Wesley Corpus

Letters 1783B

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typeletter
YearNone
Passage IDjw-letters-1783b-011
Words242
Works of Piety Means of Grace Justifying Grace
MY DEAR BETSY, -- I love to see anything that comes from you, although it be upon a melancholy occasion. Nothing can be done in the Court of King's Bench till the latter end of next week at the soonest, and till then I am trying all milder means which may possibly avail. If nothing can be done this way, we can but fight at Sharp’s. But prayer and fasting are of excellent uses; for if God be for us, who can be against us Probably I may visit you this winter. -- I always am, dear Betsy, Yours most affectionately. To Thomas Longley [11] LONDON, November 5, 1785. MY DEAR BROTHER, -- What you mention is an exceeding odd case. I hardly remember the like. I refer Samuel Edwards wholly to you. If you cannot trust him, he must go home. If you can, you may receive him again as a fellow laborer -- that is, if he is sensible of his fault, of his very uncommon pride and stubbornness and unadvisableness, contrary both to religion and to reason. But you can’t receive him unless he promises for the time to come to take your advice or reproof, not as an affront, not as ‘trampling him under-foot,’ but as a favor and an act of real kindness. -- I am Your affectionate friend and brother. To Mr. Longley, At Mr. M. Dobinson’s, In Derby. To Mrs. Barton LONDON, Noveraber 6, 1783.