Lexington Books / Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
Pages: 256
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0720-1 • Hardback • March 2004 • $162.00 • (£125.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
Edward Bond is Associate Professor of History at Alabama A&M University.
Part 1 Religion in Colonial Virginia: A Brief Overview
Part 2 Family Religion and Private Piety
Chapter 3 John Catlett Letter
Chapter 4 A Lover's Epistle
Chapter 5 A Father's Advice
Chapter 6 William Byrd II: Biblical Notes, 1728-1729
Part 7 Robert Paxton
Chapter 8 Of Angels
Chapter 9 Of Redeeming the Time
Chapter 10 Of Christ's Crucifixion
Chapter 11 Of Justice & Equity
Chapter 12 Of the Lord's Supper
Part 13 James Blair: Pastor
Chapter 14 The Peacemakers
Chapter 15 The Exemplariness of Our Good Works
Chapter 16 Who Are the Least in the Kingdom of Heaven
Chapter 17 Of the Love of Enemies
Chapter 18 Vain Repetitions and Length in Prayer
Chapter 19 General Observations on the Lord's Prayer
Chapter 20 The Fifth Petition of the Lord's Prayer
Chapter 21 Earthly Treasures Subject to Many Accidents
Chapter 22 Importunity in Prayer
Chapter 23 The Right Hearers of Christ's Sayings
Part 24 James Maury: Colonial Parson
Chapter 25 The Reverend James Maury to Mrs. Mary Grymes, 1768
Chapter 26 The Reverend James Maury to James Maury (Jr.), 1762
Chapter 27 Letter Fragment, the Reverend James Maury to Mr. Ambrose Coleman, 1768
Chapter 28 First Sermon on Private Prayer
Chapter 29 Second Sermon on Private Prayer
Chapter 30 Sermon Number 72
Chapter 31 Sermon Number 88
Chapter 32 Sermon Number 90
Chapter 33 Sermon Number 96
Chapter 34 Sermon Number 130
Chapter 35 Sermon Number 49
Chapter 36 Sermon Number 177
Chapter 37 Sermon Number 12
Chapter 38 The Reverend James Maury to Robert Jackson, 17 July 1762: On Education
Part 39 Samuel Davies
Chapter 40 Little Children Invited to Jesus Christ, 1758
Chapter 41 A Christmas-Day Sermon, 1758
Chapter 44 The Call to the Moral Life: Occasional Sermons and Other Writings
Chapter 45 A Sermon Delivered at Nassau-Hall, January 14, 1761, On the Death of His Late Majesty King George II
Chapter 46 The Reverend William Dawson to Dr. Philip Bearcroft, 1744
Part 46 The Church and Slavery
Chapter 47 The Baptist Perspective
Chapter 48 Samuel Davies: The Duty of Christians to Propagate Their Religion among Heathens, 1757
Chapter 49 Thomas Bacon: Second Sermon on Colossians 4:1, 1750
Chapter 50 John Leland, The Virginia Chronicle, 1790
Part 51 The Call to the Moral Life: Occasional Semons and Other Writings
Chapter 52 John Clayton: Scientist And Parson
Chapter 53 A Discourse from the Gallows
Chapter 54 Thomas Hellier's Confession and Admonition to All Spectators at the Gallows
Chapter 55 William Dawson: A Christmas Sermon
Chapter 56 Thomas Dawson: A Confirmation Sermon
Chapter 57 William Stith
Chapter 58 John Moncure: "Fast Day Sermon," 1756
Chapter 59 Miles Selden
Chapter 60 Enoch Green: A Presbyterian Mission Sermon, 1762
Chapter 61 Charles Clay: Sermon on Canticles 2:13, 1773
Ed Bond's chapter on the history of the church in Virginia will become the best piece of scholarship on the subject. I am very impressed.
— Joan R. Gundersen, Vice President for Policy & Planning, Progressive Episcopalians of Pittsburgh
Ed Bond's work will accomplish a number of things. This volume will make an important and unfamiliar body of sources much more readily available and considerably revise our understanding of the force of religion in the Virginia colony, where religious belief and practice has usually been perceived as rather lackadaisical. The volume will almost call attention as well to the richness of the Colonial Williamsburg manuscript and rare book collections in the area of religion.
— Thad Tate, Murden Professor of Humanities Emeritus, College of William and Mary
Ed Bond is one of the few historians of the rising generation to focus on the significance of religion in the Virginia Colony. In recent decades, though, this subject has not only been neglected as a subject of study, its place in formulating a full understanding of Virginia society, in all its complexity, has also been widely ignored. This book will begin to correct that imbalance. The breadth of documents included in the text will give students of early America access to primary materials that will enable them to understand Virginia more fully than is presently possible. Ed bond makes a much-needed step to correct the curious neglect of the study of religion that characterizes modern Virginia scholarship.
— Nelson D. Lankford, Virginius Dabney Editor of the Virginia Magazine of History and Biography
The book is really excellent and recommended to anyone with an interest in religion in colonial America.
— Anglican and Episcopal History
In assembling this fine collection of sermons and other primary source documents, Ed Bond has provided a treasure for teachers and students of colonial religious history. There is nothing like this in print for the southern colonies. This invaluable collection of previously unpublished sermons and other documents bearing on colonial religion demonstrates the religious diversity within the colonial South as well as the theological ability and pastoral acumen of its religious leadership.
— Thomas E. Buckley, S.J., professor of American religious history, Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley/Graduate Theological Union