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The Preciousness of Time
and the Importance of redeeming it
Redeeming
the time
Christians should not only
study to improve the opportunities they enjoy, for their own
advantage, as those who would make a good bargain; but also labour to
reclaim others from their evil courses; so that God might defer
his anger, and time might be redeemed from that terrible destruction,
which, when it should come, would put an end to the time of divine
patience. And it may be upon this account, that this reason is added, Because
the days are evil. As if the apostle had said, the
corruption of the times tends to hasten threatened judgments; but your
holy and circumspect walk will tend to redeem time from the devouring
jaws of those calamities.—However, thus much is certainly held forth to
us in the words; viz. That upon time we should set a high
value, and be exceeding careful that it be not lost; and we are
therefore exhorted to exercise wisdom and circumspection, in order that
we may redeem it. And hence it appears, that time is exceedingly
precious.
Section
I
Why
time is precious.
Time is precious for the
following reasons:
1. Because a happy or
miserable eternity depends on the good or ill improvement of it. Things
are precious in proportion to their importance, or to the degree
wherein they concern our welfare. Men are wont to set the highest value
on those things upon which they are sensible their interest chiefly
depends. And this renders time so exceedingly precious, because our
eternal welfare depends on the improvement of it.—Indeed our welfare in
this world depends upon its improvement. If we improve it
not, we shall be in danger of coming to poverty and disgrace; but by a
good improvement of it, we may obtain those things which will be useful
and comfortable. But it is above all things precious, as our state
through eternity depends upon it. The importance of the improvement of
time upon other accounts, is in subordination to this.
Gold and silver are
esteemed precious by men; but they are of no worth to any man, only as
thereby he has an opportunity of avoiding or removing some evil, or of
possessing himself of some good. And the greater the evil is which any
man hath advantage to escape, or the good which he hath advantage to
obtain, by any thing that he possesses, by so much the greater is the
value of that thing to him, whatever it be. Thus if a man, by any thing
which he hath, may save his life, which he must lose without it, he
will look upon that by which he hath the opportunity of escaping so
great an evil as death, to be very precious.—Hence it is that time is
so exceedingly precious, because by it we have opportunity of escaping
everlasting misery, and of obtaining everlasting blessedness and glory.
On this depends our escape from an infinite evil, and our attainment of
an infinite good.
2. Time is very short,
which is another thing that renders it very precious. The scarcity of
any commodity occasions men to set a higher value upon it, especially
if it be necessary and they cannot do without it. Thus when Samaria was
besieged by the Syrians, and provisions were exceedingly scarce, “an
ass’s head was sold for fourscore pieces of silver, and the fourth part
of a cab of dove’s dung for five pieces of silver.”—So time is the more
to be prized by men, because a whole eternity depends upon it; and yet
we have but a little of time. “When a few years are come, then I shall
go the way whence I shall not return.” “My days are swifter than a
post. They are passed away as the swift ships; as the eagle that
hasteth to the prey.” “Our life; what is it? it is but a vapour which
appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth away.”. It is but as a
moment to eternity. Time is so short, and the work which we have to do
in it is so great, that we have none of it to spare. The work which we
have to do to prepare for eternity, must be done in time, or it never
can be done; and it is found to be a work of great difficulty and
labour, and therefore that for which time is the more requisite.
3. Time ought to be
esteemed by us very precious, because we are uncertain of its
continuance. We know that it is very short, but we know not how short.
We know not how little of it remains, whether a year, or several years,
or only a month, a week, or a day. We are every day uncertain whether
that day will not be the last, or whether we are to have the whole day.
There is nothing that experience doth more verify than this.—If a man
had but little provision laid up for a journey or a voyage, and at the
same time knew that if his provision should fail, he must perish by the
way, he would be the more choice of it.—How much more would many men
prize their time, if they knew that they had but a few months, or a few
days, more to live! And certainly a wise man will prize his time the
more, as he knows not but that it will be so as to himself. This is the
case with multitudes now in the world, who at present enjoy health, and
see no signs of approaching death: many such, no doubt, are to die the
next month, many the next week, yea, many probably to-morrow, and some
this night; yet these same persons know nothing of it, and perhaps
think nothing of it, and neither they nor their neighbours can say that
they are more likely soon to be taken out of the world than others.
This teaches us how we ought to prize our time, and how careful we
ought to be, that we lose none of it.
4. Time is very precious,
because when it is past, it cannot be recovered. There are many things
which men possess, which if they part with, they can obtain them again.
If a man have parted with something which he had, not knowing the worth
of it, or the need he should have of it; he often can regain it, at
least with pains and cost. If a man have been overseen in a bargain,
and have bartered away or sold something, and afterwards repent of it,
he may often obtain a release, and recover what he had parted with.—But
it is not so with respect to time; when once that is gone, it is gone
for ever; no pains, no cost will recover it. Though we repent ever so
much that we let it pass, and did not improve it while we had it, it
will be to no purpose. Every part of it is successively offered to us,
that we may choose whether we will make it our own, or not. But there
is no delay; it will not wait upon us to see whether or no we will
comply with the offer. But if we refuse, it is immediately taken away,
and never offered more. As to that part of time which is gone, however
we have neglected to improve it, it is out of our possession and out of
our reach.
If we have lived fifty, or
sixty, or seventy years, and have not improved our time, now it cannot
be helped; it is eternally gone from us: all that we can do, is to
improve the little that remains. Yea, if a man have spent all his life
but a few moments unimproved, all that is gone is lost, and only those
few remaining moments can possibly be made his own; and if the whole of
a man’s time be gone, and it be all lost, it is irrecoverable.—Eternity
depends on the improvement of time; but when once the time of life is
gone, when once death is come, we have no more to do with time; there
is no possibility of obtaining the restoration of it, or another space
in which to prepare for eternity. If a man should lose the whole of his
worldly substance, and become a bankrupt, it is possible that his loss
may be made up. He may have another estate as good. But when the time
of life is gone, it is impossible that we should ever obtain another
such time. All opportunity of obtaining eternal welfare is utterly and
everlastingly gone.
Section
II
Reflections
on time past
You have now heard of the
preciousness of time; and you are the persons concerned, to whom God
hath committed that precious talent. You have an eternity before you.
When God created you, and gave you reasonable souls, he made you for an
endless duration. He gave you time here in order to a preparation for
eternity, and your future eternity depends on the improvement of
time.—Consider, therefore, what you have done with your past
time. You are not now beginning your time, but a great deal is past and
gone; and all the wit, and power, and treasure of the universe, cannot
recover it. Many of you may well conclude, that more than half of your
time is gone; though you should live to the ordinary age of man, your
glass is more than half run; and it may be there are but few sands
remaining. Your sun is past the meridian, and perhaps just setting, or
going into an everlasting eclipse. Consider, therefore, what account
you can give of your improvement of past time. How have you let the
precious golden sands of your glass run?
Every day that you
have enjoyed has been precious; yea, your moments have been
precious. But have you not wasted your precious moments, your precious
days, yea your precious years? If you should reckon up how many days
you have lived, what a sum would there be! and how precious hath every
one of those days been! Consider, therefore, what have you done with
them? what is become of them all? What can you show of any improvement
made, or good done, or benefit obtained, answerable to all this time
which you have lived? When you look back, and search, do you not find
this past time of your lives in a great measure empty, having not been
filled up with any good improvement? And if God, that hath given you
your time, should now call you to an account, what account could you
give to him?
How much may be done in a
year! how much good is there opportunity to do in such a space of time!
How much service may persons do for God, and how much for their own
souls, if to their utmost they improve it! How much may be done in a
day! But what have you done in so many days and years that you have
lived? What have you done with the whole time of your youth, you that
are past your youth? What is become of all that precious season of
life? Hath it not all been in vain to you? Would it not have been as
well or better for you, if all that time you had been asleep, or in a
state of non-existence?
You have had much time of
leisure and freedom from worldly business; consider to what purpose you
have spent it. You have not only had ordinary time, but you have had a
great deal of holy time. What have you done with all the sabbath-days
which you have enjoyed? Consider those things seriously, and let your
own consciences make answer.
Section
III
Who are
chiefly deserving of reproof from the subject of the preciousness of
time
How little is the
preciousness of time considered, and how little sense of it do the
greater part of mankind seem to have! and to how little good purpose do
many spend their time! There is nothing more precious, and yet nothing
of which men are more prodigal. Time is with many, as silver was in the
days of Solomon, as the stones of the street, and nothing accounted of.
They act as if time were as plenty as silver was then, and as if they
had a great deal more than they needed, and knew not what to do with
it. If men were as lavish of their money as they are of their time, if
it were as common a thing for them to throw away their money, as it is
for them to throw away their time, we should think them beside
themselves, and not in the possession of their right minds. Yet time is
a thousand times more precious than money; and when it is gone, cannot
be purchased for money, cannot be redeemed by silver or gold.—There are
several sorts of persons who are reproved by this doctrine, whom I
shall particularly mention.
1. Those who spend a
great part of their time in idleness, or in doing nothing that
turns to any account, either for the good of their souls or bodies;
nothing either for their own benefit, or for the benefit of their
neighbour, either of the family or of the body-politic to which they
belong. There are some persons upon whose hands time seems to lie
heavy, who, instead of being concerned to improve it as it passes, and
taking care that it pass not without making it their own, act as if it
were rather their concern to contrive ways how to waste and consume it;
as though time, instead of being precious, were rather a mere
encumbrance to them. Their hands refuse to labour, and rather than put
themselves to it, they will let their families suffer, and will suffer
themselves: “An idle soul shall suffer hunger." "Drowsiness shall
clothe a man with rags.”
Some spend much of their
time at the tavern, over their cups, and in wandering about from house
to house, wasting away their hours in idle and unprofitable talk which
will turn to no good account: “In all labour there is profit; but the
talk of the lips tendeth only to poverty.” The direction of the
apostle, in Eph. 4.28 is, that we should ” labour, working with our
hands the thing that is good, that we may have to give to him that
needeth.” But indolent men, instead of gaining any thing to give to him
that needeth, do but waste what they have already: He that is slothful
in his work, is brother to him that is a great waster.”.
2. They are reproved by
this doctrine who spend their time in wickedness, who do not
merely spend their time in doing nothing to any good purpose, but spend
it to ill purposes. Such do not only lose their time, but they do
worse; with it they hurt both themselves and others.—Time is precious,
as we have heard, because eternity depends upon it. By the improvement
of time, we have opportunity of escaping eternal misery, and obtaining
eternal blessedness. But those who spend their time in wicked works,
not only neglect to improve their time to obtain eternal happiness, or
to escape damnation, but they spend it to a quite contrary purpose, viz.
to increase their eternal misery, or to render their damnation the more
heavy and intolerable.
Some spend much time in
revelling, and in unclean talk and practices, in vicious
company-keeping, in corrupting and insnaring the minds of others,
setting bad examples, and leading others into sin, undoing not only
their own souls, but the souls of others. Some spend much of their
precious time in detraction and backbiting; in talking against others;
in contention, not only quarrelling themselves, but fomenting and
stirring up strife and contention. It would have been well for some
men, and well for their neighbours, if they had never done any thing at
all; for then they would have done neither good nor hurt. But now they
have done a great deal more hurt than they have done or ever will do
good. There are some persons whom it would have been better for the
towns where they live, to have been at the charge of maintaining them
in doing nothing, if that would have kept them in a state of inactivity.
Those who have spent much
of their time in wickedness, if ever they shall reform, and enter upon
a different mode of living, will find, not only that they have wasted
the past, but that they have made work for their remaining time, to
undo what they have done. How will many men, when they shall have done
with time, and shall look back upon their past lives, wish that they
had had no time! The time which they spend on earth will be worse to
them than if they had spent so much time in hell; for an eternity of
more dreadful misery in hell will be the fruit of their time on earth,
as they employ it.
3. Those are reproved by
this doctrine, who spend their time only in worldly pursuits,
neglecting their souls. Such men lose their time, let them be ever so
diligent in their worldly business; and though they may be careful not
to let any of it pass so, but that it shall some way or other turn to
their worldly profit. They that improve time only for their benefit in
time, lose it; because time was not given for itself, but for that
everlasting duration which succeeds it.—They, therefore, whose time is
taken up in caring and labouring for the world only, in inquiring what
they shall eat, and what they shall drink, and wherewithal they shall
be clothed; in contriving to lay up for themselves treasures upon
earth, how to enrich themselves, how to make themselves great in the
world, or how to live in comfortable and pleasant circumstances, while
here; who busy their minds and employ their strength in these things
only, and the stream of whose affections is directed towards these
things; they lose their precious time.
Let such, therefore, as
have been guilty of thus spending their time, consider it. You have
spent a great part of your time, and a great part of your strength, in
getting a. little of the world; and how little good doth it afford you,
now you have gotten it! What happiness or satisfaction can you reap
from it? will it give you peace of conscience, or any rational
quietness or comfort? What is your poor, needy, perishing soul the
better for it? and what better prospects doth it afford you of your
approaching eternity? and what will all that you have acquired avail
you when time shall be no longer?
Section
IV
An
exhortation to improve time
Consider what hath been said
of the preciousness of time, how much depends upon it, how short and
uncertain it is, how irrecoverable it will be when gone. If you have a
right conception of these things, you will be more choice of your time
than of the most fine gold. Every hour and moment will seem precious to
you.—But besides those considerations which have been already set
before you, consider also the following.
1. That you are
accountable to God for your time. Time is a talent given us by God; he
hath set us our day; and it is not for nothing, our day was appointed
for some work; therefore he will, at the day’s end, call us to an
account. We must give account to him of the improvement of all our
time. We are God’s servants; as a servant is accountable to his master,
how he spends his time when he is sent forth to work, so are we
accountable to God. If men would aright consider this, and keep it in
mind, would they not improve their time otherwise than they do? Would
you not behave otherwise than you do, if you considered with yourselves
every morning, that you must give an account to God, how you shall have
spent that day? and if you considered with yourselves, at the beginning
of every evening, that you must give an account to God, how you shall
have spent that evening? Christ hath told us, that "for every idle word
which men speak, they shall give account in the day of judgment,” How
well, therefore, may we conclude, that we must give an account of all
our idle mispent time!
2. Consider how much time
you have lost already. For your having lost so much, you have the
greater need of diligently improving what yet remains. You ought to
mourn and lament over your lost time; but that is not all, you must
apply yourselves the more diligently to improve the remaining part,
that you may redeem lost time.?You who are considerably advanced in
life, and have hitherto spent your time in vanities and worldly cares,
and have lived in a great measure negligent of the interests of your
souls, may well be terrified and amazed, when you think how much time
you have lost and wasted away.—In that you have lost so much time, you
have the more need of diligence, on three accounts.
(1.) As your opportunity
is so much the shorter.—Your time at its whole length is short. But set
aside all that you have already lost, and then how much shorter is it!
As to that part of your time which you have already lost, it is not to
be reckoned into your opportunity; for that will never be any more; and
it is no better, but worse to you, than if it never had been.
(2 ) You have the same
work to do that you had at first, and that under greater difficulties.
Hitherto you have done nothing at all of your work, all remains to be
done, and that with vastly greater difficulties and opposition in your
way than would have been if you had set about it seasonably. So that
the time in which to do your work is not only grown shorter, but your
work is grown greater. You not only have the same work to do,
but you have more work; for while you have lost your time, you
have not only shortened it, but you have been making work for
yourselves. How well may this consideration awaken you to a thorough
care, not to let things run on in this manner any longer, and rouse you
up immediately to apply yourselves to your work with all your might!
(3.) That is the best of
your time which you have lost. The first of a man’s time, after he
comes to the exercise of his reason, and to be capable of performing
his work, is the best. You who have lived in sin till past your youth,
have lost the best part. So that here are all these things to be
considered together, viz. that your time in the whole is but
short, there is none to spare; a great part of that is gone, so that it
is become much shorter; that which is gone is the best; yet all your
work remains, and not only so, but with greater difficulties than ever
before attended it; and the shorter your time is, the more work you
have to do.
What will make you
sensible of the necessity of a diligent improvement of remaining time,
if these things will not? Sometimes such considerations as these have
another effect, viz. to discourage persons, and to make them
think, that seeing they have lost so much time, it is not worth their
while to attempt to do any thing now. The devil makes fools of them;
for when they are young, he tells them, there is time enough hereafter,
there is no need of being in haste, it will be better seeking salvation
hereafter; and then they believe him. Afterwards, when their youth is
past, he tells them, that now they have lost so much, and the best of
their time, that it is not worth their while to attempt to do any
thing; and now they believe him too. So that with them no time is good.
The season of youth is not a good time; for that is most fit for
pleasure and mirth, and there will be enough afterwards; and what comes
afterwards is not a good time, because the best of it is gone. Thus are
men infatuated and ruined.
But what madness is it for
persons to give way to discouragement, so as to neglect their work,
because their time is short! What need have they rather to awake out of
sleep, thoroughly to rouse up themselves, and to be in good earnest,
that if possible they may yet obtain eternal life! Peradventure God may
yet give them repentance to the acknowledgment of the truth, that they
may be saved. Though it be late in the day, yet God calls upon you to
rouse, and to apply yourselves to your work; and will you not hearken
to his counsel in this great affair, rather than to the counsel of your
mortal enemy?
3. Consider how time is
sometimes valued by those who are come near to the end of it. What a
sense of its preciousness have poor sinners sometimes, when they are on
their death-beds! Such have cried out, O, a thousand worlds for an
inch of time! Then time appears to them indeed precious. An inch of
time could do them no more good than before, when they were in health,
supposing a like disposition to improve it, nor indeed so much; for a
man’s time upon a death-bed is attended with far greater disadvantage
for such an improvement as will be for the good of his soul, than when
he is in health.—But the near approach of death makes men sensible of
the inestimable worth of time. Perhaps, when they were in health, they
were as insensible of its value as you are, and were as negligent of
it. But how are their thoughts altered now! It is not because they are
deceived, that they think time to be of such value, but because their
eyes are opened; and it is because you are deceived and blind that you
do not think as they do.
4. Consider what a value
we may conclude is set upon time by those who are past the end of it.
What thoughts do you think they have of its preciousness, who have lost
all their opportunity for obtaining eternal life, and are gone to hell?
Though they were very lavish of their time while they lived, and set no
great value upon it; yet how have they changed their judgments! How
would they value the opportunity which you have, if they might
but have it granted to them! What would they not give for one
of your days, under the means of grace!—So will you, first or last, be
convinced. But if you be not convinced except in the manner in which
they are, it will be too late.
There are two ways of
making men sensible of the preciousness of time. One is, by showing
them the reason why it must be precious, by telling them how much
depends on it, how short it is, how uncertain, &c. The other is
experience, wherein men are convinced how much depends on the
improvement of time. The latter is the most effectual way; for that
always convinces, if nothing else doth.—But if persons be not convinced
by the former means, the latter will do them no good. If the former be
ineffectual, the latter, though it be certain, yet is always too late.
Experience never fails to open the eyes of men, though they were never
opened before. But if they be first opened by that, it is no way to
their benefit. Let all therefore be persuaded to improve their time to
their utmost.
Section
V
Advice
respecting the improvement of time
I shall conclude with
advising to three things in particular.
1. Improve the present
time without any delay. If you delay and put off its improvement, still
more time will be lost; and it will be an evidence that you are not
sensible of its preciousness. Talk not of more convenient seasons
hereafter; but improve your time while you have it, after the example
of the psalmist, “I made haste, and delayed not to keep thy
commandments.”
2. Be especially careful to
improve those parts of time which are most precious. Though all
time is very precious, yet some parts are more precious than others;
as, particularly, holy time is more precious than common time. Such
time is of great advantage for our everlasting welfare; therefore,
above all, improve your sabbaths, and especially the time of public
worship, which is the most precious part. Lose it not either in sleep,
or in carelessness, inattention, and wandering imaginations. How
sottish are they who waste away, not only their common, but holy time,
yea the very season of attendance on the holy ordinances of God!—The
time of youth is precious, on many accounts. Therefore, if you be in
the enjoyment of this time, take heed that you improve it. Let not the
precious days and years of youth slip away without improvement. A time
of the strivings of God’s Spirit is more precious than other time. Then
God is near; and we are directed “To seek the Lord while he may be
found, and to call upon him while he is near.” Such especially is an
accepted time, and a day of salvation: “I have heard thee in a time
accepted, and in a day of salvation have I succoured thee: behold, now
is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation.”
3. Improve well your time
of leisure from worldly business. Many persons have a great
deal of such time, and all have some. If men be but disposed to it,
such time may be improved to great advantage. When we are most free
from cares for the body, and business of an outward nature, a happy
opportunity for the soul is afforded. Therefore spend not such
opportunities unprofitably, nor in such a manner that you will not be
able to give a good account thereof to God. Waste them not away wholly
in unprofitable visits, or useless diversions or amusements. Diversion
should be used only in subserviency to business. So much, and no more,
should be used, as doth most fit the mind and body for the work of our
general and particular callings.
You have need to improve
every talent, advantage, and opportunity, to your utmost, while time
lasts; for it will soon be said concerning you, according to the oath
of the angel: “And the angel which I saw stand upon the sea and upon
the earth lifted up his hand to heaven, and sware by him that liveth
for ever and ever, who created heaven, and the things that therein are,
and the earth, and the things that therein are, and the sea, and the
things which are therein, that there should be time no longer.”
The religious affections
Introduction
There is no question
whatsoever, that is of greater importance to mankind, and what is more
concerns every individual person to be well resolved in, than this: What
are the distinguishing qualifications of those that are in favor with
God, and entitled to his eternal rewards? Or, which comes to the
same thing, What is the nature of true religion? And
wherein do lie the distinguishing notes of that virtue and holiness
that is acceptable in the sight of God? But though it be of such
importance, and though we have clear and abundant light in the word of
God to direct us in this matter, yet there is no one point, wherein
professing Christians do more differ one from another. It would be
endless to reckon up the variety of opinions in this point, that divide
the Christian world; making manifest the truth of that declaration of
our Savior, "Strait is the gate and narrow is the way, that leads to
life, and few there be that find it."
The consideration of these things has long
engaged me to attend to this matter, with the utmost diligence and
care, and exactness of search and inquiry, that I have been capable of.
It is a subject on which my mind has been peculiarly intent, ever since
I first entered on the study of divinity. But as to the success of my
inquiries it must be left to the judgment of the reader of the
following treatise.
Further
Edwards Center
The writings of
Jonathan Edwards
Edwards
in the encyclopedia of Philosophy
Jonathan Edwards :
Biography
JONATHAN EDWARDS was born into a Puritan evangelical household
on October 5, 1703, in East Windsor, Connecticut. He was the fifth of
eleven children born to the Rev. Timothy and Esther Edwards. His
childhood education immersed him not only in the study of the Bible and
Christian theology but also in classics and ancient languages.
Undergraduate
Years
During his undergraduate years (1716-1720) and graduate
studies (1721-1722) at Yale College, Edwards engaged all manner of
contemporary issues in theology and philosophy. He studied the debates
between the orthodox Calvinism of his Puritan forebears and the more
"liberal" movements that challenged it, such as Deism, Socinianism,
Arianism, and Anglican Arminianism, as well as the most current thought
coming out of Europe, such as British empiricism and continental
rationalism. From early in his life, Edwards committed himself to
vindicating his beliefs before the foreign luminaries of the
Enlightenment by recasting Calvinism in a new and vital way that
synthesized Protestant theology with Newton's physics, Locke's
psychology, the third earl of Shaftesbury's aesthetics, and
Malebranche's moral philosophy.
At Yale, Edwards wrote almost exclusively on natural
philosophy and metaphysics. Simultaneous with and yet distinct from the
great English idealist George Berkeley, Edwards formulated a
metaphysical system that was idealistic, designed to challenge
Aristotelianism. Edwards refuted both the speculations of Hobbes and
Descartes concerning the nature of reality and substance in ways that
anticipated theoretical physics. His metaphysics also had a singularly
aesthetic component to it; for Edwards, beauty was an essential aspect
of an entity, which subsisted in the harmony or agreement of its parts.
This approach continues to inform modern ethics.
Becoming a
Pastor
In 1726, Edwards succeeded his grandfather, Solomon Stoddard,
as the pastor of the church in Northampton, Massachusetts, the largest
and most influential church outside of Boston. Turning his attention
from the theoretical pursuits of his Yale years to more practical
matters, he married Sarah Pierpont in 1727. Jonathan and Sarah had met
in New Haven eight years earlier, when she was just thirteen years old,
but they were not married until eight years later. The two of them
would go on to raise ten children in Northampton.
First Great
Awakening
In 1734-1735, Edwards oversaw some of the initial stirrings of
the First Great Awakening. He gained international fame as a revivalist
and "theologian of the heart" after publishing A Faithful Narrative of the Surprising
Work of God (1738), which described the awakening in his church
and served as an empirical model for American and British revivalists
alike.
The widespread revivals of the 1730’s and 1740’s stimulated
one of the two most fruitful periods for Edwards' writings. In this
period, Edwards became very well known as a revivalist preacher who
subscribed to an experiential interpretation of Reformed theology that
emphasized the sovereignty of God, the depravity of humankind, the
reality of hell, and the necessity of a "New Birth" conversion. While
critics assailed the convictions of many supposed converts as illusory
and even the work of the devil, Edwards became a brilliant apologist
for the revivals. In The
Distinguishing Marks of a Work of the Spirit of God (1741), Some Thoughts Concerning the Present
Revival (1742), A Treatise
Concerning Religious Affections (1746), and The Life of David Brainerd (1749),
he sought to isolate the signs of true sainthood from false belief. The
intellectual framework for revivalism he constructed in these works
pioneered a new psychology and philosophy of affections, later invoked
by William James in his classic Varieties
of Religious Experience (1902).
"The first and
greatest homegrown American philosopher"
Perry Miller, the grand expositor of the New England mind and
founder of the Yale edition of the Works of Jonathan Edwards, described
Edwards as the first and greatest homegrown American philosopher. If
the student penetrates behind the technical language of theology,
Miller argued, "he discovers an intelligence which, as much as
Emerson's, Melville's, or Mark Twain's, is both an index of American
society and a comment upon it." Although nineteenth-century editors of
Edwards "improved" his style out of embarrassment for his unadorned,
earthy, and earnest language, today Edwards is recognized as a
consummate and sophisticated rhetorician and as a master preacher.
Literary scholars connect Edwards' psychological principles with his
emphasis on rhetoric as a means of eliciting emotional responses, most
readily seen in the most famous sermon in American history, "Sinners in
the Hands of an Angry God" (1741). They also point to Edwards' "Images
or Shadows of Divine Things" (published by Miller in 1948) as an
innovative application of typology that anticipated Transcendentalism
by including nature as a source of revelation.
Edwards’ published writings at Northampton also reflect strong
millenarian and prophetic interests. In A History of the Work of Redemption,
originally preached as a sermon series in 1739 but not published until
after his death, Edwards cast theology into "a method entirely new" by
showing God's work as a history structured around God's scriptural
promises and periods of the outpouring of the Spirit. An Humble Attempt to Promote . .
.Extraordinary Prayer (1747) was part of a larger movement
towards Anglo-American "concerts of prayer" and was an important
contribution to millennial thought. Scholars such as Alan Heimert have
recognized the signal importance of these works in American history,
particularly their contribution to revolutionary ideology.
In 1750, Edwards’ church dismissed him from Northampton after
he attempted to impose stricter qualifications for admission to the
sacraments upon his congregation. Concerned that the "open admission"
policies instituted by Stoddard allowed too many hypocrites and
unbelievers into church membership, he became embroiled in a bitter
controversy with his congregation, area ministers, and political
leaders. His dismissal is often seen as a turning point in colonial
American history because it marked the clear and final rejection of the
old "New England Way" constructed by the Puritan settlers of New
England. In her study of Northampton during Edwards' pastorate,
Patricia Tracy described the social and political forces at work in the
town as a reflection of larger economic, social and ideological forces
then reshaping American culture. Ironically, then, the colonial
theologian who best anticipated the intellectual shape of modern
America also was its first victim. Edwards' struggle with these forces
is recorded in the many manuscript sermons that will be made available
on the website by the Jonathan Edwards Center at Yale.
A Mission Post
From Northampton, Edwards went to the mission post of
Stockbridge, on the western border of Massachusetts, where he served
from 1751 to 1757. Here he pastored a small English congregation, was a
missionary to 150 Mahican and Mohawk families, and wrote many of his
major works, including those that addressed the "Arminian controversy."
Foremost among these was A Careful
and Strict Inquiry into the Modern Prevailing Notions of that Freedom
of Will..." (1754), in which he attempted to prove that the will
was determined by the inclination of either sin or grace in the soul.
This book, one of the most important works in modern western thought,
set the parameters for philosophical debate on freedom and determinism
for the next century and a half. Also written during this period were The Great Christian Doctrine of Original
Sin Defended (1758), in which Edwards asserted that all
humankind has a natural propensity to sin due to its "constitutional
unity" in Adam; and two major statements on ethics, The Nature of True Virtue and The End for Which God Created the World
(published posthumously in 1765).
Though Stockbridge provided something of a haven for Edwards,
he could not avoid the limelight. In late 1757, he accepted the
presidency of the College of New Jersey (later Princeton University).
While at Princeton, Edwards hoped to complete at least two more major
treatises, one that would show "The Harmony of the Old and New
Testaments" and the other that would be an experiment in narrative
theology, a much expanded treatise on "The History of the Work of
Redemption." However, he did not live to complete these works. After
only a few months in Princeton, he died on March 22, 1758, following
complications from a smallpox inoculation. He is buried in the
Princeton Cemetery.
Jonathan
Edwards: A Life by George Marsden
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