When you read Edwards’s sermons, you soon realize that sermon application can also be called “Improvement or Use” (p. 38, Kimnach). It took me a while to get use to “improving” on a doctrine, but now I get what Edwards is trying to do.
Kimnach describes the approach:
“Application is concerning with experience and practice.” (p. 39)
Most of us think of sermon application in terms of transformation of attitude or action dictated by the Scriptures. But Kimnach writes,
“But as employed by Edwards, the Application also has a subtler use, as is indicated by his own statement in this transitional passage between Doctrine and Application of Gen. 19:14.
‘The Improvement we shall make of this doctrine shall be to offer some considerations to make future punishment seem real to you.'” (p. 39, emphasis added)
So how does Edwards do that? Here’s an example from the sermon, God’s Excellencies:
APPLICATION.
We are now come to make some improvement of this glorious truth….
How dreadful must his wrath be! If God [is] infinitely great and powerful, how terrible must his wrath and anger be; what a miserable creature–how inexpressibly miserable–must a poor, weak, sinner be in the hands of an angry and enraged God, who can shake the whole earth in pieces in a moment, and can annihilate the whole universe in the twinkling of an eye. (p. 426, emphasis added)
All of this is built off from the doctrine of the excellency of God. The logic is that sin against such an excellent Being must be extremely dreadful.
Edwards improves the doctrine by moving from the truth to an implication of that truth, an implication that his hearers must experience as real.
One more example:
“O what is a worm, to bear the weight of the anger of so great a being?” (p. 427)
May our Lord receive glory in the church and in Christ Jesus (Ephesians 3:21) as we explain the Doctrine and then spend time on its Improvement, doing our best to help our listeners experience it as real.
Randal
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