This week we're going over Jonathan Edwards' Resolutions from 1716. There is a common theme he has of identifying certain things and not just "being aware" of them, but focusing all of your forces against it to kill it dead. He had an urgency and intentionality and seriousness that we need more of today.
Good morning. Welcome to The Morning Motivation, brought to you by the Patriot Gold Group. This week we're talking about Jonathan Edwards and his resolutions for life. Jonathan Edwards is one of the greatest theologians ever and founder of the Great Awakening here in America. We need a second Great Awakening, so Jonathan Edwards is a person that we should be learning about, studying about, and being more alike. So I just learned about Jonathan Edwards' resolutions on Sunday. And we've just been talking about it for the last few days here. And I just yesterday came across a new book.
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And it wasn't even a Google search. It wasn't like, you know, Google's reading your mind or, you know, you say it out loud and your phone is listening. This was an email that I was sent from Westminster Books. And it's one of the books they're promoting this month, right? And it's called Jonathan Edwards, 50 Resolutions for Life, Adapted for Modern Readers. The actual title of the book is called Following Jesus in an Age of Quitters. Isn't that amazing? What are the chances? It's by John Gillespie.
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So let's go over a few more of these. Number 10, Resolving, and this is 1716. Resolved, when I feel pain, to think of the pains of martyrdom and of hell. Resolved, if I take delight in it as a gratification of pride or vanity, or in any such account, immediately to throw it by. So if you ever feel pleasure from pride or vanity, throw it away. Resolved, never to do anything out of revenge, never to suffer the least motions of anger to irrational beings. I wonder what he meant by irrational beings. What's an irrational being in 1716? Is it just someone like a troll? Don't get angry at
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trolls. 17 resolved that I will live so as I shall wish I had done when I come to die. Resolve to live so at all times, as I think is best in my devout frames, and when I have clearest notions of things of the gospel and another world. Resolve never to do anything which I should be afraid to do if I expected it would not be above an hour before I should hear the last trumpet." That's so good! Don't do anything that if I'm doing it Jesus comes back and sees you doing it. I feel like someone's grandmother listening now would tell him that. Resolve whenever I do any conspicuously evil action to trace it back until I come to the original cause, and then both carefully
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endeavor to do so no more, and to fight and pray with all my might against the original of it." So what happens? Not only the thing, but get to the root and what caused the thing, what caused the sin. "...resolve to examine carefully and constantly what that one thing in me is, which causes in the least to doubt of the love of God and to direct all my forces against it." Oh, it's so good. If ever in your life there's a little bit of doubt, not only in God's existence, but in the love of God for you, don't just try to move past that. No. Direct all my forces against it. I love all these so much.
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This idea of if anything gets in the way of me glorifying God, I'm going to kill it. I'm going to trace it back to its roots and I'm going to kill it. I just read this morning, I left the book downstairs, from Martin Lloyd-Jones, reading a devotional of his in the mornings. He talked about the intentional process needed of sanctification. There's like God has his role and so do you. You have yours.
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We'll be talking about that one tomorrow. But here's Jonathan Edwards saying the same thing. You have to kill it. Strumming on the mount, right? Jesus said if your right eye causes you to stumble, you got to gouge it out, throw it away. Better for you to lose one part of your body than for your whole body to be thrown into hell. And if your right hand causes you to stumble, cut it off, throw it away. It's better for you to lose one
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part of your body than for your whole body to go into hell. This is the Matthew Poole Bible commentary from the 1680s. The salvation of our souls is to be preferred before all things. That's why Jonathan Edwards is like, hey, if I ever get any gratification out of pride, I gotta kill it. The salvation of your soul is the most important thing. Be they ever so dear and precious to us, our souls. And that if man's ordinary discretion teaches them
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for the preservation of their bodies to cut off our particular member, which would necessarily endanger the whole body, it much more teaches them to part with anything which will prejudice the salvation of their souls. Direct all your forces against it. We are so obsessed with the here and the now. And really, the ultimate example of that is politics.
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Right now, it's the politics of the moment, the news of the moment, what's happening today around the world, what's the latest with this bill, right now, now, now, now, there's value in that of course, but we are interested in eternity. We're interested in the soul. We're interested mostly in the unseen, not to disconnect us from the moment, but it would certainly lead to us living very different lives than those who are obsessed with the scene and the present. And it would lead to us leading a very different life than if we were only obsessed with the scene and the present. So let's be like Jonathan Edwards and take that inventory of ourselves, examine ourselves,
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and if anything is causing you to stumble, you have to kill it, direct all your forces against it. all your forces against it. But you'll only do that if you value eternity more than the present.