Treatise An Extraordinary Cure
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-an-extraordinary-cure-000 |
| Words | 189 |
An Extraordinary Cure
Source: The Works of John Wesley, Volume 11 (Zondervan)
Author: John Wesley
---
Bishop HALL, speaking of the good offices which angels
‘do to God’s servants, says, “Of this kind was that marvellous
cure which was wrought upon a poor cripple, at St. Madern's
in Cornwall; whereof, besides the attestation of many
hundreds of the neighbours, I took a strict examination in
my last visitation: This man, for sixteen years together, was
obliged to walk upon his hands, by reason the sinews of his
legs were so contracted. Upon an admonition in his dream,
to wash in a certain well, he was suddenly so restored to his
limbs that I saw him able to walk and get his own mainte
mance. The name of this cripple was John Trebble.”
And were “many hundreds of the neighbours,” together
with Bishop Hall, deceived in so notorious a matter of fact?
or did they all join together to palm such a falsehood on the
world? O incredulity what ridiculous shifts art thou
driven to ! what absurdities wilt thou not believe, rather
than own any extraordinary work of God!