Wesley Collected Works Vol 8
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-8-318 |
| Words | 389 |
4. It is the business of a Visitor of the sick,
To see every sick person within his district thrice a week. To inquire into the state of their souls, and to advise them as
occasion may require. To inquire into their disorders, and pro
cure advice for them. To relieve them, if they are in want. To do any thing for them, which he (or she) can do. To bring
in his accounts weekly to the Stewards.”
Upon reflection, I saw how exactly, in this also, we had
copied after the primitive Church. What were the ancient
Deacons? What was Phebe the Deaconess, but such a Visitor
of the sick? 5. I did not think it needful to give them any particular
rules beside these that follow :
(1.) Be plain and open in dealing with souls. (2.) Be mild,
tender, patient. (3.) Be cleanly in all you do for the sick. (4.) Be not nice. 6. We have ever since had great reason to praise God for his
continued blessing on this undertaking. Many lives have been
saved, many sicknesses healed, much pain and want prevented
or removed. Many heavy hearts have been made glad, many
mourners comforted: And the Visitors have found, from Him
whom they serve, a present reward for all their labour. XII. 1. But I was still in pain for many of the poor that
were sick; there was so great expense, and so little profit. And
* The Leaders now do this. first, I resolved to try, whether they might not receive more
benefit in the hospitals. Upon the trial, we found there was
indeed less expense, but no more good done, than before. I
then asked the advice of several Physicians for them; but still
it profited not. I saw the poor people pining away, and several
families ruined, and that without remedy. 2. At length I thought of a kind of desperate expedient. “I
will prepare, and give them physic myself.” For six or seven
and twenty years, I had made anatomy and physic the diversion
of my leisure hours; though I never properly studied them,
unless for a few months when I was going to America, where
I imagined I might be of some service to those who had no
regular Physician among them. I applied to it again.