Treatise Farther Appeal Part 1
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-farther-appeal-part-1-023 |
| Words | 303 |
3. Do not men who imagine they have attained this despise
others, as only going on in what they account the low and imper
fect way, that is, as growing in grace and goodness by degrees? A. (1.) Men who only imagine they have attained this may
probably despise those that are going on in any way. (2.) But
the growing in grace and goodness by degrees is no mark of a
low and imperfect way. Those who are fathers in Christ grow
in grace by degrees, as well as the new-born babes. Q. 4. Do they not despise those who are working out their
salvation with an humble reliance upon the merits of Christ
for the pardon of their sins, and the acceptance of their sincere
though imperfect services? A. (1.) They who really love God despise no man. But,
(2.) They grieve to hear many talk of thus relying on Christ,
who, though perhaps they are grave, honest, moral men, yet
by their own words appear not to love God at all; whose souls
cleave to the dust; who love the world; who have no part of
the mind that was in Christ. 6. Query the Sixth --“Whether the same exalted strains
and notions do not tend toweaken the natural and civil relations
among men, by leading the inferiors, into whose heads those
notions are infused, to a disesteem of their superiors; while
they consider them as in a much lower dispensation than
themselves; though those superiors are otherwise sober and
good men, and regular attendants on the ordinances of religion.”
I havementioned beforewhat those exalted notions are. These
do not tend to weaken either thenatural or civil relations among
men; or to lead inferiors to a disesteem of their superiors, even
where those superiors are neither good nor sober men.