Treatise Letter To Bishop Of Gloucester
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-bishop-of-gloucester-007 |
| Words | 365 |
My horse was
exceeding lame; and my head ached much. I thought, Can
not God heal man or beast by means or without 7 Immedi
ately my weariness and headache ceased, and my horse’s lame
ness in the same instant.” (Page 136.) It was so; and I
believe thousands of serious Christians have found as plain
answers to prayer as this. 3. William Kirkman’s case proves
only, that God does what pleases him; not that I make myself
either “a great saint or a great Physician.” (Page 137.) 4. “R.A. was freed at once, without any human means, from a
distemper naturally incurable.” (Page 138.) He was; but it
was before I knew him. So, what is that to me? 5. “I found
Mr. Lunell in a violent fever. He revived the moment he
saw me, and began to recover from that time. Perhaps for this
also was I sent.” (Ibid.) I mean, Perhaps this was one end
for which the providence of God brought me thither at that
time. 6. “In the evening, I called upon Ann Calcut. She
had been speechless for some time. But almost as soon as we
began to pray, God restored her speech. And from that hour
the fever left her.” 7. “I visited several ill of the spotted
fever, which had been extremely mortal. But God had said,
* Hitherto shalt thou come.’ I believe there was not one with
whom we were, but he recovered.” (Page 139.) 8. “Mr. Meyrick had been speechless and senseless for some time. A
few of us joined in prayer. Before we had done, his sense and
his speech returned. Others may account for this by natural
causes. I believe this is the power of God.” (Ibid.)
But what does all this prove? Not that I claim any gift above
other men; but only that I believe God now hears and answers
prayer, even beyond the ordinary course of nature: Otherwise,
the Clerk was in the right, who, in order to prevent the fana
ticism of his Rector, told him, “Sir, you should not pray for
fair weather yet; for the moon does not change till Saturday.”
While the two accounts (pp.