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Joseph Alleine playlist: http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=0664AB53EC30F52C Joseph Alleine was born in Devizes, Wiltshire, in 1633. He loved and served the Lord from childhood. From eleven years of age onward, "the whole course of his youth was an even-spun thread of godly conversation," wrote one observer. The tim...es, however, are perilous. Charles I was beheaded and his son, Charles II, at the head of a Scottish army, is defeated by Cromwell's Parliamentarians at Worcester as young Joseph Alleine sets off for Corpus Christi College. At Oxford, Alleine would sit at the feet of such divines as John Owen and Thomas Goodwin. Alleine first worked as a college tutor, then later as a chaplain, devoting considerable time to preaching in the county jail, visiting the sick, and relieving the poor. Alleine would often rise early in the morning, lamenting that others were already at work before he prayed to his Master. His wife commented that he "would be much troubled if he heard smiths or other craftsmen at work at their trades, before he was at communion with God: saying to me often, 'How this noise shames me! Doth not my Master deserve more than theirs?'" Alleine would customarily have private devotions and meditation upon God from 4 to 8 A.M. Richard Baxter was impressed with Alleine's "great ministerial skillfulness in the public explication and application of the Scriptures-so melting, so convincing, so powerful." He was an excellent teacher who devoted a good part of most weekdays to teaching his people from the Shorter Catechism. After he was ejected for nonconformity in 1662 along with most of his Puritan associates, Alleine actually increased his preaching. Believing his time was short, he averaged one or two sermons each day for the next nine months, until he was arrested and cast into prison. The evening prior to his arrest, he had preached and prayed with his people for three hours, declaring, "Glory be to God that hath accounted me worthy to suffer for His gospel!" His prison became a pulpit as he preached to crowds through the bars. Released a year later, he continued preaching. He was arrested a second time while preaching on July 10, 1666, and imprisoned again. Alleine was released after this second imprisonment and spent his last years in danger of further arrest. His health eventually gave way under the hardship. He died at age thirty-four (1668) in full assurance of faith and with much thanksgiving and praise to God. His last words were: "Christ is mine, and I am His-His by covenant." An Alarm to the Unconverted Alleine's Alarm to the Unconverted, the best known of his nineteen treatises, was first printed in 1671. Alleine's model of Puritan evangelism is well suited to correct contemporary distortions of the Gospel. For example, he shows us that dividing the offices and benefits of Christ is not a new idea. The true convert is willing to receive Christ, both as a Savior from sin and as Lord of one's life. He writes, "All of Christ is accepted by the sincere convert. He loves not only the wages but the work of Christ, not only the benefits but the burden of Christ. He takes up the commands of Christ, yea, the cross of Christ. The unsound convert takes Christ by halves. He is all for the salvation of Christ, but he is not for sanctification. He is for the privileges, but does not appropriate the person of Christ. He divides the offices and benefits of Christ. This is an error in the foundation. Whoever loves life, let him beware here. It is an undoing mistake, of which you have often been warned, and yet none is more common" (p. 45). This book greatly influenced the evangelistic approach of famous preachers such as George Whitefield and Charles Spurgeon. Iain Murray writes, "Never did the evangel of Jesus Christ burn more fervently in any English heart!". When Alexander Duff (who devoted his life to mission work in India) read Alleine's book, he wrote, "What inextinguishable zeal! What unquenchable thirstings after the conversion of lost sinners! What unslumbering watchfulness in warning and edifying saints! What profound humility and self-abasement in the sight of God! What patience and forbearance, what meekness and generosity, what affability and moderation! What triumphant faith-what tranquil, yet rapturous joy!" No wonder John Wesley called Alleine "the English Rutherford." Joseph Alleine (1633-1668) had unsurpassed zeal for the glory of God and the salvation of sinners. As one of his contemporaries said, "He was infinitely and insatiably greedy of the conversion of souls, wherein he had no small success." May the challenges of his life and ministry encourage us to emulate his zeal for the Lord. -~-~~-~~~-~~-~- Please watch: "FULL ALBUM Christian Praise Worship Songs 2013 - A Message of Hope" ➨ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jb_VlgldVpA -~-~~-~~~-~~-~-