John Owen, with great pastoral care and sensitivity, answers the question:
Discourse IX (Delivered April 19, 1677)
Discourse IX (Delivered April 19, 1677)
Question. Whether lust or corruption, habitually prevalent, be consistent with the truth of grace?
Answer. This is a hard question; there are difficulties in it, and, it
may be, it is not precisely to be determined. I am sure we should be
wonderfully careful what we say upon such a question, which determines
the present and eternal condition of the souls of men.
Supposing we retain something of what was spoken in stating a lust or corruption so habitually prevalent, because this is the foundation of our present inquiry, I shall bring what I have to say upon this question to a few heads, that they may be remembered.
Supposing we retain something of what was spoken in stating a lust or corruption so habitually prevalent, because this is the foundation of our present inquiry, I shall bring what I have to say upon this question to a few heads, that they may be remembered.
First. It is the duty of every believer to take care that this may never
be his own case practically. We shall meet with straits enough, and
fears enough, and doubts enough about our eternal condition, though we
have no lust nor corruption habitually prevalent; therefore, I say, it
is the duty of every believer to take care this may never be his case.
David did so, Ps. xix. 12, 13, "Who can understand his errors?" saith
he, "Cleanse thou me from secret faults. Keep back thy servant also from
presumptuous sins: then shall I be upright, and I shall be innocent
from the great transgression." Continue at Underdog Theology
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