Treatise Plain Account Of Christian Perfection
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-plain-account-of-christian-perfection-078 |
| Words | 378 |
Once more,
beware of Solifidianism; crying nothing but, ‘Believe, believe!’
and condemning those as ignorant or legal who speak in a more
scriptural way. At certain seasons, indeed, it may be right to
&reat of nothing but repentance, or merely of faith, or altogether
of holiness; but, in general, our call is to declare the whole
counsel of God, and to prophesy according to the analogy of
faith. The written word treats of the whole and every parti
cular branch of righteousness, descending to its minutest
branches; as to be sober, courteous, diligent, patient, to honour
all men. So, likewise, the Holy Spirit works the same in our
hearts, not merely creating desires after holiness in general, but
strongly inclining us to every particular grace, leading us to
every individual part of ‘whatsoever is lovely.’ And this with
the greatest propriety: For as ‘by works faith is made perfect,”
so the completing or destroying the work of faith, and enjoying
the favour, or suffering the displeasure, of God, greatly
depends on every single act of obedience or disobedience. “Q. 35. What is the Fourth? “A. Beware of sins of omission; lose no opportunity of
doing good in any kind. Be zealous of good works; willingly
omit no work, either of piety or mercy. Do all the good you
possibly can to the bodies and souls of men. Particularly, ‘thou
shalt in anywise reprove thy neighbour, and not suffer sin upon
him. Be active. Give no place to indolence or sloth; give no
occasion to say, ‘Ye are idle, ye are idle. Many will say so
still; but let your whole spirit and behaviour refute the slander. Be always employed; lose no shred of time; gather up the
fragments, that nothing be lost. And whatsoever thy hand
findeth to do, do it with thy might. Be “slow to speak,’ and
wary in speaking. ‘In a multitude of words there wanteth
not sin.” Do not talk much; neither long at a time. Few can
converse profitably above an hour. Keep at the utmost
distance from pious chit-chat, from religious gossiping. “Q. 36. What is the Fifth P
“A. Beware of desiring anything but God. Now you
desire nothing else; every other desire is driven out; see
that none enter again.