Treatise Earnest Appeal To Men Of Reason And Religion
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-earnest-appeal-to-men-of-reason-and-religion-028 |
| Words | 390 |
There is therefore no hinderance on God’s
part; since “as his majesty is, so is his mercy.” And what
ever hinderance there is on the part of man, when God speaketh,
it is not. Only ask then, O sinner, “and it shall be given
thee,” even the faith that brings salvation: And that without
any merit or good work of thine; for “it is not of works, lest
any man should boast.” No; it is of grace, of grace alone. For
“unto him that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifi
eth the ungodly, his faith is counted to him for righteousness.”
64. “But by talking thus you encourage sinners.” I do
encourage them--to repent; and do not you? Do not you
know how many heap sin upon sin, purely for want of such
encouragement; because they think they can never be forgiven,
there is no place for repentance left? Does not your heart also
bleed for them? What would you think too dear to part with? What would you not do, what would you not suffer, to bring
one such sinner to repentance? Could not your love “endure
all things” for them? Yes,--if you believed it would do them
good; if you had any hope that they would be better. Why
do you not believe it would do them good? Why have you not
a hope that they will be better? Plainly, because you do not
love them enough; because you have not that charity which
not only endureth, but at the same time believeth and hopeth,
all things. 65. But that you may see the wholestrength of this objection, I
will show you, without any disguise or reserve, how I encourage
the chief of sinners. My usual language to them runs thus:--
O ye that deny the Lord that bought you, yet hear the word
of the Lord! You seek rest, but find none. your heart is in heaviness. Even in laughter
How long spend ye your labour for
that which is not bread, and your strength for that which satis
fieth not? You know your soul is not satisfied. It is still an
aching void. Sometimes you find, in spite of your principles,
a sense of guilt, an awakened conscience. That grisly phan
tom, religion, (so you describe her,) will now and then haunt
you still.