CHAPTER 2 - ( CHRISTIAN LEADERS OF THE 18TH CENTURY ) - { PT. 2 }


 { PT.  2 } - Neither did the change come from the Church of England as a body. The leaders of that venerable group were utterly unequal to the times. Left to herself, the Church of England would probably have died of dignity and sunk her anchors. The change did not come from the Dissenters either. Content with their barely won triumphs, that worthy body of men seemed to rest upon their oars. In the full enjoyment of their rights of conscience, they forgot the great vital forefathers--and their own duties and responsibilities. Who, then, were the reformers of the eighteenth century? To who are we indebted, under God, for the change that took place? The men who were used by God to bring about deliverance for us a hundred years ago were a few individuals, most of them clergymen of the Established Church, whose hearts God touched about the same time in various parts of the country. They were not wealthy or highly connected. They did not have money to buy followers, and they did not have family influence to command attention and respect. They were not promoted by any church, party, society, or institution. They were simply men whom God stirred up and brought out to do His work, without previous program or plan.                                                                                      ________________________________________________________  

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