Treatise Letter To Mr Law
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-mr-law-011 |
| Words | 365 |
and, (4.) That he was on this account called the
Second Adam? “The Second Adam is now to do that which the first
should have done.” (Page 84.) Is he to do no more than that? no more than a mere creature should have done? Then what
need is there of his being any more than a creature? What
need of his being God? “Our having from him a new heavenly flesh and blood,
raised in us by his spiritual power, is the strongest proof that
we should have been born of Adam by the same spiritual
power.” (Page 85.)
Had Adam then the very same spiritual power which
Christ had ? And would he, if he had stood, have trans
mitted to us the very same benefit? Surely none that be
lieves the Christian Revelation will aver this in cool blood |
“From Adam’s desire turned toward the world, the earth
got a power of giving forth an evil tree. It was his will
which opened a passage for the evil hid in the earth,” (I
know not how it came there before Adam fell,) “to bring
forth a tree in its own likeness. No sooner was it brought
forth, than God assured him that death was hid in it: A
plain proof that this tree was not from God, but from a power
in the earth, which could not show itself, till Adam desired
to taste something which was not paradisiacal.” (Page 96.)
This is the marvellous in the highest degree, and affords
many questions not very easy to be answered. But, waving all
these, can anything be more flatly contradictory to the Mosaic
account? We read there, “The Lord God formed man. And
the Lord planted a garden. And out of the ground made the
Lord God every tree to grow that is pleasant to the sight and
good for food; the tree of life also, and the tree of knowledge
of good and evil.” (Gen. ii. 7-9.) Is it not here plainly
taught that this tree was from God? that, not the desire of
Adam, but the Lord God, made this tree to grow, as well as
the tree of life?