Treatise Letter To Gentleman At Bristol
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-gentleman-at-bristol-005 |
| Words | 366 |
Let them shudder then, let their blood run
cold, who do it; not theirs who tell them that they do so. It is not the latter, but the former, who “trample Christ’s
righteousness under foot as a mean and vile thing.”
I firmly believe, “We are accounted righteous before God,
justified only for the merit of Christ.” But let us have no
shifting the terms: “Only through Christ's imputed righte
ousness,” are not the words of the Article, neither the
language of our Church. Much less does our Church any
where affirm, “that the righteousness of Christ is imputed to
the ungodly, who have no qualifications;” (page 28;) no
repentance, no faith; nor do the Scriptures ever affirm this. The reflection on the general inference, I so entirely agree
with, as to think it worth transcribing: “If you have faith
and repentance, you want no other signs or evidences of your
justification. But if you have not these, to pretend to any
other assurances, tokens, feelings, or experiences, is vain and
delusive.” Does he know any one who maintains, that a
man may be in a state of justification, and yet have no faith
or repentance? But the marks and evidences of true faith
which the Scripture has promised, must not be discarded as
vain or delusive. The Scripture has promised us the assur
ance of faith, to be wrought in us by the operation of God. It mentions “the earnest of the Spirit,” and speaks of
“feeling after the Lord,” and finding him; and so our
Church, in her Seventeenth Article, speaks of “feeling in
ourselves the working of the Spirit of Christ;” and, in the
Homily for Rogation Week, of “feeling our conscience at
peace with God, through remission of our sin.” So that we
must not reject all “assurances, tokens, feelings, and
experiences,” as “vain and delusive.”
Nor do I apprehend Dr. T. ever intended to say, that we
must reject all inward feelings, but only those which are
without faith or repentance. And who would not reject. these ? His very words are, “If you have not these, to
pretend to any other feelings is vain and delusive.” I say
so too.