Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-270 |
| Words | 394 |
I say, every transgres
sion; because every sin virtually contains all sin; for ‘whoso
ever keepeth the whole law, and offendeth in one point, he is
guilty of all.” Every single offence is a virtual breach of all
the commands of God. There is in every particular sin, the
principle of all sin; namely, the contempt of that sovereign
authority which is equally stamped upon every command. When, therefore, our first parents ate the forbidden fruit, they
not only violated a particular precept, but the entire law of
God. They could not sin in one instance, without virtually
transgressing the whole law of their creation; which being
once done, their title to God’s favour and their original
righteousness were both lost.” (Page 16.)
“This appears, 3. From the comprehensive nature and
aggravating circumstances of the first transgression. For it
implied, (1.) Unbelief: Man did not dare to break the divine
command till he was brought to question the truth of the divine
threatening. (2.) Irreverence of God: Reverence is a mixture
of love and fear; and had they continued in their first love and
filial fear, they could not have broken through the sole com
mand of God. (3.) Ingratitude : For what a return did they
hereby make to their Creator for all his benefits 1 (4.) Pride
and ambition; affecting to be ‘as gods, knowing good and
evil.” (5.) Sensuality: The woman looked upon the fruit with
an irregular appetite. Here the conflict between reason and
sense began. To talk of such a conflict in man before he fell
is to represent him as in a degree sinful and guilty even while
innocent. For conflict implies opposition; and an opposition
of appetite to reason is nothing else than a repugnance to the
law of God. But of this our first parents were no way guilty,
till their innocence was impaired; till they were led by the
temptation of the devil to desire the forbidden fruit. (6)
Robbery: For the fruit was none of theirs. They had no
manner of right to it. Thereforetheir taking it was a flatrobbery
of God; which cannot be less criminal than robbing our fellow
creatures. So comprehensive was the nature, so aggravated the
circumstances, of man's first transgression.” (Pages 17, 18.)
“III. Hereby he incurred death of every kind; not only
temporal, but also spiritual and eternal.