Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-500 |
| Words | 399 |
The
inspired writer could not design to inform us, that Adam begat
a man, not a lion, or a horse. It could not well refer to him as
a good man; for it is not said, Adam begat a son, who at length
became pious like himself; but, He ‘begat a son in his own like
mess.’ It refers to him, therefore, as a mortal, sinful man; giv
ing us to know, that the mortality and corruption contracted by
the fall descended from Adam to his son: Adam, a sinner,
begat a sinner like himself. And if Seth was thus a sinner by
nature, so is every other descendant of Adam.” (Pages 35, 36.)
“Dr. Taylor takes no notice of the antithesis between ‘the
likeness of God,” (verse 1) and ‘the likeness of Adam : ’
(Verse 3:) On the other hand, he speaks of these two as one;
as if Seth had been ‘born’ in the very same image of God
wherein Adam was ‘made.” But this cannot be admitted;
because Adam had now lost his original righteousness. It
must therefore be “the likeness’ of fallen, corrupted Adam
which is here intended. “‘And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in
the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his
heart was only evil continually.” (Gen. vi. 5.) Here Moses,
having observed, as the cause of the flood, that ‘God saw that
the wickedness of man was great,” to account for this general
wickedness, adds, “Every imagination of the thoughts of his
heart was evil; yea, was ‘only evil, and that “continually.”
The heart of man is here put for his soul. This God had
formed with a marvellous thinking power. But so is his soul
debased, that “every imagination, figment, formation, ‘of
the thoughts’ of it, “is evil, only evil, ‘continually evil. Whatever it forms within itself, as a thinking power, is an
evil formation. This Moses spoke of the Antediluvians; but
we cannot confine it to them. If all their actual wickedness
sprung from the evil formations of their corrupt heart; and
if consequently they were sinners from the birth, so are all
others likewise.” (Page 37.)
“‘I will not again curse the ground any more for man’s sake;
for the imagination of man’s heart is evil fröm his youth; neither
will I again smite any more every living thing.” (Gen. viii.