Treatise Predestination Calmly Considered
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-predestination-calmly-considered-032 |
| Words | 393 |
And when you have yielded to “work
together with Him,” did you not find it very possible, not
withstanding, to give him all the glory? So that both
experience and Scripture are against you here, and make it
clear to every impartial inquirer, that though man has free
dom to work or not “work together with God,” yet may
God have the whole glory of his salvation. 47. If then you say, “We ascribe to God alone the whole
glory of our salvation;” I answer, So do we too. If you add,
“Nay, but we affirm, that God alone does the whole work,
without man’s working at all;” in one sense, we allow this
also. We allow, it is the work of God alone to justify, to
sanctify, and to glorify; which three comprehend the whole
of salvation. Yet we cannot allow, that man can only resist,
and not in any wise “work together with God;” or that God
is so the whole worker of our salvation, as to exclude man’s
working at all. This I dare not say; for I cannot prove it by
Scripture; nay, it is flatly contrary thereto; for the Scripture is
express, that (having received power from God) we are to “work
out our own salvation;” and that (after the work of God is
begun in our souls) we are “workers together with Him.”
48. Your objection, proposed in another form, is this: “It
is not so much for the glory of God, to save man as a free
agent, put into a capacity of either concurring with, or
resisting, his grace; as to save him in the way of a necessary
agent, by a power which he cannot possibly resist.”
O that the Lord would answer for himself! that he would
arise and maintain his own cause ! that he would no longer
suffer his servants, few as they are, to weaken one another’s
hands, and to be wearied not only with the “contradiction
of sinners,” but even of those who are in a measure saved
from sin “Woe is me, that I am constrained to dwell with
Meshech! among them that are enemies to peace | I labour
for peace; but when I speak thereof, they still make
themselves ready for battle.”
49. If it must be, then, let us look one another in the face.