Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-115 |
| Words | 385 |
“Its very fundamental powers are shaken and disjointed, and
their order toward one another confounded and broken; so that
what is judged considerable, is not considered; what is recom
mended as lovely and eligible, is not loved and chosen. Yea,
‘the truth which is after godliness’ is not so much disbelieved,
as hated, or “held in unrighteousness;’ and shines with too
feeble a light in that malignant darkness which ‘comprehends. it not.’ You come, amidst all this confusion, into the ruined
palace of some great Prince, in which you see, here the frag
ments of a noble pillar, there the shattered pieces of some
curious imagery, and all lying neglected and useless, among
heaps of dirt. He that invites you to take a view of the soul
of man gives you but such another prospect, and doth but say
to you, ‘Behold the desolation l’ All things rude and waste. So that, should there be any pretence to the Divine presence,
it might be said, ‘If God be here, why is it thus?’ The
faded glory, the darkness, the disorder, the impurity, the
decayed state in all respects of this temple, too plainly show,
‘the Great Inhabitant is gone !’”
NEWINGTON, Jan. 21. In your Third Part you propose, First, to answer some
objections and queries; and then to consider the connexion
of the doctrine of original sin with other parts of religion. “Objection 1. Are we not in worse moral circumstances
than Adam was before he fell? I answer:
“(1.) If by moral circumstances you mean, the state of
religion and virtue, it is certain the greatest part of mankind
ever were and still are very corrupt. But this is not the fault
of their nature, but occasioned by the abuse of it, in prostitut
ing reason to appetite, whereby, in process of time, they have
sunk themselves into the most lamentable degree of ignorance,
superstition, idolatry, injustice, debauchery.” (Page 168.)
But how came this? How came all nations thus to “abuse
their nature,” thus to “prostitute reason to appetite?” How
came they all to sink into this “lamentable ignorance, super
stition, idolatry, injustice, debauchery?” How came it, that
half of them, at least, if their nature was uncorrupt, did not
use it well? submit appetite to reason, and rise while the
other sunk?