"If your souls were not immortal, and you in danger of losing them, I would not thus speak unto you; but the love of your souls constrains me to speak: methinks this would constrain me to speak unto you forever"
About this Quote
The subtext is a kind of moral hostage note delivered with pastoral handwriting. You are in danger of losing your soul; I am the one person who cares enough to tell you; if you resent me, you’re resenting love itself. When he says, “the love of your souls constrains me,” he’s quietly claiming moral authority over the audience’s interior life. Not your comfort, not your reputation, not even your consent - your soul is the object of his duty.
Context sharpens the edge. Whitefield, a central engine of the Great Awakening, preached to crowds who often found established churches cold, rote, and socially polished. His revivalist rhetoric needed to break complacency fast. “Methinks” softens the sentence with a conversational, almost intimate tone, but it’s a feint: the climax is relentless, “forever.” That word stretches the preacher’s concern across eternity, mirroring the immortality he’s invoked. The effect is pressure that feels like care - an emotional lever designed to make listeners reinterpret discomfort as salvation in progress.
Quote Details
| Topic | Faith |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Christ the Only Rest for the Weary and Heavy-Laden (George Whitefield, 1740)
Evidence: Come, come unto him. If your souls were not immortal, and you in danger of losing them, I would not thus speak unto you; but the love of your souls constrains me to speak: methinks this would constrain me to speak unto you forever. (Sermon title: "Christ the Only Rest for the Weary and Heavy-Laden"; in later collected editions, p. 182-187, especially p. 187 for the quoted passage). The quote is verifiably in Whitefield's sermon "Christ the Only Rest for the Weary and Heavy-Laden." A later source explicitly identifies this sermon as having been preached at Kennington Common in 1740. In the digitized collected sermons PDF, the line appears on p. 187 of the text (internal sermon pagination around p. 182-187). I could verify the wording directly in the sermon text, and secondary scholarly/ministerial references identify the occasion as Kennington Common, 1740. However, I was not able to conclusively locate the earliest surviving title page of the standalone first printing during this search session, so the exact first publication imprint remains not fully confirmed here. Other candidates (1) The Life of the Rev. George Whitefield (Luke Tyerman, 1877) compilation97.0% ... If your souls were not immortal , and you in danger of losing them , I would not thus speak unto you ; but the lo... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Whitefield, George. (2026, March 16). If your souls were not immortal, and you in danger of losing them, I would not thus speak unto you; but the love of your souls constrains me to speak: methinks this would constrain me to speak unto you forever. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-your-souls-were-not-immortal-and-you-in-danger-15956/
Chicago Style
Whitefield, George. "If your souls were not immortal, and you in danger of losing them, I would not thus speak unto you; but the love of your souls constrains me to speak: methinks this would constrain me to speak unto you forever." FixQuotes. March 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-your-souls-were-not-immortal-and-you-in-danger-15956/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"If your souls were not immortal, and you in danger of losing them, I would not thus speak unto you; but the love of your souls constrains me to speak: methinks this would constrain me to speak unto you forever." FixQuotes, 16 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-your-souls-were-not-immortal-and-you-in-danger-15956/. Accessed 31 Mar. 2026.









