CHRISTIAN LEADERS OF THE 18th CENTURY - ( CHAPTER 5 ) - { PT. 12 }

( CHAPTER  5 )  -  { PT.  5 } - If we never can have any certainty of being in a state of salvation, that is a good reason that every moment should be spent not in joy, but in fear and trembling; and then, undoubtedly, in this life we are of all men most miserable. May God deliver us from such a fearful expectation as this! Correspondence of this kind could hardly fail to do good to a young man in John Wesley's frame of mind. It undoubtedly led him to a closer study of the Scriptures, deeper self-examination, and more fervent prayer. Whatever doubts he may have had were finally removed, and he was ordained a deacon on September 19, 1725, by Dr. Potter, then bishop of Oxford, and later became archbishop of Canterbury. In the year 1726, John Wesley was elected Fellow of Lincoln College after a content of more then ordinary severity. His recently adopted serious manner and general religiousness were used against him by his adversaries, but his high character carried him triumphantly through all opposition, to the great delight of his father. As tested as he apparently was at the time in his earthly circumstances, Samuel Wesley wrote, Whatever will be may own fate before the summer is over, God knows; but wherever I am, my John is Fellow of Lincoln. The eight years following John Wesley's election to his fellowship of Lincoln, from 1726 to 1734, from a remarkable period in his life, and certainly gave a tone and color to all his future history. During all these years, he was a resident at Oxford, and for at least some of the time was a tutor and lecturer in his college.   
 

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