Treatise Farther Appeal Part 3
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-farther-appeal-part-3-041 |
| Words | 386 |
I do not read that
either our Lord, or any of his Apostles, wrought any miracle on
such an occasion. Nay, how sharply does our Lord rebuke
those who made a demand of this kind ' When “certain of
the Scribes and of the Pharisees answered, saying, Master, we
would see a sign from thee;” (observe, this was their method of
answering the strong reasons whereby he had just proved the
works in question to be of God!) “he answered and said to
them, An evil and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign;
but there shall no sign be given to it, but the sign of the Pro
phet Jonas.” (Matt. xii. 38, 39.) “An evil and adulterous
generation l’” else they would not have needed such a kind
of proof. Had they been willing to do his will, they would,
without this, have known that the doctrine was of God. Miracles, therefore, are quite needless in such a case. Nor
are they so conclusive a proof as you imagine. If a man could
and did work them in defence of any doctrine, yet this would
not supersede other proof; for there may be tepata \revôovs,
“lying wonders,” miracles wrought in support of falsehood. Still, therefore, his doctrine would remain to be proved from
the proper topics of Scripture and reason: And these even
without miracles are sufficient; but miracles without these are
not. Accordingly, our Saviour and all his Apostles, in the
midst of their greatest miracles, never failed to prove every
doctrine they taught by clear Scripture and cogent reason. 30. I presume, by this time you may perceive the gross
absurdity of demanding miracles in the present case; seeing
one of the propositions in question, (over and above our gene
ral doctrines) viz., “That sinners are reformed,” can only be
proved by testimony; and the other, “This cannot be done
but by the power of God,” necds no proof, being self-evident. “Why, I did once myself rejoice to hear,” says a grave citi
zen, with an air of great importance, “that so many sinners
were reformed, till I found they were only turned from one
wickedness to another; that they were turned from cursing or
swearing, or drunkenness, into a mo less damnable sin, that of
schism.”
Do you know what you say?