and benignity. With a feeble constitution, _ his
voice, though clear, was not strong. He used little
gesture, and resorted to none of the arts of the
orator. Still, his sermons were so scriptural in
matter, so strong and lucid in thought, so marked
by deep knowledge of human nature, by simplicity
and the absence of all self-consciousness, so glow-
ing with the central heat of intense earnestness,
that they held the closest attention, and often pro-
duced great effects. They are still read with the
deepest interest, while those of Whitfield are for-
gotten. It is especially on his character as a theo-
logian and metaphysician that Mr. Edwards's fame
rests. lie was not by any means a merely '* dry
and cold thinker," but his highest strength un-
doubtedly lay in the region of pure thought. He
was emphatically an original thinker. He was not
widely learned, and with slender opportunities of
acquaintance with the works of contemporary
writers, it is clear that he drew his materials
almost entirely from his own reflections and re-
sources. Though the best impulse to his mind
was early given by Locke, he was far from accept-
ing that great man as his intellectual master. He
explicitly rejected many of Locke's ideas, and in-
clined rather to that system which in Europe had
found its representatives in Malebranche and Leib-
nitz. His attachment to the system known as
Calvinism was intense, and in the defence of this
system he produced his greatest works. His im-
mortal treatise "On the Freedom of the Will"
(1754) aimed at a conclusive settlement of the main
points in controversy between the Calvinists and
Arminians. He here maintains that the law of
causality extends to every action. Liberty con-
sists in the power of doing what one wills, not in
any power of willing without a motive. The will
always follows the greatest seeming good, and
what shall seem to a man the greatest good de-
pends on the state of his soul. Liberty is not in the
act but in the man, and, if a depraved nature is to
abstain from sin, it can only be effected by a change
of heart. Whatever may be thought of the con-
clusions of this treatise, there have never been two
opinions as to its extraordinary ability. Edwards's
definition of virtue, in his treatise on that subject,
as " the love of being," has provoked dissent on the
part of many who have in general accepted him as a
guide. The estimate of Edwards by competent
judges puts him in the front rank of great men.
Dr. Chalmers says that " on the arena of metaphy-
sicians he stood highest of all his contemporaries."
Sir James Mackintosh spoke of him as " a most
extraordinary man, who, in a metaphysical age or
country, would certainly have been deemed as
much the boast of America as his great contempo-
rary, Franklin." Again he calls him, by way of
eminence, " the metaphysician of America," and
expresses the opinion that "in power of subtle
argument he was perhaps unmatched, certainly
unsurpassed, among men." Dugald Stewart de-
clared " there is, however, one metaphysician of
whom America has to boast, who, in logical acute-
ness and subtlety, does not yield to any disputant
bred in the universities of Europe. I need not say
that I allude to Jonathan Edwards." The influ-
ence of Edwards was very great in the spiritual
history of England and this country, especially of
New England, whose leading minds, in the age fol-
lowing him, showed his moulding hand. Bellamy
and Hopkins were his pupils ; Dwight was his ex-
positor ; Smalley, Emmons, and many others were
his followers. Through Hopkins his influence
reached Kirkland. and assisted in forming the
character of Channing. Edwards sums up the old
theology of New England, and is the fountain-
head of the new. Besides works mentioned above,
Edwards published " Treatise Concerning the Re-
ligious Affections " (1746) : " Inquiry into the
Qualifications for Free Communion in the Church "
(1749): "Original Sin" (1757); "True Nature of
Christian Virtue" (1788); "Dissertation concern-
ing the End for which God created the World "
(1789) ; " Thoughts on the Revival of Religion " ;
" History of the Redemption " ; and a " Life of
David Brainerd." There have been two editions of
his works in England, one in eight volumes, octavo,
and one in two compact volumes. The American
editions are to be preferred. They include that edit-
ed by Samuel Austin (8 vols., Worcester, Mass.,
1809) ; that by Sereno^E. Dwight, with a memoir (10
vols.. New York, 1830) ; and a later one in a more
convenient form (4 vols., 1852). There are several
lives of Jonathan Edwards ; the most interesting is
that by Samuel Hopkins, who was his pupil ; the
fullest is that by Sereno Edwards Dwight. in the
edition of his works mentioned above. There is
also a memoir by Dr. Samuel Miller in Sparks's
" American Biography," and another in " Lives
of Eminent Literary and Scientific INIen of Ameri-
ca" (New York, 1850). — Timothy, judge, eldest
son of Jonathan, b. in Northampton, Mass., 25 Julv,
1738; d. in Stockbridge, Mass., 27 Oct., 1813. He
was graduated at Princeton in 1757, and began
business as a merchant in Elizabeth, N. J. He re-
moved to Stockbridge about 1770, where he was a
leading citizen for forty-three years, and sat as
judge of probate for Berkshire county. He had
fifteen children. — His son, WiUiaiii, inventor,
b. in Elizabethtown, N. J., 11 Nov., 1770; d. in
Brooklyn, N. Y., 1 Dec, 1851, introduced the sys-
tem, now employed in nearly all American tan-
neries, by which leather is made in about one
fourth of the time required by the old European
processes. His first tannery was built at North-
ampton, Mass., and the first leather made in it
was sent to Boston in 1794. Having exhausted
the supply of hemlock-bark in the Connecticut
valley, he removed, in 1817, to Hunter, Greene co.,
N. Y., and erected a model tannery on Schoharie
creek. It was in the midst of the hemlock forests
of the Catskill mountains, on an estate of twelve
hundred acres. In 1822 the Messrs. Edwards (he
was assisted in business by his son), in connection
with Jacob Lorillard, purchased the real estate of
the company (an act of incorporation having been
granted), which had been unsuccessful, greatly
enlarged the business, and made many improve-
ments in the machinery. From this establishment
about 10,000 sides of sole-leather were sent to the
city of New York annually. Mr. Edwards not
only invented several machines, but adapted many
devices previously used for other purposes to the
art of tanning, thus largely substituting water-
power for manual labor. His rolling machine was
considered especially valuable, is still in use in
nearly its original form, and gives to leather the
smoothness of surface and solidity of texture pecul-
iar to the hammered article. — Jonathan, Jr., theo-
logian, second son of Jonathan, Sr., b. in North-
ampton, Mass., 26 May, 1745 ; d. in Schenectady,
N. Y., 1 Aug., 1801. When he was six years old the
family removed to Stockbridge, at that time almost
solely inhabited by Indians. Here he became so
proficient in the Indian language as to surpass in
the thoroughness of his scholarship all other Anglo-
Americans of that day. As it was his father's wish
that he should become a missionary to the aborigi-
nes, he was sent, in 1755, to the Rev. Gideon Haw-
ley, who was stationed on the Susquehanna river.
Page:Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography (1900, volume 2).djvu/333
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
EDWARDS
EDWARDS
311