Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-271 |
| Words | 388 |
Hereby he incurred death of every kind; not only
temporal, but also spiritual and eternal. By losing his original
righteousness, he became not only mortal as to his body, but
also spiritually dead, dead to God, dead in sin; void of that
principle which St. Paul terms, ‘the life of God;’ (Eph. iv. 18;) St. John, “eternal life abiding in us.” (1 John iii. 15.)
A creature formed with a capacity of knowing, loving, and
serving God, must be either ‘dead in sin,” or ‘alive to God.”
Adam, in his primitive state, was ‘alive to God;’ but after he
had sinned, dead in sin, as well as dead in law.” (Page 20.)
“But Dr. Taylor is sure, only temporal death was to be
the consequence of his disobedience. ‘For death is the loss of
life, and must be understood according to the nature of the life
to which it is opposed. Most true; and the life to which it is
here opposed, the life Adam enjoyed, till lost by sin, was not
only bodily life, but that principle of holiness which the Scrip
ture terms, ‘the life of God. It was also a title to eternal
life. All this, therefore, he lost by sin. And that justly;
for ‘death is the due “wages of sin;’ death, both temporal,
spiritual, and eternal.” (Page 21.)
“IV. Adam’s first sin was the sin of a public person,-one
whom God had appointed to represent all his descendants. “This also has been proved. In one sense, indeed, Adam’s
sin was not ours. It was not our personal fault, our actual
transgression. But in another sense it was ours; it was the
sin of our common representative: And, as such, St. Paul
shows it is imputed to us and all his descendants. Hence,--
“W. All these are from their birth ‘children of wrath;’
void of all righteousness, and propense to sin of all sorts. “In order to clear and confirm this proposition, I intend,
“1. To consider a text which proves original sin in the full
extent of it. “2. To explain some other texts, which relate either to the
guilt or the corruption we derive from our first parents. “3. To add some arguments which Dr. Taylor has taken
no notice of, or touched but very slightly. “4. To answer objections. “And, 1.