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Jonathan
Edwards
1703-1758
B.A.
1720, M.A. 1723
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The "angry God" limned
with such vivid menace in 1741 by Jonathan Edwards can cause a smile among American
studies majors today. Robert Lowell's poetic portrait imagines the great divine
still dyspeptic even in heaven. But Edwards's views on human depravity were
already losing ground in his own time and place, as more and more New England
churches began to accept good intentions as sufficient proof of righteousness.
Edwards managed
to inspire hundreds of conversions during a wave of enthusiasm in the early
1740s known as the Great Awakening. But he was soon embroiled in controversy
with his Northampton congregation as well as his college. Banished to the
outpost of Stockbridge in 1751, Edwards preached in more simplistic terms
to white and Indian congregations but lived mostly for his voluminous writing,
including an ambitious attempt to integrate predestination doctrine with the empiricism of Locke and Newton, whom he had first studied at Yale.
Edwards's ambitious
publications brought recognition beyond New England. He was appointed to be
the third president of Princeton (then the College of New Jersey) in 1759
but died of smallpox just after taking office. Scholars have called him "the
last medieval American" and one of the country's major thinkers. More than
two centuries after a theological rift with his alma mater, the ongoing Yale edition of the Edwards papers (40 volumes so far) provides a symbolic homecoming
and a worthy tribute to a preacher who said of himself, "I think I can write
better than I can speak."
