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Having abandoned its solid foundation, the Society of Friends continued to “mix with the nations” and soon fell into a lamentable state of ruin, but the name John Wilbur came to be forever associated with original Quakerism, and with the small band of worthies who held on till the end.","quotes":[{"source":"Christopher Healy (in a letter to John Wilbur)","text":"I know of no one in these latter days of trouble in our Society that has had so deep baptisms to pass through as you have. Oh, my dear friend, as you are so thoroughly converted, go on and strengthen your brethren; yes speak often to them and one unto another, and the Lord who has been your helper will hearken, and a book of remembrance will be written before Him."},{"source":"John Barclay (in a letter to John Wilbur)","text":"I know of no one in these latter days of trouble in our Society that has had so deep baptisms to pass through as you have. Oh, my dear friend, as you are so thoroughly converted, go on and strengthen your brethren; yes speak often to them and one unto another, and the Lord who has been your helper will hearken, and a book of remembrance will be written before Him."}],"relatedDocuments":[],"born":1774,"died":1856,"documents":[{"title":"The Journal and Letters of John Wilbur","author":"John Wilbur","isCompilation":false,"editions":[{"size":"xl","type":"modernized","blurb":"Perhaps more than any other Friend in the nineteenth century, John Wilbur (1774-1856) labored and suffered to uphold the original principles and testimonies of the Society of Friends (as held and maintained by George Fox, Robert Barclay, Isaac Penington, etc.) at a time when multitudes were fast abandoning the faith of their worthy predecessors. 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