In 1741, in the congregation of Enfield, Connecticut, Edwards called it "awakening" in the American religion, during which the church leaders resumed the belief that they believed they were weakened in their congregation I wanted to do. By the way, Edwards remembered this harsh sermon. That is a shame - most of his service to his writings and church is more positive than this preaching.
The title of the sermon itself - "a sinner in the hand of angry god" - is that a) everyone is sinning to some extent, and b) their god is full of anger rather than anger It is enough to cause faith in those who believe. Peace and light In their belief system, God is not a merciful being to the Lord, it is a harsh, harsh, angry god that might throw them into hell as easily as they enter Heaven .
For example, we know from the actual sermon that some people were upset by Edwards' sermon. It shows how seriously it takes Edwards to express the threat expressed.
They have been condemned by hell. They should not just be abandoned, they should not be ruled. . . Oh God. . I will go out to them. . .
If they are kind and holy, all the listeners understand that they are destined to fall into hell as guilty humans. For these people hell is a physical place filled with all kinds of severe torture and you need to remember what people can imagine.
Your evil makes you heavy like lead and embarks with a lot of weight and pressure; if you let God leave you, you will soon sink. . .
The statue here - it rolls down and can only be captured by the hands of God - that the congregation is believed that they are truly guilty of sin and are about to fall into hell because of their weight It means that. For those angry gods and those who believe in their sins, this is an incredible danger that they can not control. They can not control their own destiny. It may be the most powerful and horrible concept in Edwards' sermon.
Jonathan Edwards' sinner in the hands of angry gods "was preached by Puritan's pastor Edwards. In this sermon, Edwards used the fear that God could punish evil people to rule his people at any time. This is a custom Puritan has made people live right according to the Bible and the laws of the Church. This article shows this example in his sermons. Edwards began using simple Biblical poetry in Deuteronomy 32-35. It says: "Their feet will slide in the right direction." He explained this to his congregation in this short and simple poem, he says that God can decide when they leave the world at any time. Edwards concluded that this scripture refers to the punishment and destruction that Israel had received. He believes that Israelis have the risk of falling down all the time, as the people walking on slippery floors suffered more destruction than they could collapse.
On this day of history, Jonathan Edwards started his unfinished sermon. When people hear screams, they cry, weep, the crying sounds become very big, and Edwards can not help stopping sermons. Instead, the priests fell into the crowds and prayed with them. Many people saved Christ on that day. Edwards was unjustly hurt as a missionary of hell. Read charity and its results. Read many other sermons about the beauty of Christ. In New England in the 18th century, it was not uncommon to talk about hell. The influence of Edwards' sermon is not because he preached in hell but because he preached in hell. By contrast, today's teaching papers rarely mention hell. Of course, in the future, the church will review our time and explain it as the most strange way we can preach the love of God without preaching God's justice and anger.