Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-272 |
| Words | 399 |
“And, 1. To consider that text, “And were by nature chil
dren of wrath, even as others.” (Eph. ii. 3.) In the beginning
of the chapter, St. Paul puts the Ephesians in mind of what
God had done for them. This led him to observe what they
had been before their conversion to God: They had been ‘dead
in trespasses and sins; but were now “quickened, made alive
to God. They had “walked according to the prince of the
power of the air, the spirit that worketh with energy in the
children of disobedience.’ ‘Among such,” saith the Apostle,
‘we all had our conversation in times past; the whole time
before our conversion; ‘fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of
the mind; and were by nature children of wrath, even as
others.” On this I observe,--
“(1.) The persons spoken of are both the believing Ephe
sians and the Apostle himself. For he says not, “Ye were,’
speaking in the second person, as he had done, verses 1, 2; but,
“We were,’--plainly with a design the more expressly to
include himself. Indeed, had he still spoken in the second
Terson, yet what is here affirmed would have been true of
him as well as them. But for the sake of more explicitly
including himself, he chose to say, ‘We were; ’--you,
Ephesians, who were descended of heathen parents, and I
who was born in the visible Church. “(2.) The ‘wrath’ here spoken of, means either God’s
displeasure at sinners, or the punishment which he threatens
and inflicts for sin.” (Pages 25-28.)
“(3.) ‘Children of wrath,” is an Hebraism, and denotes
persons worthy of, or liable to, wrath. And this implies the
being sinners; seeing sin only exposes us to God's displea
sure and the dreadful effects of it. “(4.) This charge the Apostle fixes on himself and them,
as they had been before their conversion. He does not say,
We are, but “we were, children of wrath.’ (Page 29.)
“ (5.) He speaks of himself and the converted Ephesians
as having been so equally with others. There is an emphasis
on the words, “even as others; even as the stubborn Jews
and idolatrous Heathens; even as all who are still “strangers
and enemies’ to Christ. These are still ‘children of wrath: ’
But whatever difference there is between us and them, we
were once what they are now.