Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-385 |
| Words | 378 |
“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. The
righteousness is the cause, and the purchase.” (Page 311.)
So the death of Christ is not so much as named ! “For all
his people.” But what becomes of all other people? They
must inevitably perish for ever. The die was cast or ever
they were in being. The doctrine to pass them by has
Consign'd their unborn souls to hell,
And damn'd them from their mother's womb :
I could sooner be a Turk, a Deist, yea, an Atheist, than I
could believe this. It is less absurd to deny the very being
of God, than to make him an almighty tyrant. “The whole world and all its seasons are rich with our
Creator’s goodness. His tender mercies are over all his
works.” (Page 318.) Are they over the bulk of mankind? Where is his goodness to the non-elect? How are his tender
mercies over them? “His temporal blessings are given to
them.” But are they to them blessings at all? Are they
not all curses? Does not God know they are? that they will
only increase their damnation? Does not he design they
should? And this you call goodness: This is tender mercy! “May we not discern pregnant proofs of goodness in each
individual object?” (Page 321.) No; on your scheme, not
a spark of it, in this world or the next, to the far greater
part of the work of his own hands. “Is God a generous benefactor to the meanest animals, to
the lowest reptiles? And will he deny my friend what is
necessary to his present comfort, and his final acceptance?”
(Page 334.) Yea, will he deny it to any soul that he has
made? Would you deny it to any, if it were in your power? But if you loved whom God abhorr'd,
The servant were above his Lord. “The ‘wedding garment’ here means holiness.” (Page 337.)
“This is his tender complaint, ‘They will not come unto
me!’” (Page 340.) Nay, that is not the case; they
cannot. He himself has decreed, not to give them that
grace without which their coming is impossible.