Anne Dutton's 
    Letters on Spiritual Subjects
    
    Dear Madam,
    I bless the Lord I am better. Before the affliction 
    came on, the Lord gave me that word, "Do not be afraid, for I have ransomed 
    you. I have called you by name; you are mine. When you go through deep 
    waters and great trouble, I will be with you. When you go through rivers of 
    difficulty, you will not drown! When you walk through the fire of 
    oppression, you will not be burned up; the flames will not consume you. For 
    I am the Lord, your God, the Holy One of Israel, your Savior," which made me 
    think an affliction was at hand; and indeed the Lord has been with me 
    greatly in this affliction; has given me many precious words for my support 
    and comfort; has exercised my various graces thereby, and given me sweet 
    resignation to, and acquiescence with, His good pleasure; and caused me to 
    have no will but His. 
    And as I was particularly drawn out in faith and 
    confidence in God that He would help and deliver me in His own time and way, 
    that word was brought, "O woman, great is your faith, be it unto you even as 
    you will." Upon which my heart replied, "Lord, Your will be mine. Save and 
    deliver me as to manner and time which shall be most for Your 
    glory; and give me grace to endure affliction, while that is Your pleasure, 
    unto Your honor." 
    Though I had not been without temptations from the enemy 
    to think, when in extremity, my Lord took no notice of me; but blessed be 
    God they did not get hold on me. I was enabled to resist Satan, steadfast in 
    the faith of God's love in the stroke, and that He would do me good by it; 
    and in His wisdom as to the time of deliverance from it, and meanwhile was 
    helped to bless His name for it; so that the flame did not kindle upon me in 
    walking through the fires, which made me think of the burning bush, 
    unscorched. You will help me to praise the Lord, and to pray that henceforth 
    I may be holiness to Himself more than ever.
    Remember, dear Madam, that the promise is, "The righteous 
    shall flourish as the palm-tree"; and naturalists observe that the palm-tree 
    flourishes most when most oppressed. And this is certainly the case with the 
    righteous. For what are trying providences but given opportunities for the 
    exercise of our graces? Without them many of our graces would have little 
    room for exercise. "They are not at present joyous (but grievous to our weak 
    flesh); but to those who are exercised thereby they afterwards yield the 
    peaceable fruit of righteousness." We are like heirs under age, put to the 
    'school of affliction' to be trained up and fitted there for the honor of a 
    high throne.