Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-223 |
| Words | 391 |
2. As to the grounds of it: If infants are guilty of original
sin, then they are proper subjects of baptism; seeing, in the
ordinary way, they cannot be saved, unless this be washed away
by baptism. It has been already proved, that this original
stain cleaves to every child of man; and that hereby they are
children of wrath, and liable to eternal damnation. It is true,
the Second Adam has found a remedy for the disease which
came upon all by the offence of the first. But the benefit
of this is to be received through the means which he hath
appointed; through baptism in particular, which is the ordi
mary means he hath appointed for that purpose; and to
which God hath tied us, though he may not have tied himself. Indeed, where it cannot be had, the case is different, but
extraordinary cases do not make void a standing rule. This
therefore is our First ground. Infants need to be washed from
original sin; therefore they are proper subjects of baptism. 3. Secondly. If infants are capable of making a covenant,
and were and still are under the evangelical covenant, then
they have a right to baptism, which is the entering seal
thereof. But infants are capable of making a covenant, and
were and still are under the evangelical covenant. The custom of nations and common reason of mankind prove
that infants may enter into a covenant, and may be obliged by
compacts made by others in their name, and receive advantage
by them. But we have stronger proof than this, even God's
own word: “Ye stand this day all of you before the Lord,
--your captains, with all the men of Israel; your little ones,
your wives and the stranger,-that thou shouldest enter into
covenant with the Lord thy God.” (Deut. xxix. 10-12.)
Now, God would never have made a covenant with little ones,
if they had not been capable of it. It is not said children
only, but little children, the Hebrew word properly signifying
infants. And these may be still, as they were of old, obliged
to perform, in aftertime, what they are not capable of per
forming at the time of their entering into that obligation. 4. The infants of believers, the true children of faithful
Abraham, always were under the gospel covenant.