Scripture in Edwards’s development of Work of Redemption

2067 Words5 Pages

In this point we analyse fourteen Scriptural passages in relation to its function of Edwards’s development of Work of Redemption. In this research we focus where Edwards cites these texts, what is the context in the sermon, and the supportive argument for the Work of Redemption. In the Index of Biblical Passages of the Work of Redemption we notice the prominent presence of the references of Isaiah, Matthew and Revelations. Hence we review four texts of each of these books. 2.1 Sermon One “For the moth shall eat them up like a garment and the worm shall eat them like wool: but my righteousness shall be forever and my salvation from generation to generation,” Isaiah 51:8. Comment: Edwards cited this text in the first sermon and the following twenty-nine sermons of the Work of Redemption that compiles thirty sermons in total. In the first sermon Edwards explains the meaning of the Work of Redemption. This text is the repetitive terminus à quo of every sermon. According Edwards reflects the part of this text “For the moth shall eat them up like a garment and the worm shall eat them like wool” the short endurance of the power and prosperity of the church’s opponents “…they shall by degrees consume and vanish away by a secret curse of God till they come to nothing…” With “my righteousness shall be forever and my salvation from generation to generation” is meant God’s faithfulness towards his church and people in bestowing the benefits of the covenant of grace upon them. Edwards continues that God’s righteousness and his salvation are relating to the covenant of grace. Salvation is the sum of all God’s works by which the benefits of the covenant of grace are procured and bestowed. There exists also a continuity of this righ... ... middle of paper ... ...dwards refers to Num.20 where Moses at the waters of Meribah at Kadesh provided water for the Israelites without acknowledging the Lord’s agency. WJE 9:323. Ibid., 363. Ibid., 382-83. Ibid., 424. Ibid., 427. See Edwards’s sermon on 1 Cor. 13 in Charity and Its Fruits (Carlisle: The Banner of Truth Trust, 1996). WJE 9:459. WJE 12:228; Edwards refers probably to a conclusion in his Ecclesiastical Writings in regard of the “Parable of the Ten Virgins” Edwards argues that “…the visible members of the Christian Church or the Kingdom of Heaven…” This shows similarity to Turretin’s view “the church is the Kingdom of Heaven” which means the church is the location where the “Kingdom” is administered and exercised. See: Francis Turretin, Institutes Elenctic Theology, Vol.II, 486-90. WJE 9:484. Ibid., 494. Ibid., 506. Ibid., 508. Ibid., 515.

Open Document