B 25 To Dorothy Furly
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | letter |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-letter-1756b-25-to-dorothy-furly-000 |
| Words | 199 |
To Dorothy Furly
Date: LONDON, December 22, 1756.
Source: The Letters of John Wesley (1756)
Author: John Wesley
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It is a happy thing if we can learn obedience by the things which we suffer. Weakness of body and heaviness of mind will, I trust, have this good effect upon you. The particular lesson which you have now to learn is to be faithful in comparatively little things, particularly in conversation. God hath given you a tongue: why That you may praise Him therewith; that all your conversation may be, for the time to come, ‘meet to minister grace to the hearers.’ Such conversation and private prayer exceedingly assist each other. By resolutely persisting, according to your little strength, in all works of piety and mercy, you are waiting on God in the old scriptural way. And therein He will come and save you. Do not think He is afar off. He is nigh that justifieth, that sanctifieth. Beware you do not thrust Him away from you. Rather say,
My heart would now receive Thee, Lord:
Come in, my Lord, come in
Write as often and as freely and fully as you please to
Your affectionate brother and servant.