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Sermons and Discourses, 1743–1758 is unavailable, but you can change that!

This wide-ranging volume covers the final fifteen of the thirty-three years that Jonathan Edwards preached and includes some of his greatest sermons—including his “Farewell Sermons” to his Northampton congregation. The period is defined by Edwards’ inventive strategies to improvise during the delivery of his sermons. Considering dependence on the written text in the pulpit to be a serious...

apprehend that for which you are apprehended of Christ Jesus. Count not yourself to have apprehended: but do this one forgetting [those things which are behind, and reaching forth to those things which are before].” [I shall] conclude by exhorting all to hearken to the joyful sound as exhibited in the sweet invitations of the gospel. Among the many blessed invitations of the gospel which we have in the Scripture, I shall select one only more particularly to insist on at this time, which is that in
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