18 To Mrs Hall
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | letter |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-letter-1761-18-to-mrs-hall-000 |
| Words | 311 |
To Mrs. Hall
Source: The Letters of John Wesley (1761)
Author: John Wesley
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NEAR NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE, June 14, 1761.
DEAR PATTY--Why should any of us live in the world without doing a little good in it? I am glad you have made a beginning. See that you are not weary of well doing; for it will often be a cross. But bear the cross, and it will bear you. The best fruit grows under the cross.
I have often thought it strange that so few of my relations should be of any use to me in the work of God. My sister Wright was, of whom I should least have expected it; but it was only for a short season. My sister Emly and you, of whom one might have expected more, have, I know not how, kept at a distance, and sometimes cavilled a little, at other times as it were approved, but never heartily joined in the work. Where did it stick? Did you not throughly understand what my brother and I were doing? Did you not see the truth? Or did the cause lie in your heart? You had no will to join hand in hand. You wanted resolution, spirit, patience. Well, the day is far spent. What you do, do quickly. 'Life for delay no time will give!'
[My] work in the country cannot be finished before the latter end of August, as the circuit is now larger by [some] hundred miles than when I was in the North two [years] ago. O let the one thing be ever uppermost in our thoughts!
To promote either your temporal or eternal good will always be a pleasure to, dear Patty,
Your affectionate Brother. [Wesley was much concerned about his sister. See letter of Dec. 26 to his brother.]
Endorsed 'I am obliged to my dear B[rother] for [this].'