Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-282 |
| Words | 377 |
But how are many dead, or made sinners,
through the disobedience of Adam? His first sin so far affects
all his descendants as to constitute them guilty, or liable to all
that death which was contained in the original threatening.”
(Page 72.)
“But Dr. Taylor avers, ‘To be made sinners, means only
to be subjected to temporal death.’
“I answer, (1.) Whatever it means, the disobedience of
Adam had a proper, causal influence upon it; just as the
obedience of Christ has upon our being made righteous. “(2.) What ‘to be made sinners’ means, must be learned
from the opposite to it, in the latter part of the verse. Now,
allowing the Apostle to be his own interpreter, “being made
righteous’ is the same with “justification.” (Verse 16.) Of this
he had treated largely before. And through the whole of his
discourse, ‘to be justified is to be acquitted from guilt, and
accepted of God’ as righteous. Consequently, ‘to be made
sinners’ is to be ‘condemned of God,” or to be ‘children of
wrath, and that on account of Adam’s sin.” (Page 73.)
“By man came death: In Adam all die.” (1 Cor. xv.21, 22.)
Let the reader please to bear in mind the whole of the two
verses and the context. By ‘man,’ in the twenty-first verse,
is meant Adam. The “all” spoken of are all his natural
descendants. These ‘all die;’ that is, as his descendants, are
liable to death, yea, to death everlasting. That this is the
meaning appears hence: That the ‘being made alive,” to
which this dying stands opposed, is not a mere recovery of
life, but a blessed resurrection to a glorious immortality. Hence I observe, (1.) Man was originally immortal as well
as righteous. In his primitive state he was not liable to
death. (2.) Death is constantly ascribed to sin, as the sole
and proper cause of it. As it was threatened only for sin, so
the sentence was not pronounced till after man had sinned. (3.) All men are mortal from their birth. As soon as they
begin to live they are liable to death, the punishment de
nounced against sin, and sin only. (4.) This is the genuine
effect of the first sin of our first father.