Journal Vol1 3
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | journal |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-journal-vol1-3-563 |
| Words | 265 |
came back to Francis Ward’s, I found many of our brethren waiting
upon God. Many also whom I never had seen before, came to rejoice
with us. And the next morning, as I rode through the town in my way
to Nottingham, every one I met expressed such a cordial affection, that
I could scarce believe what I saw and heard. I cannot closé this head
without inserting as great a curiosity in its kind as, I believe, was ever
yet seen in England; which had its birth within a very few days of this
remarkable occurrence at Walsal.
“ Staffordshire.
“To all high constables, petty constables, and other of his majesty’s
peace Officers, within the said county, and particularly to the constable of Tipton :” (near Walsal :)
“ Whereas, we, his majesty’s justices of the peace for the said county
of Stafford, have received information that several disorderly persons,
styling themselves Methodist preachers, go about raising routs and riots,
to the great damage of his majesty’s liege people, and against the peace
of our sovereign lord the king:
“ These are, in his majesty’s name, to command you and every one of
you, within your respective districts, to make diligent search after the said
Methodist preachers, and to bring him or them before some of us, his said
majesty’s justices of the peace, to be examined concerning their unlawful
doings.
Pe ce Given under our hands and seals, this day of
October, 1'743.
“J. Lane.
(N. B. The very justices to whose houses I was carried, and who
severally refused to see me!)