A 32 To Thomas Tattershall
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | letter |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-letter-1790a-32-to-thomas-tattershall-000 |
| Words | 125 |
To Thomas Tattershall
Source: The Letters of John Wesley (1790)
Author: John Wesley
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MANCHESTER, April [3], 1790.
DEAR TOMMY, -- So you have reason to acknowledge that God has not forgotten to be gracious. If you can build preaching-houses without increasing the General Debt, it is well; but otherwise it will eat us up. But I have no more to do with these matters. I have appointed a Building Committee, and shall leave to them everything pertaining to building for the time to come. In all these parts of the kingdom there is a fair measure of the work of God. There will be so everywhere if the preachers are holy and zealous men. -- I am, dear Tommy,
Your affectionate friend and brother.