Commencement of Difficulties at Northampton. Case of discipline. Conduct of the Church. Change, as to admission of members, ef- fected by Mr. Stoddard. Controversy with Dr. Mather. Lax mode of admission, early introduced into Massachusetts. Reasons of its extensive adoption. Mr. Edwards makes known his senti- Violent ferment in the town. Causes of it. Mr. Edwards not allowed to preach on the subject. Publishes "Qualifications for Communion." The Town request Mr. Williams and Mr. Clark to answer Mr. Edwards' Treatise. Difficulties in the choice of a Mr. Edwards' own Narrative. History of his own Opinions as to the point in Controversy. Consequences of declaring them. Proposal to preach rejected by Committee. Proposal to publish. First move- ment of the Precinct, Oct. 16. First meeting of the Church, Oct. 22. Meeting and Votes of Do. Nov. 20. Reply of Mr. Edwards. Meeting of Precinct, Dec. 7. Meeting of Church, Dec. 11. Let- Meeting of Previous Council. Remarks of Mr. Edwards, on the question, Whether he ought not to be allowed to go out of the coun- ty, in the choice of a Final Council. Remarks of Mr. Edwards, on the question, Whether the state of things was ripe for a Final Adjourned meeting of the Preparatory Council. Farther Remarks of Mr. Edwards on the question, Whether he ought not to go out of the County, in the choice of the Final Council. Council refuse to ex- press their opinion on this point. Mr. Edwards' Lectures on Qual- ifications for Communion. Attempted interference of neighbouring Clergy. Difficulties relating to choice of Final Council. Choice of that Council, May 3. Meeting and Result of that council, June Result of Council, and Protest, read. Farewell Sermon. Postscript of Letter to Mr. Gillespie. Letter to Mr. Erskine. Letter to Mr. M'Culloch. Marriage of two of his daughters. Forbidden to preach at Northampton. Exemplary conduct of Mr. Edwards. Proceed- Proposals from Stockbridge, and from the Commissioners. Visit to Stockbridge. Indian Mission. Housatonnucks. Mohawks. Dis- sensions of English inhabitants. Mr. Hollis' munificence. Letter to Mr. Hobby. Reply of Rev. Solomon Williams. Letter to Mr. Erskine. Letter to Mr. Gillespie. First Letter to Mr. Hollis. Removal to Stockbridge. Letter to Hon. Mr. Hubbard. Petition Indian Establishment. Schemes of its enemies. Firm stand taken by Mr. Edwards. Letter to Mr. Oliver. Letter to Commis- sioners. Difficulties of the Mission. Answer to Mr. Williams. Vote of thanks of Commissioners. Sermon at Newark. Measures of the enemies of the' Mission defeated. Letter to Mr. Oliver. Freedom of the Will. Letter to Mr. Erskine. Deposition of Mr. Gillespie. Letter to do. Letter to Mr. M'Culloch. Report of Letter to his eldest son. Return of greater part of the Mohawks. Letter to Commissioners. Mission of Mr. Hawley to Onohquauga. Remainder of Mohawks directed to return. Freedom of the Will. Letter to Mr. Erskine. Proposal of Society in London. Letter to Mr. Gillespie. Design and character of the Freedom of the Will. Letters from Mr. Hollis. Surrender of Mohawk School to Mr. Ed- wards. Entire Defeat of Enemies of Mission. Return of remain- Sickness of Mr. Edwards. God's Last End in Creation." "Nature of Virtue." Mr. Edwards' second son resides at Onohquauga. Dangers of the War. Letter to Mr. Erskine. Letter to Col. Williams. Lord Kaimes. Letter to Mr. Erskine. Letter to Mr. Death of President Burr. His character. Mr. Edwards chosen his successor. Letters of Mrs. Burr,-To a gentleman in Scotland- To a gentleman in Boston-To her Mother. Letter of Mr. Ed- wards, to the Trustees of the College. Letter of Mrs. Burr, to her father. Letter to Mr. Bellamy. Council dismiss Mr. Edwards. Inauguration as President. First Sermon at Princeton. Sickness. Death. Letter of Dr. Shippen. Letters of Mrs. Edwards, and of her daughter, to Mrs. Burr. Death of Mrs. Burr. Death of Mrs. LIFE OF PRESIDENT EDWARDS. CHAPTER I. His Descent.-Family of Edwards.-Family of Stoddard.His Father's Family. THE number of those men, who have produced great and permanent changes in the character and condition of mankind, and stamped their own image on the minds of succeeding generations, is comparatively small; and, even of this small number, the great body have been indebted for their superior efficiency, at least in part, to extraneous circumstances, while very few can ascribe it to the simple strength of their own intellect. Yet here and there an individual can be found, who, by his mere mental energy, has changed the course of human thought and feeling, and led mankind onward in that new and better path which he had opened to their view. Such an individual was JONATHAN EDWARDS. Born in an obscure colony in the midst of a wilderness, and educated at a seminary just commencing its existence; passing the better part of his life as the pastor of a frontier village, and the residue as an Indian missionary in a still humbler hamlet; he discovered, and unfolded, a system of the divine moral government so new, so clear, so full, that while at its first disclosure it needed no aid from its friends, and feared no opposition from its enemies, it has at length constrained a reluctant world to bow in homage to its truth. THE two families, from which the subject of the present memoir was immediately descended, are those of EDWARDS and STODDARD. THE family of EDWARDS is of Welch origin. The Rev. RICHARD EDWARDS, the great-great grandfather, and earliest known ancestor of President Edwards, was a clerVOL. I. 2 10 LIFE OF PRESIDENT EDWARDS. gyman in London, in the time of Queen Elizabeth. He came, according to the family tradition, from Wales to the metropolis, and was of the established church; but in what shire his family lived, or of what church in London he was the minister, is not known. His wife Mrs. ANNE EDWARDS, after the death of her husband, married Mr. James Coles; who, with her son, William Edwards, then young and unmarried, accompanied her to Hartford in Connecticut about the year 1640, where they both died. WILLIAM EDWARDS, Esquire, the great-grandfather, resided in Hartford, and is supposed to have been by profession a merchant His wife whose christian name was AGNES, and who came when a young lady with her parents to America, had two brothers in England-one the mayor of Exeter, the other the mayor of Barnstable. Their marriage occurred probably about the year 1645. It is not known whether they had more than one child. RICHARD EDWARDS, Esquire, the grandfather, so far as can now be ascertained the only child of William and Agnes Edwards, was born at Hartford in May, 1647, and resided in that town during his life. He also was a merchant and a man of wealth and respectability.* At an early age he became a communicant in the Presbyterian church in Hartford, and adorned his profession by a long life of conscientious integrity, and unusual devotedness to the prosperity of religion. He married ELIZABETH TUTHILL, the daughter of William and Elizabeth Tuthill, who came from Northamptonshire, in England. Mr. Tuthill was a merchant of New-Haven, and one of the proprietors of the colony attempted on Delaware Bay. By this connection Mr. Edwards had seven children, the eldest of whom was the Rev. TIMOTHY EDWARDS. After her decease, he married a Miss Talcot, of Hartford, sister of the Hon. John Talcot, by whom he had six children. He died April 20, 1718, in the 71st year of his age; exhibiting, during his last sickness, a bright example of christian resignation and triumphant faith.§ THE family of STODDARD is of English descent. ANTHONY STODDARD, Esquire, the maternal great-grandfather of President Edwards, and the first of the family in this country, emigrated from the west of England to Boston. He had five wives; the first of whom, MARY DOWNING, the sister of Sir George Downing, was the mother of the Rev. Solomon * I learned these particulars at East Windsor, in 1823, from two parishioners of his son, the Rev. Timothy Edwards, both of them upwards of ninety years af age. + Trumbull's Hist. of Connecticut, Vol. I. pp. 178, 197, and 201. See Appendix A. See Appendix B. Stoddard of Northampton. His other children were Anthony, Simeon, Samson, and Israel. The Rev. SOLOMON STODDARD, his eldest child, and the mdternal grandfather of President Edwards, was born in 1643, and received the degree of A. B. at Harvard College in 1662. Soon after his licensure, the first minister of Northampton, the Rev. Eleazer Mather, then a young man, died ;* and the parish applied to one of the ministers of Boston to designate a successor. He advised them at all hazards to secure Mr. Stoddard. When the parish committee applied to him, he had already taken his passage for London, and put his effects on board the ship with the expectation of sailing the next day; but, through the earnest solicitation of the gentleman who had recommended him, he was induced to relinquish the voyage and go to Northampton. He began to preach there in 1669, soon after the death of Mr. Mather, and on the 4th of March, 1670, received a unanimous call from the church and people of that village to become their minister; but was not ordained until September 11, 1672. On the 8th of March, 1670, he married Mrs. ESTHER MATHER, originally Miss WARHAM, the youngest child of Rev. JOHN WARHAM,t of Windsor, in Connecticut, and widow of his predecessor, who had left three children. Mr. and Mrs. Stoddard had twelve children: six sons and six daughters. He was a man celebrated throughout the colonies for his capacity, his knowledge of men, his influence in the churches, and his zeal for vital religion; and will long be remembered for his valuable writings, which have often been published on both sides of the Atlantic. He was the minister of Northampton from 1672 until his death in 1729, and left impressions of a character strongly marked for originality, for talents, for energy and for piety, on the minds of its inhabitants, which the lapse of a century has scarcely begun to diminish. We shall have frequent occasion to refer to him, in the progress of this memoir. THE REV. TIMOTHY EDWARDS, the father of President Edwards, was born at Hartford, May 14, 1669, and pursued his studies preparatory to his admission to College, under the Rev. Mr. Glover of Springfield,¶ a gentleman, distinguished for his classical attainments. In 1687, he entered Harvard College, at that time the only seminary in the colonies; and received the two degrees of Bachelor and Master of Arts on the same day, July 4th, 1691, one in the morning and the *Mr. Mather was ordained June 18, 1661, and died July 24, 1669. See Appendix C. See Appendix F. See Appendix D. (See Appendix E |