Journal Vol1 3
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | journal |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-journal-vol1-3-431 |
| Words | 398 |
I immediately fell into a profuse
sweat, which continued till one or two in the morning. God then gave
me refreshing sleep, and afterward such tranquillity of mind, that this
day, Sunday, November 1, seemed the shortest day to me I had ever
known in my life.
“J think a little circumstance ought not to be omitted, although I know
there may be an ill construction put upon it. ‘Those words were now so
strongly impressed upon my mind, that for a considerable time I could
not put them out of my thoughts, ‘ Blessed is the man that provideth for
the poor and needy: the Lord shall deliver him in the time of trouble.
The Lord shall comfort him when he lieth sick upon his bed: make thou
all his bed in his sickness.’
“On Sunday night likewise I slept well, and was easy all Monday morning. But about three in the afternoon the shivering returned much more
‘violent than before. It continued till I was put to bed. I was then
immediately as in a fiery furnace. In a little space I began sweating:
but the sweating seemed to increase rather than aliay the burning heat.
Thus I remained till about eight o’clock; when I suddenly awaked out
of a kind of doze, in such a sort of disorder (whether of body or mind, or
both) as I know not how to describe. My heart and lungs, and all that
was within me, and my soul too, seemed to be in perfect uproar. But
I cried unto the Lord in my trouble, and he delivered me out of my
distress.
“T continued in a moderate sweat till near midnight, and then slept
pretty well till morning. On Tuesday, November 3, about noon I was
removed to Mr. Hooper’s. Here I enjoyed a blessed calm for several
hours, the fit not returning till six in the evening: and then in such a
manner as I never heard or read of. [I had a quick pulse, attended with
violent heat; but no pain either in my head, or back, or limbs; no sickness, no stitch, no thirst. Surely God is a present help in time of trouble.
And he does ‘make all’ my ‘ bed in’ my ‘sickness.’
“ Wed. 4.--Many of our brethren agreed to seek God to-day by fasting
Nov. 1741.] REV. J. WESLEY’S JOURNAL. 235