Wesley Corpus

Journal Vol1 3

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typejournal
YearNone
Passage IDjw-journal-vol1-3-496
Words268
Prevenient Grace Free Will Works of Mercy
“5, That if ever any child performed an act of obedience, or did any thing with an intention to please, though the performance was not well, vet the obedience and intention should be kindly accepted; and the child with sweetness directed how to do better for the future. / 266 REV. J. WESLEY’S JOURNAL. [ Aug. 1742. “6, That propriety be inviolably preserved, and none suffered to invade the property of another in the smallest matter, though it were but of the value of a farthing, or a pin; which they might not take from the owner, without, much less against, his consent. This rule can never be too much inculcated on the minds of children; and from the want of parents or governors doing it as they ought, proceeds that shameful neglect of justice which we may observe in the world. “7, 'That promises be strictly observed; and a gift once bestowed, and so the right passed away from the donor, be not resumed, but left te the disposal of him to whom it was given; unless it were conditional, and the condition of the obligation not performed. **8. That no girl be taught to work till she can read very well; and then that she be kept to her work with the same application, and for the same time, that she was held to in reading. ‘This rule also is much to be observed; for the putting children to learn sewing before they, can read perfectly, is the very reason, why so few women can read fit to be neard, and never to be well understood.”