Page:The Works of the Reverend George Whitefield, M.A. (1771 Vol 1).djvu/420

 *rend and dear Sir, will help me herein. I thank you most heartily, for being jealous over me. I believe it is with a godly jealousy. I wish I was more jealous over myself. But blessed be, this I can say in the midst of the honours wherewith the glorious Emmanuel hath honoured me, "Not unto me, O, not unto me, but unto thy name be all the glory." Dear Sir, I think I am the worst of the sons of men. Yet I dare not deny what the blessed hath done for my sinful soul. He is pleased (O infinitely condescending !) to honour me still more and more. Saturday last I came to Cambuslang, and I think I never saw such things before. The work seems to be spreading. O that it may reach and overspread poor Ireland also! All things are possible with. Now the is watering so many other places, I pray he may not leave that intirely destitute and dry.—O for faith to expect great, and very great things from ! He does not love to disappoint people of their hope. Dear Sir, my heart is now enlarged with a sense of the freeness and fulness of the Redeemer's loving-kindness. You, dear Sir, are an old weather beaten soldier. You are ripened for glory, and are ready to sing your Nunc dimittis .—I am just about to begin to be a soldier. But, blessed be, I shall follow soon. The hopes of bringing more souls to, is the only consideration that can reconcile me to life. For this cause I can willingly stay long from my wish'd-for home, my wished-for. But whither am I going? I forget myself when writing of. His love fills my soul, O free grace! Surely I shall sing the loudest in heaven; but I must have done; nature calls for rest. Depending on the continuance of your prayers, and with my hearty salutation to all that love the blessed, I subscribe myself, reverend and dear Sir,

Your most affectionate, though younger and most unworthy brother and servant in the gospel of 's dear Son, G. W.