Page:The Works of the Reverend George Whitefield, M.A. (1771 Vol 1).djvu/51

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  • Yesterday a major of one of the regiments, unknown to me,

took two handsome rooms, and sent for me from on board, desiring me to lodge in them; and I find the people of the house fear God.—"When I sent you without scrip or shoe, lacked you any thing?" said our Lord. They said nothing.—O, dear Mr. ——, I beseech you abound in thanksgiving, and pray that all these blessings may humble my proud heart, and make me willing to follow the Lamb whithersoever he shall lead me. Assure yourself, that you and all your christian friends are constantly prayed for by, dear Sir,

Your's most affectionately in the Lord Jesus,
G. W.



LETTER XXXVI.


Dear Sir, Gibraltar, Feb. 27, 1738.

EVER since I left Gravesend, I remember the fulness of your heart. I have been a constant petitioner at the throne of grace for you, and intended writing to you before, but was lett hitherto. However, God has now brought me safe to Gibraltar, and as I have time, I should think myself inexcusable, did I not send a line to dear Mr. ——, to assure him, I forgot not his tears, and wish him to be not only an almost, but an altogether christian. Dear Sir, you are young and in the bloom of youth, and it would rejoice my heart to see you triumph over the lust of the eye, the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life, and to become a poor despised servant of Jesus Christ. Others, indeed, may wish you wealth, may wish you pomp and grandeur; but believe me, my dear friend, these will not, these cannot, make you happy: No, nothing but God can satisfy the heart of man; nothing but an assurance, that we are born again, that we are members of Christ, that we are united to him by one and the same spirit with which he himself was actuated. Without this, if we were to have our appetites regaled with the richest dainties, be cloathed with purple and fine linen, and fare sumptuously every day, yet the hand-writing upon the wall, the consideration, that all these things are quickly to be taken away, would make our visage to change, and our knees, like Belshazzar's, to smite one against another. Strive then, my dear friend, to get the