Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God

978 Words2 Pages

“Their foot shall slide in due time.” This biblical verse is core to Jonathan Edwards’ speech to the congregation in several churches. Edwards preaches against nonbelievers, warning them of their imminent retribution from God. He highlights that God’s wrath is upon them and will annihilate their entire being to the highest degree. Through a complex incorporation of various descriptive imagery tools, Edward invokes fear and despondence to his audience; his audience are bullied into believing in his God. Edward provides requisite imagery through well structured arguments, use of relevant evidence, and appeal to fear.
Referring to the phrase, “Their foot shall slide in due time,” Edwards creates a sermon that exhaustively explains this verse: he exposes who “their” (his subject) is, then he explains why they haven’t fallen yet, and then he gives reasons to why their fall will be transcendental. By providing a chronological argument the listeners are able to not only grasp his viewpoint but also observe the soundness of his argument. For instance, in pages 7-9, when Edwards describes why God’s wrath is transcendental, he breaks his argument into bits: one leading to the other, creating separate strands that are intertwined into a weave to achieve his argument. In this manner the audience is introduce to an argument, and then another which builds on the first. The style ensures that one idea is fully comprehended before another idea is delved into. It also ties all arguments together in supporting the main thesis.
At the time of Edwards’ sermon, the height of the great awakening to Christianity had peaked (Farley ). Considering this period and his audience, Edwards use of the Bible as evidence for his arguments is practical. His cla...

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...nonbelievers. The listeners are able to conjure images of nature’s disdain for the nonbeliever and through this comparison, can only imagine how much worse God’s wrath is. Consequently Edwards effectively uses imagery to urge his audience to believe in God rather than face dire punishment.
Edwards is able to deliver a persuasive speech by invoking fear to his audience through the provision of concrete imagery using various sentence structure, comparisons, and tone; by relevant evidence; and by structured argument. His effective use of these techniques creates a compelling argument to the congregation, and bullies them into believing in a supreme being.

Works Cited

Farley, W. n. page. .
Edwards, J.. N.p.. Web. 21 Sep 2013. .

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