Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God

Front Cover
Bridge Logos Foundation, 2003 - Religion - 326 pages
Time after time, when Jonathan Edwards read his sermon "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God," both sinners and sinning saints in his audience would weep, cry out, fall down in repentance, and plead for God's forgiveness.

For more than two centuries, Jonathan Edwards' messages have brought conversion, hope, and spiritual awakening to thousands of Christians.

Updated and revised, these eleven classic messages will bring a fresh awakening to today's Christians who are seeking the deeper things of God. If that is the hunger of your heart, then this book is for you.
 

Contents

Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God
37
The Final Judgment or The World Judged Righteously by Jesus Christ
57
Christians A Chosen Generation a Royal Priesthood A Holy Nation A Peculiar People A Compilation of Sermons
101
God the Best Portion of the Christian
137
Jesus Christ The Same Yesterday Today And Forever
151
The Excellency of Christ
173
The Preciousness of Time and the Importance of Redeeming It
217
Justification By Faith Alone Dated November 1734 Prepared from two sermons
235
Index of Topics
355
Bibliography
357
Copyright

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About the author (2003)

Born in East Windsor, Connecticut, in 1703, Edwards was the only son of the Reverend Timothy Edwards and Esther Stoddard Edwards. He was a dedicated student and scholar from his early youth, well before he entered Yale University at the age of thirteen. Despite his scholarly bent, however, he was also philosophical, and he had an appetite for the divine. In 1729, after earning a Master of Divinity from Yale, Edwards succeeded his grandfather, the famed Solomon Stoddard, as full pastor of the First Church of Northampton, Massachusetts. In the twenty-four years that he lived in Northampton, Edwards was deeply concerned with the nature of true religion. Edwards was keenly aware of the fact that true religion had to be lived out, and he set forth to transform his congregation, as well as congregations throughout New England, from believers who only understood Christian doctrine to converted Christians who were truly moved by their beliefs.