Wesley Collected Works Vol 11
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-11-441 |
| Words | 390 |
377
they spring ? “Out of the heart of man, if at all, ‘proceed
evil thoughts. If, therefore, the heart be no longer evil,
then evil thoughts no longer proceed out of it: For ‘a good
tree cannot bring forth evil fruit.’
“And as they are freed from evil thoughts, so likewise from
evil tempers. Every one of these can say, with St. Paul, ‘I
am crucified with Christ; nevertheless I live; yet not I, but
Christ liveth in me;’--words that manifestly describe a
deliverance from inward as well as from outward sin. This
is expressed both negatively, ‘I live not, my evil nature, the
body of sin, is destroyed; and positively, ‘Christ liveth in
me, and therefore all that is holy, and just, and good. Indeed, both these, ‘Christ liveth in me,’ and, ‘I live not,’
are inseparably connected. For what communion hath light
with darkness, or Christ with Belial? “He, therefore, who liveth in these Christians hath “puri
fied their hearts by faith; insomuch that every one that has
Christ in him, ‘the hope of glory, purifieth himself even as
he is pure.’ He is purified from pride; for Christ was lowly
in heart: He is pure from desire and self-will; for Christ
desired only to do the will of his Father: And he is pure
from anger, in the common sense of the word; for Christ
was meek and gentle. I say, in the common sense of the
word; for he is angry at sin, while he is grieved for the
sinner. He feels a displacency at every offence against God,
but only tender compassion to the offender. “Thus doth Jesus save his people from their sins, not only
from outward sins, but from the sins of their hearts. “True,”
say some, “but not till death, not in this world. Nay, St. John says, “Herein is our love made perfect, that we may
have boldness in the day of judgment; because, as he is, so
are we in this world. The Apostle here, beyond all contra
diction, speaks of himself and other living Christians, of
whom he flatly affirms, that, not only at or after death, but
‘in this world, they are “as their Master.’
“Exactly agreeable to this are his words in the first chapter:
‘God is light, and in him is no darkness at all.