Emmons, Nathanael. Sermons on some of the first Principles and Doctrines of True Religion. Wrentham, Massachusetts: Printed by Nathaniel and Benjamin Heaton, 1800. First Edition. [10541]
Full leather, worn with the front board attached by one cord only, some loss of leather to the card boards and at the spine ends, maroon leather spine label present. Contemporary private bookplate, several old previous owner's signatures, title page and ffep detached. [i]-viii, [9]-510, text is complete. Tattered margins in the first few leaves, smudges and stains in the text. Errata printed on p. viii. Fair. Hardcover.
We think the bookplate is that of Miss Hannah Woodward (1762-1838); she is buried in the cemetery at West Central St. in Franklin, Massachusetts.
Twenty sermons on evangelical and Calvinistic themes, including on the Inspiration of Scripture, the Doctrine of the Trinity, The testimony of Christ to His own Divinity, Man's Activity and Dependence illustrated and reconciled, Love the essence of Obedience, On Original Sin, On the special and irresistible Grace of God in the Conversion of Sinners, &c.
Nathanael Emmons (1745-1840), born at East Haddam, Connecticut, which was also the birthplace of David Brainerd (1718). He graduated with honor at Yale in 1767, studied theology with Rev. Nathan Strong and afterwards with Dr. John Smalley. In 1773 he was ordained pastor of the Congregational church in Franklin, Massachusetts, and remained as pastor of that congregation for the next fifty-four years. Revivals of religion blessed his ministry in the years 1784, 1794, and 1808-9, and two others in later years. It is said that he lived to see over four hundred of his parishioners profess their faith in Christ. His examinations for church membership were strict, and he was very active in teaching young men for the ministry - close to one hundred young men were tutored and guided by him personally to that end. He was a founder and first president of the Massachusetts Missionary Society and one of the original editors of the Massachusetts Missionary Magazine. He was a zealous anti-mason and an active abolitionist, and a Federalist in politics. He was also "Hopkinsian" in his theological views, that is, he considered himself a Calvinist who would speak plainly on all texts of scripture, rather than bending all texts to fit a theological preconception. He was very widely esteemed.
"A peculiar little fellow with a sharp tongue and a wad of tobacco in his cheek, Emmons is hardly typical of the New England preachers. He was educated at Yale at a time when it was in a very low state spiritually, but despite his rather weak preparation for ministry, he was an unusually effective communicator. His sermons were very pungent and large numbers of students delighted to sit under his ministry. The bulk of his life was spent in the pastorate in Franklin, Massachusetts where a major revival occurred in 1784 and at periodic intervals thereafter." - Roberts, Revival Literature: An Annotated Bibliography.