthy,” in the strictest sense, “is
man;” every man born into the world: “Who drinketh
iniquity like water;” (Job xv. 16, &c.;) iniquity of every
kind; so readily, so naturally, as being so thoroughly agree
able to the “desires of his “flesh and of his “mind I’’
You conclude the head thus: “Man, in his present weak
and fleshly state, cannot be clean before God.” Certainly as
clean as the moon and stars at least; if he be as he was first
created. He was “made but a little lower than the angels;”
consequently, he was then far higher and more pure than these,
or the sun itself, or any other part of the material creation. You go on: “Why cannot a man be clean before God? because he is conceived and born in sin? No such thing. But because, if the purest creatures are not pure in compari
son of God, much less a being subject to so many infirmities
as a mortal man.” Infirmities 1 What then, do innocent in
firmities make a man unclean before God? Do labour, pain,
bodily weakness, or mortality, make us“filthy and abominable?”
Surely not. Neither could they make a man pure from sin, less
pure than the moon and stars. Nor can we conceive Adam, as
he came out of the hands of God, to have been, in any sense,
less clean than these. All these texts, therefore, must refer to
that sinful impurity which every man brings into the world. You add : “Which is a demonstration to me that Job and
his friends were wholly strangers to this doctrine.” A demon
stration of a peculiar kind | I think neither mathematical nor
logical. 16. The last proof is, “‘That which is born of the flesh is
flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.” (John
iii.6.)” (Page 144.)
“Here, by ‘flesh, Dr. Taylor understands nothing else but
the mere parts and powers of a man; and by “being born of the
flesh, the being ‘born of a woman,’ with the constitution and
natural powers of a man.” (Jennings's Vindication, p.