Hot News : GEORGE WHITEFIELD - On The Method of Grace

Friday, May 14, 2010

George Whitefield was born on 16th December 1714 in Gloucester, England and He Deidon 30 September 1770 in Newburyport, was Massachusetts. George Duffield an important advisor to George Washington and one, "New Light" Presbyterian preacher, preacher and missionary. His roots were in County Antrim town of Ballymoney. His background is believed to have been Huguenot surname is first marked as "To Field".



Duffield was ordained in September 1761 and was settled in, "the New Light" Presbyterian faction, which included Jonathan Edwards, George Whitefield. In that year marriage, he blames combined Presbyterian church in Pennsylvania border towns of Carlisle, Big mechanism and Monaghan.

In September 1766 he fills a missionary tour through the valleys of Pennsylvania, Maryland and Virginia. It was intended to give the Indians and took Duffield as far west as Ohio. The trip was organized by Rev. Francis Allison, who was happy to add Duffield in the role, but as an "Old Light" Presbyterian significantly different with Duffield's, "New Light 'thinking and preaching. "

This rift in the ideology of American combat came to result in an apartment about five years later when George Duffield was claimed in the Third Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia, which still today is sometimes called "Old Pine Street Church." Duffield is able to fulfill this role was opposite the "Old Light" Presbyterians and indeed when he came to preach one Sunday, he established the church locked its doors to touch him. It is said that when his friends and faction came and saw what was done they took him up and basically threw him into the cathedral through the window.

George Whitefield was a great improvement preachers of the eighteenth century. Travelling from England to New World colonies (the U.S.) and Scotland often he became known as the Grand traveling. He was one of the preachers who were a part of the renewal known as the "Great Awakening". As a result of the strong anti-British feelings, which are often characterized Duffield preaching; Old Pine Street became known as the "Church of the Patriots."

source:impalapublications.com

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