Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-121 |
| Words | 385 |
It is likewise discerned by internal signs,--both by the
witness of the Spirit, and the fruit of the Spirit; namely, “love,
peace, joy, meekness, gentleness; ” by all “the mind which
was in Christ Jesus.”
11. You assert, Fourthly, “They speak of grace, that it is
as perceptible to the heart as sensible objects are to the senses;
whereas the Scriptures speak of grace, that it is conveyed
imperceptibly; and that the only way to be satisfied whether
we have it or no, is to appeal, not to our inward feelings, but
our outward actions.” (Page 32.)
We do speak of grace, (meaning thereby, that power of God
which worketh in us both to will and to do of his good pleasure,)
that it is “as perceptible to the heart” (while it comforts,
refreshes, purifies, and sheds the love of God abroad therein)
“as sensible objects are to the senses.” And yet we do not
doubt, but it may frequently be “conveyed to us imperceptibly.”
But we know no scripture which speaks of it as always conveyed,
and always working, in an imperceptible manner. We likewise
allow, that outward actions are one way of satisfying us that we
have grace in our hearts. But we cannot possibly allow, that
“the only way to be satisfied of this is to appeal to our outward
actions, and not our inward feelings.” On the contrary, we
104 LETTER. To
believe that love, joy, peace, are inwardly felt, or they have no
being; and that men are satisfied they have grace, first by feel
ing these, and afterward by their outward actions. 12. You assert, Fifthly, “They talk of regeneration in
every Christian, as if it was as sudden and miraculous a conver
sion as that of St. Paul and the first converts to Christianity,
and as if the signs of it were frightful tremors of body, and
convulsive agonies of mind; not as a work graciously begun
and gradually carried on by the blessed Spirit, in conjunction
with our rational powers and faculties; the signs of which
are sincere and universal obedience.” (Page 33.)
This is part true, part false. We do believe regeneration, or,
in plain English, the new birth, to be as miraculous or super
natural a work now as it was seventeen hundred years ago.