Treatise Letter To Dr Horne
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-dr-horne-006 |
| Words | 399 |
But where does he
say, this is the condition of our justification? In the Epistles
to the Romans and Galatians particularly, he vehemently
asserts the contrary; earnestly maintaining, that nothing is
absolutely necessary to this, but “believing in Him that justi
fieth the ungodly;” not the godly, not him that is already
a “new creature,” that previously keeps all the commandments
of God. He does this afterward; when he is justified by faith,
then his faith “worketh by love.”
“Therefore, there is no condemnation to them that are in
Christ Jesus,” justified by faith in him, provided they “walk
in Him whom they have received, not after the flesh, but after
the Spirit.” (Page 23.) But should they turn back, and walk
again after the flesh, they would again be under condemnation. But this no way proves that “walking after the Spirit” was
the condition of their justification. Neither will anything like this follow from the Apostle's. saying to the Corinthians, “Though I had all faith, so as to
remove mountains, and have not charity, I am nothing.” This
only proves that miracle-working faith may be where saving
faith is not. 8. To the argument, “St. Paul says, “Abraham was justified
by faith,’” you answer, “St. James says, “Abraham was justi
fied by works.’” (Page 24.) True: But he neither speaks of
the same justification, nor the same faith, nor the same works. Not of the same justification; for St. Paul speaks of that justi
fication which was five-and-twenty years before Isaac was born;
(Genesis;) St. James, of that wherewith he was justified when
he offered up Isaac on the altar. It is living faith whereby
St. Paul affirms we are justified: It is dead faith whereby St. James affirms we are not justified. St. Paul speaks of works
antecedent to justification; St. James, of works consequent
upon it. This is the plain, easy, natural way of reconciling the
two Apostles. The fact was manifestly this: (1.) When Abraham dwelt in
Haran, being then seventy-five years old, God called him
thence: He “believed God,” and He “counted it to him for
righteousness; ” that is, “he was justified by faith,” as St. Paul
strenuously asserts. (2.) Many years after Isaac was born,
(some of the ancients thought three-and-thirty,) Abraham,
showing his faith by his works, offered him up upon the altar. (3.) Here the “faith” by which, in St.