<h2>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
<div class="blockquot"><p>George Whitefield, the "boy parson."—The Wesleys back in
England.—Long walks.—Preaching by the way-side.—A talk in a
stable.—Sermon in Manchester.—Mr. Charles in London.—Wants
something he has not got.—Gets it.—Mr. John wants it too.—A top
place in the class.</p>
</div>
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<div class='unindent'><br/>OU remember the Holy Club which the
Methodists started at Oxford? Well,
one of the youngest members was named
George Whitefield; he was a pupil of
Mr. John Wesley's, and when he left Oxford he
became a preacher. While the two Wesleys were
in Georgia, he carried on their work in England.
He had learnt to love Jesus very dearly, had felt
how wicked and sinful he was, and had gone to the
Saviour and told Him all, asking Him to "Create
in him a clean heart, and to renew within him a right
spirit." Then he was so happy in knowing he was
forgiven, that he wanted every one else to be happy
and forgiven too. He was so young when he commenced
to preach that every one called him the
"boy parson;" but he talked so earnestly and kindly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span>
to the people that crowds everywhere flocked to
hear him.</div>
<p>When he heard that the two Wesleys were leaving
Georgia he determined to go and take their place, and
see what he could do for the poor exiles. Before
he left England he preached a good-bye sermon,
and told the people that he was going this long
and dangerous voyage, and perhaps they might never
see his face again. When they heard this, the
children and the grown-up people, rich and poor,
burst into tears, they loved him so much. But as
this book is to be about Mr. John Wesley, we must
not follow Mr. Whitefield across the Atlantic. Try
to remember his name though, for he and the Wesleys
were life-long friends, and you will hear about him
again further on.</p>
<p>When Mr. John and Mr. Charles got back to
England they took up George Whitefield's work,
going from town to town telling the people about
Jesus Christ. As there were no railways they had
to walk a great deal, and they used to speak to
the people they met on the roads and in the
villages through which they passed. Once, when
Mr. Wesley and a friend were on their way to
Manchester, they stayed one night in an inn at
Stafford. Before they went to bed, Mr. Wesley
asked the mistress of the house if they might have
family prayer. She was quite willing, and so all the
servants were called in. Next morning, after breakfast,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</SPAN></span>
Mr. Wesley had a talk with them all again, and
even went into the stables and spoke to the men
there about their sins and about the love of Jesus
Christ.</p>
<p>He preached in Manchester the next Sunday, and
this was his text: "If any man be in Christ, he is
a new creature" (2 Cor. v. 17). He explained to
them that when any one begins to love Jesus, and
tries to copy His life, they grow more and more like
what He was. Then everything becomes different;
the things they loved to do before cease to be a
pleasure to them, and the places they liked to go
to they no longer care to visit; they are "<i>new
creatures</i> in Christ Jesus."</p>
<p>The next morning (Monday) Mr. Wesley, and the
friend who was with him, left Manchester and went
on to Knutsford. Here, too, the people listened
attentively, while they preached the gospel of Jesus
Christ. They visited other towns, and then Mr. Wesley
returned to Oxford.</p>
<p>He had not been long there when he heard that
his brother Charles was very ill in London, and went
at once to see him. Charles Wesley had been living
and working there with some German Christians, or
Moravians, as they were called, and before long he
found that these people had something in their lives
that he did not possess. Like the Germans he met
in Georgia, their religion gave them peace and joy
on week-days as well as on Sundays.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>When he was ill, one of these Moravians, named
Peter Böhler, came to see him. During the little
talk they had, the visitor said:</p>
<p>"What makes you hope you are saved?"</p>
<p>"Because I have done my best to serve God,"
answered Mr. Charles.</p>
<p>You see, he was trusting in all the good deeds he
had done, and not on Jesus Christ's suffering and
death for him.</p>
<p>Mr. Böhler shook his head, and did not say any
more then. But he left Charles Wesley longing for
the something he had not got.</p>
<p>When he was a little better, he was carried to the
house of a poor working-man named Bray. He was
not clever, indeed, he hardly knew how to read, but
he was a happy believer in Jesus; and he explained
to Mr. Charles that <i>doing</i> was not enough, that we
must believe that Jesus Christ died on the cross for
us, and that it is only through Him that we can
pray to God, and only by His death that we can
hope to go to heaven.</p>
<p>Then a poor woman came in, and she made him
understand better than any one; and at last Mr. Charles
saw where he had been in the wrong, and instead of
trusting in his own goodness and in all the kind
things he had done, he just gave up his faith in these,
and trusted alone in the dying love of his Saviour,
and ours.</p>
<p>I expect all my readers have classes in the schools<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span>
they go to. Some of you are at the top of your
class, some of you are in the middle, and some of
you are—well—near the bottom. I think this is very
much the way in Christ's school, the only difference
is that in your class at school there can only be <i>one</i>
at the top. In Christ's school there can be any
number at the top. There are a great number of
Christians who are only half-way up in the class,
and I am afraid there are a still greater number at
the bottom. That is a place none of us like to be
in at school; then don't let us be content to keep
that place in Christ's school; let us all seek and
obtain top places.</p>
<p>When Mr. John Wesley visited his brother, he
found he had got above him in Christ's school; he
had taken a top place in the class, and John could
not rest until he had got a top place too. So he
prayed very earnestly, and got the people that had
helped his brother to talk to him, but still he did
not seem to understand. Four days after he went to
a little service, and while the preacher was explaining
the change that comes in us, when we trust in Jesus
alone, John Wesley saw it all, took a top place in
Christ's school, and joyfully went and told his
brother.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span></p>
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