"Press forward. Do not stop, do not linger in your journey, but strive for the mark set before you"
About this Quote
The sentence stacks imperatives - "do not stop, do not linger" - to close off escape hatches. Stopping sounds harmless; lingering sounds cultured. Whitefield condemns both. That pairing is the subtext: the enemy isnt just sin, its delay. Procrastination becomes a spiritual pathology, and idleness a kind of quiet rebellion. In a culture where churchgoing could be dutiful and decorous, Whitefield insists that faith must look like pursuit, not maintenance.
Then comes the rhetorical masterstroke: "the mark set before you". The goal isnt self-invented. Its assigned. That phrasing does two jobs at once: it offers direction to the anxious and authority to the preacher. If the mark is "set", then dissent can be reframed as wandering, and uncertainty as lack of discipline.
Theres also a social dimension. Whitefield preached across class lines, and this kind of language democratizes spiritual ambition: anyone can "strive". But it also polices the crowd. In a revival, emotion can curdle into spectacle; "dont linger" warns against turning awakening into entertainment. Keep going. Keep converting. Keep obeying.
Quote Details
| Topic | Perseverance |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Selected Sermons of George Whitefield (George Whitefield)
Evidence:
Press forward. Do not stop, do not linger in your journey, but strive for the mark set before you. (Sermon 9: "The Folly and Danger of Being Not Righteous Enough"). This exact sentence appears verbatim near the conclusion of Whitefield’s sermon titled “The Folly and Danger of Being Not Righteous Enough” in the CCEL transcription of his sermons. CCEL is not the original 18th-century printing, but it is reproducing a sermon text attributed to Whitefield. Many later quote sites repeat this line without giving the sermon context. I was able to verify the wording and identify the primary-work context (a Whitefield sermon), but I could not verify, within the material retrieved here, the FIRST publication details (exact first print edition/year/page) for this specific sermon text. A frequently-cited later collected edition is *Seventy-five Sermons on Various Important Subjects* (London: printed for W. Baynes, 1812), which quote sites sometimes cite as p. 158, but I did not successfully open a page-image scan to confirm that page number directly during this lookup. If you need the true earliest publication, the next step would be to check early printings of this sermon (or early collected sermon volumes) via page-image sources (e.g., HathiTrust/EEBO/ECCO or a library scan) and confirm the earliest dated edition containing the sermon and this passage. |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Whitefield, George. (2026, February 9). Press forward. Do not stop, do not linger in your journey, but strive for the mark set before you. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/press-forward-do-not-stop-do-not-linger-in-your-10360/
Chicago Style
Whitefield, George. "Press forward. Do not stop, do not linger in your journey, but strive for the mark set before you." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/press-forward-do-not-stop-do-not-linger-in-your-10360/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Press forward. Do not stop, do not linger in your journey, but strive for the mark set before you." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/press-forward-do-not-stop-do-not-linger-in-your-10360/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.







