Upon The Burning Of Our House Summary

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1. From these lines from "Upon the Burning of Our House" by Puritan poet Anne Bradstreet, the
speaker has witnessed her home erupt in flames and feels great lament over this loss of her
possessions and treasures that she left in her home. Through this hardship, Bradestreet clings even
more to her faith and seeks comfort in God, believing in the Puritan value of the predestination, part of
which is that God causes events to happen for a reason. Being a Purtian woman, Bradstreet is able to
feel less grief as she believes that this was God's message to her. While she also feels sadden by the
loss of her home and belongings, she realizes that the items she lost were only materialistic and they
cannot compare to the great things she will receive …show more content…

Overall, Bradstreet adovcates creating a stronger connection in her relationship with
God and by continuing to be a devouted Christian, she will be rewarded by being able to be in an
eternal life with God after death in heaven, hence she says, "Raise thy thoughts above the sky".

3. In these lines from "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God", minister and Puritan author Jonathan
Edwards describes the wrath that humans will experience if they violate God in the laws of the Puritan
religion. Being a very traditional and conservative Puritan, Edwards believes in the Calvinistic ideas of
the predestination and that because Adam sinned, the entire humankind is announced evil as well.
Edwards uses symbols and frightening images to decipt the fearful and sereve wrath of God to those
who provoke God and by stating that, "The Bow of God's Wrath is bent and the Arrow made ready on
the String" the punishment for sinning is unexpected and can happen at any given moment. Edwards
consquently establishes the frailty of humans in comparison to God, showing the relationship between
humans and God as "without any Promise or Obligation at all" because in the Puritan belief, God is a
supreme being that is extraordinarily merciful. This sermon is to persuade fellow Puritans to

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