Twenty-three-year-old
George Whitefield sat on a ship ready to sail for America from the port of
Deal, located approximately 70 miles southeast of London. For some time, he had
experienced a compelling call to preach the gospel to Colonial America and now the
day for his departure had finally arrived. His heart was filled with gratitude,
excitement and expectation.
As
he waited for the ship's crew to hoist anchor and sail, a letter was delivered
to him from John Wesley who had just returned from Georgia.
He opened the letter and was stunned by what he read.
Wesley had written, “When
I saw God, by the wind which was carrying you out, brought me in, I asked
counsel of God. His answer you have enclosed.” The message Wesley had enclosed was,
“Let him return to London.”
Whitefield was shocked
and momentarily confused. Wesley was ten years his senior and had been a mentor
to him. He held the Wesley brothers, John and Charles, in very high esteem.
However, this word from John contradicted everything he believed about his call
to America.
He Finds the Answer in Prayer and God’s Word
Whitefield went to prayer with a friend, and as they prayed, there there came to his mind a
story from the Old Testament where a prophet lost his life because he listened
to the words of another prophet instead of diligently adhering to what God had
told him.
I Kings 13 contains the story of an
unnamed prophet to whom God spoke and instructed to go to Bethel and prophesy
against the idolatrous altars that had been established there by King Jeroboam.
God instructed him not to stop to eat or drink but to return directly home to
Judah when he had completed his assignment.
Based on this directive from the Lord,
the prophet went to Bethel. As he prophesied against the idolatrous altars as
instructed, they miraculously split apart and the ashes were poured out on the
ground. As a result of that miracle and a miracle of healing for King Jeroboam,
the king invited the prophet to his home. He refused and recounted to the king
what the Lord had told him.
But as he departed Bethel, an old
prophet, who heard of what had happened, saddled his donkey and caught up with
the prophet and invited him to his home to eat and drink. When the first
prophet recounted to him what the Lord had instructed him, the old prophet
said, I too am a prophet as you are, and
an angel spoke to me by the word of the Lord, saying, “Bring him back with you
to your house that he may eat bread and drink water.” The old prophet,
however, was lying.
Contrary to the instructions given
him by the Lord, the prophet went back with the old prophet. While they were
eating, the Spirit of the Lord came upon the old prophet and he prophesied to
him that because of his disobedience he would not be buried in the tombs of his
ancestors. Sure enough, upon leaving the old prophet’s home, he was met by a
lion in the road, which killed him, fulfilling the old lying prophet’s
prediction of his demise because of his disobedience.
Three Powerful Lessons
As Whitefield prayed about Wesley’s letter, this story was powerfully impressed on his mind and heart. He knew that God was highlighting to him the importance of obeying the directions he had received from the Lord and to not listen to this word from another party, even such a respected one as John Wesley.
It turns out that Wesley had “cast a
lot” concerning whether Whitefield should go to America. This was something
Wesley and others practiced, if after diligent prayer they were unable to
discern the will of God.
Exactly how he cast the lot is not
clear, but it may have been as simple as putting two sheets of paper in a bowl
on which was written, “Proceed to America” and “Let him return to London” and
then drawing the one that said, “Let him return to London.”
Hindsight is 20/20 and it is
abundantly clear that Whitefield made the right decision in ignoring Wesley’s prophecy
and sailing for America. He ignited the Great Awakening that transformed
Colonial America and prepared her for statehood. Through his incessant travels he
became the most recognizable figure in America and earned for himself the title,
“America’s Spiritual Founding Father.”
Here are three powerful lessons to
be derived from Whitefield’s experience:
1. We
are not to be led by lots, omens or prophecies. We are to be led by the indwelling Holy Spirit as Paul tells us in Romans 8:14.
2. Prophetic
utterances are to be tested, even when they come from the most esteemed among
us.
3. We should be more confident in our own ability to hear God's voice, than in someone else's ability to hear Him for us.
This article is
derived from Dr. Eddie Hyatt’s latest book entitled, George Whitefield,
with the subtitle, From Poor English Inn-Keeper to the Revivalist Who Became America’s Spiritual Founding Father. This book and oters are available from Amazon and
his website at www.eddiehyatt.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment