Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-310 |
| Words | 389 |
5. Their Fourth proposition is, “The sinfulness of that
state into which man fell consists in the guilt of Adam’s first
sin; the want of that righteousness wherein he was created;
and the corruption of his nature, whereby he is utterly indis
posed, disabled, and made opposite to all that is spiritually
good, and wholly inclined to evil, and that continually;
which is commonly called original sin, and from which do
proceed all actual transgressions.”
On the first article of this you say, “Adam’s first sin was
attended with consequences which affect all his posterity. But we could not, on account of his sin, become obnoxious
to punishment.” (Page 99.) By punishment I mean evil,
suffered on account of sin. And are we not obnoxious to
any evil on account of Adam’s sin? To prove the rest of the proposition, they cite first, Rom. iii. 10-20. On which you remark, “The Apostle is here
speaking of Jews and Gentiles, not in a personal, but in a
national, capacity. “The mouth, says he, of all sorts of peo
ple is ‘stopped, and both Jews and Gentiles are brought in
guilty; for I have proved that there are transgressors among
the Jews, as well as among the Gentiles.” (Page 102.) Not
at all. If he proved no more than this, not one person
would “become guilty before God.” Not one “mouth” of
Jew or Gentile would “be stopped,” by showing, “there
were Jewish as well as Heathen transgressors.”
I proceed to your observations:--
(1) “In this whole section there is not one word of Adam.”
There is enough in the next chapter but one. The Apostle
first describes the effect, and afterwards point out the cause. (2.) “He is here speaking, not of all men, but of the Jews;
of those alone who were “under the law,’ (verse 19,) and
proving from their own writings that there were great cor
ruptions among them as well as other people.” (Page 103.)
He is speaking of them chiefly; but not of them only, as
appears from the ninth verse: “We have before proved both
Jews and Gentiles, that they are all under sin: As it is written,
There is none righteous,” (neither among the Jews nor Gen
tiles,) “no, not one.” Does this respect them in their na
tional only, not personal, capacity?