B 20 To James Hervey
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | letter |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-letter-1756b-20-to-james-hervey-019 |
| Words | 263 |
'The "wedding garment" here means holiness' . 'This is His tender complaint, "They will not come unto Me !"' . Nay, that is not the case; they cannot. He Himself has decreed not to give them that grace without which their coming is impossible. 'The grand end which God proposes in all His favorable dispensations to fallen man is to demonstrate the sovereignty of His grace.' Not so: to impart happiness to His creatures is His grand end herein. Barely to demonstrate His sovereignty is a principle of action fit for the great Turk, not the Most High God. 'God hath pleasure in the prosperity of His servants. He is a boundless ocean of good.' Nay, that ocean is far from boundless, if it wholly passes by nine-tenths of mankind. 'You cannot suppose God would enter into a fresh covenant with a rebel' . I both suppose and know He did. 'God made the new covenant with Christ, and charged Him with the performance of the conditions.' I deny both these assertions, which are the central point wherein Calvinism and Antinomianism meet. '"I have made a covenant with My chosen" ' namely, with 'David My servant.' So God Himself explains it. 'He will wash you in the blood which atones and invest you with the righteousness which justifies' . Why should you thus continually put asunder what God has joined 'God Himself at the last day pronounces them righteous because they are interested in the obedience of the Redeemer' . Rather because they are washed in His blood and renewed by His Spirit.