Journal Vol1 3
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | journal |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-journal-vol1-3-180 |
| Words | 350 |
3. What I design in the following extract is, openly to declare to all mankind,
what it is that the Methodists (so called) have done, and are doing now: or rather,
what it is that God hath done, and is still doing in our land. For it is not the work
of man which hath lately appeared. All who calmly observe it must say, “ This is
the Lord’s doing, and it is marvellous in our eyes.”
4. Such a work this hath been in many respects, as neither we nor our fathers had
known. Not a few whose sins were of the most flagrant kind, drunkards, swearers,
thieves, whoremongers, adulterers, have been brought “from darkness unto light,
and from the power of Satan unto God.” Many of these were rooted in their
wickedness, having long gloried in their shame, perhaps for a course of many years,
yea, even to hoary hairs. Many had not so much as a notional faith, being Jews,
Arians, Deists, or Atheists. Nor has God only made bare his arm in these last days,
in behalf of open publicans and sinners; but many “ of the Pharisees” also “ have
believed on him,” of the “righteous that needed no repentance ;” and, having
received “the sentence of death in themselves,” have then heard the voice that
raiseth the dead: have been made partakers of an inward, vital religion; even
“righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost.”
5. The manner wherein God hath wrought this work in many souls is as strange
as the work itself. It has generally, if not always, been wrought in one moment,
“ As the lightning shining from heaven,” so was “the coming of the Son of Man,”
either to bring peace or a sword; either to wound or to heal; either to convince of
sin, or to give remission of sins in his blood. And the other circumstances attending
it have been equally remote from what human wisdom would have expected. So
true is that word, “My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my
ways.”