Journal Vol4 7
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | journal |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-journal-vol4-7-406 |
| Words | 395 |
uponthem ; and I believe few of them will forget that hour,
till their spirits return to God.
Fri. 15.-About eight I preached at Rich-Hill, to a deeply
serious congregation. At eleven I preached in the Castle-yard,
at Charlemount, to alarge congregation, gathered from all parts ;
it being the Quarterly Meeting. Immediately followed the
love-feast. But the preaching-house would not contain one half
of the people : So we borrowed the Green in the fort, and let the
people through the wicket, one by one. They then sat down on
the grass, being full as private as in the House ; and many spoke
their experience quite freely. But the rain obliged us to break
off our meeting sooner thanwe intended. It began in the even-
ing, before I had finished the hymn, but stopped in two or three
minutes, and left us a fair and tolerably pleasant evening.
Sat. 16. I went on to Dungannon; but the town seemed to
be in an uproar. One would have thought Bedlam had broke
loose. The cause was this :-A cock-fight was at hand. A
gentleman asked the Presbyterian Minister for the use of his
meeting-house ; but he gave a reason for his denial, viz. , that
Mr. Hall, one of the society, had said he had played at cards all
[June, 1787.
night ; (which, it seems, was true;) and therefore he could not
allow him to come into his meeting-house. So we removed all
the benches out of our own ; and it contained most of the con-
gregation. I preached there again in the evening, and then
held a love-feast ; at which many were greatly comforted.
Sun. 17. We knew not what to do at Armagh : The rain
:
would not suffer us to preach in the avenue; and our House
would not contain half of the congregation, many of whom
came from far. The best shift we could make was to squeeze
into the House as many as possible, and keep both the windows !
and doors open; by which means many more could hear.
In the evening the Seceders (who would think it ?) freely
gave me the use of their large meeting-house. It was filled
from end to end: But awise young gentleman observed, that I
had quite mistook my subject ; my sermon being calculated for