Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-143 |
| Words | 397 |
Taylor believes, ‘the influence of the Spirit of God, to assist our
sincere endeavours, is spoken of in the gospel, but never as
supposing any natural pravity of our minds. But certain it
is, that Christ opposeth our being ‘born of the Spirit, to our
being ‘born of the flesh : ‘That which is born of the flesh is
flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.” (John
iii.6.) Therefore, the influence of the Spirit in regeneration
supposeth something that we are ‘born with; which makes
such an influence necessary to our being ‘born again.” And
if this be not some natural pravity, let our author tell us
what it is. It is plain it is not any ill habit afterward
acquired; for it is something that we are born with. And
if to be ‘born of the flesh, means only ‘to have the parts
and powers of a man;’ and if these parts and powers are all
‘pure and uncorrupted, we have no need of any such influ
ence of the Spirit to be superadded to our natural powers. Without this, our own sincere endeavours will suffice for attain
ing all habits of virtue.” (Jennings's Vindication, p. 125.)
I proceed to your conclusion: “Is it not highly injurious
to the God of our nature, whose hands have formed and
fashioned us, to believe our nature is originally corrupted?”
(Taylor's Doctrine, &c., p. 256.) It is; but the charge falls
not on us, but you. We do not believe “our nature is ori
ginally corrupted.” It is you who believe this; who believe
our nature to be in the same state, moral and intellectual, as
it originally was ! Highly injurious indeed is this supposition
to the God of our nature. Did he originally give us such a
nature as this? so like that of a wild ass’s colt; so stupid, so
stubborn, so intractable; so prone to evil, averse to good? Did his hands form and fashion us thus? no wiser or better
than men at present are? If I believed this,--that men were
originally what they are now,-if you could once convince
me of this, I could not go so far as to be a Deist; I must
either be a Manichee or an Atheist. I must either believe
there was an evil God, or that there was no God at all.