Wesley Corpus

Journal Vol1 3

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typejournal
YearNone
Passage IDjw-journal-vol1-3-087
Words348
Pneumatology Prevenient Grace Assurance
Sat. 28.--Was another cloudy day; but about ten in the morning (the wind continuing southerly) the clouds began to fly just contrary to the wind, and, to the surprise of us all, sunk down under the sun, so that at noon we had an exact observation; and by this we found we were as well as we could desire, about eleven leagues south of Scilly. Sun. 29.--We saw English land once more; which, about noon, appeared to be the Lizard Point. We ran by it with a fair wind; and at noon, the next day, made the west end of the Isle of Wight. Here the wind turned against us, and in the evening blew fresh, so that we expected (the tide being likewise strong against us) to be driven some leagues backward in the night: but in the morning, to our great surprise, we saw Beachy-head, just before us, and found we had gone forward near forty miles. Ve aN OT alts hE ae hh \ 56 * REV. J. WESLEY’S JOURNAL. [Feb. 1738. Toward evening was a calm; but in the night a strong north wind brought us safe into the Downs. The day before, Mr. Whitefield had sailed out, neither of us then knowing anv thing of the other. At four in the morning we took boat, and in half an hour landed at Deal: it being Wednesday, February 1, the anniversary festival in Georgia for Mr. Oglethorpe’s landing there. It is now two years and almost four months since I left my native country, in order to teach the Georgian Indians the nature of Christianity : but what have I learned myself in the mean time ? Why, (what ! the least of all suspected,) that I who went to America to convert others, was never myself converted to God. (I am not sure of this.) ‘I am not mad,” though I thus speak ; but “I speak the words of truth and soberness ;” if haply some of those who still dream may awake, and see, that as I am, so are they.