Treatise Life And Death Of John Fletcher
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-life-and-death-of-john-fletcher-100 |
| Words | 397 |
“If the prospect of glory
sweetly opens before thee, repeat the sign. He instantly
raised it again, and in half a minute, a second time. He
then threw it up, as if he would reach the top of the bed;
after this, his hands moved no more. But on my saying,
“Art thou in pain?’ he answered, ‘No. From this time he
lay in a kind of sleep, though with his eyes open and fixed. For the most part he sat upright, against pillows, with his
head a little inclining to one side; and so remarkably composed,
yea, triumphant, was his countenance, that the least trace of
death was scarce discernible in it. Twenty-four hours he was
in this situation, breathing like a person in common sleep. About thirty-five minutes past ten on Sunday night, August
14, his precious soul entered into the joy of his Lord, without
one struggle or groan, in the fifty-sixth year of his age. “And here I break off my mournful story; but on my
bleeding heart the fair picture of his heavenly excellencies
will be for ever drawn. When I call to mind his ardent zeal,
his laborious endeavours to seek and save the lost, his
diligence in the employment of his time, his Christ-like
condescension toward me, and his uninterrupted converse
with heaven; I may well be allowed to add, My loss is beyond
the power of words to paint. I have often gone through
deep waters; but all my afflictions were nothing to this. Well; I want no pleasant prospect but upwards, nor anything
whereon to fix my hope but immortality. “From the time I have had the happiness and honour of
being with him, every day more and more convinced me he was
the Christian. I saw, I loved, in him the image of my Saviour;
and thought myself the happiest of women in the possession
of the most sympathizing and heavenly friend. My sorrow
bears a due proportion; but it is alleviated by that thought,
“United in God, we cannot be divided. No; we are of one
household still; we are joined in Him as our centre, ‘of whom
the whole family in heaven and earth is named. It is said
of New Testament believers, “They are come to the spirits of
just men made perfect;’ to the glorious privilege of com
munion with the Church triumphant.