Saturday, February 25, 2023

Edwards' use of parallel structures - Moulton describes chiasmus in 1899

Commentary from the Yale edition.

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Parallelism—the repetition of syntactical patterns and structures of thought—is also a major device in Edwards' rhetorical repertory. In the case of parallelism, as in so many other instances, one need not look far for precedents and influences: "… the versification of the Bible is of a kind totally unlike that which prevails in English literature.… Its underlying principle is found to be the symmetry of clauses in a verse, which has come to be called 'Parallelism.'" R. G. Moulton, The Literary Study of the Bible (New York, 1899), p. 46. 

[https://archive.org/details/literarystudyofb00mouliala/page/46/mode/2up]

Inasmuch

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as Edwards' Bible's verse was printed as prose, and he seems not to have differentiated between the prose and verse in the Bible, I suppose that he took the apparent form of the verse as a model for his own highly rhythmical prose, for Edwards' sermons display a remarkable number of variations on parallelism, several of which are recognized as conventional forms in biblical verse.

Coordination, the simplest form of parallelism, is the dominant structure in Edwardsean syntax. In the unpunctuated sermon manuscripts, the exposition characteristically evolves through a succession of declarative statements and ampersands. Unedited excerpts from a sermon on Psalms 108:4 give the flavor:

This metaphor [God's mercy is great above the heavens] very naturally signifies in the general a superlative inexpressible & Incomprehensible Greatness & Excellency of the mercy of G. the Expanse of the Heavens is the Greatest & most Extensive thing that we have in view or that we have any notice of by our senses & the height thereof is Immeasurable & Inconceivable

In G. Infinite Greatness & Infinite Goodness & mercy are joined together the mercy of G. is like a sea or like a deluge noahs flood was so great that it was above the tops of the mountains but the mercy that is in the Heart of G. is greater it is above the heavens and overtops our sins that are like great mountains that are grown up to Heaven

The remarkable thing is that it is as clear as it is, and it is that clear because of the inexorable forward movement of the agglutinative syntax. The formula is essentially that of the ancient storyteller: "and then, and then, and then," although other elements make the total impression far from simple. In this manner of expression, the listeners are given the impression of being led, ever outward and onward, from the point of departure to some unrevealed destination. Or, if one thinks of the auditory as receiving facts, ideas, and experiences, the impression of weight and massiveness is enhanced by the sustained sequence of coordinated units of thought. It is a most simple, yet forceful syntax.

Beyond the fundamental level of coordination, Edwards employs parallelism for various rhetorical effects. One of the more effective devices is the doublet, a pair of words, roughly synonymous, which connotatively supplement each other and, together, enhance a point

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with the emphasis of concise parallelism. A fine example of the technique occurs in "The Nakedness of Job":

We have an instance in this chapter of one of the greatest men in the world, in the most prosperous worldly estate and condition, brought to be externally one of the meanest of men… a most remarkable instance of the vanity of worldly honors, riches and prosperity. How soon is it gone and lost; how many hundred, yea, thousands of accidents may deprive the most prosperous of all in a little time, and make him most miserable and forlorn?

In addition to emphasizing the point indicated by each doublet, the pairs of words parallel the other pairs, of course, and thus call attention to a pattern of thought: worldly condition-riches-loss-misery.

Edwards frequently employs a more insistent, reduplicative parallelism when he wishes to emphasize a major point, the simple structure enabling him to put forward the maximum number of ideas per word. In Luke 17:9, he insists that God is under no obligation to man, and that "obedience and labors and prayers and tears" do not compromise God's essential freedom:

This [that God is under no obligation] is certainly plain reason, and if it be, then God don't owe salvation, nor pity, nor pardon, nor the answer of prayers, nor the mitigation of punishment, nor converting, nor assisting grace for any thing that we do in religion, because as we have showed already, he owes us nothing at all, not the least benefit anyway.

With incantatory power, the succession of negations represents so many slamming doors to those who are looking for an easy way out. A comparable use of parallelism occurs in "A Warning to Professors," involving a long series of similarly structured queries, though here the effect is that of a probing surgeon's knife. Works, Worcester rev. ed., 4, 535. In both examples, however, the essential effect of the parallelism is to advance the argument at such a rate that the auditor is fully occupied in taking it in, and has little pause to rationalize or reply. It is a rhetoric of brute power.

There is, in all the examples cited above, a kind of rhythmic progression, and all of Edwards' parallel constructions give some sense of crescendo—if only through the impression of rapidly increasing

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mass. Some of his most dramatic perorations, however, are achieved through the combination of parallelism and the periodic sentence structure, as in 2 Kings 7:3–4.

If you are so wicked that you are like a dead man; yea, if you are so wicked that you are not only dead, but rotten; yea, if you have been dead so long that your bones are dried, yet God can bring you up out of your grave and bring you into the land of Israel.

The gradually altered idea, plus the repeated construction, make this a kind of "incremental parallelism." Such magniloquence is generally reserved for the conclusion of a head or sermon, though less emphatic variants of the pattern, often involving several sentences, may be found whenever Edwards is making a summary within his argument.

Other complex forms of parallelism are employed by Edwards to facilitate juxtaposition, antithesis, and contrast of ideas. Among these is the sustained juxtaposition of two antithetical alternatives, as illustrated in "The Unreasonableness of Indetermination in Religion. "Works, Worcester rev. ed., 4, 342.

And there are but two states in this world, a state of sin, and a state of holiness, a natural state, and a converted state.…

There are but two masters, to one of which we must be reputed the servants, Baal and Jehovah, God and mammon.

There are but two competitors for the possession of us, Christ and the devil.

There are but two paths, in one of which you are to travel, either in the strait and narrow way which leadeth unto life, or the broad way which leadeth unto destruction.

The sheer weight of the rhetoric and the vivid simplicity of statement make a passage such as this much more powerful than one with a more varied structure. Edwards frequently employs this formula, particularly when concluding a phase of his argument. An expanded version of this juxtaposition through parallelism appears in the "dialogue" passages, the traditional Objection-Answer formula as improved through Edwards' keen sense of verisimilitude and his dramatic flair. One of the better instances of this technique occurs in "Great Guilt No Obstacle to the Pardon of the Returning Sinner," where the minister appears carrying on a realistic debate with an imaginary sinner. Works, Worcester rev. ed., 4, 426–28.

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Whether in the briefer or more expanded form, the movement of this type of parallelism strongly suggests the "characteristically Hebrew" Pendulum Figure that is found throughout the Bible. For a discussion of the Pendulum Figure and its importance as a mode of Hebrew thought and expression, see Moulton, pp. 58–59, et passim. 

[https://archive.org/details/literarystudyofb00mouliala/page/58/mode/2up]

The figure in Edwards' sermons sets up the same rhythms of thought and emotion as are found in the Bible. Moreover, one can easily see in the sustained or expanded parallelism a significant source of structure. Already, in passages from Job 18:15 (p. 215), Daniel 4:35 (p. 238), and Ecclesiastes 11:2 (pp. 241–42), statements have been presented that reiterate the opening idea more or less in parallel form at the conclusion, making an envelope figure which structures the passage as a unit. The significance of the Envelope Figure in the Bible is discussed in Moulton, pp. 56–58, 543. Between the sustained parallelism and envelope figures, a prime source of internal structure in Edwards' prose is defined.

[Note: Moulton describes chiasmus on p. 56 and gives an example, but doesn't use that term.

https://archive.org/details/literarystudyofb00mouliala/page/56/mode/2up]

Syntactical parallelism, whether simple or complex, brief or sustained, is simply the outward form of a parallelism of ideas, for Edwards, again following the tradition of the Bible, thought in terms of parallels: God and man, heaven and hell, salvation and damnation, conversion and reprobation, and on and on. For every concept, there is its parallel: God the king of the universe, man the king of the world; heaven the city of light, hell the city of darkness; salvation the end of the true saints, damnation the end of the unregenerate, and so forth. Moreover, between the extremes cited here, there are hierarchies of parallels between the Scripture and life, the divine and the mundane, Christ and the church, and so on to men and worms, or possibly spiders. 

Thus the structures of parallelism in Edwards' sermons are more than rhetorical structures for his theological arguments; the rhetorical gesture of parallelism is itself a theological argument. "Christ, the Light of the World" presents a veritable symphony of parallelism—simple and complex, brief and sustained—as well as a synthesis of most of the techniques and devices that have been discussed thus far in this chapter. 

In his lyrical celebration of Christ, Edwards harmonizes the idiom of the Scripture, images, similes, metaphors, types, repetition, and parallelism in an exuberant style characteristic of the sermons of the twenties. The doctrine of this sermon is, "Jesus Christ is the light of the world;" I quote from the third Observation under the second Proposition of the Doctrine.

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Third. And lastly, light is of a quickening, reviving, and refreshing nature. It revives one that hath been long in darkness again to behold the light; so Christ Jesus revives the souls that come unto him by faith. Here you may run a parallel between the sun and Jesus Christ, the Sun of Righteousness.

1. As the sun, when it rises, all things are thereby revived and awakened out of sleep and silence, so when Jesus Christ shines into the souls of men, they are revived out of their deep and dead sleep of sin. When the sun arises, the world that before was all still and silent, and seemed to be dead, now is revived and raised up by the light thereof, and all things begin to stir and move: things seem to have new life put into them; man rises out of his sleep and sets about his business; the husbandman goeth forth to his labor, the beasts come out of their dens, the birds begin to sing and chant forth their notes, and the world is again put into motion. So it is in spiritual matters with respect to Christ. Before he shines into men's souls, they are dead and dull in a deep sleep, are not diligent at their work, but lie still and sleep and do nothing respecting their souls. All their affections are dead, dull and lifeless; their understandings are darkened with the dark shades of spiritual night, and there is nothing but spiritual sleep and death in their souls.

But when Christ arises upon them, then all things begin to revive, the will and affections begin to move, and they set about the work they have to do. They are now awakened out of their sleep: whereas they were still before, now they begin to be diligent and industrious; whereas they were silent before, now they begin to sing forth God's praises. Their graces now begin to be put into exercise, as flowers send forth a fragrancy when the sun shines upon them.

2. As the sun by his returning influences causes clouds and storms and cold to fly before it, so doth Jesus Christ, the cold, tempests, and clouds of the soul. In the winter season, the heavens are frequently overcast with clouds that hide the pleasing light of the sun; the air is disturbed with winds, storms and tempests, and all things are chilled with frost and cold. The rivers and streams are shut up with ice, the earth is covered with snow, and all things look dreadful, but when the sun returns with its warming influences, the heavens are cleared of dark clouds and the air stilled from tempests, the ice and snow and cold are fled. So the souls

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of men in their natural state are like winter, perpetually disturbed with the storms of lust and vice, and a raging conscience; their souls are all beclouded with sin and spiritual darkness. But when Christ comes with his warming influences, things are far otherwise: their minds are calm and serene, warmed with holiness and religion, and the clear sunshine of spiritual comfort.

3. As when the sun returns in the spring, the frozen earth is opened, mollified and softened, so by the beams of the Sun of Righteousness the stony, rocky, adamantine hearts of men are thawed, mellowed, and softened, and made fit to receive the seeds of grace. In the winter, the face of the earth is closed and shut up as a stone, unfit for any thing to be sown in it, but is loosened in the spring by the warm beams of the sun; so [is] the heart in its natural state frozen and like the stony ground, so that the seeds of God's Word take no rooting in it, but it is as if we should cast seed upon the bare rock. But when Christ melts the heart by shining upon it, the seed then sinks into it and takes root and begins to germinate and spring forth.

4. As the sun revives the plants and trees and fruits of the earth, so Christ Jesus by his spiritual light revives the soul and causes it to bring forth fruit. In the winter, the trees are stripped of their leaves and fruit, and stand naked, cease growing, and seem to be dead; the grass and herbs are killed, and all things have the appearance of death upon them. But when the sun returns, then all things have the appearance of a resurrection: things revive again, the trees and fields put on their green livery and begin to bud forth, anew, and flourish and grow. The grass and herbs begin to peep forth out of the ground, and all things look green and flourishing: the fields, meadows, and woods seem to rejoice, and the birds sing a welcome to the returning spring. The fields and trees are adorned with beautiful and fragrant flowers.

Just such an alteration is made in the soul at conversion by Jesus Christ, only far more glorious:

My beloved spake, and said unto me, Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away. For, lo, the winter is past, the rain is over and gone; the flowers appear on the earth; the time of the singing of birds is come, and the voice of the turtle is heard in our land; the fig tree putteth forth her green figs, and the vines with the tender grape give a good smell. Arise, my love, my fair one, and come away (Canticles 2:10–13).

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In conversion, graces do spring forth in the soul which are like the sweet flowers that adorn the face of the earth in the spring, and like the sweet melody of singing birds. The soul of one upon whom Christ has shined differs as much from the souls of the wicked as the earth, beautified with the vernal sunbeams, and, when covered with ice and snow, and vexed with storms in the dead of winter.

To chronicle the varieties of parallelism, alone, in this excerpt—leaving out the synthetic scriptural idiom; the nature imagery from the Connecticut Valley; the similes, metaphors, and symbols; the puns, alliteration, and assonance—would constitute a kind of academic parlor game. Nevertheless, taken as a total impression, the passage offers the prepared reader an authentic representation of the mind and rhetorical manner of the young preacher. 

Here is his great theme, his central imagery, and his characteristic diction—before the "chastisement of the trope," the years of refining and disciplining metaphors in "Shadows," and the acquisition of that cool self-possession and incisive precision which mark the years of his stylistic mastery. Lacking the focus of an adequate tonic word, or the centripetal cohesion of philosophically systematized imagery, the passage seems to explode in all directions, the constraints of the sermon's numbered divisions and the power of the central metaphor notwithstanding. But it is a joyous, effervescent explosion, and in its final configuration depicts a mind reveling in the very plenitude of parallels (analogies) between the Word and life, the Deity and nature, and finally, its own ideas and its sensations. This is the mind and the style that underlay all the homiletical experiments and developments in Edwards' subsequent career.

In concluding this study of the primary rhetorical and literary resources of Edwards' sermons, it is necessary to consider three techniques which, while not of such importance as those already discussed, are nevertheless worthy of consideration: Edwards' use of the a fortiori construction, his "rhetoric of logic," and his manipulation of point of view.

The a fortiori or "all the more reason" construction—originally indicating increasing necessity in a logical proof—is employed by Edwards as his primary supplement to simile and metaphor in developing analogical bridges between the seen and the unseen, or in suggesting the plausible route between the present state of sensation

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and a different state at some point in the future. The apparent reason for Edwards' wanting to supplement metaphors and similitudes is that they have a certain static or self-contained quality that might prevent the less imaginative members of his congregation from having a truly sensible impression of them. 

To say that God in heaven is "like the sun" supplies a vivid image, but it leaves a considerable amount of the imaginative responsibility of interpretation to the auditory, and some might not be able to meet the challenge. Moreover, because of his adherence to Scripture precedent and the use of familiar images in forming his metaphors, there was always the danger that a similitude would lose its impact through overuse.

Thus, in an effort to "open up" the metaphor and give it freshness, Edwards dramatizes the process of the mind's apprehension and interpretation of it through the "what is more" formula.

If the natural sun of this lower world be so bright and glorious, how glorious is the sun of the heavenly world, in comparison of which this world is but a dark dungeon? And if the very inhabitants that are enlightened there by the rays of Christ's glory do themselves shine as the sun, how brightly then does he shine who is a sun to them, and does as much exceed them in glory as the sun exceeds our bodies? (Psalms 24:7–10.)

In the same way, Edwards labored to bring new life into the notoriously dead metaphors related to the brevity of life and the nature of eternal punishment.

Consider that if you do go to hell, hell is certainly near. How near, you can't tell, but in the general that it is near you may be certain. If you should live fifty years longer, how soon will they be gone! How soon is the revolution of the year finished, and how soon are fifty of them numbered! It would terrify you if you knew you was to burn at the stake, or [be] roasted to death by the Indians fifty years hence. It would appear near to you; you would be ready to count the months and the days. But what is that to the being cast into hell, into that place of extreme torment that we have been telling you of, at the end of fifty years?

Consider how dreadful it will be to suffer such an extremity forever. It is dreadful beyond expression to suffer it half an hour—the misery, the tribulation, and anguish that is endured. Do therefore but consider what it would be to suffer day after

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day, to have no rest day nor night for thousands, for millions, of years; yea, forever and ever.

 They will despair of ever being delivered; that despair will double their torment, yea, more than double it. If a person had the headache or toothache, or any other such pain, and knew he was to have it all his lifetime, and not have a moment's rest, it would more than double the affliction; it would magnify it exceedingly. How much more are pains increased when the subject of them knows he shall endure them to all eternity. If a person knew they were to endure a pain all his lifetime, that would not be despair because there is an end, but there is utter despair accompanies the torments of the damned. (Luke 16:24.)

Filling the mind with particulars, and controlling the process of imagined sensation, Edwards guides his audience inexorably along the narrow way from the "reality of here" to the "reality of there." Though tropes and symbolism might indicate the way and illumine the goal, only the painstaking and reiterative a fortiori could drive a lazy or reluctant imagination to the goal, dramatizing the mind's quest for a sensible knowledge of spiritual truth and reality in the process.

Indeed, when one considers many of Edwards' series of parallel constructions, and particularly his "lists," there is often more than a suggestion of the upward (or downward) movement of the a fortiori construction: "the meanest object of their lusts is set higher than [God]. He has less respect shown him than a few shillings, or than a morsel of meat, or a draught of strong drink, or a little brutish pleasure with a harlot" (Malachi 1:8). 

In this way, Edwards intensifies the rhetorical and ideational rhythms of his prose, keeping a highly reiterative style free of dull, dead levels. Obvious and subtle by turns, this theoretically simple device fulfills a variety of essential tasks in Edwards' writings. For a fine example of variations on a fortiori, see the sermon on Luke 22:44 printed in Dwight, Works, 8, 159–94 (particularly the concluding two or three pages).

The "rhetoric of logic" sounds self-contradictory since rhetoric and logic are conventionally differentiated as disciplines. It should be observed, however, that classic homiletical manuals such as William Chappell's The Preacher, or the Art and Method of Preaching (London, 1656) effectively conflate rhetoric and logic in presenting student preachers with strategies of argument. Nor do I contend that logic is anything but logic. What I would insist, however, is that Edwards' mastery of deductive logic, and his various uses of it

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in the sermons, have quite notable rhetorical consequences. Edwards himself was never immune to the aesthetic qualities of logic:

One reason why at first, before I knew other logic, I used to be mightily pleased with the study of the old logic, was because it was very pleasant to see my thoughts, that before lay in my mind jumbled without any distinction, ranged into order…"The Mind," Works, 6, 345.

And there is no evidence that this aesthetic appreciation of logic, or the old joy in playing with it, departed when Edwards switched to the newer, more "useful" logic. For that matter, JE's near obsession with parallels, juxtapositions, images and shadows, types and antitypes, and so forth, suggests that his mind always bore an impression of the early Ramean stamp. Indeed, most of his sermons, including the imprecatory ones, contain at least a few passages of fine logical argumentation, and many sermons contain displays of logical brilliance that do not always seem to be mere utilitarian tools.

From the rhetorical point of view, Edwards' logical mastery is that which enabled him to give adequate form to passages of massed images and heavily particularized sensations, perceptions, and conceptions. Moreover, it enabled him to keep his rhetorical balance when weaving a network of parallels and juxtapositions between the divine and mundane worlds. All in all, Edwards' peculiar density of style would be little more than a massing of particulars were it not for the remarkable logical discipline of his analytic imagination.

In the final analysis, "logic is logic," and perhaps Edwards' logic is rhetorically most impressive when it is presented as logic, specifically, in the "rational proof" of the Doctrine where he argues not only a positive proof, but first eliminates alternatives in a negative proof. In many such negative-to-positive proofs, Edwards moves grandly through the whole range of evident possibilities until the espoused principle is left standing alone and dominant.

A representative example would be the first proposition of the Doctrine in A Divine and Supernatural Light, Works, Worcester rev. ed., 4, 439–43. The dramatic gesture of such logic—suggesting a metaphysical plow that moves slowly and methodically, yet inexorably and effortlessly to the goal, clearing away all obstacles in its passage—establishes a most commanding "presence" for the preacher, however humble his professions or general tone. Edwards, as a connoisseur of logic, would not be the last to appreciate the power and beauty, or the purely aesthetic qualities, of the grand syllogistic gesture.

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With so much of every sermon being formal, symmetrical, and systematic, it seems that Edwards felt the need for a maverick element, an implement of shock and surprise. He found such a device in the manipulation of the point of view. As indicated by the personal pronouns used, the point of view in the "average" Edwards sermon has certain basic patterns. Thus, in the Opening of the Text, the unity of the minister and congregation is emphasized by references to the first person plural: "we are told"; "in this passage the apostle says (to us)," and so forth. 

In the Doctrine, and sometimes in the Application, references to the saved and the damned are usually in the third person, emphasizing their status as objects of contemplation by the group comprising the preacher and congregation: "they glorify God," or "they writhe in pain," as the case may be. 

In the Application, however, and particularly in the uses of exhortation, the point of view is radically altered by shifting to the second person. The preacher separates himself from the congregation, as if leaving them to stand alone under the light of the Word: "if you do not, you will surely suffer"; "[you] come to the waiting arms," and so on.

Sometimes, Edwards not only isolates the congregation before God, but calls attention to their standing in the world-suggesting that he knew well which was probably the more immediate concern of a Yankee congregation. For instance, in a sermon (Nehemiah 2:20; 1738) preached not long before the publication of A Faithful Narrative in Boston, he suddenly turns the klieg light of public opinion upon his people in the Use of Self-examination:

… There has a great deal been done among us at one time or other since the like remarkable pouring out of the Spirit of God upon us to pull down the city of God. God has set us high as a city set upon an hill and very great has been the fame of us throughout this land, and also in the other England. Great notice has been taken of the great work that was here wrought and the profession we make; the account that was sent over to London of it has already had two impressions there. The first impression was soon dispensed and it has been printed there a second time, and they have lately sent over to enquire how things are amongst us now.

And this work has often been spoken of in pulpits abroad; it has been twice mentioned in election sermons in Boston that were, as it were, preached before the whole country.

There are congregations I have been informed of where the

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whole account as printed in London has been read at length, and you know persons from time to time have come hither to see what remaining fruits there are of this work. And the narrative that has been twice printed in London is now printing again in Boston.

Was there ever a town in New England so much set up to public view in religious aspects—as a city that can't be hid—and was there ever a town in the country on whose holy and Christian conversation, honor and influence of religion did so much depend, and whose good behavior would tend so much to build up the city of God, and that ill behavior tend so much to pull it down? But have there not been many things amongst us that have tended to pull it down?

Suddenly, his congregation is thrust before the tribunal of the world and history. One can imagine the turning of heads.

Particularly in imprecatory sermons, Edwards may at any moment alter the point of view, giving the shock of a sudden new perspective. Thus, he may develop an image, say, of a "muck worm," crawling and slithering through the barnyard, apt to be trodden under foot at any moment—all in all a contemptible object—in a third person (objective) narration. 

Just as the congregation has become fascinated in contemplating the despicable object from the point of view of an attentive human observer, Edwards is likely to assert, "you are that miserable worm!" and then continue the development of the image, but from the worm's point of view, enumerating in detail the heat and stench of the worm's surroundings, the threatening hooves overhead, and so forth. 

In the same way, Edwards is fond of first delineating experiences and ideas from the human point of view, and then—with little or no transition—suddenly re-envisioning them from a divine point of view. The combinations and permutations of the manipulated point of view yield effects ranging from the thrill of Miltonic cosmic perspectives to vertiginous transits in time and space, from the sense of liberation to the sense of unbearable confinement and oppression. 

Certainly, as it is sometimes employed, the manipulated point of view seems to constitute the necessary element of madness in Edwards' method.


http://edwards.yale.edu/archive?path=aHR0cDovL2Vkd2FyZHMueWFsZS5lZHUvY2dpLWJpbi9uZXdwaGlsby9nZXRvYmplY3QucGw/Yy45OjMud2plby43MDgzNzQuNzA4Mzc4LjcwODM4Mg== 

Hebrew repetitions for emphasis

From the 1808 edition of President Edwards' works:


As to that objection which some have made, that the phrase, dying thou shalt die, is several times used in the Books of Moses, to signify temporal death, it can be of no force: For it has been shewn already, that the same phrase is sometimes used in Scripture to signify eternal death, in instances much more parallel with this. 

But indeed nothing can be certainly argued concerning the nature of the thing intended, from its being expressed in such a manner. For it is evident that such repetitions of a word in the Hebrew language, are no more than an emphasis upon a word in the more modern languages, to signify the great degree of a thing, the importance of it, or the certainty of it, etc. 

When we would signify and impress these, we commonly put an emphasis on our words: instead of this, the Hebrews, when they would express a thing strongly, repeated or doubled the word, the more to impress the mind of the hearer; as may be plain to everyone in the least conversant with the Hebrew Bible. 

The repetition in the threatening to Adam, therefore only implies the solemnity, and importance of the threatening. But God may denounce either eternal or temporal death with peremptoriness and solemnity, and nothing can certainly be inferred concerning the nature of the thing threatened, because it is threatened with emphasis, more than this, that the threatening is much to be regarded. 

Though it be true, that it might in an especial manner be expected that a threatening of eternal death, would be denounced with great emphasis, such a threatening being infinitely important, and to be regarded above all others.


Kindle at 48117

Monday, January 9, 2023

God's providence is one work

 

'Tis with God's work of providence as it is with his work of creation: 'tis but one work. The events of providence ben't so many distinct independent works of providence, but they are rather so many different parts of one work of providence: 'tis all one work, one regular scheme. 

God's works of providence ben't disunited and jumbled, without connection or dependence. 

But all are united, just as the several parts of one building: there are many stones, many pieces of timber, but all are so joined and fitly framed together that8 they make but one building. They have all but one foundation, and are united at last in one topstone.

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God's providence may not unfitly be compared to a large and long river, having innumerable branches beginning in different regions, and at a great distance one from another, and all conspiring to one common issue. 

After their very diverse and contrary courses which they hold for a while, yet all gathering more and more together the nearer they come to their common end, and all at length discharging themselves at one mouth into the same ocean. The different streams of this river are ready to look like mere jumble and confusion to us because of the limitedness of our sight, whereby we can't see from one branch to another and can't see the whole at once, so as to see how all are united in one. 

A man that sees but one or two streams at a time can't tell what their course tends to. Their course seems very crooked, and the different streams seem to run for a9 while different and contrary ways. 

And if we view things at a distance, there seem to be innumerable obstacles and impediments in the way to hinder their ever uniting and coming to the ocean, as rocks and mountains and the like. But yet if we trace them they all unite at last and all come to the same issue, disgorging themselves in one into the same great ocean. 

Not one of all the streams fail of coming hither at last.




Monday, January 2, 2023

New Year's Resolutions


From the 1808 edition of The Works of President Edwards, Volume 1, which was on sale in the Palmyra bookshop that Joseph Smith frequented. Several of Edwards' resolutions were omitted from the 1808 edition, as indicated below.

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Mr. Edwards was too well acquainted with human weakness and frailty, where the intention is most sincere, to enter on any resolutions rashly. He therefore looked to God for aid, who alone can afford success in the use of any means. This he places at the head of all his other important rules, that his dependence was on grace, while he frequently recurred to a serious perusal of them... “Being sensible that I am unable to do any thing without God’s help, I do humbly intreat him by his grace to enable me to keep these resolutions so far as they are agreeable to his will, for Christ’s sake." He then adds:-- 

Remember to read over these resolutions once a week.

1. Resolved, That I will do whatsoever I think to be most to the glory of God, and my own good, profit, and pleasure, on the whole; without any consideration of the time, whether now, or never so many myriads of ages hence; to do whatever I think to be my duty, and most for the good and advantage of mankind in general whatever difficulties I meet with, how many and how great soever.

2. Resolved, To be continually endeavouring to find out some new contrivance and invention to promote the forementioned things.

[omitted in 1808 edition] 3. Resolved, If ever I shall fall and grow dull, so as to neglect to keep any part of these Resolutions, to repent of all I can remember, when I come to myself again.

4. Resolved, Never to do, be or suffer, any manner of thing in soul or body, less or more, but what tends to the glory of God.

5. Resolved, Never to lose one moment of time, but to improve it in the most profitable way I possibly can.

6. Resolved, To live with all my might, while I do live.

7. Resolved, Never to do any thing, which I should be afraid to do if it were the last hour of my life.

[omitted in 1808 edition] 8. Resolved, To act, in all respects, both speaking and doing, as if nobody had been so vile as I, and as if I had committed the same sins, or had the same infirmities or failings, as others; and that I will let the knowledge of their failings promote nothing but shame in myself, and prove only an occasion of my confessing my own sins and misery to God. Vid. July 30.

9. Resolved, To think much, on all occasions, of my dying, and of the common circumstances which attend death.

[omitted in 1808 edition] 10. Resolved, when I feel pain, to think of the pains of martyrdom, and of hell.

11. Resolved, When I think of any theorem in divinity to be solved, immediately to do what I can towards solving it, if circumstances do not hinder.xxi

[omitted in 1808 edition] 12. Resolved, If I take delight in it as a gratification of pride, or vanity, or on any such account, immediately to throw it by.

13. Resolved, To be endeavouring to find out fit objects of liberality and charity.

14. Resolved, Never to do any thing out of revenge.

15. Resolved, Never to suffer the least motions of anger towards irrational beings.

[omitted in 1808 edition] 16. Resolved, Never to speak evil of any one, so that it shall tend to his dishonour, more or less, upon no account except for some real good.

17. Resolved, That I will live so, as I shall wish I had done when I come to die.

18. Resolved, To live so, at all times, as I think is best in my most devout frames, and when I have the clearest notions of the things of the gospel, and another world.

19. Resolved, Never to do any thing, which I should be afraid to do, if I expected it would not be above an hour before I should hear the last trump.

20. Resolved, To maintain the strictest temperance in eating and drinking.

21. Resolved, Never to do any thing, which if I should see in another, I should count a just occasion to despise him for, or to think any way the more meanly of him.

[omitted in 1808 edition]22. Resolved, To endeavour to obtain for myself as much happiness in the other world as I possibly can, with all the power, might, vigour, and vehemence, yea violence, I am capable of, or can bring myself to exert, in any way that can be thought of.

[omitted in 1808 edition]23. Resolved, Frequently to take some deliberate action, which seems most unlikely to be done, for the glory of God, and trace it back to the original intention, designs, and ends of it; and if I find it not to be for God’s glory, to repute it as a breach of the fourth Resolution.

24. Resolved, Whenever I do any conspicuously evil action, to trace it back, till I come to the original cause; and then, both carefully endeavour to do so no more, and to fight and pray with all my might against the original of it.

[omitted in 1808 edition]25. Resolved, To examine carefully and constantly, what that one thing in me is, which causes me in the least to doubt of the love of God; and so direct all my forces against it.

[omitted in 1808 edition]26. Resolved, To cast away such things as I find do abate my assurance.

[omitted in 1808 edition]27. Resolved, Never wilfully to omit any thing, except the omission be for the glory of God; and frequently to examine my omissions.

28. Resolved, To study the Scriptures so steadily, constantly, and frequently, as that I may find, and plainly perceive, myself to grow in the knowledge of the same.

[omitted in 1808 edition]29. Resolved, Never to count that a prayer, nor to let that pass as a prayer, nor that as a petition of a prayer, which is so made, that I cannot hope that God will answer it; nor that as a confession which I cannot hope God will accept.

30. Resolved, To strive every week to be brought higher in religion, and to a higher exercise of grace, than I was the week before.

[omitted in 1808 edition]31. Resolved, Never to say any thing at all against any body, but when it is perfectly agreeable to the highest degree of christian honour, and of love to mankind, agreeable to the lowest humility, and sense of my own faults and failings, and agreeable to the golden rule; often, when I have said any thing against any one, to bring it to, and try it strictly by, the test of this Resolution.

32. Resolved, To be strictly and firmly faithful to my trust, that that, in Prov. xx. 6. ‘A faithful man, who can find?’ may not be partly fulfilled in me.

33. Resolved, To do always what I can towards making, maintaining, and preserving peace, when it can be done without an overbalancing detriment in other respects. Dec. 26, 1722.

34. Resolved, In narrations, never to speak any thing but the pure and simple verity.

[omitted in 1808 edition]35. Resolved, Whenever I so much question whether I have done my duty, as that my quiet and calm is thereby disturbed, to set it down, and also how the question was resolved. Dec. 18, 1722.

36. Resolved, Never to speak evil of any, except I have some particular good call to it. Dec. 19, 1722.

37. Resolved, To inquire every night, as I am going to bed, wherein I have been negligent,—what sin I have committed,—and wherein I have denied myself;—also, at the end of every week, month, and year. Dec. 22 and 26, 1722.

38. Resolved, Never to utter any thing that is sportive, or matter of laughter, on a Lord’s day. Sabbath evening, Dec. 23, 1722.

39. Resolved, Never to do any thing, of which I so much question the lawfulness, as that I intend, at the same time, to consider and examine afterwards, whether it be lawful or not; unless I as much question the lawfulness of the omission.

[omitted in 1808 edition]40. Resolved, To inquire every night before I go to bed, whether I have acted in the best way I possibly could, with respect to eating and drinking. Jan. 7, 1723.

41. Resolved, to ask myself, at the end of every day, week, month, and year, wherein I could possibly, in any respect, have done better. Jan. 11, 1723.

42. Resolved, Frequently to renew the dedication of myself to God, which was made at my baptism, which I solemnly renewed when I was received into the communion of the church, and which I have solemnly re-made this 12th day of January, 1723.

43. Resolved, Never, henceforward, till I die, to act as if I were any way my own, but entirely and altogether God’s; agreeably to what is to be found in Saturday, Jan. 12th. Jan. 12, 1723.

[omitted in 1808 edition]44. Resolved, That no other end but religion shall have any influence at all on any of my actions; and that no action shall be, in the least circumstance, any otherwise than the religious end will carry it. Jan. 12, 1723.

[omitted in 1808 edition]45. Resolved, Never to allow any pleasure or grief, joy or sorrow, nor any affection at all, nor any degree of affection, nor any circumstance relating to it, but what helps religion. Jan. 12 and 13, 1723.

46. Resolved, Never to allow the least measure of any fretting or uneasiness at my father or mother. Resolved, to suffer no effects of it, so much as in the least alteration of speech, or motion of my eye; and to be especially careful of it with respect to any of our family.

47. Resolved, To endeavour, to my utmost, to deny whatever is not most agreeable to a good and universally sweet and benevolent, quiet, peaceable, contented and easy, compassionate and generous, humble and meek, submissive and obliging, diligent and industrious, charitable and even, patient, moderate, forgiving, and sincere, temper; and to do, at all times, what such a temper would xxiilead me to; and to examine strictly, at the end of every week, whether I have so done. Sabbath morning, May 5, 1723.

48. Resolved, Constantly, with the utmost niceness and diligence, and the strictest scrutiny, to be looking into the state of my soul, that I may know whether I have truly an interest in Christ or not; that when I come to die, I may not have any negligence respecting this to repent of. May 26, 1723.

[omitted in 1808 edition]49. Resolved, That this never shall be, if I can help it.

50. Resolved, That I will act so, as I think I shall judge would have been best, and most prudent, when I come into the future world. July 5, 1723.

51. Resolved, That I will act so, in every respect, as I think I shall wish I had done, if I should at last be damned. July 8, 1723.

52. I frequently hear persons in old age say how they would live, if they were to live their lives over again: Resolved, That I will live just so as I can think I shall wish I had done, supposing I live to old age. July 8, 1723.

[omitted in 1808 edition]53. Resolved, To improve every opportunity, when I am in the best and happiest frame of mind, to cast and venture my soul on the Lord Jesus Christ, to trust and confide in him, and consecrate myself wholly to him; that from this I may have assurance of my safety, knowing that I confide in my Redeemer. July 8, 1723.

54. Resolved, Whenever I hear anything spoken in commendation of any person, if I think it would be praiseworthy in me, that I will endeavour to imitate it. July 8, 1723.

55. Resolved, To endeavour, to my utmost, so to act, as I can think I should do, if I had already seen the happiness of heaven and hell torments. July 8, 1723.

56. Resolved, Never to give over, nor in the least to slacken, my fight with my corruptions, however unsuccessful I may be.

57. Resolved, When I fear misfortunes and adversity, to examine whether I have done my duty, and resolve to do it and let the event be just as Providence orders it. I will, as far as I can, be concerned about nothing but my duty and my sin. June 9, and July 13, 1723.

[omitted in 1808 edition]58. Resolved, Not only to refrain from an air of dislike, fretfulness, and anger in conversation, but to exhibit an air of love, cheerfulness, and benignity. May 27, and July 13, 1723.

[omitted in 1808 edition]59. Resolved, When I am most conscious of provocations to ill nature and anger, that I will strive most to feel and act good-naturedly; yea, at such times, to manifest good nature, though I think that in other respects it would be disadvantageous, and so as would be imprudent at other times. May 12, July 11, and July 13.

[omitted in 1808 edition]60. Resolved, Whenever my feelings begin to appear in the least out of order, when I am conscious of the least uneasiness within, or the least irregularity without, I will then subject myself to the strictest examination. July 4 and 13, 1723.

[omitted in 1808 edition]61. Resolved, That I will not give way to that listlessness which I find unbends and relaxes my mind from being fully and fixedly set on religion, whatever excuse I may have for it—that what my listlessness inclines me to do, is best to be done, &c. May 21, and July 13, 1723.

62. Resolved, Never to do any thing but my duty, and then, according to Eph. vi. 6-8. to do it willingly and cheerfully, as unto the Lord, and not to man: knowing that whatever good thing any man doth, the same shall be receive of the Lord. June 25, and July 13, 1723.

[omitted in 1808 edition]63. On the supposition, that there never was to be but one individual in the world, at any one time, who was properly a complete Christian, in all respects of a right stamp, having Christianity always shining in its true lustre, and appearing excellent and lovely, from whatever part and under whatever character viewed: Resolved, To act just as I would do, if I strove with all my might to be that one, who should live in my time. Jan. 14, and July 13, 1723.

[omitted in 1808 edition]64. Resolved, When I find those ”groanings which cannot be uttered,“ of which the apostle speaks, and those ”breathings of soul for the longing it hath,” of which the psalmist speaks, Psalm cxix. 20. that I will promote them to the utmost of my power; and that I will not be weary of earnestly endeavouring to vent my desires, nor of the repetitions of such earnestness. July 23, and Aug. 10, 1723.

65. Resolved, Very much to exercise myself in this, all my life long, viz. with the greatest openness of which I am capable, to declare my ways to God, and lay open my soul to him, all my sins, temptations, difficulties, sorrows, fears, hopes, desires, and every thing, and every circumstance, according to Dr. Manton’s Sermon on the 119th Psalm,. July 26, and Aug. 10, 1723.

[omitted in 1808 edition]66. Resolved, That I will endeavour always to keep a benign aspect, and air of acting and speaking, in all places, and in all companies, except it should so happen that duty requires otherwise.

67. Resolved, After afflictions, to inquire, what I am the better for them; what good I have got by them; and, what I might have got by them.

[omitted in 1808 edition]68. Resolved, To confess frankly to myself, all that which I find in myself, either infirmity or sin; and, if it be what concerns religion, also to confess the whole case to God, and implore needed help. July 23, and August 10, 1723.

[omitted in 1808 edition]69. Resolved, Always to do that, which I shall wish I had done when I see others do it. Aug. 11, 1723.

[omitted in 1808 edition]70. Let there be something of benevolence in all that I speak. Aug. 17, 1723.”


Adapted from https://ccel.org/ccel/edwards/works1/works1.i.iii.html, which edited the 1808 edition.