A 32 To Alexander Surer
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | letter |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-letter-1784a-32-to-alexander-surer-000 |
| Words | 200 |
To Alexander Surer Date: DARLINGTON, June 13, 1784. MY DEAR BROTHER, - Your letter gave me not a little satisfaction. I am glad to hear that your spirit revives. I doubt not but it will revive more and more, and the work of the Lord will prosper in your hands. I have a very friendly letter from Sir Lodowick Sir Lodovick Grant. Wesley visited him at Grange Green, near Forres, in June 1764, and on June 7, 1779. See Journal, v. 74-6; vi. 237.; and hope you will have an opportunity of calling upon him again, especially if Brother McAllum Duncan McAllum was Assistant at Aberdeen, and Alexander Suter his colleague in Inverness. and you have the resolution to change places regularly, as I proposed. I dearly love the spirit of Sister McAllum. She is a woman after my own heart. It will be of great and general use, when you have a quantity of little books, partly to sell and partly to give among the poor - chiefly indeed to give. If I live till the Conference, I will take order concerning it. Certainly you shall not want any help that is in the power of Your affectionate brother.