Wesley Corpus

Treatise Extract On Moravian Brethren

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typetreatise
YearNone
Passage IDjw-treatise-extract-on-moravian-brethren-001
Words382
Christology Works of Piety Justifying Grace
For notwith standing all that Christ has done, he that believeth not shall be damned. But he has done all which was necessary for the conditional salvation of all mankind; that is, if they believe; for through his merits all that believe to the end, with the faith that worketh by love, shall be saved. “2. We are to do nothing as necessary to salvation, but simply to believe in Him.” If we allow the Count’s definition of faith, namely, “the historical knowledge of this truth, that Christ has been a man and suffered death for us,” (Sixteen Discourses, p. 57) then is this proposition directly subversive of the whole revelation of Jesus Christ. “3. There is but one duty now, but one command, viz., to believe in Christ.” Almost every page in the New Testament proves the false hood of this assertion. “4. Christ has taken away all other commands and duties, having wholly abolished the law.” How absolutely contrary is this to his own solemn declara tion l--“Think not that I am come to destroy the law or the Prophets. I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil. One jot or one tittle shall in nowise pass from the law, till heaven and earth pass.” “Therefore a believer is free from the law.” That he is “free from the curse of the law,” we know ; and that he is “free from the law,” or power, “ of sin and death: ” But where is it written that he is free from the law of God? “He is not obliged thereby to do or omit anything, it being inconsistent with his liberty to do anything as commanded.” So your liberty is a liberty to disobey God; whereas ours is a liberty to obey him in all things: So grossly, while we “establish the law,” do you “make void the law through faith !” “5. We are sanctified wholly the moment we are justified, and are neither more nor less holy to the day of our death; entire sanctification and entire justification being in one and the same instant.” Just the contrary appears both from the tenor of God’s word, and the experience of his children. “6. A believer is never sanctified or holy in himself, but in Christ only.