Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-248 |
| Words | 384 |
“IN the preceding verse Solomon had declared, how few
wise and good persons he had found in the whole course of
his life; but, lest any should blame the providence of God
for this, he here observes, that these were not what God
made man at first; and that their being what they were not
was the effect of a wretched apostasy from God. The original
words stand thus: Only see thou, I have found.” (Page 3.)
“Only: This word sets a mark on what it is prefixed to,
as a truth of great certainty and importance. See, observe,
thou. He invites every hearer and reader, in particular, to
consider what he was about to offer. I have found: I have
discovered this certain truth, and assert it on the fullest
evidence, ‘that God made man upright; but they have
sought out many inventions.’” (Page 4.)
“The Hebrew word "ws which we render upright, is pro
perly opposed to crooked, irregular, perverse. It is applied to
things, to signify their being straight, or agreeable to rule;
but it is likewise applied both to God and man, with the
words and works of both. As applied to God, the ways of
God, the word of God, it is joined with good; (Psalm xxv. 8;)
with righteous; (Psalm crix. 137;) with true and good; (Neh. ix. 13;) where mention is made of ‘right judgments, true
laws, good statutes. The uprightness with which God is said
to minister judgment to the people, answers to righteousness:
In a word,--God’s uprightness is the moral rectitude of his
nature, infinitely wise, good, just, and perfect. The upright
ness of man, is his conformity, of heart and life, to the rule
he is under; which is the law or will of God. Accordingly,
we read of uprightness of heart; (Psalm xxxvi. 10; Job
xxxiii. 33) and uprightness of way, or conversation; (Psalm
xxxvii. 14;) and often elsewhere. ‘The upright man,’
throughout the Scripture, is a truly good man; a man of
integrity, a holy person. In Job i. 1, 8; ii. 3, upright is
the same with perfect, (as in Psalm xxxvii. 37, and many
other places,) and is explained by, one “who feareth God and
escheweth evil. In Job viii. 6, it is joined and is the same
with pure.