Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-250 |
| Words | 400 |
9, 10. On which
passages I observe, (1.) By ‘the old man’ is not meant a
heathenish life, or an ungodly conversation; but a corrupt
nature. For the Apostle elsewhere speaks of our ‘old man,’
as ‘crucified with Christ;’ and here distinguishes from it
their ‘former conversation,’ or sinful actions, which he calls
‘the deeds of the old man.’ (2.) By ‘the new man’ is meant,
not a new course of life; (as the Socinians interpret it;) but
a principle of grace, called by St. Peter, ‘The hidden man of
the heart, and a ‘divine nature. (3.) To put off ‘the old
man’ (the same as to ‘crucify the flesh”) is, to subdue and
mortify our corrupt nature; to “put on the new man’ is, to
stir up and cultivate that gracious principle, that new nature. ‘This,” saith the Apostle, ‘is created after God, in righteous
ness and true holiness.’ It is created: Which cannot pro
perly be said of a new course of life; but may of a ‘new
nature. It is ‘created after God; or, ‘in his image and
likeness, mentioned by Moses. But what is it to be “created
after God,” or ‘in his image?’ It is to be “created in righte
ousness and true holiness;’ termed ‘knowledge, the practical
knowledge of God. (Col. iii. 10.) But if ‘to be created after
God, or ‘in his image and likeness, is ‘to be created in
righteousness and true holiness, and if that principle of right
eousness and holiness by which we are ‘created unto good
works, is a ‘new man,” a “divine nature; it is easy to infer, that
man was at first created ‘righteous’ or ‘holy.’” (Pages 9, 10.)
“2. All things, as at first made by God, ‘were very good.’
Nor indeed could he make them otherwise. Now, a rational
being is not good, unless his rational powers are all devoted to
God. The goodness of man, as a rational being, must lie in a
devotedness and consecration to God. Consequently, man was
at first thus devoted to God: Otherwise he was not good. But
this devotedness to the love and service of God is true righteous
ness or holiness. This righteousness then, this goodness, or
uprightness, this regular and due state or disposition of the
human mind, was at first natural to man. It was wrought into
his nature, and concreated with his rational powers.