Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-367 |
| Words | 400 |
A consider ABLE time since, I sent you a few hasty
thoughts which occurred to me on reading the “Dialogues
between Theron and Aspasio.” I have not been favoured
with any answer. Yet upon another and a more careful
perusal of them, I could not but set down some obvious
reflections, which I would rather have communicated before
these Dialogues were published. In the First Dialogue there are several just and strong
observations, which may be of use to every scrious reader. In the Second, is not the description often too laboured? the language too stiff and affected? Yet the reflections on
the creation, in the thirty-first and following pages, make
abundant amends for this. (I cite the pages according to
the Dublin edition, having wrote the rough draught of what
follows in Ireland.)
Is justification more or less than God’s pardoning and
accepting a sinner through the merits of Christ? That God
herein “reckons the righteousness and obedience which
Christ performed as our own,” (page 39,) I allow; if by that
ambiguous expression you mean only, as you here explain it
yourself, “They are as effectual for obtaining our salvation,
as if they were our own personal qualifications.” (Page 41.)
“We are not solicitous as to any particular set of phrases. Only let men be humbled, as repenting criminals at Christ's
feet, let them rely as devoted pensioners on his merits,
and they are undoubtedly in the way to a blissful immor
tality.” (Page 43.) Then, for Christ's sake, and for the sake
of the immortal souls which he has purchased with his blood,
do not dispute for that particular phrase, “the imputed
righteousness of Christ.” It is not scriptural; it is not
necessary. Men who scruple to use, men who never heard,
the expression, may yet “be humbled, as repenting criminals
at his feet, and rely as devoted pensioners on his merits.”
But it has done immense hurt. I have had abundant proof,
that the frequent use of this unnecessary phrase, instead of
“furthering men's progress in vital holiness,” has made
them satisfied without any holiness at all; yea, and encou
raged them to work all uncleanness with greediness. “To ascribe pardon to Christ's passive, eternal life to his
active, righteousness, is fanciful rather than judicious. His
universal obedience from his birth to his death is the one
foundation of my hope.” (Page 45.)
This is unquestionably right.