Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-375 |
| Words | 396 |
Watts and you is, whether the
thing, concerning which you are agreed, should be expressed by
one term or another. You both agree, (and no man in his
senses can deny,) that, in all ages, God has, on account of pious
ancestors, given many blessings to “heir offspring. But he
thinks these blessings should be termed rewards; (and so do all
the world;) you say they should not. The fact is plain either
way: God does continually, and did in all ages, give number
less blessings to the children, on account of the piety of their
fathers; and, it is certain, blessings given on account of virtue
have been hitherto termed rewards, both by God and man. You conclude this section: “Thus, it appears, the distinc
tion between personal sin and imputed guilt is without any
ground in Scripture.” (Page 22.) Just the contrary appears,
namely, that guilt was imputed to the scape-goat, to the child
ren of wicked parents, and to our blessed Lord himself, with
out any personal sin. The distinction, therefore, is sound
and scriptural. THAT God designs to bring good out of these is certain. But
does this prove, they have not the nature of punishments? Did
Adam himself suffer any affliction, any toil or pain? Doubt
less he did, long before he returned to dust. And can we doubt
but he received spiritual good from that pain? Yet it was a
punishment still; as really such, as if it had consigned him
over to everlasting punishment. This argument, therefore, is
of no weight: “God draws good out of punishments; there
fore they are no punishments at all.” However, then, the
sufferings wherein Adam’s sin has involved his own posterity
may “try and purify us, in order to future and everlasting
happiness,” (page 23,) this circumstance does not alter their
nature; they are punishments still. Let “afflictions, calamities, and death itself, be means of
improving in virtue,” (page 24,) of healing or preventing sin,
this is no manner of proof that they are not punishments. Was
not God able to heal or prevent sin, without either pain or
death? Could not the Almighty have done this as easily, as
speedily, and as effectually, without these, as with them? Why,
then, did he not? Why did Adam's sin bring these on his
whole posterity? Why should one man suffer for another
man's fault?