Thursday, July 30, 2015

Reading the two volume set on George Whitfield by Calvinist Baptist pastor Arnold Dallimore who hailed from Canada is the most exciting reading I have ever completed.  He did more research on George Whitfield, John and Charles Wesley, Howell Harris, the Moravians and their true doctrinal distinctions, Jonathan Edwards and many others who became part of the Great Awakening of the 18th century, both in the United Kingdom and in the New America.

I know the experience of Whitfield's salvation experience and of his walk with God as it has happened to me. What a humble man filled with the presence and power of the Holy Spirit. I am jealous of him with a godly jealousy, as I love to speak the gospel and study the Word of God. He was, throughout his life extremely careful of the leading of God in his life. For me that has been somewhat  of a mystery in my life. I have always struggled with being able to discern God's true leading in my life. Nevertheless, I prayed about my decisions and just moved forward in faith.

I have experienced in my salvation what he experienced; nevertheless, I am very well aware that Whitfield was given special natural and spiritual gifts by the Lord to discipline his body, preach from early in the morning until late at night. To see how people almost worshiped him, wherever he traveled to preach is an amazing sight to behold. He was a man who gave away to others nearly everything he had, showing his benevolence . He cared for the poor, cared for the orphans, cared for the slaves and defended them, started churches for the slaves and they loved him. His sincerity and love for Jesus Christ was unblemished. You could hardly slow him down, in fact he probably ended his life early for not taking sufficient rest for his body. This was a man of tears, a man who knew weeping. He was a man who knew what a night of prayer was. George Whitfield became friends with the elite on both sides of the Atlantic and associated with the lowest in society all to win them to Christ. In all of history, he was as close to being a disciple of the Apostle Paul as anyone else who ever lived. If I pastored a church, I would teach them how to evangelize, and my one requirement would be that they purchase this two volume book on George Whitfield.  

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