Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-543 |
| Words | 396 |
They laugh at all its
power. Can it cut off the connexion between those traces
and our apprehensions; or that between our apprehensions
and our passions; or between our passions and actions? No
thing at all of this. It may see the evil, but it cannot help it. 4. Try what reason can do, upon the third supposition,
that of President Edwards. Can it change the appearances
of the things that surround us? or the impression which the
nerves convey to the common sensory? or the sensation that
follows? or the apprehension? Or can it cut off the con
nexion between our apprehensions of things and our
passions? or that between our passions and our actions? Poor, impotent reason It can do neither more nor less in
any of these matters. It cannot alter the outward constitu
tion of things; the nature of light, sound, or the other objects
that surround us. It cannot prevent their affecting our senses
thus and thus. And then, will not all the rest follow 7
5. Make a trial, if reason can do any more, upon Lord
Kames’s supposition. Can it in any degree alter the nature
of the universal machine? Can it change or stop the
motion of any one wheel? Utterly impossible. 6. Has free-will any more power in these respects than
reason? Let the trial be made upon each of these schemes. What can it do upon Dr. Hartley’s scheme? Can our
free-will alter one vibration of the brain? What can it do
upon the second scheme? Can it erase or alter one of the
traces formed there? What can it do upon Mr. Edwards's? Can it alter the appearances of the things that surround us? or the impressions they make upon the nerves? or the
natural consequences of them? Can it do anything more on
Lord Kames’s scheme? Can it anyways alter the constitu
tion of the great clock 2 Stand still ! Look awhile into
your own breast ! What can your will do in any of these
matters? Ah, poor free-will! Does not plain experience
show, it is as impotent as your reason? Let it stand then as
an eternal truth, “Without me ye can do nothing.”
VI. 1. But in the same old book there is another word:
“I can do all things through Christ strengthening me.”
Here the charm is dissolved !