Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-043 |
| Words | 387 |
From whom did
I covet silver, or gold, or apparel? To whom did I deny any
thing which I had, even to the hour that I departed from you? Ye of Epworth and Wroote, among whom I ministered for
nearly the space of three years, what gain did I seek among
you? Or of whom did I take or covet anything? Ye of Savannah
and Frederica, among whom God afterwards proved me, and
showed me what was in my heart, what gain did I seek among
you? Of whom did I take anything? Or whose food or apparel
did I covet, (for silver or gold had ye none, no more than I
myself for many months,) even when I was in hunger and
nakedness? Ye yourselves, and the God and Father of our
Lord Jesus Christ, know that I lie not. 89. “But,” it is said, “things are fairly altered now. Now
I cannot complain of wanting anything; having the yearly
income of a Bishop of London, over and above what I gain at
other places.” At what other places, my friend? Inform your
self a little better, and you will find that both at Newcastle,
Bristol, and Kingswood, and all other places, where any collec
tion is made, the money collected is both received and
expended by the stewards of those several societies, and
never comes into my hands at all,--neither first nor last. And you, or any who desire it, shall read over the accounts
kept by any of those stewards, and see with your own eyes,
that by all these scoieties I gain just as much as you do. 90. The case in London stands thus:-In November, 1739,
two gentlemen, then unknown to me, (Mr. Ball and Mr. Wat
Kins,) came and desired me, once and again, to preach in a place
called the Foundery, near Moorfields. With much reluctance
I at length complied. I was soon after pressed to take that
place into my own hands. Those who were most earnest therein
lent me the purchase-money, which was one hundred and fif
teen pounds. Mr. Watkins and Mr. Ball then delivered me
the names of several subscribers, who offered to pay, some four
or six, some ten shillings a year towards the repayment of the
purchase-money, and the putting the buildings into repair.