While Luther was opening a closed Bible to the
people of Germany, Tyndale was impelled by the Spirit
of God to do the same for England. Wycliffe's Bible had
been translated from the Latin text, which contained many
errors. It had never been printed, and the cost of manuscript
copies was so great that few but wealthy men or nobles could
procure it; and, furthermore, being strictly proscribed by the
church, it had had a comparatively narrow circulation. In
1516, a year before the appearance of Luther's theses,
Erasmus had published his Greek and Latin version of the New
Testament. Now for the first time the word of God was
printed in the original tongue. In this work many errors of
former versions were corrected, and the sense was more
clearly rendered. It led many among the educated classes to
a better knowledge of the truth, and gave a new impetus
to the work of reform. But the common people were still, to
a great extent, debarred from God's word. Tyndale was
to complete the work of Wycliffe in giving the Bible to his
countrymen.
A diligent student and an earnest seeker for truth, he had
received the gospel from the Greek Testament of Erasmus.
He fearlessly preached his convictions, urging that all
doctrines be tested by the Scriptures. To the papist claim that
the church had given the Bible, and the church alone could
explain it, Tyndale responded: "Do you know who taught
the eagles to find their prey? Well, that same God teaches
His hungry children to find their Father in His word. Far
from having given us the Scriptures, it is you who have
hidden them from us; it is you who burn those who teach
them, and if you could, you would burn the Scriptures
themselves."--D'Aubigne, History of the Reformation of the
Sixteenth Century, b. 18, ch. 4.
Tyndale's preaching excited great interest; many accepted
the truth. But the priests were on the alert, and no sooner
had he left the field than they by their threats and
misrepresentations endeavored to destroy his work. Too often they
succeeded. "What is to be done?" he exclaimed. "While I
am sowing in one place, the enemy ravages the field I have
just left. I cannot be everywhere. Oh! if Christians possessed
the Holy Scriptures in their own tongue, they could of
themselves withstand these sophists. Without the Bible it is
impossible to establish the laity in the truth."-- Ibid., b. 18,
ch. 4.
A new purpose now took possession of his mind. "It was
in the language of Israel," said he, "that the psalms were sung
in the temple of Jehovah; and shall not the gospel speak the
language of England among us? . . . Ought the church to
have less light at noonday than at the dawn? . . . Christians
must read the New Testament in their mother tongue." The
doctors and teachers of the church disagreed among themselves.
Only by the Bible could men arrive at the truth. "One
holdeth this doctor, another that. . . . Now each of these
authors contradicts the other. How then can we distinguish
him who says right from him who says wrong? . . . How?
. . . Verily by God's word."-- Ibid., b. 18, ch. 4.
It was not long after that a learned Catholic doctor,
engaging in controversy with him, exclaimed: "We were better
to be without God's laws than the pope's." Tyndale replied:
"I defy the pope and all his laws; and if God spare my life,
ere many years I will cause a boy that driveth the plow
to know more of the Scripture than you do."--Anderson,
Annals of the English Bible, page 19.
The purpose which he had begun to cherish, of giving to
the people the New Testament Scriptures in their own
language, was now confirmed, and he immediately applied
himself to the work. Driven from his home by persecution, he
went to London, and there for a time pursued his labors
undisturbed. But again the violence of the papists forced
him to flee. All England seemed closed against him, and he
resolved to seek shelter in Germany. Here he began the
printing of the English New Testament. Twice the work was
stopped; but when forbidden to print in one city, he went
to another. At last he made his way to Worms, where, a few
years before, Luther had defended the gospel before the Diet.
In that ancient city were many friends of the Reformation,
and Tyndale there prosecuted his work without further
hindrance. Three thousand copies of the New Testament were
soon finished, and another edition followed in the same year.
With great earnestness and perseverance he continued his
labors. Notwithstanding the English authorities had guarded
their ports with the strictest vigilance, the word of God was
in various ways secretly conveyed to London and thence
circulated throughout the country. The papists attempted to
suppress the truth, but in vain. The bishop of Durham at one
time bought of a bookseller who was a friend of Tyndale his
whole stock of Bibles, for the purpose of destroying them,
supposing that this would greatly hinder the work. But, on
the contrary, the money thus furnished, purchased material
for a new and better edition, which, but for this, could not
have been published. When Tyndale was afterward made
a prisoner, his liberty was offered him on condition that he
would reveal the names of those who had helped him meet
the expense of printing his Bibles. He replied that the bishop
of Durham had done more than any other person; for by
paying a large price for the books left on hand, he had
enabled him to go on with good courage.
Tyndale was betrayed into the hands of his enemies,
and at one time suffered imprisonment for many months.
He finally witnessed for his faith by a martyr's death; but
the weapons which he prepared have enabled other soldiers
to do battle through all the centuries even to our time.
Latimer maintained from the pulpit that the Bible ought
to be read in the language of the people. The Author of Holy
Scripture, said he, "is God Himself;" and this Scripture
partakes of the might and eternity of its Author. "There is no
king, emperor, magistrate, and ruler . . . but are bound to
obey . . . His holy word." "Let us not take any bywalks,
but let God's word direct us: let us not walk after . . . our
forefathers, nor seek not what they did, but what they should
have done."--Hugh Latimer, "First Sermon Preached Before
King Edward VI."
Barnes and Frith, the faithful friends of Tyndale, arose to
defend the truth. The Ridleys and Cranmer followed. These
leaders in the English Reformation were men of learning,
and most of them had been highly esteemed for zeal or piety
in the Romish communion. Their opposition to the papacy
was the result of their knowledge of the errors of the "holy
see." Their acquaintance with the mysteries of Babylon gave
greater power to their testimonies against her.
"Now I would ask a strange question," said Latimer.
"Who is the most diligent bishop and prelate in all England?
. . . I see you listening and hearkening that I should name
him. . . . I will tell you: it is the devil. . . . He is never out
of his diocese; call for him when you will, he is ever at home;
. . . he is ever at his plow. . . . Ye shall never find him
idle, I warrant you. . . . Where the devil is resident, . . .
there away with books, and up with candles; away with
Bibles, and up with beads; away with the light of the gospel,
and up with the light of candles, yea, at noondays; . . .
down with Christ's cross, up with purgatory pickpurse; . . .
away with clothing the naked, the poor, and impotent, up
with decking of images and gay garnishing of stocks and
stones; up with man's traditions and his laws, down with
God's traditions and His most holy word. . . . O that our
prelates would be as diligent to sow the corn of good doctrine,
as Satan is to sow cockle and darnel!"-- Ibid., "Sermon
of the Plough."
The grand principle maintained by these Reformers--the
same that had been held by the Waldenses, by Wycliffe, by
John Huss, by Luther, Zwingli, and those who united with
them--was the infallible authority of the Holy Scriptures as
a rule of faith and practice. They denied the right of popes,
councils, Fathers, and kings, to control the conscience in
matters of religion. The Bible was their authority, and by
its teaching they tested all doctrines and all claims. Faith in
God and His word sustained these holy men as they yielded
up their lives at the stake. "Be of good comfort," exclaimed
Latimer to his fellow martyr as the flames were about to
silence their voices, "we shall this day light such a candle,
by God's grace, in England, as I trust shall never be put out."
-- Works of Hugh Latimer, vol. 1, p. xiii.
In Scotland the seeds of truth scattered by Columba and
his colaborers had never been wholly destroyed. For hundreds
of years after the churches of England submitted to
Rome, those of Scotland maintained their freedom. In the
twelfth century, however, popery became established here,
and in no country did it exercise a more absolute sway.
Nowhere was the darkness deeper. Still there came rays of light
to pierce the gloom and give promise of the coming day.
The Lollards, coming from England with the Bible and
the teachings of Wycliffe, did much to preserve the knowledge
of the gospel, and every century had its witnesses and
martyrs.
With the opening of the Great Reformation came the
writings of Luther, and then Tyndale's English New Testament.
Unnoticed by the hierarchy, these messengers silently
traversed the mountains and valleys, kindling into new life
the torch of truth so nearly extinguished in Scotland, and
undoing the work which Rome for four centuries of oppression
had done.
Then the blood of martyrs gave fresh impetus to the
movement. The papist leaders, suddenly awakening to the danger
that threatened their cause, brought to the stake some of the
noblest and most honored of the sons of Scotland. They did
but erect a pulpit, from which the words of these dying
witnesses were heard throughout the land, thrilling the souls of
the people with an undying purpose to cast off the shackles
of Rome.
Hamilton and Wishart, princely in character as in birth,
with a long line of humbler disciples, yielded up their lives
at the stake. But from the burning pile of Wishart there
came one whom the flames were not to silence, one who
under God was to strike the death knell of popery in Scotland.
John Knox had turned away from the traditions and
mysticisms of the church, to feed upon the truths of God's
word; and the teaching of Wishart had confirmed his
determination to forsake the communion of Rome and join
himself to the persecuted Reformers.
Urged by his companions to take the office of preacher,
he shrank with trembling from its responsibility, and it was
only after days of seclusion and painful conflict with himself
that he consented. But having once accepted the position,
he pressed forward with inflexible determination and
undaunted courage as long as life continued. This truehearted
Reformer feared not the face of man. The fires of martyrdom,
blazing around him, served only to quicken his zeal
to greater intensity. With the tyrant's ax held menacingly
over his head, he stood his ground, striking sturdy blows on
the right hand and on the left to demolish idolatry.
When brought face to face with the queen of Scotland, in
whose presence the zeal of many a leader of the Protestants
had abated, John Knox bore unswerving witness for the
truth. He was not to be won by caresses; he quailed not
before threats. The queen charged him with heresy. He had
taught the people to receive a religion prohibited by the state,
she declared, and had thus transgressed God's command
enjoining subjects to obey their princes. Knox answered firmly:
"As right religion took neither original strength nor
authority from worldly princes, but from the eternal God
alone, so are not subjects bound to frame their religion
according to the appetites of their princes. For oft it is that
princes are the most ignorant of all others in God's true
religion. . . . If all the seed of Abraham had been of the
religion of Pharaoh, whose subjects they long were, I pray
you, madam, what religion would there have been in the
world? Or if all men in the days of the apostles had been
of the religion of the Roman emperors, what religion would
there have been upon the face of the earth? . . . And so,
madam, ye may perceive that subjects are not bound to the
religion of their princes, albeit they are commanded to give
them obedience."
Said Mary: "Ye interpret the Scriptures in one manner,
and they [the Roman Catholic teachers] interpret in
another; whom shall I believe, and who shall be judge?"
"Ye shall believe God, that plainly speaketh in His word,"
answered the Reformer; "and farther than the word teaches
you, ye neither shall believe the one nor the other. The word
of God is plain in itself; and if there appear any obscurity in
one place, the Holy Ghost, which is never contrary to Himself,
explains the same more clearly in other places, so that
there can remain no doubt but unto such as obstinately
remain ignorant."--David Laing, The Collected Works of John
Knox, vol. 2, pp. 281, 284.
Such were the truths that the fearless Reformer, at the
peril of his life, spoke in the ear of royalty. With the same
undaunted courage he kept to his purpose, praying and fighting
the battles of the Lord, until Scotland was free from
popery.
In England the establishment of Protestantism as the
national religion diminished, but did not wholly stop,
persecution. While many of the doctrines of Rome had been
renounced, not a few of its forms were retained. The
supremacy of the pope was rejected, but in his place the
monarch was enthroned as the head of the church. In the
service of the church there was still a wide departure from
the purity and simplicity of the gospel. The great principle
of religious liberty was not yet understood. Though the
horrible cruelties which Rome employed against heresy were
resorted to but rarely by Protestant rulers, yet the right of
every man to worship God according to the dictates of his
own conscience was not acknowledged. All were required
to accept the doctrines and observe the forms of worship
prescribed by the established church. Dissenters suffered
persecution, to a greater or less extent, for hundreds of years.
In the seventeenth century thousands of pastors were
expelled from their positions. The people were forbidden, on
pain of heavy fines, imprisonment, and banishment, to attend
any religious meetings except such as were sanctioned by the
church. Those faithful souls who could not refrain from
gathering to worship God were compelled to meet in dark
alleys, in obscure garrets, and at some seasons in the woods
at midnight. In the sheltering depths of the forest, a temple
of God's own building, those scattered and persecuted children
of the Lord assembled to pour out their souls in prayer
and praise. But despite all their precautions, many suffered
for their faith. The jails were crowded. Families were
broken up. Many were banished to foreign lands. Yet God
was with His people, and persecution could not prevail to
silence their testimony. Many were driven across the ocean
to America and here laid the foundations of civil and
religious liberty which have been the bulwark and glory of
this country.
Again, as in apostolic days, persecution turned out to the
furtherance of the gospel. In a loathsome dungeon crowded
with profligates and felons, John Bunyan breathed the very
atmosphere of heaven; and there he wrote his wonderful
allegory of the pilgrim's journey from the land of destruction
to the celestial city. For over two hundred years that
voice from Bedford jail has spoken with thrilling power to
the hearts of men. Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress and Grace
Abounding to the Chief of Sinners have guided many feet
into the path of life.
Baxter, Flavel, Alleine, and other men of talent, education,
and deep Christian experience stood up in valiant defense of
the faith which was once delivered to the saints. The work
accomplished by these men, proscribed and outlawed by the
rulers of this world, can never perish. Flavel's Fountain of
Life and Method of Grace have taught thousands how to
commit the keeping of their souls to Christ. Baxter's
Reformed Pastor has proved a blessing to many who desire a
revival of the work of God, and his Saints' Everlasting Rest
has done its work in leading souls to the "rest" that remaineth
for the people of God.
A hundred years later, in a day of great spiritual darkness,
Whitefield and the Wesleys appeared as light bearers for
God. Under the rule of the established church the people of
England had lapsed into a state of religious declension hardly
to be distinguished from heathenism. Natural religion was
the favorite study of the clergy, and included most of their
theology. The higher classes sneered at piety, and prided
themselves on being above what they called its fanaticism.
The lower classes were grossly ignorant and abandoned to
vice, while the church had no courage or faith any longer
to support the downfallen cause of truth.
The great doctrine of justification by faith, so clearly
taught by Luther, had been almost wholly lost sight of; and
the Romish principle of trusting to good works for salvation,
had taken its place. Whitefield and the Wesleys, who were
members of the established church, were sincere seekers for
the favor of God, and this they had been taught was to be
secured by a virtuous life and an observance of the ordinances
of religion.
When Charles Wesley at one time fell ill, and anticipated
that death was approaching, he was asked upon what he
rested his hope of eternal life. His answer was: "I have used
my best endeavors to serve God." As the friend who had put
the question seemed not to be fully satisfied with his answer,
Wesley thought: "What! are not my endeavors a sufficient
ground of hope? Would he rob me of my endeavors? I
have nothing else to trust to."--John Whitehead, Life of the
Rev. Charles Wesley, page 102. Such was the dense darkness
that had settled down on the church, hiding the atonement,
robbing Christ of His glory, and turning the minds of men
from their only hope of salvation--the blood of the crucified
Redeemer.
Wesley and his associates were led to see that true religion
is seated in the heart, and that God's law extends to the
thoughts as well as to the words and actions. Convinced of
the necessity of holiness of heart, as well as correctness of
outward deportment, they set out in earnest upon a new life.
By the most diligent and prayerful efforts they endeavored
to subdue the evils of the natural heart. They lived a life of
self-denial, charity, and humiliation, observing with great
rigor and exactness every measure which they thought could
be helpful to them in obtaining what they most desired--that
holiness which could secure the favor of God. But they did
not obtain the object which they sought. In vain were their
endeavors to free themselves from the condemnation of sin
or to break its power. It was the same struggle which
Luther had experienced in his cell at Erfurt. It was the
same question which had tortured his soul--"How should
man be just before God?" Job. 9:2.
The fires of divine truth, well-nigh extinguished upon the
altars of Protestantism, were to be rekindled from the ancient
torch handed down the ages by the Bohemian Christians.
After the Reformation, Protestantism in Bohemia had been
trampled out by the hordes of Rome. All who refused to
renounce the truth were forced to flee. Some of these, finding
refuge in Saxony, there maintained the ancient faith. It was
from the descendants of these Christians that light came to
Wesley and his associates.
John and Charles Wesley, after being ordained to the
ministry, were sent on a mission to America. On board the
ship was a company of Moravians. Violent storms were
encountered on the passage, and John Wesley, brought face to
face with death, felt that he had not the assurance of peace
with God. The Germans, on the contrary, manifested a
calmness and trust to which he was a stranger.
"I had long before," he says, "observed the great seriousness
of their behavior. Of their humility they had given a
continual proof, by performing those servile offices for the
other passengers which none of the English would undertake;
for which they desired and would receive no pay,
saying it was good for their proud hearts, and their loving
Saviour had done more for them. And every day had given
them occasion of showing a meekness which no injury could
move. If they were pushed, struck, or thrown about, they
rose again and went away; but no complaint was found in
their mouth. There was now an opportunity of trying
whether they were delivered from the spirit of fear, as well
as from that of pride, anger, and revenge. In the midst of
the psalm wherewith their service began, the sea broke over,
split the mainsail in pieces, covered the ship, and poured in
between the decks as if the great deep had already swallowed
us up. A terrible screaming began among the English. The
Germans calmly sang on. I asked one of them afterwards,
'Were you not afraid?' He answered, 'I thank God, no.'
I asked, 'But were not your women and children afraid?'
He replied mildly, 'No; our women and children are not
afraid to die.'"--Whitehead, Life of the Rev. John Wesley,
page 10.
Upon arriving in Savannah, Wesley for a short time abode
with the Moravians, and was deeply impressed with their
Christian deportment. Of one of their religious services, in
striking contrast to the lifeless formalism of the Church of
England, he wrote: "The great simplicity as well as solemnity
of the whole almost made me forget the seventeen hundred
years between, and imagine myself in one of those assemblies
where form and state were not; but Paul, the tentmaker, or
Peter, the fisherman, presided; yet with the demonstration
of the Spirit and of power."-- Ibid., pages 11, 12.
On his return to England, Wesley, under the instruction
of a Moravian preacher, arrived at a clearer understanding of
Bible faith. He was convinced that he must renounce all
dependence upon his own works for salvation and must trust
wholly to "the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of
the world." At a meeting of the Moravian society in London
a statement was read from Luther, describing the change
which the Spirit of God works in the heart of the believer.
As Wesley listened, faith was kindled in his soul. "I felt my
heart strangely warmed," he says. "I felt I did trust in Christ,
Christ alone, for salvation: and an assurance was given me,
that He had taken away my sins, even mine, and
saved me from the law of sin and death."--
Ibid., page 52.
Through long years of wearisome and comfortless striving--
years of rigorous self-denial, of reproach and humiliation--
Wesley had steadfastly adhered to his one purpose of
seeking God. Now he had found Him; and he found that
the grace which he had toiled to win by prayers and fasts, by
almsdeeds and self-abnegation, was a gift, "without money
and without price."
Once established in the faith of Christ, his whole soul
burned with the desire to spread everywhere a knowledge of
the glorious gospel of God's free grace. "I look upon all the
world as my parish," he said; "in whatever part of it I am,
I judge it meet, right, and my bounden duty, to declare unto
all that are willing to hear, the glad tidings of salvation."--
Ibid., page 74.
He continued his strict and self-denying life, not now as
the ground, but the result of faith; not the
root, but the fruit of holiness. The grace of God
in Christ is the foundation of the Christian's hope, and that grace
will be manifested in obedience. Wesley's life was devoted to the
preaching of the great truths which he had received--justification
through faith in the atoning blood of Christ, and the renewing power
of the Holy Spirit upon the heart, bringing forth fruit in
a life conformed to the example of Christ.
Whitefield and the Wesleys had been prepared for their
work by long and sharp personal convictions of their own
lost condition; and that they might be able to endure hardness
as good soldiers of Christ, they had been subjected to
the fiery ordeal of scorn, derision, and persecution, both
in the university and as they were entering the ministry.
They and a few others who sympathized with them were
contemptuously called Methodists by their ungodly fellow
students--a name which is at the present time regarded as
honorable by one of the largest denominations in England
and America.
As members of the Church of England they were strongly
attached to her forms of worship, but the Lord had
presented before them in His word a higher standard. The Holy
Spirit urged them to preach Christ and Him crucified. The
power of the Highest attended their labors. Thousands were
convicted and truly converted. It was necessary that these
sheep be protected from ravening wolves. Wesley had no
thought of forming a new denomination, but he organized
them under what was called the Methodist Connection.
Mysterious and trying was the opposition which these
preachers encountered from the established church; yet God,
in His wisdom, had overruled events to cause the reform to
begin within the church itself. Had it come wholly from
without, it would not have penetrated where it was so much
needed. But as the revival preachers were churchmen, and
labored within the pale of the church wherever they could
find opportunity, the truth had an entrance where the doors
would otherwise have remained closed. Some of the clergy
were roused from their moral stupor and became zealous
preachers in their own parishes. Churches that had been
petrified by formalism were quickened into life.
In Wesley's time, as in all ages of the church's history, men
of different gifts performed their appointed work. They did
not harmonize upon every point of doctrine, but all were
moved by the Spirit of God, and united in the absorbing aim
to win souls to Christ. The differences between Whitefield
and the Wesleys threatened at one time to create alienation;
but as they learned meekness in the school of Christ, mutual
forbearance and charity reconciled them. They had no time
to dispute, while error and iniquity were teeming
everywhere, and sinners were going down to ruin.
The servants of God trod a rugged path. Men of influence
and learning employed their powers against them. After a
time many of the clergy manifested determined hostility,
and the doors of the churches were closed against a pure faith
and those who proclaimed it. The course of the clergy in
denouncing them from the pulpit aroused the elements of
darkness, ignorance, and iniquity. Again and again did John
Wesley escape death by a miracle of God's mercy. When the
rage of the mob was excited against him, and there seemed
no way of escape, an angel in human form came to his side,
the mob fell back, and the servant of Christ passed in safety
from the place of danger.
Of his deliverance from the enraged mob on one of these
occasions, Wesley said: "Many endeavored to throw me
down while we were going down hill on a slippery path to
the town; as well judging that if I was once on the ground,
I should hardly rise any more. But I made no stumble at all,
nor the least slip, till I was entirely out of their hands. . . .
Although many strove to lay hold on my collar or clothes, to
pull me down, they could not fasten at all: only one got fast
hold of the flap of my waistcoat, which was soon left in his
hand; the other flap, in the pocket of which was a bank note,
was torn but half off. . . . A lusty man just behind, struck
at me several times, with a large oaken stick; with which if
he had struck me once on the back part of my head, it would
have saved him all further trouble. But every time, the blow
was turned aside, I know not how; for I could not move to
the right hand or left. . . . Another came rushing through
the press, and raising his arm to strike, on a sudden let it
drop, and only stroked my head, saying, 'What soft hair he
has!' . . . The very first men whose hearts were turned were
the heroes of the town, the captains of the rabble on all
occasions, one of them having been a prize fighter at the bear
gardens. . . .
"By how gentle degrees does God prepare us for His will!
Two years ago, a piece of brick grazed my shoulders. It was
a year after that the stone struck me between the eyes. Last
month I received one blow, and this evening two, one before
we came into the town, and one after we were gone out; but
both were as nothing: for though one man struck me on the
breast with all his might, and the other on the mouth with
such force that the blood gushed out immediately, I felt no
more pain from either of the blows than if they had touched
me with a straw."--John Wesley, Works, vol. 3, pp. 297, 298.
The Methodists of those early days--people as well as
preachers--endured ridicule and persecution, alike from
church members and from the openly irreligious who were
inflamed by their misrepresentations. They were arraigned
before courts of justice--such only in name, for justice was
rare in the courts of that time. Often they suffered violence
from their persecutors. Mobs went from house to house,
destroying furniture and goods, plundering whatever they
chose, and brutally abusing men, women, and children. In
some instances, public notices were posted, calling upon
those who desired to assist in breaking the windows and
robbing the houses of the Methodists, to assemble at a given
time and place. These open violations of both human and
divine law were allowed to pass without a reprimand. A
systematic persecution was carried on against a people whose
only fault was that of seeking to turn the feet of sinners
from the path of destruction to the path of holiness.
Said John Wesley, referring to the charges against himself
and his associates: "Some allege that the doctrines of these
men are false, erroneous, and enthusiastic; that they are new
and unheard-of till of late; that they are Quakerism, fanaticism,
popery. This whole pretense has been already cut up
by the roots, it having been shown at large that every branch
of this doctrine is the plain doctrine of Scripture interpreted
by our own church. Therefore it cannot be either false or
erroneous, provided the Scripture be true." "Others allege,
"Their doctrine is too strict; they make the way to heaven too
narrow.' And this is in truth the original objection, (as it was
almost the only one for some time,) and is secretly at the
bottom of a thousand more, which appear in various forms.
But do they make the way to heaven any narrower than our
Lord and His apostles made it? Is their doctrine stricter than
that of the Bible? Consider only a few plain texts: 'Thou
shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all
thy mind, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength.'
'For every idle word which men shall speak, they shall give
an account in the day of judgment.' 'Whether ye eat, or
drink, or whatever ye do, do all to the glory of God.'
"If their doctrine is stricter than this, they are to blame;
but you know in your conscience it is not. And who can be
one jot less strict without corrupting the word of God? Can
any steward of the mysteries of God be found faithful if he
change any part of that sacred depositum? No. He can abate
nothing, he can soften nothing; he is constrained to declare
to all men, 'I may not bring down the Scripture to your taste.
You must come up to it, or perish forever.' This is the real
ground of that other popular cry concerning 'the
uncharitableness of these men.' Uncharitable, are they? In what
respect? Do they not feed the hungry and clothe the naked?
'No; that is not the thing: they are not wanting in this: but
they are so uncharitable in judging! they think none can be
saved but those of their own way.'"-- Ibid., vol. 3, pp. 152, 153.
The spiritual declension which had been manifest in
England just before the time of Wesley was in great degree
the result of antinomian teaching. Many affirmed that Christ
had abolished the moral law and that Christians are therefore
under no obligation to observe it; that a believer is freed
from the "bondage of good works." Others, though admitting
the perpetuity of the law, declared that it was unnecessary
for ministers to exhort the people to obedience of its
precepts, since those whom God had elected to salvation
would, "by the irresistible impulse of divine grace, be led
to the practice of piety and virtue," while those who were
doomed to eternal reprobation "did not have power to obey
the divine law."
Others, also holding that "the elect cannot fall from grace
nor forfeit the divine favor," arrived at the still more hideous
conclusion that "the wicked actions they commit are not
really sinful, nor to be considered as instances of their violation
of the divine law, and that, consequently, they have
no occasion either to confess their sins or to break them off
by repentance."--McClintock and Strong, Cyclopedia, art.
"Antinomians." Therefore, they declared that even one of
the vilest of sins, "considered universally an enormous violation
of the divine law, is not a sin in the sight of God," if
committed by one of the elect, "because it is one of the
essential and distinctive characteristics of the elect, that they
cannot do anything that is either displeasing to God or
prohibited by the law."
These monstrous doctrines are essentially the same as the
later teaching of popular educators and theologians--that
there is no unchangeable divine law as the standard of right,
but that the standard of morality is indicated by society itself,
and has constantly been subject to change. All these ideas are
inspired by the same master spirit--by him who, even among
the sinless inhabitants of heaven, began his work of seeking
to break down the righteous restraints of the law of God.
The doctrine of the divine decrees, unalterably fixing the
character of men, had led many to a virtual rejection of
the law of God. Wesley steadfastly opposed the errors of the
antinomian teachers and showed that this doctrine which led
to antinomianism was contrary to the Scriptures. "The grace
of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men ."
"This is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Saviour;
who will have all men to be saved, and to come unto the
knowledge of the truth. For there is one God, and one
mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus; who
gave Himself a ransom for all ." Titus 2:11; 1 Timothy 2:3-6.
The Spirit of God is freely bestowed to enable every man to
lay hold upon the means of salvation. Thus Christ, "the true
Light," "lighteth every man that cometh into the world."
John 1:9. Men fail of salvation through their own willful
refusal of the gift of life.
In answer to the claim that at the death of Christ the
precepts of the Decalogue had been abolished with the
ceremonial law, Wesley said: "The moral law, contained in the
Ten Commandments and enforced by the prophets, He did
not take away. It was not the design of His coming to revoke
any part of this. This is a law which never can be broken,
which 'stands fast as the faithful witness in heaven.' . . . This
was from the beginning of the world, being 'written not on
tables of stone,' but on the hearts of all the children of men,
when they came out of the hands of the Creator. And however
the letters once wrote by the finger of God are now in a
great measure defaced by sin, yet can they not wholly be
blotted out, while we have any consciousness of good and
evil. Every part of this law must remain in force upon all
mankind, and in all ages; as not depending either on time
or place, or any other circumstances liable to change, but
on the nature of God, and the nature of man, and their
unchangeable relation to each other.
"'I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill.' . . . Without
question, His meaning in this place is (consistently with all
that goes before and follows after),--I am come to establish
it in its fullness, in spite of all the glosses of men: I am come
to place in a full and clear view whatsoever was dark or obscure
therein: I am come to declare the true and full import
of every part of it; to show the length and breadth, the entire
extent, of every commandment contained therein, and the
height and depth, the inconceivable purity and spirituality
of it in all its branches."--Wesley, sermon 25.
Wesley declared the perfect harmony of the law and the
gospel. "There is, therefore, the closest connection that can
be conceived, between the law and the gospel. On the one
hand, the law continually makes way for, and points us to,
the gospel; on the other, the gospel continually leads us to
a more exact fulfilling of the law. The law, for instance,
requires us to love God, to love our neighbor, to be meek,
humble, or holy. We feel that we are not sufficient for these
things; yea, that 'with man this is impossible;' but we see a
promise of God to give us that love, and to make us humble,
meek, and holy: we lay hold of this gospel, of these glad
tidings; it is done unto us according to our faith; and 'the
righteousness of the law is fulfilled in us,' through faith
which is in Christ Jesus. . . .
"In the highest rank of the enemies of the gospel of
Christ," said Wesley, "are they who openly and explicitly
'judge the law' itself, and 'speak evil of the law;' who teach
men to break (to dissolve, to loose, to untie the obligation of)
not one only, whether of the least or of the greatest, but all
the commandments at a stroke. . . . The most surprising
of all the circumstances that attend this strong delusion, is
that they who are given up to it, really believe that they honor
Christ by overthrowing His law, and that they are magnifying
His office while they are destroying His doctrine! Yea, they
honor Him just as Judas did when he said, 'Hail, Master, and
kissed Him.' And He may as justly say to every one of them,
'Betrayest thou the Son of man with a kiss? It is no other
than betraying Him with a kiss, to talk of His blood, and
take away His crown; to set light by any part of His law,
under pretense of advancing His gospel. Nor indeed can
anyone escape this charge, who preaches faith in any such a
manner as either directly or indirectly tends to set aside any
branch of obedience: who preaches Christ so as to disannul,
or weaken in any wise, the least of the commandments of
God."-- Ibid .
To those who urged that "the preaching of the gospel
answers all the ends of the law," Wesley replied: "This we
utterly deny. It does not answer the very first end of the
law, namely, the convincing men of sin, the awakening those
who are still asleep on the brink of hell." The apostle Paul
declares that "by the law is the knowledge of sin;" "and not
until man is convicted of sin, will he truly feel his need of
the atoning blood of Christ. . . . 'They that be whole,' as our
Lord Himself observes, 'need not a physician, but they that
are sick.' It is absurd, therefore, to offer a physician to them
that are whole, or that at least imagine themselves so to be.
You are first to convince them that they are sick; otherwise
they will not thank you for your labor. It is equally absurd
to offer Christ to them whose heart is whole, having never
yet been broken."-- Ibid., sermon 35.
Thus while preaching the gospel of the grace of God,
Wesley, like his Master, sought to "magnify the law, and
make it honorable." Faithfully did he accomplish the work
given him of God, and glorious were the results which he
was permitted to behold. At the close of his long life of more
than fourscore years--above half a century spent in itinerant
ministry--his avowed adherents numbered more than half
a million souls. But the multitude that through his labors
had been lifted from the ruin and degradation of sin to a
higher and a purer life, and the number who by his teaching
had attained to a deeper and richer experience, will never
be known till the whole family of the redeemed shall be
gathered into the kingdom of God. His life presents a lesson
of priceless worth to every Christian. Would that the faith
and humility, the untiring zeal, self-sacrifice, and devotion
of this servant of Christ might be reflected in the churches of
today!