Collected Essays, Volume V eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 394 pages of information about Collected Essays, Volume V.

Collected Essays, Volume V eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 394 pages of information about Collected Essays, Volume V.
for long periods; who was in perils on land and perils at sea.  George Fox was an even more widely-travelled missionary; while his success in founding congregations, and his energy in visiting them, not merely in Great Britain and Ireland and the West India Islands, but on the continent of Europe and that of North America, were no less remarkable.  A few years after Fox began to preach, there were reckoned to be a thousand Friends in prison in the various gaols of England; at his death, less than fifty years after the foundation of the sect, there were 70,000 Quakers in the United Kingdom.  The cheerfulness with which these people—­women as well as men—­underwent martyrdom in this country and in the New England States is one of the most remarkable facts in the history of religion.

No one who reads the voluminous autobiography of “Honest George” can doubt the man’s utter truthfulness; and though, in his multitudinous letters, he but rarely rises for above the incoherent commonplaces of a street preacher, there can be no question of his power as a speaker, nor any doubt as to the dignity and attractiveness of his personality, or of his possession of a large amount of practical good sense and governing faculty.

But that George Fox had full faith in his own powers as a miracle-worker, the following passage of his autobiography (to which others might he added) demonstrates:—­

Now after I was set at liberty from Nottingham gaol (where I had been kept a prisoner a pretty long time) I travelled as before, in the work of the Lord.  And coming to Mansfield Woodhouse, there was a distracted woman, under a doctor’s hand, with her hair let loose all about her ears; and he was about to let her blood, she being first bound, and many people being about her, holding her by violence; but he could get no blood from her.  And I desired them to unbind her and let her alone; for they could not touch the spirit in her by which she was tormented.  So they did unbind her, and I was moved to speak to her, and in the name of the Lord to bid her be quiet and still.  And she was so.  And the Lord’s power settled her mind and she mended; and afterwards received the truth and continued in it to her death.  And the Lord’s name was honoured; to whom the glory of all His works belongs.  Many great and wonderful things were wrought by the heavenly power in those days.  For the Lord made bare his omnipotent arm and manifested His power to the astonishment of many; by the healing virtue whereof many have been delivered from great infirmities, and the devils were made subject through his name:  of which particular instances might be given beyond what this unbelieving age is able to receive or bear.[45]

It needs no long study of Fox’s writings, however, to arrive at the conviction that the distinction between subjective and objective verities had not the same place in his mind as it has in that of an ordinary mortal.  When an ordinary person would say “I

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Collected Essays, Volume V from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.