Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-234 |
| Words | 380 |
One jot or one tittle shall in nowise pass from the law, till
heaven and earth pass.”
“Therefore a believer is free from the law.” That he is
“free from the curse of the law,” we know ; and that he is
“free from the law,” or power, “ of sin and death: ” But
where is it written that he is free from the law of God? “He is not obliged thereby to do or omit anything, it being
inconsistent with his liberty to do anything as commanded.”
So your liberty is a liberty to disobey God; whereas ours is a
liberty to obey him in all things: So grossly, while we “establish
the law,” do you “make void the law through faith !”
“5. We are sanctified wholly the moment we are justified,
and are neither more nor less holy to the day of our death;
entire sanctification and entire justification being in one and
the same instant.”
Just the contrary appears both from the tenor of God’s
word, and the experience of his children. “6. A believer is never sanctified or holy in himself, but
in Christ only. He has no holiness in himself at all; all his
holiness being imputed, not inherent.”
Scripture holiness is the image of God; the mind which was
in Christ; the love of God and man; lowliness, gentleness,
temperance, patience, chastity. And do you coolly affirm,
that this is only imputed to a believer, and that he has none
at all of this holiness in him? Is temperance imputed only to
him that is a drunkard still ; or chastity, to her that goes on
in whoredom? Nay, but a believer is really chaste and
temperate. And if so, he is thus far holy in himself. Does a believer love God, or does he not? If he does, he
has the love of God in him. Is he lowly, or meek, or patient
at all? If he is, he has these tempers in himself; and if he
has them not in himself, he is not lowly, or meek, or patient. You cannot therefore deny, that every believer has holiness
in, though not from, himself; else you deny, that he is holy
at all; and if so, he cannot see the Lord.