Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-377 |
| Words | 338 |
Now, what benefits, I say, have
these from their sufferings? Are they also “tried and purified
thereby?” Do sufferings “correct their inordinate passions,
and dispose their minds to sober reflections?” Do they “give
them opportunity of exercising kindness and compassion in
relieving each other’s distresses?” That I know not; but I
know by this and a thousand proofs, that when man, the lord
of the visible creation, rebelled against God, every part of the
creation began to suffer on account of his sin. And to
suffering on account of sin, I can give no properer name
than that of punishment. “It was to reclaim offenders that an extraordinary power
was exercised, either immediately by our Lord himself, or
by his Apostles, of inflicting bodily distempers, and, in some
cases, death itself.” (Page 25.) I do not remember any
more than one single case, wherein one of the Apostles
“inflicted death.” I remember no instance recorded in
Scripture, of their “inflicting bodily distempers; ” (the
blindness inflicted on Elymas cannot be so termed, without
great impropriety;) and certain I am, that our Lord himself
inflicted neither one nor the other. The citations in the next page prove no more than that we
may reap benefit from the punishments of others. (Page 26.)
But though either we or they reap benefit from them, yet
they are punishments still. “We do not here consider death and suffering as they
stand in the threatening of the law.” (Page 27.) You are
sensible, if we did, all mankind must acknowledge them to
be punishments. And this is the very light wherein we do
and must consider them in the present question. We consider
death and suffering as they stand in that threatening, “Thou
shalt surely die.” That this was denounced to all mankind,
we know, because it is executed on all. Therefore, considering
suffering and death as so threatened and executed, we cannot
deny that they are punishments,--punishments not on Adam
only, but on all that in fact do either die or suffer.