Treatise Farther Appeal Part 1
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-farther-appeal-part-1-003 |
| Words | 351 |
He is the sole
Giver of every good gift, and the sole Author of every good
work. There is no more of power than of merit in man;
but as all merit is in the Son of God, in what he has done
and suffered for us, so all power is in the Spirit of God. And
therefore every man, in order to believe unto salvation, must
receive the Holy Ghost. This is essentially necessary to every
Christian, not in order to his working miracles, but in order
to faith, peace, joy, and love,--the ordinary fruits of the Spirit. Although no man on earth can explain the particular
manner wherein the Spirit of God works on the soul, yet
whosoever has these fruits, cannot but know and feel that
God has wrought them in his heart. Sometimes He acts more particularly on the understanding,
opening or enlightening it, (as the Scripture speaks,) and re
vealing, unveiling, discovering to us “the deep things of God.”
Sometimes He acts on the wills and affections of men;
withdrawing them from evil, inclining them to good, inspiring
(breathing, as it were) good thoughts into them : So it has
frequently been expressed, by an easy, natural metaphor,
strictly analogous to r", Trvevua, spiritus, and the words
used in most modern tongues also, to denote the third person
in the ever-blessed Trinity. But however it be expressed,
it is certain all true faith, and the whole work of salvation,
every good thought, word, and work, is altogether by the
operation of the Spirit of God. II. 1. I come now to consider the principal objections
which have lately been made against these doctrines. I know nothing material which has been objected as to the
nature of justification; but many persons seem to be very
confused in their thoughts concerning it, and speak as if they
had never heard of any justification antecedent to that of
the last day. To clear up this, there needs only a closer
inspection of our Articles and Homilies; wherein justifica
tion is always taken for the present remission of our sins.