Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-005 |
| Words | 388 |
precedes the forgiving love of God. His pardoning mercy
supposes nothing in us but a sense of mere sin and misery;
and to all who see, and feel, and own their wants, and their
utter inability to remove them, God freely gives faith, for the
sake of Him in whom he is always “well pleased.”
12. This is a short, rude sketch of the doctrine we teach. These are our fundamental principles; and we spend our lives
in confirming others herein, and in a behaviour suitable to them. Now, if you are a reasonable man, although you do not
believe the Christian system to be of God, lay your hand upon
your breast, and calmly consider what it is that you can here
condemn? What evil have we done to you, that you should join
the common cry against us? Why should you say, “Away with
such fellows from the earth; it is not fit that they should live?”
13. It is true, your judgment does not fall in with ours. We believe the Scripture to be of God. This you do not
believe. And how do you defend yourselves against them who
urge you with the guilt of unbelief? Do you not say, “Every
man must judge according to the light he has,” and that “if
he be true to this, he ought not to be condemned?” Keep
then to this, and turn the tables. Must not we also judge
according to the light we have 2 You can in nowise condemn
us without involving yoarselves in the same condemnation. According to the light we have, we cannot but believe the
Scripture is of God; and while we believe this, we dare not
turn aside from it, to the right hand or to the left. 14. Let us consider this point a little farther. You yourself
believe there is a God. You have the witness of this in your
own breast. Perhaps sometimes you tremble before him. You
believe there is such a thing as right and wrong; that there is
a difference between moral good and evil. Of consequence you
must allow, there is such a thing as conscience: I mean, that
every person, capable of reflection, is conscious to himself, when
he looks back on anything he has done, whether it be good or
evil.