Jonathan Edwards´ Page |
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September the 21st, 2007. ![]() Jonathan Edwards
Edwards´ desk
Entrance of Jonathan Edwards
College in Yale
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A faithful Narrative
of the Surprising Work of God
(by Jonathan Edwards) ![]() The Preciousness of Time (by Jonathan Edwards) ![]() Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God (by Jonathan Edwards) ![]() Pressing into the Kingdom of God (by Jonathan Edwards) ![]() The Justice of God in the Damnation of Sinners (by Jonathan Edwards) ![]() The Manner in Which the Salvation of the Soul is to be sought (by Jonathan Edwards) ![]() The Resolutions of Jonathan Edwards (by Jonathan Edwards) ![]() You see, I tried to make an English version of my Dutch `Jonathan Edwards Pagina`. You can help me! When you´ve got a good English article about Jonathan Edwards, you can send it to dpvandendool@hoofdkabel.com. So you can help me to build this site! Of course other kind of mail will be welcome too! ![]() 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 (Yale) The writings of Jonathan Edwards Edwards in the encyclopedia of Philosophy ![]() Jonathan Edwards : BiographyJONATHAN 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 |