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George Whitefield
BORN: December 16, 1714 Gloucester, England
DIED: September 30, 1770 Newburyport, Massachusetts
WHITEFIELD WAS THE MOST TRAVELED preacher of the gospel up to his time and
many feel he was the greatest evangelist of all time. Making 13 trips across
the Atlantic Ocean was a feat in itself, for it was during a time when sea
travel was primitive. This meant he spent over two years of his life
traveling on water--782 days. However, his diligence and sacrifice helped
turn two nations back to God. Jonathan Edwards was stirring things up in
New England, and John Wesley was doing the same in England. Whitefield
completed the trio of men humanly responsible for the great awakening on both
sides of the Atlantic. He spent about 24 years of ministry in the British
Isles and about nine more years in America, speaking to some ten million souls.
It is said his voice could be heard a mile away, and his open-air
preaching reached as many as 100,000 in one gathering! His crowds were the
greatest ever assembled to hear the preaching of the gospel before the days of
amplification--and, if we might add, before the days of advertising.
He was born in the Bell Inn where his father, Thomas, was a wine
merchant and innkeeper. The father died when George was two. George was the
youngest of seven children. His widowed mother, Elizabeth (born in 1680),
struggled to keep the family together. When the lad was about ten his mother
remarried, but it was not a happy union. Childhood measles left him
squint-eyed the rest of his life. When he was twelve he was sent to the St.
Mary de Crypt Grammar School in Gloucester. There he had a record of truancy
but also a reputation as an actor and orator. At about 15 years of age George
persuaded his mother to let him leave school because he would never make much
use of his education--so he thought! He spent time working in the inn.
Hidden in the back of his mind was a desire to preach. At night George
sat up and read the Bible. Mother was visited by an Oxford student who worked
his way through college and this report encouraged both mother and George to
plan for college. He returned to grammar school to finish his preparation to
enter Oxford, losing about one year of school. When he was 17 he entered
Pembroke College at Oxford in November, 1732. He was gradually drawn from former
sinful associates, and after a year, he met John and Charles Wesley and joined
the Holy Club. Charles Wesley loaned him a book, The Life of God in the Soul of
Man. This book--plus a severe sickness which resulted because of long and
painful periods of spiritual struggle--finally resulted in his conversion.
This was in 1735. He said many years later:
"I know the place...Whenever I go to Oxford, I cannot help running to the
spot where Jesus Christ first revealed himself to me, and gave me the new
birth."
Many days and weeks of fasting, and all the other tortures to which he had
exposed himself so undermined his health that he was never again a well man.
Because of poor health, he left school in May, 1735, and returned home for
nine months of recuperation. However, he was far from idle, and his activity
attracted the attention of Dr. Benson, who was the bishop of Gloucester. He
announced he would gladly ordain Whitefield as a deacon. Whitefield returned to
Oxford in March of 1736 and on June 20, 1736, Bishop Benson ordained him.
He placed his hands upon his head--whereupon George later declared, "My heart
was melted down, and I offered my whole spirit, soul and body to the service of
God's sanctuary." Whitefield preached his first sermon the following Sunday.
It was at the ancient Church of Saint Mary de Crypt, the church where he had
been "baptized" and grown up as a boy. People, including his mother, flocked
to hear him. He described it later:
"...Some few mocked, but most for the present, seemed struck, and I have
since heard that a complaint was made to the bishop, that I drove fifteen
people mad, the first sermon."
More than 18,000 sermons were to follow in his lifetime, an average of 500 a
year, or ten a week. Many of them were given over and over again. Less than
90 of them have survived in any form. The Wednesday following his first
sermon, he re- turned to Oxford where the B.A. degree was conferred upon
him. Then he was called to London to act as a supply minister at the Tower
of London. He stayed only a couple of months, and then returned to Oxford
for a very short time, helping a friend in a rural parish for a few weeks. He
also spent much time amongst the prisoners at Oxford during this time. The
Wesley brothers had gone to Georgia in America, and Whitefield got letters
from them urging him to come there. He felt called to go, but the Lord
delayed the trip for a year, during which time he began to preach with power
to great crowds throughout England. He preached in some of the principal
churches of London and soon no church was large enough to hold those who came
to hear him. He finally left for America from England on January 10, and on
February 2, 1738, sailed from Gibraltar, although he had left England in
December. The boat was delayed a couple of places, but Whitefield used the extra
time preaching. He arrived in America on May 7, 1738. Shortly after arrival he
had a severe bout with fever. Upon recovering he visited Tomo-Chici, an Indian
chief who was on his death bed. With no interpreter available, Whitefield
could only offer a prayer in his behalf. He loved Georgia and was not
discouraged there as were the Wesleys. He was burdened about orphans, and
started to collect funds for the same. He opened schools in Highgate and
Hampstead, and also a school for girls in Savannah. Of course he also
preached. On September 9, 1738, he left Charleston, South Carolina, for the
trip back to London. It was a perilous voyage. For two weeks a bad storm
beat the boat. About one-third of the way home, they met a ship from Jamaica
which had ample supplies to restock the dwindling food and water cargo on
their boat. After nine weeks of tossing to and fro they found themselves in
the harbor of Limerick, Ireland, and in London in December. On Sunday, January
14, 1739, George Whitefield was ordained as a priest in the Church of England
by his friend, Bishop Benson, in an Oxford ceremony. Upon his return to
London, he thought that the doors would be opened and that he would be
warmly received. Instead it was the opposite. Now many churches were closed
to him. His successes, preaching, and connection with Methodist
societies--in particular his association with the Wesleys--were all opposed by
the establishment. However, he preached to as many churches as would receive
him, working and visiting with such as the Moravians and other non-conformist
religious societies in London. However, these buildings were becoming too small
to hold the crowds. Alternative plans had to be formulated. Howell
Harris of Wales was preaching in the fields. Whitefield wondered if he ought to
try it too. He concluded he was an outcast anyway, so why not try to reach
people this "new" way? He held a conference with the Wesleys and other Oxford
Methodists before going to Bristol in February. Soon John Wesley would be
forced to follow Whitefield's example. Just outside the city of Bristol
was a coal mine district known as Kingswood Hill. Whitefield first preached
here in the open on February 17, 1739. The first time about 200 came to hear
him, but in a very short time he was preaching to 10,000 at once. Often
they stood in the rain listening with the melodies of their singing being heard
two miles away. One of his favorite preaching places was just out- side
London, on a great open tract known as Moorfields. He had no designated time
for his services, but whenever he began to preach, thousands came to
hear--whether it was 6 a.m. or 8 p.m. Not all were fans, as evidenced by his
oft-repeated testimony, "I was honored with having stones, dirt, rotten eggs
and pieces of dead cats thrown at me." In the morning some 20,000 listened to
him, and in the evening some 35,000 gathered! Whitefield was only 25 years old.
Crowds up to 80,000 at one time gathered there to hear him preach for an hour
and a half. There seems to be nothing unusual in content about his printed
sermons, but his oratory put great life into them. He could paint word
pictures with such breathless vividness that crowds listening would stare
through tear-filled eyes as he spoke. Once, while describing an old man trem-
bling toward the edge of a precipice, Lord Chesterfield jumped to his feet
and shouted as George walked the man un- knowingly toward the edge--"He is
gone." Another time in Boston he described a storm at sea. There were many
sailors in the crowd, and at the very height of the "tempest" which Whitefield
had painted an old salt jumped to his feet and shouted, "To the lifeboats,
men, to the lifeboats!" Often as many as 500 would fall in the group and lay
prostrate under the power of a single sermon. Many people made
demonstrations, and in several instances men who held out against the Spirit's
wooing dropped dead during his meetings. Audible cries of the audience often
interrupted the messages. People usually were saved right during the progress of
the service. The altar call as such was not utilized. On August 1,
1739, the Bishop of London denounced him--nevertheless on August 14 he was on
his way to his second trip to America, taking with him about $4,000 which he
had raised for his orphanage. This time he landed near Philadelphia on
October 30, preaching here before going south. The old courthouse had a
balcony, and Whitefield loved to preach from it whenever he came here. People
stood in the streets all around to listen to him. When preaching on Society
Hill near Philadelphia he spoke to 6,000 in the morning and 8,000 in the
evening. On the following Sunday the respective crowds were 10,000 to
25,000. At a farewell address, more than 35,000 gathered to hear him.
Benjamin Franklin became a good friend of the evangelist, and he was always
impressed with the preaching although not converted. Once Franklin emptied his
pockets at home, knowing that an offering would be taken. But it was to no
avail. So powerful was the appeal at Whitefield's meeting that Franklin ended
up borrowing money from a stranger sitting nearby to put in the plate!
From Philadelphia Whitefield went to New York. Again the people thronged to
hear him by the thousands. He preached to 8,000 in the field, on Sunday
morning to 15,000, and Sunday afternoon to 20,000. He returned again and again
to these cities. After a short stay here, he was eager to reach
Georgia. He went by land with at least 1,000 people accompanying him from
Philadelphia to Chester. Here he preached to thousands with even the judges
postponing their business until his sermon was over. He preached at various
places, journeying through Maryland and ending up at Charleston, South
Carolina. He finally ended up in Savannah on January 10, 1740, going by canoe
from Charleston. His first order of business was to get an orphanage started.
He rented a large house for a temporary habitation for the homeless waifs, and
on March 25, 1740, he laid the first brick of the main building, which he
named Bethesda, meaning "house of mercy." With things under control in the
South, he sailed up to New England in September, 1740, for his first of three
trips to that area. He arrived at Newport, Rhode Island, to commence what
historians call the focal point of "the first great awakening." Jonathan
Edwards had been sowing the seed throughout the area--and Whitefield's presence
was the straw that was to break the devil's back. He preached in Boston to the
greatest crowds ever assembled there to hear the gospel. Some 8,000 assembled in
the morning and some 15,000 returned to the famous Commons in the evening. At
Old North Church thousands were turned away, so he took his message outside
to them. Later, Governor Belcher drove him to the Commons where 20,000 were
waiting to hear him. He was invited more than once to speak to the faculty and
students of Harvard. At Salem, hundreds could not get into the building where
he spoke. He then preached four times for Edwards in Northampton,
Massachusetts (October 17-20), and, though he stayed in New England less than
a month that time, the revival that was started lasted for a year and a half.
He left January 24, 1741, and returned to England March 14, 1741. There he
found that John Wesley was diverging from Calvinist doctrine, so he withdrew
from the Wesley Connexion which he had embraced. Thereupon, his friends
built him a wooden church named the Moorfields Tabernacle. A reconciliation was
later made between the two evangelists, but they both went their separate
ways from then on. Thenceforth, Whitefield was considered the unofficial
leader of Calvinistic Methodism. Unique details are available following
his break with Wesley. They begin with his first of fourteen trips to
Scotland July 30, 1741. This trip was sponsored by the Seceders, but he
refused to limit his ministrations to this one sect who had invited him--so
he broke with them. Continuing his tour, he was received everywhere with
enthusiasm. In Glasgow many were brought under deep conviction. The largest
audience he ever addressed was at Cambuslang, near Glasgow, where he spoke to
an estimated 100,000 people! He preached for an hour and a half to the
tearful crowd. Converts from that one meeting numbered nearly 10,000. Once he
preached to 30,000; another day he had five services of 20,000. Then he went
on to Edinburgh where he preached to 20,000. In traveling from Glasgow to
Edinburgh he preached to 10,000 souls every day. He loved it so much he cried
out, "May I die preaching," which, in essence, he did. Then he went on to
Wales, where he was to make frequent trips in the future, and was received
with great respect and honor. Here he met his wife to be, Elizabeth
James, an older widow. They were married there on November 14, 1741, and on
October 4, 1743, one son was born, named John, who died at age four months,
the following February. In 1742 a second trip was made to Scotland. During
the first two visits here Scotland was spiritually awakened and set "on fire"
as she had not been since the days of John Knox. Subsequent visits did not
evidence the great revivals of the early trips, but these were always
refreshing times for the people. Then a tour through England and Wales was
made from 1742 to 1744. It was in 1743 that he began as moderator for the
Calvinistic Methodists in Wales, which position he held a number of years.
In 1744 George Whitefield almost became a martyr. He was attacked by a man
uttering abusive language, who called him a dog, villain, and so forth, and
then proceeded to beat him unmercifully with a gold-headed cane until he was
almost unconscious. About this time, he was also accused of misappropriating
funds which he had collected. Nothing could be further from the truth. At
least once he had to sell what earthly possessions he had in order to pay a
certain debt that he had incurred for his orphanage, and to give his aged
mother the things she needed. Friends had loaned him the furniture that he
needed when he lived in England. When he died he was a pauper with only a few
personal possessions being the extent of his material gain. Another trip was
made to America from 1744 to 1748. On his way home because of ill health,
he visited the Bermudas. It was a pleasant trip. On the trip he preached
regularly and saw many souls won to the Lord. It was in 1748 that he said,
"Let the name of Whitefield die so that the cause of Christ may live." A fourth
trip to America was made October 27, 1751, to May, 1752. Upon his return to
England he was appointed one of the chaplains to Selina, Countess of
Huntingdon--known as Lady Huntingdon, a friend since 1748. His mother died at
71 in December of 1751. In 1753 he compiled "Hymns for Social Worship." This
was also the year he traveled 800 miles on horseback, preaching to 100,000
souls. It was during this time that he was struck on the head by stones and
knocked off a table upon which he had been preaching. Afterwards he said, "We
are immortal till our work is done," a phrase he would often repeat. n 1754
Whitefield embarked again for America, with 22 orphans. En route he visited
Lisbon, Portugal, and spent four weeks there. In Boston thousands awakened
for his preaching at 7 a.m. One auditorium seating 4,000 saw great numbers
turned away while Whitefield, himself, had to be helped in through a
window. He stayed from May, 1754, to May, 1755. In 1756 he was in
Ireland. He made only two, possibly three, trips here. On this occasion, at
age 42, he al- most met death. One Sunday afternoon while preaching on a
beautiful green near Dublin, stones and dirt were hurled at him. Afterwards a
mob gathered, intending to take his life. Those attending to him fled, and he
was left to walk nearly a half a mile alone, while rioters threw great
showers of stones upon him from every direction until he was covered with
blood. He staggered to the door of a minister living close by. Later he said,
"I received many blows and wounds; one was particularly large near my
temples." He later said that in Ireland he had been elevated to the rank
of an Apostle in having had the honor of being stoned. Also in 1756 he
opened the Congregational Chapel bearing his name on Tottenham Court Road,
London. He ministered here and at the before-mentioned Moorsfield Tabernacle
often. A sixth trip was made to America from 1763 to 1765. In 1768 he made his
last trip to Scotland, 27 years after his first. He was forced to conclude, "I
am here only in danger of being hugged to death." He visited Holland, where
he sought help for his body, where his health did improve. It is also recorded
that he once visited Spain. His wife died on August 9, 1768, and Whitefield
preached the funeral sermon, using Romans 8:28 as a text. He dedicated the
famous Tottenham Court Road Chapel on July 23, 1769. On September 4, 1769, he
started on his last voyage to America, arriving November 30. He went on
business to make arrangements for his orphanage to be converted into
Bethesda College. He spent the winter months of 1769-70 in Georgia, then with
the coming of spring he started north. He arrived in Philadelphia in May,
traveling on to New England. Never was he so warmly received as now. The
crowds flocked in great numbers to see him. July was spent preaching in New
York and Albany and places en route. In August he reached Boston. For
three days in September he was too ill to preach, but as soon as he could
be out of bed he was back preaching. His last written letter was dated
September 23, 1770. He told how he could not preach, although thousands were
waiting to hear. On September 29, he went from Portsmouth, New
Hampshire, to Newburyport, Massachusetts. He preached en route in the open
at Exeter, New Hampshire. Looking up he prayed,
"Lord Jesus, I am weary in thy work, but not of thy work. If I have not yet
finished my course, let me go and speak for thee once more in the fields, seal
thy truth, and come home and die."
He was given strength for this, his last sermon. The subject was Faith and
Works. Although scarcely able to stand when he first came before the group,
he preached for two hours to a crowd that no building then could have held.
Arriving at the parsonage of the First Presbyterian Church in
Newburyport--which church he had helped to found-- he had supper with his
friend, Rev. Jonathan Parsons. He in- tended to go at once to bed. However,
having heard of his arrival, a great number of friends gathered at the parsonage
and begged him for just a short message. He paused a moment on the stairs,
candle in hand, and spoke to the people as they stood listening--until the
candle went out. At 2 a.m., painting to breathe, he told his traveling
companion Richard Smith, "My asthma is returning; I must have two or three
days' rest." His last words were, "I am dying," and at 6 a.m. on Sunday
morning he died--September 30, 1770. The funeral was held on October 2 at the
Old South First Presbyterian Church. Thousands of people were unable to even
get near the door of the church. Whitefield had re- quested earlier to be
buried beneath the pulpit if he died in that vicinity, which was done.
Memorial services were held for him in many places.
John Wesley said:
"Oh, what has the church suffered in the setting of that bright star which
shone so gloriously in our hemisphere. We have none left to succeed him;
none of his gifts; none anything like him in usefulness."
Source: www.believersweb.org