Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-297 |
| Words | 373 |
17.) This is a
plain proof of the corruption of nature; forasmuch as those
that have not actually sinned have their share of these sor
rows; yea, and draw their first breath weeping. There are
also graves of the smallest as well as the largest size; and
there are never wanting some in the world, who, like Rachel,
are ‘weeping for their children, because they are not.’
“(2.) How early does this corruption of nature appear ! It is soon discerned which way the bias of the heart lies. Do not the children of fallen Adam, before they can go
alone, follow their father’s footsteps? What pride, ambition,
curiosity, vanity, wilfulness, and averseness to good, appear
in them ! And when they creep out of infancy, there is a
necessity of using ‘the rod of correction, to drive away the
foolishness that is bound in their heart.”
“(3.) Take a view of the out-breakings of sin in the world. ‘The wickedness of man is yet great in the earth. Behold
the bitter fruits of corrupt nature ! ‘By swearing, and lying,
and killing, and stealing, and committing adultery, they
break out,’ (like the breaking forth of waters,) “and blood
toucheth blood. The world is filled with all manner of filthi
ness, wickedness, and impiety. And whence is this deluge of
sin on the earth, but from the breaking up of the fountains of
the great deep, “the heart of man,’ out of which ‘proceed
adulteries, fornications, murders, thefts, covetousness, wicked
ness?’ Ye may, it may be, thank God, that ye are not in
these respects ‘like other men: And you have reason; for
the corruption of nature is the very same in you as in them. “(4.) Cast your eye upon those terrible convulsions the
world is thrown into by the wickedness of men. Lions prey
not on lions, nor wolves on wolves; but men bite and devour
one another. Upon how slight occasions will men sheathe
their swords in one another's bowels | Since Cain shed Abel's
blood, the world has been turned into a slaughter-house. And the chase has been continued, ever since Nimrod began
his hunting; as on the earth, so in the seas, the greater still
devouring the lesser.