The Gospel Worthy of All Acceptation,
or the Duty of Sinners to Believe in Jesus Christ,
[With Corrections and Additions, to which is added an Appendix,
on the Necessity of a Holy Disposition in order to Believing in Christ.]
"Go, . . . preach the gospel to every creature: he that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shalt be damned!" -- Jesus CHRIST
[p. 328]
1801.
Part I
The Subject Shown to be Important, Stated and Explained.
If it be asked, What ground could a sinner, who shall at last prove to have no interest in the salvation of Christ, ever possess for trusting in him? let it be considered what it was for which he was warranted or obliged to trust. Was it that Christ would save him, whether he believed in him or not? No: there is no such promise, but an explicit declaration of the contrary. To trust in this, therefore, would be to trust in a falsehood. That for which he ought to have trusted in him was the obtaining of mercy, in case he applied for it. For this there was a complete warrant in the gospel declarations, as Mr. Booth, in his Tidings to Perishing Sinners, has fully evinced. There are principles, in that performance, which the writer of these pages, highly as he respects the author, cannot approve. The principal subjects of his disapprobation have been pointed out, and he thinks Scripturally refuted, by Mr. Scott;* but with respect to the warrant which every sinner has to trust in Christ for salvation, Mr. B. has clearly and fully established it. I may add, if any man distrust either the power or willingness of Christ to save those that come to him, and so continue to stand at a distance, relying upon his own righteousness, or some false ground of confidence, to the rejection of him, it is criminal and inexcusable unbelief.
[From Joseph Belcher, editor, The Complete Works of the Rev. Andrew Fuller, Volume II, 1845; rpt. 1988, pp. 328-342. Document provided by David Oldfield, Post Falls, ID. — jrd]