Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-444 |
| Words | 400 |
Wesley?” No.;
his Calvinism is omitted, to make him like the authors going
before him; “to preserve a consistency throughout the work;”
which still is not done as I could wish. However, those that
are fond of his bowels may put them in again, and swallow
them as they would the trail of a woodcock. 35. “They to whom the “The nice, metaphysical doc. righteousness of Christ is trine of imputed righteousness,
imputed (I mean, who truly instead of furthering men in
believe) are made righteous holiness, makes them satisfied
by the Spirit of Christ.” without any holiness at all.”
I have known a thousand instances of this. And yet “they
who truly believe in Christ are made righteous by his Spirit.”
Where is the contradiction between these propositions? 36. “Christian Library.” Nothing. 37. “Christ is now the Baxter's Aphorisms go for
righteousness of all that truly nothing. Richard Baxter is
believe.” not John Wesley. 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43. Nothing. Nothing against
44. “To all believers, the Goodwin : Nothing. righteousness of Christ is
imputed.”
We have now examined four-and-forty witnesses; but still
have no proof that I contradict myself, either with regard to
the covenant, election, and perseverance, or the imputed righte
ousness of Christ. With regard to this, the thing, that we are
justified merely for the sake of what Christ has done and suf
fered, I have constantly and earnestly maintained above four
and-thirty years. And I have frequently used the phrase,
hoping thereby to please others “for their good to edification.”
But it has had a contrary effect, since so many improve it into
an objection. Therefore, I will use it no more, unless it occur
in an hymn, or steal upon me unawares; I will endeavour to
use only such phrases as are strictly scriptural. And I will
advise all my brethren, all who are in connexion with me
throughout the three kingdoms, to lay aside that ambiguous,
unscriptural phrase, which issoliable to be misinterpreted, and to
speak in all instances, this in particular, “as the oracles of God.”
“Suffering the penalty is not Suffering the penalty is all the
all the law requires.” law requires. (Page 132.)
45. “So says the ‘Christian So says John Goodwin. Library.”
But this does not prove that I contradict myself. St. Paul speaks of the law as St. Paul does not speak of the
a person.