Treatise Letter To Mr Law
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-mr-law-041 |
| Words | 362 |
And was this tune, or another, or all that ever
were and will be played on it, the inward state of the trumpet? “No more can the mind have any grief or joy but that
which is from itself.” (Page 43.)
An unhappy comparison | For the instrument can have
no melody or sound at all from itself; and most unhappily
applied to the operations of God upon the souls of men. For
has God no more power over my soul, than I have over a
musical instrument? These are your arguments to prove that Christ is in every
man: A blessing which St. Paul thought was peculiar to
believers. He said, “Christ is in you, except ye be
reprobates,” unbelievers. You say, Christ is in you, whether
ye be reprobates or no. “If any man hath not the Spirit of
Christ, he is none of his,” saith the Apostle. Yea, but “every
man,” saith Mr. Law, “hath the Spirit of God. The Spirit
of Christ is in every soul.” (Spirit of Prayer, Part I., p. 63.)
“He that hath not the Son of God hath not life,” saith St. John. But Mr. Law saith, “Every man hath the Son of
God.” Sleep on, then, ye sons of Belial, and take your rest;
ye are all safe; for “he that hath the Son hath life.”
There can hardly be any doctrine under heaven more
agreeable to flesh and blood; nor any which more directly
tends to prevent the very dawn of conviction, or, at least, to
hinder its deepening in the soul, and coming to a sound issue. None more naturally tends to keep men asleep in sin, and to
lull asleep those who begin to be awakened. Only persuade
one of this, “Christ is already in thy heart; thou hast now
the inspiration of his Spirit; all the peace and joy of God
are within thee, yea, all the holy nature, tempers, and Spirit
of Christ;” and you need do no more; the siren song quiets
all his sorrow and fear. As soon as you have sewed this
pillow to his soul, he sinks back into the sleep of death. 6.