Wesley Corpus

09 To Elizabeth Padbury

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typeletter
YearNone
Passage IDjw-letter-1779-09-to-elizabeth-padbury-000
Words194
Free Will Means of Grace Religious Experience
To Elizabeth Padbury Date: LONDON, February 10, 1779. Source: The Letters of John Wesley (1779) Author: John Wesley --- MY DEAR BETSY, - A letter from you is always agreeable. I feel a sincere affection for you; so much the more because you are free and unreserved, both when you write and when we converse together. I am glad you think of me when you do not see me. Distance need not be any bar to affection. It is good that you should be tenderly concerned for those of your own household; but so as always to hold that anchor fast, 'Not as I will, but as Thou wilt.' And you have great reason to hope that sooner or later prayer will prevail for them. But the time God has reserved in His own hand, and we know 'His manner and His time are best.' Whether you have a longer or a shorter time to praise Him on earth is of no great moment. It is enough that you shall have an eternity to praise Him in heaven! Let this be ever in our eye! And never forget, my dear Betsy, Yours most affectionately.