OF THE LATE REV. WILLIAM BLACK, Wesleyan Minister. HALIFAX, N. S. INCLUDING AN ACCOUNT OF THE RISE AND PROGRESS OF METHODISM IN NOVA SCOTIA, CHARACTERISTIC NOTICES OF SEVERAL INDIVIDUALS; WITH COPIOUS REV. FREEBORN GARRETSON, ETC. BY MATTHEW RICHEY, A. M. Principal of Upper Canada Academy. REMEMBER them which have the rule over you, who have spoken unto you the word of God: whose faith follow, considering the end of HALIFAX, MDCCCXXXIX. TO MARTIN G. BLACK AND WILLIAM A. BLACK, ESQUIRES, THIS MEMOIR OF THEIR REVERED FATHER IS RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED, WITH SENTIMENTS OF PROFOUND VENERATION FOR HIS MEMORY, AND THE MOST DEVOUT AND ARDENT WISHES THAT, FOLLOWING HIM AS HE FOLLOWED CHRIST, THEY MAY EVENTUALLY REIGN WITH HIM IN LIFE ETERNAL. FEB - 4 1919 PREFACE. One HUNDRED YEARS have now elapsed since the first Methodist Society was formed. That auspicious event dated the commencement of a new and glorious era in the history of Christianity. The moral revolution which Methodism, under the blessing of Almighty God, has already produced, has not been surpassed in magnitude and rapidity since the days of the Apostles. Its " line has gone out through all the earth, and its words to the ends of the world;" and while we behold it, all-animate still with the ardour and energy of its first love, “as a bridegroom coming out of his chamber, and rejoicing as a strong man to run a race,” is it too much to expect, that the day is coming when it will be universally recognized as the selectest agency of a redeeming Providence, |