Treatise Plain Account Of Christian Perfection
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-plain-account-of-christian-perfection-034 |
| Words | 357 |
The loving God with all our heart, mind,
soul, and strength. This implies, that no wrong temper,
none contrary to love, remains in the soul; and that all the
thoughts, words, and actions, are governed by pure love. “Q. Do you affirm, that this perfection excludes all infirm
ities, ignorance, and mistake? “A. I continually affirm quite the contrary, and always
have done so. “Q. But how can every thought, word, and work, be
governed by pure love, and the man be subject at the same
time to ignorance and mistake? “A. I see no contradiction here: ‘A man may be filled
with pure love, and still be liable to mistake.” Indeed I do
not expect to be freed from actual mistakes, till this mortal
puts on immortality. I believe this to be a natural conse
quence of the soul's dwelling in flesh and blood. For we
cannot now think at all, but by the mediation of those bodily
organs which have suffered equally with the rest of our frame. And hence we cannot avoid sometimes thinking wrong, till
this corruptible shall have put on incorruption. “But we may carry this thought farther yet. A mistake
in judgment may possibly occasion a mistake in practice. For instance: Mr. De Renty’s mistake touching the nature
of mortification, arising from prejudice of education, occa
sioned that practical mistake, his wearing an iron girdle. And a thousand such instances there may be, even in those. who are in the highest state of grace. Yet, where every word
and action springs from love, such a mistake is not properly
a sin. However, it cannot bear the rigour of God's justice,
but needs the atoning blood. “Q. What was the judgment of all our brethren who met
at Bristol in August, 1758, on this head? “A. It was expressed in these words: (1) Every one may
mistake as long as he lives. (2.) A mistake in opinion may
occasion a mistake in practice. (3.) Every such mistake is a
transgression of the perfect law. Therefore, (4) Every such
mistake, were it not for the blood of atonement, would
expose to eternal damnation.