A
Classic Holiness Sermon
Free Grace
by John Wesley
“He that spared not his own Son, but delivered him
up for us all, how shall he not with him also freely give us all things?”
Romans 8:32
TO THE READER: Nothing but the strongest conviction, not
only that what is here advanced is “the truth as it is in Jesus,”
but also that I am indispensably obliged to declare this truth to all
the world, could have induced me openly to oppose the sentiments of
those whom I esteem for their work’s sake: At whose feet may I
be found in the day of the Lord Jesus!
Should any believe it his duty to reply hereto, I have
only one request to make,—Let whatsoever you do, be done inherently,
in love, and in the spirit of meekness. Let your very disputing show
that you have “put on, as the elect of God, bowel of mercies,
gentleness, longsuffering; “that even according to this time it
may be said, “See how these Christians love one another!”
ADVERTISEMENT Whereas a pamphlet entitled, “Free Grace Indeed,”
has been published against this Sermon; this is to inform the publisher,
that I cannot answer his tract till he appears to be more in earnest.
For I dare not speak of “the deep things of God” in the
spirit of a prize-fighter or a stage-player.
1. How freely does God love the world! While we were
yet sinners, “Christ died for the ungodly.” While we were
“dead in our sin,” God “spared not his own Son, but
delivered him up for us all.” And how freely with him does he
“give us all things!” Verily, FREE GRACE is all in all!
2. The grace or love of God, whence cometh our salvation,
is FREE IN ALL, and FREE FOR ALL.
3. First. It is free in all to whom it is given.
It does not depend on any power or merit in man; no, not in any degree,
neither in whole, nor in part. It does not in anywise depend either
on the good works or righteousness of the receiver; not on anything
he has done, or anything he is. It does not depend on his endeavors.
It does not depend on his good tempers, or good desires, or good purposes
and intentions; for all these flow from the free grace of God; they
are the streams only, not the fountain. They are the fruits of free
grace, and not the root. They are not the cause, but the effects of
it. Whatsoever good is in man, or is done by man, God is the author
and doer of it. Thus is his grace free in all; that is, no way depending
on any power or merit in man, but on God alone, who freely gave us his
own Son, and “with him freely giveth us all things.
4. But it is free for ALL, as well as IN ALL. To
this some have answered, “No: It is free only for those whom God
hath ordained to life; and they are but a little flock. The greater
part of God hath ordained to death; and it is not free for them. Them
God hateth; and, therefore, before they were born, decreed they should
die eternally. And this he absolutely decreed; because so was his good
pleasure; because it was his sovereign will. Accordingly, they are born
for this,—to be destroyed body and soul in hell. And they grow
up under the irrevocable curse of God, without any possibility of redemption;
for what grace God gives he gives only for this, to increase, not prevent,
their damnation.”
5. This that decree of predestination. But methinks
I hear one say, “This is not the predestination which I hold:
I hold only the election of grace. What I believe is not more than this,—that
God, before the foundation of the world, did elect a certain number
of men to be justified, sanctified, and glorified. Now, all these will
be saved, and none else; for the rest of mankind God leaves to themselves:
So they follow the imaginations of their own hearts, which are only
evil continually, and, waxing worse and worse, are at length justly
punished with everlasting destruction.”
6. Is this all the predestination which you hold?
Consider; perhaps this is not all. Do not you believe God ordained them
to this very thing” If so, you believe the whole degree; you hold
predestination in the full sense which has been above described. But
it may be you think you do not. Do not you then believe, God hardens
the hearts of them that perish: Do not you believe, he (literally) hardened
Pharaoh’s heart; and that for this end he raised him up, or created
him? Why, this amounts to just the same thing. If you believe Pharaoh,
or any one man upon earth, was created for this end,—to be damned,—you
hold all that has been said of predestination. And there is no need
you should add, that God seconds his degree, which is supposed unchangeable
and irresistible, by hardening the hearts of those vessels of wrath
whom that decree had before fitted for destruction.
7. Well, but it may be you do not believe even this;
you do not hold any decree of reprobation; you do not think God decrees
any man to be damned, not hardens, irresistibly fits him, for damnation;
you only say, “God eternally decreed, that all being dead in sin,
he would say to some of the dry bones, Live, and to others he would
not; that, consequently, these should be made alive, and those abide
in death,—these should glorify God by their salvation, and those
by their destruction.”
8. Is not this what you mean by the election of grace?
If it be, I would ask one or two question: Are any who are not thus
elected saved? or were any, from the foundation of the world? Is it
possible any man should be saved unless he be thus elected? If you say,
“No,” you are but where you was; you are not got one hair’s
breadth farther; you still believe, that, in consequence of an unchangeable,
irresistible decree of God, the greater part of mankind abide in death,
without any possibility of redemption; inasmuch as none can save them
but God, and he will not save them. You believe he hath absolutely decreed
not to save them; and what is this but decreeing to damn them? It is,
in effect, neither more not less; it comes to the same thing; for if
you are dead, and altogether unable to make yourself alive, then, if
God has absolutely decreed he will make only others alive, and not you,
he hath absolutely decreed your everlasting death; you are absolutely
consigned to damnation. So then, though you use softer words than some,
you mean the self-same thing; and God’s decree concerning the
election of grace, according to your account of it, amounts to neither
more not less than what others call God’s decree of reprobation.
9. Call it therefore by whatever name you please,
election, preterition, predestination, or reprobation, it comes in the
end to the same thing. The sense of all is plainly this,—by virtue
of an eternal, unchangeable, irresistible decree of God, on part of
mankind are infallibly saved, and the rest infallibly damned; it being
impossible that any of the former should be damned or that any of the
latter should be saved.
10. But if this be so, then is all preaching vain?
It is needless to them that are elected; for they, whether with preaching
or without, will infallibly be saved. Therefore, the end of preaching—to
save should—is void with regard to them; and it is useless to
them that are not elected, for they cannot possibly be saved: They,
whether with preaching or without, will infallibly be damned. The end
of preaching is therefore void with regard to them likewise; so that
in either case our preaching is vain, as you hearing is also vain.
11. This then, is a plain proof that the doctrine
of predestination is not a doctrine of God, because it makes void the
ordinance of God; and God is not divided against himself. A second is,
that it directly tends to destroy that holiness which is the end of
all the ordinances of God. I do not say, none who hold it are holy;
(for God is of tender mercy to those who are unavoidably entangled in
errors of any kind;) but that the doctrine itself,—that every
man is either elected or not elected from eternity, and that the one
must inevitably be saved, and the other inevitably damned,—has
a manifest tendency to destroy holiness in general; for it wholly takes
away those first motives to follow after it, so frequently proposed
in Scripture, the hope of future reward and fear of punishment, the
hope of heaven and fear of hell. That these shall go away into everlasting
punishment, and those into life eternal, is not motive to him to struggle
for life who believes his lot is cast already; it is not reasonable
for him so to do, if he thinks he is unalterably adjudged either to
life or death. You will say, “But he knows not whether it is life
or death.” What then?—this helps not the matter; for if
a sick man knows that he must unavoidably die, or unavoidably recover,
though he knows not which, it is unreasonable for him to take any physic
at all. He might justly say, (and so I have heard some speak, both in
bodily sickness and in spiritual,) “If I am ordained to life,
I shall live; if to death, I shall live; so I need not trouble myself
about it.” So directly does this doctrine tend to shut the very
gate of holiness in general,—to hinder unholy men from ever approaching
thereto, or striving to enter in thereat.
12. as directly does this doctrine tend to destroy
several particular branches of holiness. Such are meekness and love,—love,
I mean, of our enemies,—of the evil and unthankful. I say not,
that none who hold it have meekness and love; (for as is the power of
God, so is his mercy;) but that it naturally tends to inspire, or increase,
a sharpness or eagerness of temper, which is quite contrary to the meekness
of Christ; as then especially appears, when they are opposed on this
head. And it as naturally inspires contempt or coldness towards those
whom we suppose outcast form God. “O but,” you say, “I
suppose no particular man a reprobate.” You mean you would not
if you could help it: But you cannot help sometimes applying your general
doctrine to particular persons: The enemy of souls will apply it for
you. You know how often he has done so. But you rejected the thought
with abhorrence. True; as soon as you could; but how did it sour and
sharpen your spirit in the mean time! You well know it was not the spirit
of love which you then felt towards that poor sinner, whom you supposed
or suspected, whether you would or no, to have been hated of God from
eternity.
13. Thirdly. This doctrine tends to destroy the comfort
of religion, the happiness of Christianity. This is evident as to all
those who believe themselves to be reprobated, or who only suspect or
fear it. All the great and precious promises are lost to them; they
afford them no ray of comfort: For they are not the elect of God; therefore
they have neither lot nor portion in them. This is an effectual bar
to their finding any comfort or happiness, even in that religion whose
ways are designed to be “ways of pleasantness, and all her paths
peace.”
14. And as to you who believe yourselves the elect
of God, what is your happiness? I hope, not a notion, a speculative
belief, a bare opinion of any kind; but a feeling possession of God
in your heart, wrought in you by the Holy Ghost, or, the witness of
God’s Spirit with your spirit that you are a child of God. This,
otherwise termed “the full assurance of faith,: is the true ground
of a Christian’s happiness. And it does indeed imply a full assurance
that all your past sins are forgiven, and that you are now a child of
God. But it does not necessarily imply a full assurance of our future
perseverance. I do not say this is never joined to it, but that it is
not necessarily implied therein; for many have the one who have not
the other.
15. Now, this witness of the Spirit experience shows
to be much obstructed by this doctrine; and not only in those who, believing
themselves reprobated, by this belief thrust it far from them, but even
in them that have tasted of that good gift, who yet have soon lost it
again, and fallen back into doubts, and fears, and darkness,—horrible
darkness, that might be felt! And I appeal to any of you who hold this
doctrine, to say, between God and your own hearts, whether you have
not often a return of doubts and fears concerning your election or perseverance!
If you ask, “Who has not?” I answer, Very few of those that
hold this doctrine; but many, very many, of those that hold it not,
in all parts of the earth;—many of these have enjoyed the uninterrupted
witness of his Spirit, the continual light of his countenance, from
the moment wherein they first believed, for many months or years, to
this day.
16. That assurance of faith which these enjoy excludes
all doubt and fear, it excludes all kinds of doubt and fear concerning
their future perseverance; though it is not properly, as was said before,
an assurance of what is future, but only of what now is. And this needs
not for its support a speculative belief, that whoever is once ordained
to life must live; for it is wrought from hour to hour, by the mighty
power of God, “by the Holy Ghost which is given unto them.”
And therefore that doctrine is not of God, because it tends to obstruct,
if not destroy, this great work of the Holy Ghost, whence flows the
chief comfort of religion, the happiness of Christianity.
17. Again: How uncomfortable a thought is this, that
thousands and millions of men, without any preceding offense or fault
of theirs, were unchangeably doomed to everlasting burnings! How peculiarly
uncomfortable must it be to those who have put on Christ! To those who,
being filled with bowels of mercy, tenderness, and compassion, could
even “wish themselves accursed for their brethren’s sake!”
18. Fourthly. This uncomfortable doctrine directly
tends to destroy our zeal for good works. And this it does, first, as
it naturally tends (according to what was observed before) to destroy
our love to the greater part of mankind, namely, the evil and unthankful.
For whatever lessens our love, must go far to lessen our desire to do
them good. This it does, secondly, as it cuts off one of the strongest
motives to all acts of bodily mercy, such as feeding the hungry, clothing
the naked, and the like,—viz., the hope of saving their souls
from death. For what avails it to relieve their temporal wants, who
are just dropping into eternal fire? “Well; but run and snatch
them as brands out of the fire: Nay, this you suppose impossible. They
were appointed thereunto, you say, from eternity, before they had done
either good or evil. you believe it is the will of God they should die.
And “who hath resisted his will?” But you say you do not
know whether these are elected or not. What then? If you know they are
the one or the other,—that they are either elected or not elected,—all
your labor is void and vain. In either case, your advice, reproof, or
exhortation is as needless and useless as our preaching. It is needless
to them that are elected; for they will infallibly be saved without
it. It is useless to them that are not elected; for with or without
it they will infallibly be damned; therefore you cannot consistently
with your principles take any pains about their salvation. Consequently,
those principles directly tend to destroy you zeal for good works; for
all good works; but particularly for the greatest of all, the saving
of souls from death.
19. But, fifthly, this doctrine not only tends to
destroy Christian holiness, happiness, and good works, but hath also
a direct and manifest tendency to overthrow the whole Christian Revelation.
The point which the wisest of the modern unbelievers most industriously
labor to prove, is, that the Christian Revelation is not necessary.
They well know, could they once show this, the conclusion would be too
plain to be denied, “If it be not necessary, it is not true,”
Now, this fundamental point you give up. For supposing that eternal,
unchangeable decree, one part of mankind must be saved, though the Christian
Revelation were not in being, and the other part of mankind must be
damned, notwithstanding that Revelation. And what would an infidel desire
more? You allow him all he asks. In making the gospel thus unnecessary
to all sorts of men, you give up the whole Christian cause. “O
tell it not in Gath! Lest the daughters of the uncircumcised rejoice;
lest the sons of unbelief triumph!”
20. And as this doctrine manifestly and directly
tends to overthrow the whole Christian Revelation, so it does the same
thing, by plain consequence, in making that Revelation contradict itself.
For it is grounded on such an interpretation of some texts (more or
fewer it matters not) as flatly contradicts all the other texts, and
indeed the whole scope and tenor of Scripture. For instance: The assertors
of this doctrine interpret that text of Scripture, “Jacob have
I loved, but Esau have I hated,” as implying that God in a literal
sense hated Esau, and all the reprobated, from eternity. Now, what can
possibly be a more flat contradiction than this, not only to the whole
scope and tenor of Scripture, but also to all those particular texts
which expressly declare, “God is love?” Again: They infer
from that text, “I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy,”
(Romans 4:15) that God is love only to some men, viz., the elect, and
that he hath mercy for those only; flatly contrary to which is the whole
tenor of Scripture, as is that express declaration in particular, “The
Lord is loving unto every man; and his mercy is over all his works”
(Psalm 114:9). Again: They infer from that and the like texts, “It
is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that
showeth mercy: that he showeth mercy only to those to whom he had respect
from all eternity. Nay, but who replieth against God now? You now contradict
the whole oracles of God, which declare throughout, “God is no
respecter of persons,” (Acts 10:34) “There is no respect
of persons with him” (Romans 2:11). Again: from that text, “The
children being not yet born, neither having done any good or evil, that
the purpose of God according to election might stand, not of works,
but of him that calleth; it was said unto her,” unto Rebecca,
“The elder shall serve the younger;” you infer, that our
being predestinated, or elect, no way depends on the foreknowledge of
God. Flatly contrary to this are all the Scriptures; and those in particular,
“Elect according to the foreknowledge of God; “ (1 Peter
1:2;) “Whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate” (Romans
8:29).
21. And “the same Lord over all is rich”
in mercy “to all that call upon him” (Romans 10:12). But
you say, “No; he is such only to those for whom Christ died. And
those are not all, but only a few, whom God hath chosen out of the world;
for he died not for all, but only for those who were ‘chosen in
him before the foundation of the world.’” (Ephesians 1:4).
Flatly contrary to your interpretation of these scriptures, also, is
the whole tenor of the New Testament; as are in particular those texts:—”Destroy
not him with thy meat, for whom Christ died,” (Romans 14:15)—a
clear proof that Christ died, not only for those that are saved, but
also for them that perish: He is “the Saviour of the world;”
(John 4:42) He is “the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of
the world;” (John 1:29) “He is the propitiation, not for
our sins only, but also for the sins of the whole world;” (1 John
2:2) “He,” the living God, “is the Savior of all men;”
(1 Timothy 4:10) “He gave himself a ransom for all;” (1
Tim. 2:6) “He tasted death for every man” (Hebrews 2:9).
22. If you ask, “Why then are not all men saved?”
the whole law and the testimony answer, first, Not because of any decree
of God; not because it is his pleasure they should die; for, As I live,
saith the Lord God, “I have no pleasure in the death of him that
dieth” (Ezekiel 18:3, 32). Whatever be the cause of their perishing,
it cannot be his will, if the oracles of God are true; for they declare,
“He is not willing that any should perish, but that all should
come to repentance;” (2 Peter 3:9) “He willeth that all
men should be saved.” And they, secondly, declare what is the
cause why all men are not saved, namely, that they will not be saved:
So our Lord expressly, “Ye will not come unto me that ye may have
life” (John 5:40). “The power of the Lord is present to
heal” them, but they will not be healed. “They reject the
counsel,” the merciful counsel, “of God against themselves,”
as did their stiff-necked forefathers. And therefore are they without
excuse; because God would save them, but they will not be saved: This
is the condemnation, “How often would I have gathered you together,
and ye would not!” (Matthew 23:37).
23. Thus manifestly does this doctrine tend to overthrow
the whole Christian Revelation, by making it contradict itself; by giving
such an interpretation of some texts, as flatly contradicts all the
other texts, and indeed the whole scope and tenor of Scripture;—an
abundant proof that it is not of God. But neither is this all: For,
seventhly, it is a doctrine full of blasphemy; of such blasphemy as
I should dread to mention, but that the honor of our gracious God, and
the cause of his truth, will not suffer me to be silent. In the cause
of God, then, and from a sincere concern for the glory of his great
name, I will mention a few of the horrible blasphemies contained in
this horrible doctrine. But first, I must warn every one of you that
hears, as ye will answer it at the great day, not to charge me (as some
have done) with blaspheming, because I mention the blasphemy of others.
And the more you are grieve with them that do thus blaspheme, see that
ye “confirm your love towards them: the more, and that your heart’s
desire, and continual prayer to God, be, “Father, forgive them;
for they know not what they do!”
24. This premised, let it be observed, that this
doctrine represents our blessed Lord, “Jesus Christ the righteous,”
“the only begotten Son of the Father, full of grace and truth,”
as a hypocrite, a deceiver of the people, a man void of common sincerity.
For it cannot be denied, that he everywhere speaks as if he was willing
that all men should be saved. Therefore, to say he was not willing that
all men should be saved, is to represent him as a mere hypocrite and
dissembler. It cannot be denied that the gracious words which came out
of his mouth are full of invitations to all sinners. To say, then, he
did not intend to save all sinners, is to represent him as a gross deceiver
of the people. You cannot deny that he says, “Come unto me, all
ye that are weary and heavy laden.” If, then, you say he calls
those that cannot come; those whom he knows to be unable to come; those
whom he can make able to come, but will not; how is it possible to describe
greater insincerity? You represent him as mocking his helpless creatures,
by offering what he never intends to give. You describe him as saying
on thing, and meaning another; as pretending the love which his had
not. Him, in “whose mouth was no guile,” you make full of
deceit, void of common sincerity;—then especially, when, drawing
nigh the city, He wept over it, and said, “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem,
thou killest the prophets, and stonest them that are sent unto thee;
how often would I have gathered thy children together,—and ye
would not;” hqelhsa—kai ouk hqelhsate. Now, if you say,
they would, but he would not, you represent him (which who could hear?)
as weeping crocodiles’ tears; weeping over the prey which himself
had doomed to destruction!
25. Such blasphemy this, as one would think might
make the ears of a Christian to tingle! But there is yet more behind;
for just as it honors the Son, so doth this doctrine honor the Father.
It destroys all his attributes at once: It overturns both his justice,
mercy, and truth; yea, it represents the most holy God as worse than
the devil, as both more false, more cruel, and more unjust. More false;
because the devil, liar as he is, hath never said, “He willeth
all men to be saved:” More unjust; because the devil cannot, if
he would, be guilty of such injustice as you ascribe to God, when you
say that God condemned millions of souls to everlasting fire, prepared
for the devil and his angels, for continuing in sin, which, for want
of that grace he will not give them, they cannot avoid: And more cruel;
because that unhappy spirit “seeketh rest and findeth none;”
so that his own restless misery is a kind of temptation to him to tempt
others. But God resteth in his high and holy place; so that to suppose
him, of his own mere motion, of his pure will and pleasure, happy as
he is, to doom his creatures, whether they will or no, to endless misery,
is to impute such cruelty to him as we cannot impute even to the great
enemy of God and man. It is to represent the high God (he that hath
ears to hear let him hear!) as more cruel, false, and unjust than the
devil!
26. This is the blasphemy clearly contained in the
horrible decree of predestination! And here I fix my foot. On this I
join issue with every assertor of it. You represent God as worse than
the devil; more false, more cruel, more unjust. But you say you will
prove it by scripture. Hold! What will you prove by Scripture? That
God is worse than the devil? It cannot be. Whatever that Scripture proves,
it never proves this; whatever its true meaning be. This cannot be its
true meaning. Do you ask, “What is its true meaning then?”
If I say, “I know not,” you have gained nothing; for there
are many scriptures the true sense whereof neither you nor I shall know
till death is swallowed up in victory. But this I know, better it were
to say it had no sense, than to say it had such a sense as this. It
cannot mean, whatever it mean besides, that the God of truth is a liar.
Let it mean what it will it cannot mean that the Judge of all the world
is unjust. No scripture can mean that God is not love, or that his mercy
is not over all his works; that is, whatever it prove beside, no scripture
can prove predestination.
27. This is the blasphemy for which (however I love
the persons who assert it) I abhor the doctrine of predestination, a
doctrine, upon the supposition of which, if one could possibly suppose
it for a moment, (call it election, reprobation, or what you please,
for all comes to the same thing,) one might say to our adversary, the
devil, “Thou fool, why dost thou roar about any longer? Thy lying
in wait for souls is as needless and useless as our preaching. Hearest
thou not, that God hath taken thy work out of thy hands; and that he
doeth it much more effectually? Thou, with all thy principalities and
powers, canst only so assault that we may resist thee; but He can irresistibly
destroy both body and soul in hell! Thou canst only entice; but his
unchangeable decrees, to leave thousands of souls in death, compels
them to continue in sin, till they drop into everlasting burnings. Thou
temptest; He forceth us to be damned; for we cannot resist his will.
Thou fool, why goest thou about any longer, seeking whom thou mayest
devour? Hearest thou not that God is the devouring lion, the destroyer
of souls, the murderer of men” Moloch caused only children to
pass though the fire: and that fire was soon quenched; or, the corruptible
body being consumed, its torment was at an end; but God, thou are told,
by his eternal decree, fixed before they had done good or evil, causes,
not only children of a span long, but the parents also, to pass through
the fire of hell, the ‘fire which never shall be quenched; and
the body which is cast there into, being now incorruptible and immortal,
will be ever consuming and never consumed, but ‘the smoke of their
torment,’ because it is God’s good pleasure, ‘ascendeth
up for ever and ever.’”
28. O how would the enemy of God and man rejoice
to hear these things were so! How would he cry aloud and spare not!
How would he lift up his voice and say, “To your tents, O Israel!
Flee from the face of this God, or ye shall utterly perish! But whither
will ye flee? Into heaven? He is there. Down to hell? He is there also.
Ye cannot flee from an omnipresent, almighty tyrant. And whether ye
flee or stay, I call heaven, his throne, and earth, his footstool, to
witness against you, ye shall perish, ye shall die eternally. Sing,
O hell, and rejoice, ye that are under the earth! For God, even the
mighty God, hath spoken, and devoted to death thousands of souls, form
the rising of the sun unto the going down thereof! Here, O death, is
the sting! They shall not, cannot escape; for the mouth of the Lord
hath spoken it. Here, O grave is thy victory. Nations yet unborn, or
ever they have done good or evil are doomed never to see the light of
life, but thou shalt gnaw upon them for ever and ever! Let all those
morning stars sing together, who fell with Lucifer, son of the morning!
Let all the sons of hell shout for joy! For the decree is past, and
who shall disannul it?”
29. Yea, the decree is past; and so it was before
the foundation of the world. But what decree? Even this: “I will
set before the sons of men ‘life and death, blessing cursing.’
And the soul that chooseth life shall live, as the soul that chooseth
death shall die.” This decree whereby “whom God did foreknow,
he did predestinate,” was indeed from everlasting; this, whereby
all who suffer Christ to make them alive are “elect according
to the foreknowledge of God,” now standeth fast, even as the moon,
and as the faithful witnesses in heaven; and when heaven and earth shall
pass away, yet this shall not pass away; for it is as unchangeable and
eternal as is the being of God that gave it. This decree yields the
strongest encouragement to abound in all good works and in all holiness;
and it is a well-spring of joy, of happiness also, to our great and
endless comfort. This is worthy of God; it is every way consistent with
all the perfections of his nature. It gives us the noblest view both
of his justice, mercy, and truth. To this agrees the whole scope of
the Christian Revelation, as well as all the parts thereof. To this
Moses and all the Prophets bear witness, and our blessed Lord and all
his Apostles thus Moses, in the name of his Lord: “I call heaven
and earth to record against you this day, that I have set before you
life and death, blessing and cursing; therefore choose life, that thou
and thy seed may live.” Thus Ezekiel: choose life, that thou and
thy seed may live; Thus Ezekiel: (To cite one Prophet for all:) “The
soul that sinneth, it shall die: The son shall not bear” eternally,
“the iniquity of the father. The righteousness of the righteous
shall be upon him, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him.”
(18:20). Thus our blessed Lord: “If any man thirst, let him come
unto me and drink.” (John 7:37). Thus his great Apostle, St. Paul:
(Acts 17:30) “God commandeth all men everywhere to repent;—”all
men everywhere;” every man in every place, without any exception
either of place or person. Thus St. James: “If any of you lack
wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth
not, and it shall be given him.” (James 1:5). Thus St. Peter:
(2 Peter 3:9) “The Lord is not willing that any should perish,
but that all should come to repentance.” And thus St. John: “
If any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father; and he is the propitiation
for our sins; and not for ours only, but for the sins of the whole world.”
(1 John 2:1, 2).
30. O hear ye this, ye that forget God! Ye cannot
charge your death upon him! “‘Have I any pleasure at all
that the wicked should die?’ saith the Lord God.” (Ezekiel
18:23ff.). “Repent, and turn from all your transgressions; so
iniquity shall not be your ruin. Cast away from you all your transgressions
where by ye have transgressed,—for why will ye die, O house of
Israel? For I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth, saith
the Lord God. Wherefore turn yourselves, and live ye.” “As
I live, saith the Lord God, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked.
— Turn ye, turn ye from your evil ways; for why will ye die, O
house of Israel?” (Ezekiel 33:11).
Edited by Ken Harris with corrections by Ryan Danker and George Lyons
of Northwest Nazarene University (Nampa, Idaho) for the Wesley Center
for Applied Theology.
Printed by permission of the Wesley Center for Applied
Theology: http://wesley.nnu.edu.