The works of the rev Richard Watson Author:Richard Watson Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER III. The Wesleys on their Voyage—Intercourse with the Moravians—Conduct, Troubles, and Sufferings in Georgia—Affair of Miss Hopkey —Mr. Wesley returns... more » to England. Mr. Wesley now prepared for Georgia, the place where, as he afterwards said, " God humbled me, and proved me, and showed me what was in my heart." But he was not suffered to depart without remonstrances from friends, which he answered calmly and at length, and the scoffs of the profane, to which he made but brief reply. " What is this, Sir," said one of the latter class to him ; " are you turned Quixote too ? Will nothing serve you, but to encounter windmills ?" To which he replied, " Sir, if the Bible be not true, I am as very a fool and madman as you can conceive; but if it be of God, I am sober-minded." Mr. Charles Wesley, although in opposition to the opinion of his brother Samuel, agreed to accompany him to Georgia, and received holy orders. They were accompanied by Mr. Ingham, of Queen's College, and Mr. Delamotte. That Mr. Wesley considered the sacrifices and hardships of their Mission in the light of means of religious edification to themselves, as well as the means of doing good to others, is plain from his own account: " Our end in leaving our native country was not to avoid want; God had given us plenty of temporal blessings; nor to gain the dung and dross of riches and honour; but singly this, to save our souls, to live wholly to the glory of God." These observations are sufficiently indicative of that dependenqe upon a mortified course of life, and that seclusion from the temptations of the world, which he then thought essential to religious safety. Georgia is now a flourishing state, and the number of Methodist societies in it very considerable; a result not then certainly contemplated b...« less