Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-269 |
| Words | 365 |
And this glory admits of no increase,
being the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever. But the
Scripture frequently speaks of the glory of God, in a sense
something different from this; meaning thereby, the mani
festation of his essential glory, of his eternal power and
godhead, and of his glorious attributes, more especially his
justice, mercy, and truth. And it is in this sense alone that
the glory of God is said to be advanced by man. Now then,
this is the point which it lies on you to prove: “That it does
more eminently manifest the glorious attributes of God, more
especially his justice, mercy, and truth, to save man irresist
ibly, than to save him by such grace as it is in his power
either to concur with, or to resist.”
50. But you must not imagine I will be so unwise as to
engage you here on this single point. I shall not now dispute
(which yet might be done) whether salvation by irresistible
grace, (which indeed makes man a mere machine, and, conse
quently, no more rewardable and punishable,) whether, I
say, salvation by irresistible grace, considered apart from its
consequences, manifest the glory of God more or less than
salvation by grace which may be resisted. Not so; but, by
the assistance of God, I shall take your whole scheme toge
ther; irresistible grace for the elect, implying the denial of
saving grace to all others; or unconditional election with its
inseparable companion, unconditional reprobation. The case is clearly this: You may drive me, on the sone
hand, unless I will contradict myself, or retract my principles,
to own a measure of free-will in every man; (though not by
nature, as the Assembly of Divines;) and, on the other hand,
I can drive you, and every assertor of unconditional election,
unless you will contradict yourself, or retract your principles,
to own unconditional reprobation. Stand forth, then, free-will on the one side, and reproba
tion on the other; and let us see whether the one scheme,
attended with the absurdity, as you think it, of free-will, or
the other scheme, attended with the absurdity of reprobation,
be the more defensible.