A
Classic Holiness Sermon
God's Love to the Fallen Man
by John Wesley
Not as the offence, so also is the free gift
(Romans 5:15).
How exceedingly common, and how bitter, is the outcry
against our first parent for the mischief which he not only brought
upon himself, but entailed upon his latest posterity! It was by his
willful rebellion against God, “that sin entered into the world.”
“By one man’s disobedience,” as the apostle observes,
the many, as many as were then in the loins of their forefathers, were
made, or constituted sinners. Not only were they deprived of the favor
of God, but also of His image, of all virtue, righteousness, and true
holiness, and sunk partly into the image of the Devil: in pride, malice
and all other diabolical tempers, partly into the image of the brute,
being fallen under the dominion of brutal passions and groveling appetites.
Hence also death entered into the world, with all his forerunners and
attendants: pain, sickness, and a whole train of uneasy as well as unholy
passions and tempers.
“For all this we may thank Adam,” has been
echoed down from generation to generation. The selfsame charge has been
repeated in every age and every nation where the oracles of God are
known, in which alone this grand and important event has been discovered
to the children of men. Has not your heart, and probably your lips too,
joined in the general charge? How few are there of those who believe
the scriptural relation of the fall of man who have not entertained
the same thought concerning our first parent? Severely condemning him,
that, through willful disobedience to the sole command of his Creator,
“Brought death into the world and all our woe.”
Nay, it were well if the charge rested here, but it is
certain it does not. It cannot be denied that it frequently glances
from Adam to his Creator. Have not thousands, even of those who are
called Christians, taken the liberty to call His mercy, if not His justice
also, into question on this account? Some indeed have done this a little
more modestly, in an oblique and indirect manner; but others have thrown
aside the mask and asked, “Did not God foresee that Adam would
abuse his liberty? Did He not know the baneful consequences which this
must naturally have on all His posterity? Why then did He permit that
disobedience? Was it not easy for the Almighty to have prevented it?”
He certainly did foresee the whole. This cannot be denied. “For
known unto God are all his works from the beginning of the world.”
(Rather from all eternity, as the words ap aionos properly signify.)
It was undoubtedly in His power to prevent it, for He hath all power
both in heaven and earth. But it was known to Him at the same time that
it was best upon the whole not to prevent it. He knew that, “not
as the offence, so is the free gift”: that the evil resulting
from the former was not as the good resulting from the latter, not worthy
to be compared with it. He saw that to permit the fall of the first
man was far best for mankind in general, that abundantly more good than
evil would accrue to the posterity of Adam by his fall, that if “sin
abounded” thereby over all the earth yet grace “would much
more abound,” yea, and that to every individual of the human race,
unless it was his own choice.
May the Lover of men open the eyes of our understanding
to perceive clearly that by the fall of Adam mankind in general have
gained a capacity, first, of being more holy and happy on earth, and
secondly, of being more happy in heaven than otherwise they could have
been.
First, mankind in general has gained by the fall of Adam
a capacity of attaining more holiness and happiness on earth than it
would have been possible to attain if Adam had not fallen. If Adam had
not fallen, Christ had not died. Nothing can be more clear than this,
nothing more undeniable; the more thoroughly we consider the point,
the more deeply shall we be convinced of it. Unless all the partakers
of human nature had received that deadly wound in Adam it would not
have been needful for the Son of God to take our nature upon Him. Do
you not see this was the ground of His coming into the world? “By
one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed
upon all men” through him, “for all have sinned” (Romans
5:12). Was it not to remedy this very thing that, “the Word was
made flesh” that, “as in Adam all die, so in Christ shall
all be made alive”? Unless, then, many had been made sinners by
the disobedience of one; by the obedience of one, many would not have
been made righteous (v. 18). So there would have been no room for the
amazing display of the Son of God’s love to mankind. There would
have been no occasion for His “being obedient unto death, even
the death of the cross.” It could not then have been said, to
the astonishment of all the hosts of heaven, “God so loved the
world,” yet, the ungodly world, which had no thought or desire
of returning to Him, “that he gave his Son” out of His bosom,
His only begotten Son, to the end “that whosoever believeth on
him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” Neither could
we then have said, “God was in Christ reconciling the world to
himself”: or that He “made him to be sin,” that is,
a sin offering “for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made
the righteousness of God in him.” There would have been no such
occasion for such “an Advocate with the Father,” as, “Jesus
Christ the Righteous”; neither for His appearing, “at the
right hand of God, to make intercession for us.”
What is the necessary consequence of this? It is this:
there could then have been no such thing as faith in God, thus loving
the world, giving His only Son for us and for our salvation. There could
have been no such thing as faith in the Son of God, “as loving
us and giving himself for us.” There could have been no faith
in the Spirit of God, as renewing the image of God in our hearts, as
raising us from the death of sin unto the life of righteousness. Indeed,
the whole privilege of justification by faith could have no existence;
there could have been no redemption in the blood of Christ; neither
could Christ have been “made of God unto us” either “wisdom,
righteousness, sanctification, or redemption.”
The same grand blank which was in our faith, must likewise
have been in our love. We might have loved the Author of our being,
the Father of angels and men, as our Creator and preserver; we might
have said, “O Lord our Lord, how excellent is thy name in all
the earth!” But we could not have loved Him under the nearest
and dearest relation, “as delivering up his Son for us all.”
We might have loved the Son of God, as being the, “brightness
of his (Father’s) glory, the express image of his person”
(although this ground seems to belong rather to the inhabitants of heaven
than earth).
But we could not have loved Him as, bearing “our
sins in his own body on the tree,” and, by that one oblation of
Himself once offered, making a full oblation, sacrifice, and satisfaction,
for the sins of the whole world. We could not have been, “made
conformable to his death” nor, “have known the power of
his resurrection.” We could not have loved the Holy Ghost as revealing
to us the Father and Son, as opening the eyes of our understanding,
bringing us out of the darkness into His marvelous light, renewing the
image of God in our soul and sealing us unto the day of redemption.
So that, in truth, what is now, “in the sight of God, even the
Father,” not of fallible men, “pure religion and undefiled,”
would then have had no being; inasmuch as it wholly depends on those
grand principles, “By grace are ye saved through faith”
and, “Jesus Christ is of God made unto us wisdom, and righteousness,
and sanctification, and redemption.”
We see then what unspeakable advantage we derive from
the fall of our first parent with regard to faith: faith both in God
the Father, who spared not His own Son, His only Son, but, “wounded
him for our transgressions” and, “bruised him for our iniquities”;
and in God the Son, who poured out His soul for us transgressors and
washed us in His own blood. We see what advantage we derive there with
regard to the love of God, both of God the Father and God the Son. The
chief ground of this love, as long as we remain in the body, is plainly
declared by the apostle, “We love him, because he first loved
us.” But the greatest instance of His love had never been given,
if Adam had not fallen.
As our faith, both in God the Father and the Son receives
an unspeakable increase, if not its being, from this grand event, as
does also our love both of the Father and the Son, so does the love
of our neighbor also, our benevolence to all mankind, which cannot but
increase in the same proportion with our faith and love of God. For
who does not apprehend the force of that inference drawn by the loving
Apostle, “Beloved, if God so loved us, we ought also to love one
another.” If God so loved us, observe, the stress of the argument
lies on this point: so loved us! As to deliver up His only Son to die
a cursed death for our salvation. “Beloved, what manner of love
is this,” wherewith God hath loved us? So as to give His only
Son! In glory equal with the Father, in majesty co-eternal! What manner
of love is this wherewith the only begotten Son of God hath loved us,
as to empty Himself, as far as possible, of His eternal Godhead; as
to divest Himself of that glory, which He had with the Father before
the world began; as to, “take upon him the form of a servant,
being found in fashion as a man!” and then to humble Himself still
further, ‘being obedient unto death, even the death of the cross!”
If God so loved us, how ought we to love one another? But this motive
to brotherly love had been totally wanting, if Adam had not fallen.
Consequently we could not then have loved one another
in so high a degree as we may now. Nor could there have been that height
and depth in the command of our Blessed Lord, “As I have loved
you, so love one another.”
Such gainers may we be by Adam’s fall, with regard
both to the love of God and of our neighbor. But there is another grand
point, which though little adverted to, deserves our deepest consideration.
By that one act of our first parent, not only, “sin entered into
the world,” but pain also, and was alike entailed on his whole
posterity. Herein appeared, not only the justice, but the unspeakable
goodness of God. For how much good does He continually bring out of
this evil! How much holiness and happiness out of pain!
How innumerable are the benefits which God conveys to
the children of men through the channel of sufferings! So that it might
well be said, “What are termed afflictions in the language of
men, are in the language of God styled blessings.” Indeed had
there been no suffering in the world, a considerable part of religion,
yea, and in some respects, the most excellent part, could have had no
place therein, since the existence of it depends on our suffering. Had
there been no pain, it could have had no being. Upon this foundation,
even our suffering, it is evident all our passive graces are built,
yea, the noblest of all Christian graces: love enduring all things.
Here is the ground for resignation to God, enabling us to say from the
heart, in every trying hour, “It is the Lord: let him do what
seemeth him good.” “Shall we receive good at the hand of
the Lord, and shall we not receive evil?” And what a glorious
spectacle is this? Did it not constrain even a heathen to cry out, “Ecce
spectaculum. Deo dignum! See a sight worthy of God: a good man struggling
with adversity and superior to it.”
Here is the ground for confidence in God, both with regard
to what we feel and with regard to what we should fear, were it not
that our soul is calmly stayed on Him. What room could there be for
trust in God, if there was no such thing as pain or danger? Who might
not say then, “The cup which my Father hath given me, shall I
not drink it?” It is by sufferings that our faith is tried, and,
therefore, made more acceptable to God. It is in the day of trouble
that we have occasion to say, “Though he slay me, yet will I trust
in him.” This is well pleasing to God, that we should own Him
in the face of danger, in defiance of sorrow, sickness, pain, or death.
Again: had there been neither natural nor moral evil in
the world, what must have become of patience, meekness, gentleness,
long-suffering? It is manifest they could have had no being, seeing
all these have evil for their object. If, therefore, evil had never
entered into the world, neither could these had had any place in it.
For who could have returned good for evil, had there been no evildoer
in the universe? How had it been possible, on the supposition, to overcome
evil with good? Well you say, “But all these graces might had
been divinely infused into the hearts of men.”
Undoubtedly they might, but if they had, there would have
been no use or exercise for them. Whereas in the present state of things
we can never long want occasion to exercise them. The more they are
exercised, the more all our graces are strengthened and increased. In
the same proportion as our resignation, our confidence in God, our patience
and fortitude, our meekness, gentleness, and long-suffering, together
with our faith and love of God and man increase, must our happiness
increase, even in the present world.
To sum up what has been said under this head: as the more
holy we are upon earth, the more happy we must be (seeing there is an
inseparable connection between holiness and happiness); as the more
good we do to others, the more of present reward rebounds into our own
bosom, even as our sufferings for God lead us to rejoice in Him, “with
joy unspeakable and full of glory.” Therefore, the fall of Adam,
first, by giving us an opportunity of being far more holy; secondly,
by giving us the occasions of doing innumerable good works, which otherwise
could not have been done; and thirdly, by putting it in our power to
suffer for God, whereby “the Spirit of glory and of God rests
upon us” may be of such advantage to the children of men, even
in the present life, as they will not thoroughly comprehend till they
attain life everlasting.
It is then we shall be enabled fully to comprehend, not
only the advantages which accrue at the present time to the sons of
men by the fall of their first parent, but the infinitely greater advantages
which they may reap from it in eternity. In order to form some conception
of this, we may remember the observation of the apostle, “As one
star differeth from another star in glory, so also is the resurrection
of the dead.” The most glorious stars will undoubtedly be those
who are the most holy, who bear most of that image of God wherein they
were created. The next in glory to these will be those who have been
most abundant in good works and next to them, those that have suffered
most.
But what advantages in every one of these respects, will
the children of God receive in heaven, by God’s permitting the
introduction of pain upon earth, in consequence of sin? By occasion
of this they attained many holy tempers, which otherwise could have
had no being: resignation to God, confidence in Him in times of trouble
and danger, patience, meekness, gentleness, long-suffering and the whole
train of passive virtues. On account of this superior holiness they
will then enjoy superior happiness. Again: everyone will then, “receive
his own reward, according to his own labor.” Every individual
will be “rewarded according to his work.” But the Fall gave
rise to innumerable good works, which could otherwise never have existed,
such as ministering to the necessities of the saints, yea, relieving
the distressed in every kind.
Hereby innumerable stars will be added to their eternal
crown.
Yet again: there will be an abundant reward in heaven,
for suffering, as well as for doing, the will of God, “these light
afflictions, which are but for a moment, work out for us a far more
exceeding and eternal weight of glory.” Therefore that event,
which occasioned the entrance of suffering into the world, has thereby
occasioned, to all the children of God, an increase of glory to all
eternity. For although the sufferings themselves will be at an end,
although:
The pain of life shall then be o’er
The anguish and distracting care;
The sighing grief shall weep no more;
And sin shall never enter there.
Yet the joys occasioned thereby shall never end, but flow at God’s
right hand forevermore.
There is one advantage more that we reap from Adam’s
fall, which is not unworthy our attention. Unless in Adam all had died,
being in the loins of their first parent, every descendant of Adam,
every child of man, must have personally answered for himself to God.
It seems to be a necessary consequence of this, that if he had once
fallen, once violated any command of God, there would have been no possibility
of his rising again; there was no help, but he must have perished without
remedy. For that covenant knew not to show mercy; the word was, “The
soul that sinneth, it shall die.” Who would not rather be on the
footing he is now, under a covenant of mercy? Who would wish to hazard
a whole eternity upon one stake? Is it not infinitely more desirable
to be in a state wherein, though encompassed with infirmities, yet we
do not run such a desperate risk, but if we fall, we may rise again?
Wherein we may say:
My trespass is grown up to heaven!
But, far above the skies,
In Christ abundantly forgiven,
I see thy mercies rise!
In Christ! Let me entreat every serious person once more
to fix his attention here. All that has been said, all that can be said,
on these subjects, centers in this point. The fall of Adam produced
the death of Christ! Hear, O heavens, and give ear, O earth! Yea:
Let earth and heaven agree,
Angels and men be joined,
To celebrate with me
The Saviour of mankind;
To adore the all-atoning Lamb,
And bless the sound of JESUS’ Name!
If God had prevented the fall of man, the Word had never
been made flesh; nor had we ever, “seen his glory, the glory as
of the only begotten of the Father.” Those mysteries had never
been displayed, “which the very angels desire to look into.”
Methinks this consideration swallows up all the rest and should never
be out of our thoughts. Unless, “by one man, judgment had come
upon all men to condemnation,” neither angels nor men could ever
have known, “the unsearchable riches of Christ.”
See then, upon the whole, how little reason we have to repine at the
fall of our first parent, since herefrom we may derive such unspeakable
advantages, both in time and eternity. See how small pretense there
is for questioning the mercy of God in permitting that even to take
place! Since, therein, mercy, by infinite degrees, rejoices over judgment!
Where, then, is the man who presumes to blame God for not preventing
Adam’s sin? Should we not rather bless Him from the ground of
the heart for therein laying the grand scheme of man’s redemption
and making way for that glorious manifestation of His wisdom, holiness,
justice, and mercy? If indeed God had decreed before the foundation
of the world that millions of men should dwell in everlasting burnings,
because Adam sinned, hundreds of thousands of years before they had
a being, I know not who could thank Him for this, unless the Devil and
his angels: seeing, on this supposition, all those millions of unhappy
spirits would be plunged into hell by Adam’s sin, without any
possible advantage from it. But, blessed be God, this is not the case.
Such a decree never existed. On the contrary, everyone born of a woman
may be an unspeakable gainer thereby; and none ever was or can be a
loser, but by his own choice.
We see here a full answer to that plausible account, “of
the origin of evil,” published to the world some years since and
supposed to be unanswerable; that it, “necessarily resulted from
the nature of matter, which God was not able to alter.” It is
kind in this sweet-tongued orator to make an excuse for God! But there
is really no occasion for it: God hath answered for Himself. He made
man in His own image, a spirit endued with understanding and liberty.
Man abusing that liberty, produced evil, brought sin and pain into the
world. This God permitted, in order to [create] a fuller manifestation
of His wisdom, justice and mercy, by bestowing on all who would receive
it an infinitely greater happiness than they could possibly have attained
if Adam had not fallen.
“O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and
knowledge of God!” Although a thousand particulars of, “his
judgments, and of his ways are unsearchable” to us, and past our
finding out, yet we may discern the general scheme, running through
time into eternity. “According to the counsel of his own will,”
the plan He had laid before the foundation of the world, He created
the parent of all mankind in His own image He permitted all men to be
made sinners by the disobedience of this one man, that by the obedience
of one, all who receive the free gift may be infinitely holier and happier
to all eternity.