Wesley Corpus

Journal Vol4 7

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typejournal
YearNone
Passage IDjw-journal-vol4-7-129
Words395
Means of Grace Works of Mercy Prevenient Grace
well. On our approaching the third, seven or eight countrymen presently ran to help us. One of them carried me over on his shoulders ; others got the horses through ; and some carried the chaise. We then thought the difficulty was past ; but in half anhour we came to another slough : Being helped over it, I walked on, leaving Mr. Delap, John Carr, Joseph Bradford, and Jesse Bugden, with the chaise, which was stuck fast in the slough. As none of them thought of unharnessing the horses, the traces were soon broke: At length they fastened ropes to the chaise, and to the stronger horse ; and the horse pulling, and the men thrusting at once, they thrust it through the slough to the firm land. In an hour or two after we all met at Ballin- acurrah. While I was walking, a poor man overtook me, who appeared to be in deep distress : He said, he owed his landlord twenty shillings rent, for which he had turned him and his family out of doors ; and that he had been down with his relations to beg their help, but they would do nothing. Upon my giving him [May, 1778. a guinea, he would needs kneel down inthe road to pray for me; and then cried out, " O, I shall have a house ! I shall have a house over my head!" So perhaps God answered that poor man's prayer, by the sticking fast of the chaise in the slough! Tues. 19. In the evening I preached at Sligo, in the old Court-House, an exceeding spacious building : I know not that ever I saw so large a congregation here before ; nor (considering their number) so well behaved. Will God revive his work even in this sink of wickedness, and after so many deadly stumbling-blocks ? Upon inquiry, I found, there had been for some time a real revival of religion here. The congregations have considerably increased, and the society is nearly doubled. We had in the evening a larger congregation than before, among whom were most of the Gentry of the town: And all but one or two young gentlemen (so called) were remarkably serious and attentive. I now received an intelligible account of the famous massacre at Sligo. A little before the Revolution, one Mr. Morris, a