Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-434 |
| Words | 400 |
I believe it not; nor Michael Linner
neither; to clear whom entirely, one need only read his own
words:
“About fourteen years ago, I was more than ever convinced
that I was wholly different from what God required me to be. I consulted his word again and again; but it spoke nothing but
condemnation; till at last I could not read, nor indeed do any
thing else, having no hope and no spirit left in me. I had been
in this state for several days, when, being musing by myself,
those words came strongly into my mind, “God so loved the
world that he gave his only-begotten Son, to the end that all
who believe in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.’
I thought, ‘All ! Then I am one. Then He is given for me. But I am a sinner: And he came to save sinners.’ Immedi
ately my burden dropped off, and my heart was at rest. “But the full assurance of faith I had not yet, nor for the
two years I continued in Moravia. When I was driven out
thence by the Jesuits, I retired hither, and was soon after
received into the Church. And here, after some time, it pleased
our Lord to manifest himself more clearly to my soul; and give
PRINCIPLEs of A METHODIsT. 37]
me that full sense of acceptance in him, which excludes all
doubt and fear. “Indeed, the leading of the Spirit is different in different
souls. His more usual method, I believe, is, to give, in one
and the same moment, forgiveness of sins, and a full assurance
of that forgiveness. Yet in many he works as he did in me;
giving first the remission of sins, and after some weeks, or
months, or years, the full assurance of it.” (Vol. I. p. 128.)
All I need observe is, that the first sense of forgiveness is
often mixed with doubt or fear. But the full assurance of
faith excludes all doubt and fear, as the very term implies. Therefore, instead of, “He may not know that he has peace
with God till long after,” it should be, (to agree with Michael
Linner’s words,) “He may not have, till long after, the full
assurance of faith, which excludes all doubt and fear.”
“I believe a man is justified at the same time that he is
born of God.