CANNOT GOD HEAL MAN OR BEAST
March 17, 1746
"I took my leave of Newcastle...my horse was so exceedingly lame that I was afraid I must have lain by too. We could not discern what it was that was amiss; and yet he would scarce set his foot to the ground. By riding thus seven miles, I was thoroughly tired, and my head ached more than it had done for some months.
What I here aver (old Anglo-French word meaning "confirm to be true") is the naked fact: let every man account for it as he sees good.
I then thought, 'CANNOT GOD HEAL MAN OR BEAST, by any means, or without any?'
Immediately my weariness and headache ceased, and my horse's lameness in the same instant. Nor did he halt any more either that day or the next.
John Wesley
March 17, 1746
"I took my leave of Newcastle...my horse was so exceedingly lame that I was afraid I must have lain by too. We could not discern what it was that was amiss; and yet he would scarce set his foot to the ground. By riding thus seven miles, I was thoroughly tired, and my head ached more than it had done for some months.
What I here aver (old Anglo-French word meaning "confirm to be true") is the naked fact: let every man account for it as he sees good.
I then thought, 'CANNOT GOD HEAL MAN OR BEAST, by any means, or without any?'
Immediately my weariness and headache ceased, and my horse's lameness in the same instant. Nor did he halt any more either that day or the next.
John Wesley
- 3
- 1
- 1
- 1
- Show all