Treatise Life And Death Of John Fletcher
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-life-and-death-of-john-fletcher-059 |
| Words | 390 |
He seems to call me out
to more activeness; so that I am ready to cry out, What
wouldest thou have me to do? Then I consider, Can I do any
more for the souls or bodies of the poor about me? But this
does not seem to be the thing. What I am now led to wish
for is, with both soul and body to serve those who are in
Christ. And as soon as the Lord has prepared me for his
work, and set me at liberty, my firm resolution is, by the
grace of God, to be wholly given up to the Church. I plainly
see, I have no more to do with the world, than to allow
myself the necessaries of life. And though it has pleased
God that I have no need to work for my living, yet surely
that is no reason my hand should be idle. I would be like
those described 1 Timothy v. 10, to bring up children, to
lodge strangers, to be ready to do the meanest offices for the
saints, to relieve the afflicted, to visit the fatherless and
widow, and diligently to follow every good work. O pray for
me, that the Lord may shorten his work in me, and quickly
make an end of sin! O that he would say to my soul, Thou
art all fair, my love; there is no spot in thee! O when shall
I be wholly given up, both body and soul, to Him who gave
himself for me?’
“I admired the spirit of this letter; but little expected to
see these good desires brought so fully into practice, as they
were in a few years after. And this may suffice as a clear
proof that God fulfils the desire of them that fear him; yea,
and shows unto them the path wherein he would have them
to walk. That her light given before was not delusive, is
plain; as it is well known, how many years she has ‘brought
up children, lodged strangers, relieved the afflicted, and
‘diligently followed every good work.’
“With regard to the dear saint that is now swallowed up
in his beloved employment, praise and adoration, it is eight
or nine and twenty years since I was first favoured with his
heavenly conversation, in company with Mr.