04 To His Brother Charles
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | letter |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-letter-1736-04-to-his-brother-charles-001 |
| Words | 262 |
You are not, I think, at liberty stfesa e t ', 'e sfta s 'aps se. ' To turn to the Gentiles till your own countrymen shall cast you out.' If that period comes soon, so much the better. Only in the meanwhile reprove and exhort with all authority, even though all men should despise thee. pseta s e at. 'It shall turn to thee for a testimony ': see Luke xxi. 13. I conjure you, spare no time or address or pains to learn the true cause t pa d t f . 'Of the former distress of my friend.' I much doubt you are the right. t 'a 't p at. Ge, fss sta d. Gfe , p e d fe p at. 'God forbid that she should again in like manner miss the mark. Watch over her, keep her as much as possible. Write to me, how I ought to write to her.' If Mr. Ingham Benjamin Ingham had gone to Prederica with General Oglethorpe on Feb. 16, and welcomed Charles on his landing there in March. were here, I would try to see you. But omit no opportunity. of writing. de pasa 'a. ' te es ae, etea, stea, fea t e. se, 'a ta at s at sa. 'I stand in jeopardy every hour. Two or three are women, younger, refined, God-fearing. Pray that I know none of them after the flesh.' Let us be strong and very courageous; for the Lord our God is with us, and there is no counsel or might against Him Adieu!