Treatise Letter To Bishop Of Gloucester
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-bishop-of-gloucester-021 |
| Words | 399 |
A poor wretch, who
was here the last week, cursing and blaspheming, and labour
ing with all his might to hinder the word of God, had after
wards boasted, he would come again on Sunday, and no man
should stop his mouth then. But on Friday God laid his hand
upon him, and on Sunday he was buried.” (Page 202.) And
was not this an awful providence? But yet I do not doom
evenhim to perdition. (5.) “I saw a poor man, once joined
with us, who wanted nothing in this world. A day or two
before, he hanged himself, but was cut down before he was
dead. He has been crying out ever since, God had left him,
because he had left the children of God.” This was his asser
tion, not mine. I neither affirm nor deny it. (6.) The true
account of Lucy Godshall is this: “I buried the body of Lucy
Godshall. After pressing toward the mark for more than two
years, since she had known the pardoning love of God, she was
for some time weary, and faint in her mind, till I put her out
of the Bands. God blessed this greatly to her soul, so that, in
a short time, she was admitted again. Soon after, being at home,
she felt the love of God in an unusual manner poured into her
heart. She fell down upon her knees, and delivered up her
soul and body into the hands of God. In the instant, the use
of all her limbs was taken away, and she was in a burning fever. For three days, she mightily praised God, and rejoiced in him
all the day long. She then cried out, ‘Now Satan hath desired
to have me, that he may sift me as wheat.’ Immediately dark
ness and heaviness fell upon her, which continued till Satur
day, the 4th instant. On Sunday the light shone again upon
her heart. About ten in the evening, one said to her, “Jesus
is ready to receive your soul. She said, ‘Amen Amen l’
closed her eyes, and died.” (Vol. I. p. 397.) Is this brought as
a proof of my inexorableness, or of my dooming men to
perdition? (7) “I found Nicholas Palmer in great weakness of body,
and heaviness of spirit. We wrestled with God in his behalf;
and our labour was not in vain.