Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-313 |
| Words | 379 |
(3.) “In these verses he is describing their wretched state,
while they were in Gentile darkness,”--and while they were
in Jewish darkness; the Jews having been just as wicked be
fore their conversion as the Heathens. Both the one and the
other had “walked,” till then, “in the vanity of their mind;
having their understanding darkened,” being equally “dead
in trespasses and sins,” equally “alienated from the iife of
God, through the blindness of their heart:”--A very lively
description, not so much of a wicked life, as of an evil nature. (4.) “When he saith, they were ‘dead in trespasses and
sins, he speaks of their personal iniquities.” (Page 109.)
True, both of heart and life. I must make some variation in
the rest of your paraphrase. “Wherein,” saith he, “in times
past, ye,” Heathens particularly, “walked;” inwardly and
outwardly, “according to the prince of the power of the air,
the spirit that now” (still) “worketh in the children of dis
obedience; among whom we Jews also had our conversation;”
being as “dead in trespasses and sins” as you. “Therefore, (5.) When he adds, “And were by nature the
children of wrath, even as others, he cannot mean, they were
liable to wrath, by that nature which they brought into the
world.” (Page 110.) Why not? This does not follow from
anything you have said yet. Let us see how you prove it
now : “This nature is now no other than God’s own work. The nature of every man comes out of the hands of God.”
The same may be said of those who are still “dead in tres
passes and sins.” Their original nature came from God, and
was no other than God’s own work; yet the present corrup
tion of their nature came not from God, and is not his work. “Consequently, the nature of every person, when brought into
being, is just what God sees fit it should be.” This is true of
the original nature of mankind, when it was first “brought
into being;” but it is not true of our present corrupt nature. This is not “what God sees fit it should be.” “It is his power
alone that forms it.” Yes, that forms us men; but not that
forms us sinful men.