Wesley Corpus

Letters 1790A

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typeletter
YearNone
Passage IDjw-letters-1790a-017
Words276
Social Holiness Catholic Spirit Universal Redemption
I have wrote a loving but plain letter to Arthur Keene [See next letter, and that of July 6, 1789.] (without saying a word of the forenoon service) to this effect: 'You would not have been justified in removing such a friend as me even if I had turned Papist or Mahometan.' -- I am, with kind love to Nancy, dear Henry, Your affectionate friend and brother. To Arthur Keene PARKGATE, LEEDS, April 28, 1790. DEAR ARTHUR, -- Many years you and I loved as brethren. We were united by no common ties. We took sweet counsel together and walked to the house of God as friends. On a sudden you renounced all intercourse with me, because, you said, I had left the Church. Alas! what a cause! Are such friends as I was to be thrown away for such a reason as this Truly I think such a step would not have been justifiable if I had turned Papist or Mahometan, much less for my turning Presbyterian, if it only had been so. And to your example chiefly was owing the unjust, unkind behavior which I met with from many when I was in Dublin last! Well, I cannot help it; I am to be guided by my own conscience, not that of another man! Many a weary journey have I had to Ireland; I seem now to be fairly discharged. May the peace of God be with you and yours! I do not depend on seeing you any more till we meet in the world of spirits. Dear Arthur, adieu! To Arthur Keene, Esq., Dublin. To his Niece Sarah Wesley PARKGATE, April 28, 1790.