Weynken: “This is not my Lord and my God; my Lord God is in me, and I in him.”

Monk: “Consider! will you condemn all these lambs, and are they all condemned?”

Weynken: “Not all; judgment belongs unto God.” (Heb. 10:30.)

Monk: “Do you not fear the severe judgment of God?”

Weynken: “God comes not to condemn sinners, but to give them peace.” (Luke 9:56.)

Monk: “Do you not fear the sentence which you must suffer in the fire?”

Weynken: “No, for I know how I stand with my Lord.”

On the scaffold there stood one who said to Weynken: “Mother, turn to the people, and ask them to forgive you, if you have offended any.” This she did. Then she assisted the executioner to put the powder into her bosom. Here the monk again tempted her with the cross; but she pushed it away with her hand, turned around, and said: “How you tempt me? My Lord and my God is above.” She then went gladly, as though she were going to a marriage; and her face did not once betoken fear of the fire.

The monk said: “Will you not always and firmly adhere to God?”

Weynken said: “Yes, indeed.”