DALLAS (ABP) — The Texas Baptist Historical Collection is displaying iconic preacher George Whitefield’s elevated pulpit, one of the top five artifacts of American Christianity and a key tool that helped unite the colonies as well as lay the foundation of the revolution against England, in the estimation of Alan Lefever, director of the collection.
Whitefield was one of the key preachers in the First Great Awakening, a spiritual revival that swept across the colonies and Britain in the 1730s and 1740s. He traveled the colonies with this pulpit and preached in open areas to crowds as large as 30,000 people. Some historians call Whitefield the colonies’ first celebrity.
“When you look at the pulpit, you’re not just looking at a piece of furniture that had to do with the spreading of the gospel, which is significant in and of itself. You’re looking at a piece of furniture that helped with the formation of the United States of America,” said Lefever, who recently received the piece when the American Tract Society gave its archives to the historical collection.
“Before Whitefield, the colonies all saw themselves as independents who answered to Britain. After Whitefield, they began to see each as together. They began coming together and seeing themselves as a group who had something to offer.”
The pulpit is being displayed in the historical collection’s offices temporarily, but eventually will be moved to the Dallas offices of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The display coincides with the launch of the convention’s Hope 1:8 efforts that encourage churches to share the Christian message locally, across the state, throughout the nation and around the world.
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John Hall writes for Texas Baptist communications.