Treatise Farther Appeal Part 1
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-farther-appeal-part-1-005 |
| Words | 302 |
“St. Peter also,” you say, “affirms that
‘baptism doth save us, or justify us.” Again you beg the
question; you take for granted what I utterly deny, viz., that
save and justify are here synonymous terms. Till this is
proved, you can draw no inference at all; for you have no
foundation whereon to build. I conceive these and all the scriptures which can be quoted
to prove sanctification antecedent to justification, (if they do
not relate to our final justification,) prove only, (what I have
never denied,) that repentance, or conviction of sin, and
fruits meet for repentance, precede that faith whereby we are
justified: But by no means, that the love of God, or any
branch of true holiness, must or can precede faith. 3. It is objected, Secondly, that justification by faith alone
is not the doctrine of the Church of England. “You believe,” says the writer above-mentioned, “that no
good work can be previous to justification, nor, consequently,
a condition of it. But, God be praised, our Church has
nowhere delivered such abominable doctrine.” (Page 14.)
“The Clergy contend for inward holiness, as previous to
the first justification;--this is the doctrine they universally
inculcate, and which you cannot oppose without contradict
ing the doctrine of our Church.” (Page 26.)
“All your strongest persuasives to the love of God will
not blanch over the deformity of that doctrine, that men
may be justified by faith alone;--unless you publicly recant
this horrid doctrine, your faith is vain.” (Page 27.)
“If you will vouchsafe to purge out this venomous part of
your principles, in which the wide, essential, fundamental,
irreconcilable difference, as you very justly term it, mainly
consists, then there will be found, so far, no disagreement be
tween you and the Clergy of the Church of England.” (Ibid.)
4.