Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-304 |
| Words | 386 |
Has not covetousness been the peculiar vice of
old age? As death is nearer to the view, we plainly see that
men have more and more regard for the things of a transitory
world. We are sure, therefore, that death is no such benefit
to the generality of men. On the contrary, it is the king of
terrors to them, the burden of their lives, and bane of their
pleasures. To talk, therefore, of death’s being a benefit, an
original benefit, and that to all mankind, is to talk against the
common sense and experience of the whole world. “It is strange, death should be originally given by God as a
benefit to man, and that the shortening of man’s life afterward
should be designed as a farther benefit; and yet that God
should so often promise his peculiar people long iife as the
reward of obedience, and threaten them with death as a punish
ment of disobedience |
“‘But the Scripture, he says, “affirms that sufferings are
the chastisements of our heavenly Father, and death in parti
cular. But does not every chastisement suppose a fault? Must he not be a cruel father who will chasten his children for
no fault at all? If then God does but chasten us for Adam’s
sin, the fault of it must some way lie upon us; else we suppose
God’s dealings with his children to be unreasonable and
unrighteous.” (Vindication, p. 36, &c.)
(3.) I would only add two or three obvious questions: (i.)
Did God propose death as a benefit in the original threatening? (ii.) Did he represent it as a benefit in the sentence pronounced
on Adam : “Dust thou art, and unto dust thou shalt return?”
(iii.) Do the inspired writers speak of God’s “bringing a flood
on the world of the ungodly, as a benefit, or a punishment?”
(iv.) Do they mention the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah
as designed for a benefit to them? (v.) Is it by way of
benefit that God declares, “The soul that sinneth, it shall
die?” Certainly this point is not defensible. Death is pro
perly not a benefit, but a punishment. (4.) The other question is, “How shall we account for all
men’s rising again, by the obedience of another man, Jesus
Christ?” (Taylor's Doctrine, &c., p.