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Maggie, an
Irish girl of about twenty years, burned herself by lighting the morning fire
with kerosene. Dr. Benjamin, the leader of the infidel club here, was called,
who bound her up in cotton and oil. |
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A neighbor
sent for John Byers, an old Scotch shoemaker, to pray with her. As he came into
the house, the doctor was coming out, and ordered him away, saying, he didn’t
want any praying done about any of his patients. But Brother Byers paid him
no heed, and taking the girl’s hand, asked her: “Maggie, are you in great
pain?” “Oh! Awful, sir,” was her answer. “Well, we will ask God to take it
away,” he said; and falling upon his knees at her bedside paying no more
attention to the room full of women that stood about, than if they had been
so many flies, he asked the Lord to take all the pain away, so that he could
talk to her about her soul; and very soon he got the perfect assurance that
his prayer was heard. So he arose and said: |
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“Do you
feel any pain now, Maggie?” |
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“No, sir,
it has all gone away.” |
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Then he
presented a Savior to her mind, as dying for dying Maggie, so that she, by
believing on Him, might live forever; and soon she accepted Him as her
Redeemer. After a little while she opened her eyes, and looking around, said
to the women: “Don’t you hear it?” |
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“No, we don’t
hear anything, Maggie,” they replied. |
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“Oh, I
never heard such singing before! And the music! I can’t tell you how fine it
is” And then she lay, listening till starting up, she sat up in bed, and
pointing upward, said: “Don’t you see them? Oh, how beautiful they are! What
are they?” |
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“They are
the angels, coming to take you home, Maggie,” said Brother Byers. |
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Then she laid back again on her pillow perfectly quiet, as if
fearing to lose sight of the beautiful vision. |
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Brother
Byers turned to go home, but had not got a hundred steps from the house, when
one of the women called out to him: “She’s gone, sir.” |
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But the
case of the doctor lay heavily on John Byers’ mind; and that night, he did not
go to bed until he had made the case a subject of earnest prayer, and had
received the assurance that he should be converted, Seeing the doctor a few
days after that, he told him of his answer to prayer for him. But the doctor
laughed at the idea of such a fool getting any such a promise from the Maker
of the universe. |
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But the
next fall the doctor went to |
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The next
spring he died, rejoicing in the faith. -- Dr. H. Durham. |
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Touching
Incidents and Remarkable Answers to Prayer By S. B. SHAW. |
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From: http://www.ccel.org/ |