Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-384 |
| Words | 384 |
Paul’s account of
faith; and it is sufficient. He that thus believes is justified. “It is a sure means of purifying the heart, and never fails
to work by love.” (Page 287.) It surely purifies the heart,
--if we abide in it; but not if we “draw back to perdition.”
It never fails to work by love while it continues; but if itself
fail, farewell both love and good works. “Faith is the hand which receives all that is laid up in
Christ.” Consequently, if we make “shipwreck of the
faith,” how much soever is laid up in Christ, from that hour
we receive nothing. “Faith in the imputed righteousness of Christ is a funda
mental principle in the gospel.” (Letter 11, p. 288.) If so,
what becomes of all those who think nothing about imputed
righteousness? How many who are full of faith and love, if
this be true, must perish everlastingly ! “Thy hands must urge the way of the deadly weapon through
the shivering flesh, till it be plunged in the throbbing heart.”
(Page 297.) Are not these descriptions far too strong? May
they not occasion unprofitable reasonings in many readers? Ne pueros coran populo Medea trucidet.*
“How can he justify it to the world?” (Page 298.) Not
at all. Can this then justify his faith to the world? “You take the certain way to obtain comfort,--the
righteousness of Jesus Christ.” (Page 304.) What, without
the atonement? Strange fondness for an unscriptural,
dangerous mode of expression
“So the merits of Christ are derived to all the faithful.”
(Page 306.) Rather, the fruits of the Spirit; which are
likewise plainly typified by the oil in Zechariah’s vision. “Has the law any demand? It must go to him for satis
faction.” (Page 310.) Suppose, “Thou shalt love thy
neighbour as thyself;” then I am not obliged to love my
* The following is Lord Roscommon's translation of this verse from Horace :
“Medea must not draw her murdering knife,
Nor spill her children's blood, upon the stage.”--EDIT. neighbour: Christ has satisfied the demand of the law for
me. Is not this the very quintessence of Antinomianism? “The righteousness wrought out by Jesus Christ is
wrought out for all his people, to be the cause of their
justification, and the purchase of their salvation.