Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-326 |
| Words | 399 |
Nay,
but he means as he speaks. They “are alienated from the
life of God,” from the time of their coming into the world. From the time of their birth, they “knew not the way of
truth; ” neither can, unless they are “born of God.”
You cite as a parallel text, “‘Thou wast called a transgressor
from the womb; that is, set to iniquity by prevailing habits
and customs.” Nay, the plain meaning is, The Israelites in
general had never kept God’s law since they came into the world. Perhaps the phrase, “from the womb,” is once used figura
tively, namely, Job xxxi. 18. But it is manifest, that it is to
be literally taken, Isaiah xlix. 1 : “The Lord hath called me
from the womb; from the bowels of my mother hath he made
mention of my name.” For, (1.) This whole passage relates
to Christ; these expressions in particular. (2.) This was lite
rally fulfilled, when the angel was sent while he was yet in
the womb, to order that his “name * should be “called
Jesus.” This is not therefore barely “an hyperbolical form
of aggravating sin; ” but a humble confession of a deep and
weighty truth, whereof we cannot be too sensible. “But you have no manner of ground to conclude, that it
relates to Adam’s sin.” (Page 136.)
Whether it relates to Adam’s personal sin or no, it relates
to a corrupt nature. This is the present question; and your
pulling in Adam’s sin only tends to puzzle the reader. But how do you prove (since you will drag this in) that it
does not relate to Adam’s sin? Thus: “(1.) In the whole Psalm there is not one word
about Adam, or the effects of his sin upon us.”
Here, as usual, you blend the two questions together; the
ready way to confound an unwary reader. But first, to the
first: “In the whole Psalm there is not one word about Adam;
therefore it relateth not to him.” Just as well you may argue,
“In the whole Psalm there is not oneword about Uriah; there
fore it relatethnot to him.” The second assertion, “There is not
one word of the effects of his sin,” is a fair begging the question. “(2.) The Psalmist is here charging himself with his own
sin.” He is; and tracing it up to the fountain.