George Whitefield: A Biography, with special reference to his labors in America. Belcher Joseph
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Joseph Belcher
George Whitefield: A Biography, with special reference to his labors in America
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066203566
Table of Contents
WHITEFIELD'S SUCCESS AS A PREACHER IN ENGLAND—FIRST VISIT TO AMERICA. 1736-1738.
OPEN-AIR PREACHING IN ENGLAND AND WALES—ERECTION OF THE TABERNACLE IN LONDON. 1738-1739.
WHITEFIELD'S SECOND VISIT TO AMERICA. 1739, 1740.
CONTINUATION OF WHITEFIELD'S SECOND VISIT TO AMERICA. 1740.
WHITEFIELD'S FIRST VISIT TO NEW ENGLAND. SEPTEMBER TO NOVEMBER, 1740.
LABORS IN NEW YORK AND THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN STATES. 1740, 1741.
FIRST AND SECOND VISITS TO SCOTLAND—LABORS IN ENGLAND AND WALES. 1740-1744.
WHITEFIELD'S SECOND VISIT TO NEW ENGLAND. 1744, 1745.
LABORS IN ENGLAND AND SCOTLAND—CHAPLAIN TO LADY HUNTINGDON. 1748, 1749.
FIFTH VISIT TO AMERICA—RENEWED LABORS IN GREAT BRITAIN—TOTTENHAM-COURT-ROAD CHAPEL. 1754-1763.
SIXTH VISIT AND LABORS IN AMERICA—RENEWED LABORS IN GREAT BRITAIN. 1763-1767.
HIS LAST LABORS IN GREAT BRITAIN—COLLEGE AT TREVECCA—EARL OF BUCHAN—TUNBRIDGE WELLS. 1767-1769.
SEVENTH VISIT AND LABORS IN AMERICA—DEATH. 1769, 1770.
TESTIMONIES AND FACTS ILLUSTRATIVE OF WHITEFIELD'S CHARACTER.
CHARACTER OF WHITEFIELD AS A PREACHER—CENTENNIAL COMMEMORATIONS.
PREFACE.
The excellent Matthew Henry has very truly said, "There are remains of great and good men, which, like Elijah's mantle, ought to be gathered up and preserved by the survivors—their sayings, their writings, their examples; that as their works follow them in the reward of them, they may stay behind in the benefit of them."
Influenced by this and kindred sentiments, the compiler of this volume has devoted no small labor to gather from every source to which he could gain access, whatever appeared to him important to be known respecting the most distinguished uninspired preacher perhaps of any age or country. Whatever may be the faults of the work, to use the language of the Rev. Dr. Campbell, one of the present pastors of Whitefield's churches in London, in reference to a short sketch he had himself prepared of our great evangelist, "It will serve to bring him and his apostolic labors before the minds of vast multitudes of the rising generation, to whom both are all but unknown; and this is far from unimportant. Whatever tends to fix the minds of men afresh upon the character of Whitefield is, and it always will be, something gained to the cause of true religion. The contemplation of that character is one of the most healthful exercises that can occupy a Christian heart, or a Christian understanding. It is an admirable theme for ministerial