Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-447 |
| Words | 397 |
Nay, many
even of the heathen philosophers believed it, from their own
experience, and their daily survey of mankind; though they
were utterly at a loss how to account for it. And what, if
we could not assign a sufficient and satisfactory reason for it,
or show how this spreading degeneracy began, or how it came
to take place so universally? What, if we were still at a loss to
explain how all this guilt and misery came upon us,--must
we therefore deny the things which we see, and hear, and
feel, daily?” (Page 91.)
“Can we account for all the secret things in the creation
of God? And must we deny whatever we cannot account for? Does any man refuse to believe that the infinite variety of
plants and flowers, in all their beauteous colours and forms,
grow out of the same earth, because he does not know all the
springs of their vegetation? Do men doubt of a loadstone's
drawing iron to itself, because they cannot find out the way of
its operation? Are we not sure that food nourishes our bodies,
and medicines relieve our pains? Yet we know not all the
ferment and motions of those atoms by which we are relieved
and nourished. Why then should we deny that degeneracy of
our nature which admits of so full and various proof, though
we are not able to account for every circumstance relating to
it, or to solve every difficulty that may attend it?” (Page 92.)
“How came vice and misery to overspread mankind in all
nations, and in all ages? “Heathen philosophers could never answer this; but Chris
tians may from the oracles of God.” (Page 94.)
“These inform us, that the first man was a ‘common head
and representative of all mankind;’ and that he, by sinning
against his Maker, lost his own holiness and happiness, and
exposed himself and his posterity (whom he naturally pro
duced, and whom he legally represented) to the displeasure of
his Maker, and so spread sin and misery through his whole
offspring.” (Page 102.)
“So St. Paul: “As by one man sin entered into the world,
and death by sin; even so death passed upon all men, for that
all have sinned.” (Rom. v. 12.) All are esteemed in some sort
guilty before God, though they “did not sin after the similitude
of Adam’s transgression.