
Subject: We ought not to look back when we are flying
out of Sodom.
CHRIST here foretells his coming in
his kingdom, in answer to the question which the Pharisees asked him, viz.
When the kingdom of God should come. And in what he says of his coming,
he, evidently has respect to two things; his coming at the destruction of
Jerusalem, and his coming at the end of the world. He compares his coming at
those times to the coming of God in two remarkable judgments that were past.
First, [he compares] to that in the time of the flood; “and as it was in the
days of Noah, so shall it be also in the days of the Son of Man.” Next, he
compares it to the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah; “likewise also, as it was
in the days of Lot, even thus shall it be in the day when the Son of man is
revealed.”
Then he immediately proceeds to direct his people how
they should behave themselves at the appearance of the signal of that day’s
approach, referring especially to the destruction of Jerusalem. “In that day, he
which shall be upon the housetop, and his stuff in the house, let him not come
down to take it away: and he that is in the field, let him likewise not return
back.” In which words Christ shows that they should make the utmost haste to
flee and get out of the city to the mountains, as he commands. Mat. 24:15, etc.
“When ye therefore shall see the abomination of desolation spoken of by Daniel
the prophet stand in the holy place, then let them which be in Judea flee to the
mountains; let him which is in the housetop not come down to take anything out
of the house, neither let him which is in the field turn back to take his
clothes.”
Jerusalem was like Sodom, in that it was devoted to
destruction by special divine wrath; and indeed to a more terrible destruction
than that of Sodom. Therefore the like direction is given concerning fleeing out
of it with the utmost haste, without looking behind, as the angel gave to Lot,
when he bid him flee out of Sodom. Gen. 19:17, “Escape for thy life; look not
behind thee, neither stay thou in all the plain.” And in the text, Christ
enforces his counsel by the instance of Lot’s wife. He bids them remember her,
and take warning by her, who looked back as she was fleeing out of Sodom, and
became a pillar of salt.
If it be inquired why Christ gave this direction to his
people to flee out of Jerusalem, in such exceeding haste, at the first notice of
the signal of her approaching destruction; I answer, it seems to be, because
fleeing out of Jerusalem was a type of fleeing out of a state of sin. Escaping
out of that unbelieving city typified an escape out of a state of unbelief.
Therefore they were directed to flee without staying to take anything out of
their houses, to signify with what haste and concern we should flee out of a
natural condition, that no respect to any worldly enjoyment should prevent us
one moment, and that we should flee to Jesus Christ, the refuge of souls, our
strong rock, and the mount of our defense, so as, in fleeing to him, to leave
and forsake heartily all earthly things.
This seems to be the chief reason also why Lot was
directed to make such haste, and not to look behind. Because his fleeing out of
Sodom was designed on purpose to be a type of our fleeing from that state of sin
and misery in which we naturally are.
DOCTRINE
We ought not to look back when we are fleeing out of
Sodom. The following reasons may be sufficient to support this doctrine:
I. That Sodom is a city full of filthiness and
abominations. It is full of those impurities that ought to be had in the utmost
abhorrence and detestation by all. The inhabitants of it are a polluted company.
They are all under the power and dominion of hateful lusts. All their faculties
and affections are polluted with those wile dispositions that are unworthy of
the human nature, that greatly debase it, that are exceedingly hateful to God,
and that dreadfully incense his anger. Every kind of spiritual abomination
abounds in it. There is nothing so hateful and abominable but that there it is
to be found, and there it abounds.
Sodom is a city full of devils and all unclean spirits.
There they have their rendezvous, and there they have their dominion. There they
sport, and wallow in filthiness, as it is said of mystical Babylon, Rev. 18:2.
Babylon is become the habitation of devils, and the hold of every foul spirit,
and the cage of every unclean and hateful bird. — Who would be of such a
society? Who would not flee from such a city with the utmost haste, and never
look back upon it, and never have the least inclination of returning?
Some in Sodom may seem to carry a fair face, and make a
fair outward show. But if we could look into their hearts, they are everyone
altogether filthy and abominable. We ought to flee from such a city, with the
utmost abhorrence of the place and society, with no desires to dwell longer
there, and never to discover the least inclination to return to it. But [we]
should be desirous to get to the greatest possible distance from it, that we
might in no wise be partakers in her abominations.
II. We ought not to look back when fleeing out of Sodom,
because Sodom is a city appointed to destruction. The cry of the city hath
reached up to heaven. The earth cannot bear such a burden as her inhabitants
are. She will therefore disburden herself of them, and spew them out. God will
not suffer such a city to stand; he will consume it. God is holy, and his nature
is infinitely opposite to all such uncleanness. He will therefore be a consuming
fire to it. The holiness of God will not suffer it to stand, and the majesty and
justice of God require that the inhabitants of that city who thus offend and
provoke him be destroyed. And God will surely destroy them. It is the immutable
and irreversible decree of God. — He hath said it, and he will do it. The decree
is gone forth, and so sure as there is a God, and he is almighty, and able to
fulfill his decrees and threatenings, so surely will he destroy Sodom. Gen.
19:12, 13, “Whatsoever thou hast in this city, bring them out of this place; for
we will destroy this place, because the cry of them is waxen great before the
face of the Lord, and the Lord has sent us to destroy it.” And in verse 14, “Up,
get ye out of this place, or the Lord will destroy this city.”
This city is an accursed city; it is destined to ruin. —
Therefore, as we would not be partakers of her curse, and would not be
destroyed, we should flee out of it, and not look behind us. Rev. 18:4, “Come
out of her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive
not her plagues.”
III. We ought not to look back when fleeing out of
Sodom, because the destruction to which it is appointed is exceedingly dreadful;
it is appointed to utter destruction, to be wholly and entirely consumed. It is
appointed to suffer the wrath of the great God, which is to be poured down from
God upon it, like a dreadful storm of fire and brimstone. This city is to be
filled full of the wrath of God. Everyone that remains in it shall have the fire
of God’s wrath come down on his head and into his soul. He shall be full of fire
and full of the wrath of the Almighty. He shall be encompassed with fire without
and full of fire within. His head, his heart, his bowels, and all his limbs
shall be full of fire, and not a drop of water to cool him.
Nor shall he have any place to flee to for relief. Go
where he will, there is the fire of God’s wrath. His destruction and torment
will be inevitable. — He shall be destroyed without any pity. He shall cry
aloud, but there shall be none to help, there shall be none to regard his
lamentations, or to afford relief. The decree is gone forth, and the days come
when Sodom shall burn as an oven, and all the inhabitants thereof shall be as
stubble. As it was in the literal Sodom, the whole city was full of fire. In
their houses there was no safety, for they were all on fire. And if they fled
out into the streets, they also were full of fire. Fire continually came down
out of heaven everywhere. — That was a dismal time. What a cry was there then in
that city, in every part of it! But there was none to help. They had no where to
go where they could hide their heads from fire. They had none to pity or relieve
them. If they fled to their friends, they could not help them.
Now, with what haste should we flee from a city
appointed to such a destruction! And how should we flee without looking behind
us! How should it be our whole intent to get at the greatest distance from a
city in such circumstances! How far should we be from thinking at all of
returning to a city which has such wrath hanging over it!
IV. The destruction to which Sodom is appointed is an
universal destruction. None that stay in it shall escape. None will have the
good fortune to be in any by-corner, where the fire will not search them out.
All sorts, old and young, great and small, shall be destroyed. There shall be no
exception of any age, or any sex, or any condition, but all shall perish
together. Gen. 19:24, 25, “Then the Lord rained upon Sodom and upon Gomorrah
brimstone and fire from the Lord out of heaven, and he overthrew those cities
and all the plain, and all the inhabitants of the cities, and that which grew
upon the ground.” We therefore must not delay or look behind us; for there is no
place of safety in Sodom, nor in all the plain on which Sodom is built. The
mountain of safety is before us, and not behind us.
V. The destruction to which Sodom is appointed is an
everlasting destruction. This is said of the literal Sodom, that it suffered the
vengeance of eternal fire. Jude 7, “Even as Sodom and Gomorrah, and the cities
about them, in like manner, giving themselves over to fornication, and going
after strange flesh, are set forth for an example, suffering the vengeance of
eternal fire.” The destruction that Sodom and Gomorrah suffered was an eternal
destruction. Those cities were destroyed, and have never been built since, and
are not capable of being rebuilt; for the land on which they stood at the time
of their destruction sunk, and has ever since been covered with the lake of
Sodom or the Dead sea, or as it is called in Scripture, the Salt sea.
This seems to have been thus ordered on purpose to be a type of the eternal
destruction of ungodly men. So that fire by which they were destroyed is called
eternal fire, because it was so typically, it was a type of the eternal
destruction of ungodly men; which may be in part what is intended, when it is
said in that text in Jude, that they were set forth for an example, or for a
type or representation of the eternal fire in which all the ungodly are to be
consumed.
Sodom has in all ages since been covered with a lake
which was first brought on it by fire and brimstone, to be a type of the lake of
fire and brimstone in which ungodly men shall have their part forever and ever,
as we read Rev. 20:15, and elsewhere. — We ought not therefore to look back when
fleeing out of Sodom, seeing that the destruction to which it is appointed is an
eternal destruction; for this renders the destruction infinitely dreadful.
VI. Sodom is a city appointed to swift and sudden
destruction. The destruction is not only certain and inevitable, and infinitely
dreadful, but it will come speedily. “Their judgment lingereth not, and their
damnation slumbereth not;” 2 Pet. 2:3. And so Deu. 32:35, “The day of their
calamity is at hand, and the things that shall come upon them make haste.” — The
storm of wrath, the black clouds of divine vengeance, even now every moment hang
over them, just ready to break forth and come down in a dreadful manner upon
them. God hath already whet his sword and bent his bow, and made ready his arrow
on the string, Psa. 7:12. Therefore we should make haste, and not look behind
us. For if we linger and stop to look back, and flee not for our lives, there is
great danger that we shall be involved in the common ruin.
The destruction of Sodom is not only swift, but will
come suddenly and unexpectedly. — It seems to have been a fair morning in Sodom
before it was destroyed, Gen. 19:23. It seems that there were no clouds to be
seen, no appearance of any storm at all, much less of a storm of fire and
brimstone. The inhabitants of Sodom expected no such thing. Even when Lot told
his sons-in-law of it, they would not believe it, Gen. 19:14. — They were making
merry. Their hearts were at ease, they though nothing of such a calamity at
hand. But it came at once, as travail upon a woman with child, and there was no
escaping. As verse 28, 29 [says], “They did eat, they drank; they bought, they
sold; they planted, they builded; but the same day that Lot went out of Sodom,
it rained fire and brimstone from heaven, and destroyed them all.”
So it is with wicked men. Psa. 73:19, “How are they
brought into desolation in a moment! They are utterly consumed with terrors.” —
If therefore we linger and look back, we may be suddenly overtaken and seized
with destruction.
VII. There is nothing in Sodom that is worth looking
back upon. All the enjoyments of Sodom will soon perish in the common
destruction; all will be burnt up. And surely it is not worth the while to look
back on things that are perishing and consuming in the flames, as it is with all
the enjoyments of sin. They are all appointed to the fire. Therefore it is
foolish for any who are fleeing out of Sodom to hanker any more after them. For
when they are burnt up, what good can they do? And is it worth the while for us
to return back for the sake of a moment’s enjoyment of them, before they are
burnt, and so expose ourselves to be burnt up with them?
Lot’s wife looked back, because she remembered the
pleasant things that she left in Sodom. She hankered after them. She could not
but look back with a wishful eye upon the city, where she had lived in such ease
and pleasure. Sodom was a place of great outward plenty. They ate the fat, and
drank the sweet. The soil about Sodom was exceedingly fruitful. It is said to be
as the garden of God, Gen. 13:10. And fullness of bread was one of
the sins of the place, Eze. 16:49.
Here Lot and his wife lived plentifully; and it was a
place where the inhabitants wallowed in carnal pleasures and delights. But
however much it abounded in these things, what were they worth now, when the
city was burning? Lot’s wife was very foolish in lingering in her escape, for
the sake of things which were all on fire. — So the enjoyments, the profits, and
pleasures of sin, have the wrath and curse of God on them. Brimstone is
scattered on them. Hell-fire is ready to kindle on them. It is not therefore
worth while for any person to look back after such things.
VIII. We are warned by messengers sent to us from God to
make haste in our flight from Sodom, and not to look behind us. God sends to us
his ministers, the angels of the churches, on this grand errand, as he sent the
angels to warn Lot and his wife to flee for their lives, Gen. 19:15, 16. — If we
delay or look back, now that we have had such fair warning, we shall be
exceedingly inexcusable and monstrously foolish.
APPLICATION
The use that I would make of this doctrine, is to warn
those who are in a natural condition to flee out of it, and by no means to look
back. While you are out of Christ you are in Sodom. The whole history of the
destruction of Sodom, with all its circumstances, seems to be inserted in the
Scriptures for our warning, and is set forth for an example, as the apostle Jude
says; It in a lively manner typifies the case of natural men, the destruction of
those that continue in a natural state, and the manner of their escape who flee
to Christ. The psalmist, when speaking of the appointed punishment of ungodly
men, seems evidently to refer to the destruction of Sodom. Psa. 11:6, “Upon the
wicked God shall rain snares, fire, and brimstone, and a horrible tempest: This
shall be the portion of their cup.”
Consider therefore, you that are seeking an interest in
Christ, you are to flee out of Sodom. Sodom is the place of your nativity, and
the place where you have spent your lives. You are citizens of that city which
is full of filthiness and abomination before God, that polluted and accursed
city. You belong to that impure society. You not only live among them, but you
are of them, you have committed those abominations, and have so provoked God as
you have heard. It is you that I have all this while been speaking of under this
doctrine. You are the inhabitants of Sodom. Perhaps you may look on your
circumstances as not very dreadful; but you dwell in Sodom. — Though you may be
reformed, and appear with a clean outside, and a smooth face to the world; yet
as long as you are in a natural condition, you are impure inhabitants of
Sodom.
The world of mankind is divided into two companies, or,
as I may say, into two cities. There is the city of Zion, the church of God, the
holy and the beloved city. And there is Sodom, that polluted and accursed city,
which is appointed to destruction. You belong to the latter of these. How much
soever you may look upon yourselves as better than some others, you are of the
same city; the same company with fornicators, and drunkards, and adulterers, and
common swearers, and highwaymen, and pirates, and Sodomites. How much soever you
may think yourselves distinguished, as long as you are out of Christ, you belong
to the very same society. You are of the company, you join with them, and are no
better than they, any otherwise than as you have greater restraints. You are
considered in the sight of God as fit to be ranked with them. You and they are
altogether the objects of loathing and abhorrence, and have the wrath of God
abiding on you. You will go with them and be destroyed with them, if you do not
escape from your present state. Yea, you are of the same society and the same
company with the devils, for Sodom is not only the city of wicked men, but it is
the hold of every foul spirit.
You belong to that city which is appointed to an awful,
inevitable, universal, swift, and sudden destruction; a city that hath a storm
of fire and wrath hanging over it. Many of you are convinced of the awful state
you are in while in Sodom, and are making some attempts to escape from the wrath
which hangs over it. Let such be warned by what has been said, to escape for
their lives, and not to look back. Look not back, unless you choose to have a
share in the burning tempest that is coming down on that city. — Look not back
in remembrance of the enjoyments which you have had in Sodom, as hankering after
the pleasant things which you have had there, after the ease, the security, and
the pleasure which you have there enjoyed.
Remember Lot’s wife, for she looked back, as being loth
utterly and forever to leave the ease, the pleasure, and plenty which she
enjoyed in Sodom, and as having a mind to return to them again; remember what
became of her. — Remember the children of Israel in the wilderness, who were
desirous of going back again into Egypt. Num. 11:5, “We remember the flesh which
we did eat in Egypt freely, the cucumbers, and the melons, and the leeks and
onions, and the garlick.” Remember what was the issue. You must be willing
forever to leave all the ease, and pleasure, and profit of sin, to forsake all
the salvation, as Lot forsook all, and left all he had, to escape out of
Sodom.
And further to enforce this warning, let me entreat all
you who are in this state to consider the several things which I shall now
mention.
I. The destruction of which you are in danger is
infinitely more dreadful than that destruction of the literal Sodom from which
Lot fled. The destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah in a storm of fire and brimstone
was but a shadow of the destruction of ungodly men in hell, and is no more to it
than a shadow or a picture is to a reality, or than painted fire is to real
fire. The misery of hell is set forth by various shadows and images in
Scripture, as blackness of darkness, a never-dying worm, a furnace of fire, a
lake of fire and brimstone, the torments of the valley of the son of Hinnom, a
storm of fire and brimstone. The reason why so many similitudes are used is
because none of them are sufficient. Anyone does but partly and very imperfectly
represent the truth, and therefore God makes use of many.
You have therefore much more need to make haste in your
escape, and not look behind you, than Lot and his wife had when they fled out of
Sodom. For you are every day and every moment in danger of a thousand times more
dreadful storm coming on your heads, than that which came on Sodom, when the
Lord rained brimstone and fire from the Lord out of heaven upon them. So that it
will be vastly more sottish in you to look back than it was in Lot’s wife.
II. The destruction of which you are in danger is not
only greater than the temporal destruction of Sodom, but greater than the
eternal destruction of the inhabitants of Sodom. For however well you may think
you have behaved yourselves, you who have continued impenitent under the
glorious gospel, have sinned more, and provoked God far more, and have greater
guilt upon you, than the inhabitants of Sodom; although you may seem to
yourselves, and perhaps to others, to be very harmless creatures. Mat. 10:15,
“Verily I say unto you, it shall be more tolerable for Sodom and Gomorrah in the
day of judgment, than for that city.”
III. Multitudes, while they have been looking back, have
been suddenly overtaken and seized by the storm of wrath. The wrath of God hath
not delayed, while they have delayed; it has not waited at all for them to turn
about and flee; but has presently seized them, and they have been past hope.
When Lot’s wife looked back, she was immediately destroyed. God had exercised
patience toward her before. When she lingered at the setting out, the angels
pressed her, and her husband and children, to make haste. Not only so, but when
they yet delayed, they brought her forth, and set her without the city, the Lord
being merciful to her. But now when, notwithstanding this mercy, and the
warnings which had been given her, she looked back, God exercised no more
patience towards her, but proceeded immediately to put her to death.
Now God has in like manner been merciful to you. You in
time past have been lingering; you have been warned by the angel of your danger,
and pressed to make haste and flee; yet you have delayed. And now at length God
hath as it were laid hold on you, by the convictions of his spirit, to draw you
out of Sodom; and therefore remember Lot’s wife. If now, after
all, you should look back, when God hath been so merciful to you, you will have
reason to fear, that God will suddenly destroy you. Multitudes, when they have
been looking back, and putting off to another time, have never had another
opportunity; they have been suddenly destroyed, and that without remedy.
IV. If you look back, and live long after it, there will
be great danger that you will never get any further. The only way to seek
salvation is to press forward with all your might, and still to look and press
forward, never to stand still or slacken your pace. When Lot’s wife stopped in
her flight and stood still in order that she might look, her punishment was,
that there she was to stand forever; she never got any further; she never got
beyond that place. But there she stood as a pillar of salt, a durable pillar and
monument of wrath, for her folly and wickedness.
So it was very often with backsliders, though they may
live a considerable time after. When they look back, after they have been taking
pains for their salvation, they lose all, they put themselves under vast
disadvantages. By quenching the Spirit of God, and losing their convictions,
they dreadfully harden their own hearts, and stupefy their souls. They make way
for discouragements, dreadfully strengthen and establish the interest of sin in
their hearts, many ways give Satan great advantages to ruin them, and provoke
God oftentimes utterly to leave them to hardness of heart. When they come to
look back, their souls presently become dead and hard like the body of Lot’s
wife. And though they live long after, they never get any further. It is worse
for them than if they were immediately damned. When persons in fleeing out of
Sodom look back, their last case is far worse than the first; Mat. 12:43, 44,
45. And experience confirms, that none ordinarily are so hard to be brought to
penance as backsliders.
V. It may well stir you up to flee for your lives, and
not to look behind you, when you consider how many have lately fled to the
mountains, while you yet remain in Sodom. To what multitudes hath God given the
wisdom to flee to Christ, the mountain of safety! They have fled to the little
city Zoar, which God will spare and never destroy. How many have you seen of all
sorts resorting out of Sodom thither, as believing the Word of God by the
angels, that God would surely destroy that place. They are in a safe condition.
They are got out of the reach of the storm. The fire and brimstone can do them
no hurt there.
But you yet remain in that cursed city among that
accursed company. You are yet in Sodom, which God is about so terribly to
destroy, where you are in danger every minute of having snares, fire, and
brimstone, come down on your head. — Though so many have obtained, yet you have
not obtained deliverance. Good has come but you have seen none of it. Others are
happy, but no man knows what will become of you. You have no part nor lot in the
glorious salvation of souls, which has lately been among us. — The consideration
of this should stir you up effectually to escape, and in your escape to press
forward — still to press forward — and to resolve to press forward forever, let
what will be in the way, to hearken to no temptation, and never to look back, or
in any wise slacken or abate your endeavors as long as you live, but if possible
to increase in them more and more.
VI. Backsliding after such a time as this,
*1* will have a vastly greater tendency to seal a man’s
damnation than at another time. The greater means men have, the louder calls and
the greater advantages they are under, the more dangerous is backsliding, the
more it has a tendency to enhance guilt, to provoke God, and to harden the
heart.
We, in this land of light, have long enjoyed greater
advantages than most of the world. But the advantages which persons are under
now for their salvation, are perhaps tenfold what they have been at such times
as we have ordinarily lived in. And backsliding will be proportionably the
greater sin, and the more dangerous to the soul. You have seen God’s glory and
his wonders amongst us, in a most marvelous manner. — If therefore you look back
after this, there will be great danger that God will swear in his wrath, that
you shall never enter into his rest; as God sware concerning them that were for
going back into Egypt, after they had seen the wonders which God wrought for
Israel. Num. 14:22, 23, “Because all those men that have seen my glory and my
miracles that I did in Egypt, and in the wilderness, and have tempted me now
these ten times, and have not hearkened to my voice; surely they shall not see
the land which I sware unto their fathers, neither shall any of them that
provoked me see it.” — The wonders that we have seen among us of late, have been
of a more glorious nature than those that the children of Israel saw in Egypt
and in the wilderness.
VII. We know not but that great part of the wicked world
are, at this day, in Sodom’s circumstances, when Lot fled out of it; having some
outward, temporal destruction hanging over it. It looks as if some great thing
were coming; the state of things in the world seems to be ripe for some great
revolution. The world has got to such a terrible degree of wickedness, that it
is probable the cry of it has reached up to heaven. And it is hardly probable
that God will suffer things to go on, as they now do, much longer. It is likely
that God will ere long appear in awful majesty to vindicate his own cause. And
then none will be safe that are out of Christ. Now therefore everyone should
flee for his life, and escape to the mountain, lest he be consumed. We cannot
certainly tell what God is about to do, but this we may know, that those who are
out of Christ are in a most unsafe state.
VIII. To enforce this warning against looking back, let
me beseech you to consider the exceeding proneness to it there is in the heart.
The heart of man is a backsliding heart. There is in the heart a great love and
hankering desire after the ease, pleasure, and enjoyments of Sodom, as there was
in Lot’s wife, by which persons are continually liable to temptations to look
back. The heart is so much towards Sodom, that it is a difficult thing to keep
the eye from turning that way, and the feet from tending thither. When men under
convictions are put upon fleeing, it is a mere force. It is because God lays
hold on their hands, as he did on Lot’s and his wife’s, and drags them so far.
But the tendency of the heart is to go back to Sodom.
Persons are very prone to backsliding also through
discouragement. The heart is unsteady, soon tired, and apt to listen to
discouraging temptations. A little difficulty and delay soon overcome its feeble
resolutions. And discouragement tends to backsliding. It weakens persons’ hands,
lies as a dead weight on their hearts, and makes them drag heavily; and if it
continue long, it very often issues insecurity and senselessness. Convictions
are often shaken off that way. They begin first to go off with
discouragement.
Backsliding is a disease that is exceeding secret in its
way of working. It is a flattering distemper. It works like a consumption,
wherein persons often flatter themselves that they are not worse, but something
better, and in a hopeful way to recover, till a few days before they die. So
backsliding commonly comes on gradually, and steals on men insensibly, and they
still flatter themselves that they are not backslidden. — They plead that they
are seeking yet, and they hope they have not lost their convictions. And by the
time they find it out, and cannot pretend so any longer, they are commonly so
far gone, that they care not much if they have lost their convictions. And when
it is come to that, it is commonly a gone case as to those convictions. Thus
they blind themselves, and keep themselves insensible of their own disease, and
so are not terrified with it, nor awakened to use means for relief, till it is
past cure.
[ Thanks to: Jonathan-Edwards.org ]