ul Monday in June, 1744, the first Methodist Conference met;
and from that time up to the present, no year has passed but Methodist
preachers and helpers have gathered together to make plans and talk
business.
I am sure you must all have heard of the Wesleyan Methodist Conference,
which is now held every July or August in some one or other of the large
towns of England. This first conference was opened with solemn prayer
and a sermon by Mr. Charles Wesley; then all the difficulties of the
work were talked over, and arrangements made for the future. Mr. John
Wesley presided, and for forty-six years after, at every conference,
their beloved leader and head took the chair at this annual gathering.
You will think that what with travelling and preaching, and looking
after his helpers, and visiting the members, Mr. Wesley could not find
time for much else. But it is always the busiest people who have the
most time. As I told you before, Mr. Wesley began his days very early,
getting up at four o'clock; and by doing this every morning for sixty
years, he managed not only to preach, and read, and visit, but also to
write a great many books, and thousands of tracts--one of his books was
called "Lessons for Children." Many of the tracts were about swearing
and Sabbath-breaking, and printed on the outside were the words, "Not to
be sold, but given away"; and he and his preachers used to carry them in
their pockets and give them to the people they passed on the roads.
Another reason why Mr. Wesley had more time than most people was,
because he
NEVER WASTED A MINUTE,
and though he did so much work, he was _never in a hurry_. He used to
say, "I have no time to be in a hurry." Hurry you know does not always
mean speed; when things are done in a hurry they are often only half
done, and have to be done all over again.
You remember how the miners at Kingswood collected money and built a
school for their children. Well, about ten years afterwards, another
school was built at Kingswood for the children of the travelling
preachers. These preachers had not much time to look after their
families themselves, being so much away from home, and they wanted their
boys and girls to be taught to read their Bibles and to learn to love
Jesus. They had some dreadfully strict rules at this boarding school,
which my readers would not have liked at all, and which I am afraid the
children there did not like either, for I have heard tha
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