Treatise Predestination Calmly Considered
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-predestination-calmly-considered-036 |
| Words | 379 |
To what end does all this
apparatus serve? If you say, “To insure his damnation;”
alas, what needeth that, seeing this was insured before the
foundation of the world! Let all mankind then judge, which
of these accounts is more for the glory of God’s wisdom ! 52. We come next to his justice. Now, if man be capable of
choosing good or evil, then he is a proper object of the justice
of God, acquitting or condemning, rewarding or punishing. But otherwise he is not. A mere machine is not capable of
being either acquitted or condenned. Justice cannot punish
a stone for falling to the ground; mor, on your scheme, a man
for falling into sin. For he can no more help it than the stone,
if he be, in your sense, fore-ordained to this condemnation. Why does this man sin? “He cannot cease from sin.” Why
cannot he cease from sin “Because he has no saving grace.”
Why has he no saving grace? “Because God, of his own good
pleasure, hath eternally decreed not to give it him.” Is he
then under an unavoidable necessity of sinning? “Yes, as
much as a stone is of falling. He never had any more power
to cease from evil, than a stone has to hang in the air.” And
shall this man, for not doing what he never could do, and for
doing what he never could avoid, be sentenced to depart into
everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels? “Yes,
because it is the sovereign will of God.” Then “you have
either found a new God, or made one !” This is not the God
of the Christians. Our God is just in all his ways; he reapeth
not where he hath not strewed. He requireth only according
to what he hath given; and where he hath given little, little is
required. The glory of his justice is this, to “reward every
man according to his works.” Hereby is that glorious attri
bute shown, evidently set forth before men and angels, in that
it is accepted of every man according to that he hath, and not
according to that he hath not. This is that just decree which
cannot pass, either in time or in eternity.