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The Works of Jonathan Edwards, Vol. 7 Vol. 7

Volume 7: the Life of David Brainerd

The Works of Jonathan Edwards, Vol. 7( )
Author: Edwards, Jonathan
Editor: Pettit, Norman
Series title:The Works of Jonathan Edwards Ser.
ISBN:978-0-300-03004-4
Publication Date:Sep 1984
Publisher:Yale University Press
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:USD $125.00USD $138.00
Book Description:

Edwards' Life of David Brainerd is a rare, almost forgotten document depicting life in pre-Revolutionary America during the period when religious enthusiasm swept the colonial frontier. From 1743 to 1747 Brainerd had been a missionary to the Indians. Riding alone, thousands of miles on horseback, he kept a journal of daily events that he continued until the week before he died, at the age of twenty-nine, in Edwards' house. Published in 1749, the Life of Brainerd...
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Book Details
Pages:620
Detailed Subjects: Biography & Autobiography / Religious
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):0.644 x 0.944 x 0.172 Inches
Book Weight:2.575 Pounds
Author Biography
Edwards, Jonathan (Author)
In 1716 Edwards was admitted to Yale at the remarkable age of thirteen. After he graduated in 1722, he spent four years there pursuing theological interests, teaching, and completing his master's degree. In 1727 ,Edwards complied with his grandfather's request and traveled to Northhampton, Massachusetts to be his assistant in his church.

A committed scholar of John Calvin and the early Puritan theologians, as well as of the writings of John Locke and Isaac Newton, Edwards pursued a theology founded on two seemingly contradictory themes---a desire to return to the Calvinist tradition, as well as a desire to include the insights of contemporary Enlightenment philosophy. While Edwards's theological formulations were not completely developed until the 1750s, his lifetime pursuit of these ideas profoundly influenced the Puritan period of religious revival known as the Great Awakening. Though Edwards's provocative theology and sermons occasionally invoked fire and brimstone, as in the famous Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God (1741), his sermons generally moved parishioners to faith through the employment of positive imagery, as in God Glorified in Man's Dependence (1731).

In spite of his successes during the Great Awakening, Edwards was ultimately involved in a controversy that led to his dismissal at the Northhampton parish in 1750. Viewed as too progressive by a faction of the church known as the Old Lights, Edwards stepped down after delivering his famous Farewell Sermon (1750), in which he declared that God would ultimately determine whether Edwards had been right or wrong

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