. T. DeWitt Talmage : his life and work : biographical edition . THE GREAT ART GALLERY IN DRESDEN honor of standing in a pulpit where Newman Hall had so faithfully proclaimedChrist to the people—multitudes all over the world responding to the invitationof his Come to Jesus. The beloved pastor of your church put into my hand thefirst sermon Rowland Hill delivered at the dedication of this church, printed althat time. In it he makes many allusions to his own ministry. In his prefacehe says many quaint and beautiful and stirring things, in regard to himself andthe ministry, which had been assault


. T. DeWitt Talmage : his life and work : biographical edition . THE GREAT ART GALLERY IN DRESDEN honor of standing in a pulpit where Newman Hall had so faithfully proclaimedChrist to the people—multitudes all over the world responding to the invitationof his Come to Jesus. The beloved pastor of your church put into my hand thefirst sermon Rowland Hill delivered at the dedication of this church, printed althat time. In it he makes many allusions to his own ministry. In his prefacehe says many quaint and beautiful and stirring things, in regard to himself andthe ministry, which had been assaulted on all sides, declaring his faith in God—that God who brought him off victorious over all his foes, and made his namehonored in all Christendom, and to be honored in all the ages that are to the opening sentences of that sermon Rowland Hill declares, I take it forgranted the majority of my congregation believe in the immortality of the soul,. 26S A GOSPEL TOUR OF THE GLOBE 269 and that the Bible is our only directory to a blessed eternity. That is the key-note of my sermon this morning. In the evening Dr. Talmage preached in Agricultural Hall, London, to a vastand enthusiastic audience on The Mission of Christ. The Young Mens Christian Association of Leeds, England, desired to makesome expression of the high esteem in which Dr. Talmage was held by them,and to show their gratitude to him for the pecuniary benefits derived from hisvisit, entertained him at a public breakfast. The association needed a more com-modious building, and the profit from Dr. Talmages lectures in England (about$6,000, which the Y. M. C. A. received) was a material help to them in theireffort. While in England, on one of his many preaching tours, Dr. Talmage visitedStratford-on-Avon and the grave of Shakespeare.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectclergy, bookyear1902