Treatise Plain Account Of Christian Perfection
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-plain-account-of-christian-perfection-040 |
| Words | 400 |
It is not; for one may start, tremble, change colour,
or be otherwise disordered in body, while the soul is calmly
stayed on God, and remains in perfect peace. Nay, the
mind itself may be deeply distressed, may be exceeding
sorrowful, may be perplexed and pressed down by heaviness
and anguish, even to agony, while the heart cleaves to God
by perfect love, and the will is wholly resigned to him. Was
it not so with the Son of God himself? Does any child of
man endure the distress, the anguish, the agony, which he
sustained? And yet he knew no sin. “Q. But can any one who has a pure heart prefer pleasing
to unpleasing food; or use any pleasure of sense which is not
strictly necessary? If so, how do they differ from others? “A. The difference between these and others in taking
pleasant food is, (1.) They need none of these things to make
them happy; for they have a spring of happiness within. They see and love God. Hence they rejoice evermore, and
in everything give thanks. (2.) They may use them, but
they do not seek them. (3.) They use them sparingly, and
not for the sake of the thing itself. This being premised, we
answer directly,--Such a one may use pleasing food, without
the danger which attends those who are not saved from sin. He may prefer it to unpleasing, though equally wholesome,
food, as a means of increasing thankfulness, with a single eye
to God, who giveth us all things richly to enjoy: On the same
principle, he may smell to a flower, or eat a bunch of grapes,
or take any other pleasure which does not lessen but increase
his delight in God. Therefore, neither can we say that one
perfected in love would be incapable of marriage, and of
worldly business? If he were called thereto, he would be
more capable than ever; as being able to do all things
without hurry or carefulness, without any distraction of spirit. “Q. But if two perfect Christians had children, how could
they be born in sin, since there was none in the parents? “A. It is a possible, but not a probable, case; I doubt
whether it ever was or ever will be. But waving this, I
answer, Sin is entailed upon me, not by immediate genera
tion, but by my first parent.