Treatise Letter To Gentleman At Bristol
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-gentleman-at-bristol-004 |
| Words | 366 |
They are
no part of the meritorious cause; but they are the conditions
of it. This and no other is “the doctrine of Scripture, and
of the Church of England l’” Both the Scripture and “our
Church allow, yea, insist on these qualifications or condi
tions.” (Page 21.)
“But if repentance and faith would not be valid and
acceptable without the righteousness of Christ, then they
cannot be necessary qualifications for our justification.”
(Page 22.) I cannot allow the consequence. They are not
acceptable without the righteousness or merits of Christ;
and yet he himself has made them necessary qualifications
for our justification through his merits. But the grand objection of this gentleman lies against the
Doctor’s next paragraph; the sum of which is: “The merits
of Christ were never intended to supersede the necessity of
repentance and obedience,” (I would say, repentance and
faith,) “but to make them acceptable in the sight of God,
and to purchase for them” (I would add, that obey him) “a
reward of immortal happiness.”
I am not afraid to undertake the defence of this paragraph,
with this small variation, against Mr. Chapman, Mr. Nyberg,
Count Zinzendorf, or any other person whatever; provided
only that he will set his name to his work; for I do not love
fighting in the dark. And I, as well as Dr. T., affirm, that “to say more than
this concerning Christ’s imputed merits,” to say more than,
that “they have purchased for us grace to repent and believe,
acceptance upon our believing, power to obey, and eternal
salvation to them that do obey him;”--to say more than this
“is blasphemous Antinomianism,” such as Mr. Calvin would
have abhorred; and does “open a door to all manner of sin
and wickedness.”
“I must likewise affirm, that to talk of imputed righteous
ness in the manner many do at this day, is making the
imaginary transfer of Christ's righteousness serve as a cover
for the unrighteousness of mankind.” (Page 26.) Does not
Mr. Ch-p-n do this at Bristol? Does not Mr. M-rd--n,
at London? Let them shudder then, let their blood run
cold, who do it; not theirs who tell them that they do so.