Wesley Collected Works Vol 9
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-9-544 |
| Words | 383 |
It cannot do
its work, but according to the light it hath to work by. Wherefore, seeing ‘the natural man discerneth not spiritual
things,’ his conscience is quite useless in that point. It may
indeed check for grosser sins; but spiritual sins it discerns
not. Thus it will fly in the face of many for drunkenness;
who yet have a profound peace though they live in unbelief,
and are utter strangers to spiritual worship and ‘the life of
faith.’ And the light of his conscience being faint and
languishing even in the things which it does reach, its incite
ments to duty, and struggles against sin, are very remiss and
easily got over. But there is also a false light in the dark
mind, which often ‘ calls evil good, and good evil.” And such
a conscience is like a blind and furious horse, which violently
runs down all that comes in his way. Indeed, whenever
conscience is awakened by the spirit of conviction, it will rage
and roar, and put the whole man in a consternation. It
makes the stiff heart to tremble, and the knees to bow; sets
the eyes a weeping, the tongue a confessing. But still it is an
evil conscience, which naturally leads only to despair; and
will do it effectually, unless either sin prevails over it to lull
it asleep, as in the case of Felix, or the blood of Christ pre
vail over it, sprinkling and ‘purging it from dead works.’
“Thus is man by nature wholly corrupted. But whence
came this total corruption of our nature? That man’s nature
was corrupt, the very Heathens perceived; but how “sin
entered’ they could not tell. But the Scripture is very plain
in the point: “By one man sin entered into the world.” “By
one man’s disobedience many’ (all) “were made sinners.”
Adam's sin corrupted man’s nature, and leavened the whole
lump of mankind. We putrefied in Adam as our root. The
root was poisoned, and so the branches were envenomed. The
vine turned ‘the vine of Sodom,’ and so the grapes became
‘grapes of gall. Adam, by his sin, became not only guilty,
but corrupt; and so transmits guilt and corruption to his
posterity. By his sin he stripped himself of his original
righteousness and corrupted himself.