Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-476 |
| Words | 396 |
It was wrought into
his nature, and concreated with his rational powers. A rational
creature, as such, is capable of knowing, loving, serving, living
in communion with, the Most Holy One. Adam at first either
did or did not use this capacity; either he knew and loved God,
or he did not. If he did not, he was not ‘very good, no, nor good
at all: If he did, he was upright, righteous, holy.” (Page 12.)
“3. When God vested man with dominion over the other
creatures, how was he qualified for exercising that dominion,'
unless he had in himself a principle of love and obedience to the
Supreme Governor? Did not God form the creatures obedient
to man, to confirm man in his loving obedience to God; Or did
he create them with a disposition to depend on and obey man
as their lord, and not create man with a disposition to obey and
live dependent on the Lord of all? But this disposition is
uprightness. Therefore God “made man upright.’” (Page 13.)
“4. Either man was created with principles of love and obe
dience, or he was created an enemy to God. One of these must
be: For as all the duty required of man, as a rational being, is
summarily comprised in love, a supreme love to God, and a sub
ordinate love to others, for his sake; so there can be no me
dium between a rational creature's loving God, and not loving,
which is a degree of ‘enmity’ to him. Either, O man, thou
lovest God, or thou dost not: If thou dost, thou art holy or
righteous; if thou dost not, thou art indisposed to serve him
in such a manner, and with such a frame of spirit, as he re
quires. Then thou art an enemy to God, a rebel against his
authority. But God could not create man in such a state, in
a state of enmity against himself. It follows, that man was
created a lover of God, that is, righteous and holy.” (Page 14.)
“In a word: Can you prove, either that man was not
‘created after God,” or that this does not mean, being ‘created
in righteousness and true holiness?’ Was not man, as all crea
tures, good in his kind? And is a rational creature good,
unless all its powers are devoted to God?