Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-226 |
| Words | 388 |
Adam was the head of
all mankind, who became sinful and mortal through his sin;
Christ was the head of all believers, who obtain pardon and life
through his righteousness. To prove this headship of Adam,
the Apostle says, “Until the law,’ (that is, from the creation till
the law of Moses,) “sin was in the world; but sin is not
imputed where there is no law; that is, where there is no law
or constitution of duty or penalty at all. Yet, saith he, “Death
reigned from Adam to Moses:” Yet sin was imputed, and pun
ished by death, even upon all mankind, both small and great,
before the law given by Moses. The inference is, therefore,
there was some law or constitution during all the time from
Adam to Moses, in virtue of which sin was imputed to man
kind, and death accordingly executed upon them. Now, what
law or constitution could this be, beside that which said to
Adam, as a representative of his whole posterity, ‘In the day
thou sinnest thou shalt die?’” (Pages 177, 178.)
“2. The Apostle carries his argument yet farther: ‘Sin was
imputed, and death reigned, or was executed, “even upon those
who had not sinned after the similitude of Adam’s transgres
sion;' who had not broken an express command, as Adam had
done. This manifestly refers to infants;--death reigned over
them; death was executed upon them. And this must be by
some constitution which, in some sense, imputed sin to them
who had not committed actual sin: For without such a con
stitution, sin would never have been imputed, nor death
executed on children. “Yet, 3. Death did not come upon them as a mere natural
effect of their father Adam’s sin and death, but as a proper and
legal punishment of sin; for it is said, his sin brought “con
demnation’ upon all men. (Verse 18.) Now, this is a legal
term, and shows that death is not only a natural but a penal
evil, and comes upon infants as guilty and condemned;--not
for their own actual sins, for they had none; but for the sin
of Adam, their legal head, their appointed representative.”
(Page 179.)
“In the eighteenth verse the expression is very strong:
“By the offence of one, judgment came upon all men to con
demnation.