By Austin B. Tucker
In
London, he had two regular spaces to gather the multitudes. One was Moorfields,
the "city mall" of seventeenth-century London. Elm trees lined well-drained
walks. By Whitefield's time, this was the general recreation ground of the city.
The other field was Kennington Commons, a neglected waste and the place of regular
executions. Etchings of the era show gallows with corpses hanging from them.
Whitefield stood at least once beside the gallows and used the setting to make
his appeal more solemn.
Both
of these fields were what genteel society called "the domain of the rabble."
Many predicted that the preacher would never come out alive. At Moorfields,
the rabble amused themselves by breaking apart a table meant to be his pulpit.
He climbed up on a stone wall in his robe, bands and cassock and preached the
Gospel. 4
Advertisement

But
in a very class-conscious culture, Whitefield was an equal-opportunity evangelist.
He denounced the sins of the rich and titled as well as the poor and disenfranchised.
He told them all they needed a savior. The Duchess of Buckingham accepted the
invitation of Lady Huntingdon to come to her manor to hear Whitefield. But she
wrote in a letter her objection to Methodist preachers "perpetual endeavoring
to level all ranks, and do away with all distinctions. It is monstrous to be
told that you have a heart as sinful as the common wretches that crawl on the
earth." 5
Whitefield
preached with passion. Charles Dargan, in The History of Preaching
described the evangelist's preaching in terms of "intensity, passionate
fervor, earnestness" 6 Tyerman's tomes and other
biographers record a letter from Sarah Edwards, wife of Jonathan Edwards describing
Whitefield's pulpit ministry in their church at Northampton. It is sent to prepare
her brother, Rev. James Pierpont, for Whitefield's visit to New Haven.
He is a born
orator. You have already heard of his deep-toned, yet clear and melodious
voice. It is perfect music . . . He is a very devout and godly man, and his
only aim seems to be to reach and influence men the best way. He speaks from
a heart all aglow with love, and pours out a torrent of eloquence which is
almost irresistible. 7
He
had a consuming passion for souls. He dealt with pastoral and ethical concerns
in some sermons, but he was an evangelist all his days. He made the gospel message
plain and he pleaded with his hearers to come to Christ. He seldom preached
without tears. Critics despised the emotion; the multitudes knew it was coming
from a heart of genuine love for them. Rough men, who never felt anyone cared
for them, at last saw a minister pour out his life for their souls. He was not
ashamed to weep over them.
Whitefield
was not as some evangelists today — all out for souls in their sermons but
only in their sermons. If you spend time with some of them you are amazed that
they never seem to do any personal evangelism. Whitefield said, "God forbid
that I should travel with anybody a quarter of an hour without speaking of Christ
to them." 8 His personal correspondence, likewise,
is salted with the quest for souls. He met Ben Franklin on his first journey
to Philadelphia and agreed to let the young printer publish and market his sermons.
They became lifelong friends. If Franklin never became a Christian it was not
for lack of witness from his friend Whitefield. Late in life, when both men
were famous in America and in England, the evangelist wrote a personal letter
which still pressed the claims of Christ on the American philosopher, statesman,
and scientist.