Digital Logos Edition
Jonathan Edwards is well known as perhaps the greatest theologian the United States has ever produced. He is equally noted for his preaching and writing. But in this Long Line Profile, Dr. Steven J. Lawson considers the unique focus and commitment with which Edwards sought to live out the Christian faith.
Lawson examines Edwards’ life through the lens of the 70 resolutions he penned in his late teens, shortly after his conversion, which cover everything from glorifying God to repenting of sin to managing time. Drawing on Edwards’ writings, as well as scholarly accounts of Edwards’ life and thought, Lawson shows how Edwards sought to live out these lofty goals he set for the management of his walk with Christ. In Edwards’ example, he finds helpful instruction for all believers.
With the Logos edition, The Unwavering Resolve of Jonathan Edwards is fully integrated with the other resources in your digital library, including Bibles, maps, dictionaries, and numerous other Bible study tools. All Scripture references are linked directly to the text of your favorite Bible translation, making your Bible study and teaching preparations more effective and rewarding. You can also explore Scripture on a deeper level with powerful search features, Passage Guides, and all the other interactive features in your Logos library. That makes this important book more useful than ever before for pastors, teachers, Bible study leaders, and anyone else desiring to get deeper into the truth of God’s Word.
“We live in a day of spiritual laxity. Many who confess Christ are pampering themselves to death rather than pushing themselves to holiness. Their spiritual muscles are untrained and unfit. Their wills are soft and unresolved.” (Pages xii–xiii)
“Spending thirteen hours a day in study, he wrote his three weightiest works: Freedom of the Will (1754), The End for Which God Created the World (1755; published with True Virtue under the title The Two Treatises), and Original Sin (1758). Freedom of the Will, his greatest literary achievement, was a monumental treatment of the inability of the fallen will to believe on Christ. In it, ‘Edwards argues that only the regenerate person can truly choose the transcendent God; that choice can be made only through a disposition that God infuses in regeneration.’53 The one who wills to believe in Christ, Edwards taught, is the one in whom the Holy Spirit has already performed His sovereign, monergistic work in the new birth.” (Page 17)
“This proved to be a soul-stretching time in which Edwards gave careful thought to the priorities that he desired to be the guiding principles for his life. It was then that Edwards, eighteen years old, began writing his ‘Resolutions.’ He eventually composed seventy purpose statements, each designed to direct his newly begun Christian journey. They were ‘the guidelines, the system of checks and balances he would use to chart out his life—his relationships, his conversations, his desires, his activities.’29 At this time, Edwards also began keeping a diary to monitor his spiritual pulse (1722–25, 1734–35).” (Pages 7–8)
Dr. Steven J. Lawson is the senior pastor of Christ Fellowship Baptist Church in Mobile, Alabama.
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Michael Conn
12/1/2019