Wesley Corpus

Treatise Some Account Of An Eminent Man

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typetreatise
YearNone
Passage IDjw-treatise-some-account-of-an-eminent-man-000
Words224
Catholic Spirit Religious Experience Universal Redemption
Some Account of an Eminent Man Source: The Works of John Wesley, Volume 11 (Zondervan) Author: John Wesley --- PHILIP VERHEYEN, Doctor of Physic, in the University of Louvain, and Royal Professor of Anatomy and Surgery, was, towards the end of the last and in the beginning of the present century, one of the most eminent Physicians in Europe. He died at Louvain on the 28th of February, 1710, aged sixty-two. He was a man of eminent piety, wholly detached both from the goods and glory of this world. He gave orders not to bury him in the church, but in the churchyard; all the will which he left being in the following words : Philippus Verheyen, Medicinae Doctor et Professor, partem sui materialem hoc in caemeterio condi voluit, ne templum dehonestaret, aut nocivis halitibus inficeret. Requiescat in Apace. That is,--“Philip Verheyen, Doctor and Professor of Physic, ordered his body to be buried in this churchyard, that he might not lessen the honour of the church, or infect it with unwholesome vapours.” What pity it is, that so few persons, even of sense and piety, feel the force of these considerations ! I am so sensible of their weight, that I have likewise left orders to bury my remains, not in the New Chapel, but in the burying-ground adjoining to it. * 3: 460