Treatise Thoughts Upon Necessity
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-thoughts-upon-necessity-019 |
| Words | 370 |
4. But allowing all he contends for, -that upon such vibra
tions of the brain, such sensations directly follow, and indi
rectly, as the various combinations and results of them, all
our judgments and passions, and consequently words and
actions; yet this infers no necessity at all, if there be a God
in the world. Upon this the whole matter turns. And,
“This circumstance the Doctor had forgot.” And so indeed
have almost the whole tribe of modern philosophers. They do
not at all take God into their account; they can do their whole
business without him... But in truth this their wisdom is
their folly; for no system, either of morality or philosophy,
can be complete, unless God be kept in view, from the very
beginning to the end. Every true philosopher will surely go
at least as far as the poor heathen poet:
Ek Atos apxacue6a, kalew Au Anyere Maloal. “Muses, begin and end with God supreme !”
Now, if there be a God, he cannot but have all power over
every creature that he has made. He must have equal
power over matter and spirits, over our souls and bodies. What are then all the vibrations of the brain to him? or
all the natural consequences of them ? Suppose there be
naturally the strongest concatenation of vibrations, sensations,
reflections, judgments, passions, actions; cannot He, in a
moment, whenever and however He pleases, destroy that
concatemation ? Cannot he cut off, or suspend, in any degree,
the connexion between vibrations and sensations, between
sensations and reflections, between reflections and judgments,
and between judgments and passions or actions? We cannot
have any idea of God’s omnipotence, without seeing He can
do this if he will. 5. “If he will,” you may say, “we know he can. But
have we any reason to think he will?” Yes; the strongest
reason in the world, supposing that God is love; more especi
ally, suppose he “is loving to every man,” and that “his
mercy is over all his works.” If so, it cannot be, that he
should see the noblest of his creatures under heaven neces
sitated to evil, and incapable of any relief but from himself,
without affording that relief.