The Whole Works of the Right Rev. Edward Reynolds (Pitman, ed.)
Description
“Reynolds was a man of vast learning and thoroughly evangelical spirit.”—Charles Spurgeon
With The Whole Works of the Right Rev. Edward Reynolds, Soli Deo Gloria Publications brings a collection of Puritan writings that are expositional, insightful, and experiential back into print. In six volumes, Reynolds explores man's fallenness, the glory of Christ’s offices, and how we may enjoy His benefits now by faith.
Contents
Volume 1 (560 pages)
- Memoirs of the Life of the Author
- The Vanity of the Creature
- The Sinfulness of Sin
- The Life of Christ
Volume 2 (480 pages)
- An Exposition of the Hundred and Tenth Psalm
Volume 3 (448 pages)
- Meditation on the Holy Sacrament of the Lord’s Last Supper
- Seven Sermons on the Fourteenth Chapter of Hosea
Volume 4 (496 pages)
- Meditations on the Fall and Rise of St. Peter
- Annotations on the Book of Ecclesiastes
- Sermons on Miscellaneous Subjects
Volume 5 (568 pages)
- Sermons on Miscellaneous Subjects
Volume 6 (392 pages)
- A Treatise on the Passions and Faculties of the Soul
- Sermon Preached at the Funeral of Bishop Reynolds
- Index of Texts Illustrated
Endorsements
“Edward Reynolds, claimed by Puritans and Church of England loyalists alike, was recognized in his own day and ever since as a pastor of pastors and as a beautiful writer. The publisher is to be thanked for reissuing Reynolds’s collected works. Now a new generation of pastors and students can add to their libraries the powerful prose and Christ-centered piety of this seventeenth-century stalwart.”
—Chad Van Dixhoorn, professor of church history and theology, Reformed Theological Seminary, Charlotte; editor of The Minutes and Papers of the Westminster Assembly, 1643–1653
About the Author
Edward Reynolds (1599–1676) served as a divine of the Westminster Assembly, dean of Christ Church College, and vice-chancellor of the University of Oxford. A Presbyterian by conviction, he nonetheless wanted to maintain the unity of the national church and argued for a milder form of episcopacy that would accommodate Presbyterian beliefs. After the Restoration, Reynolds was made chaplain to King Charles II, elected warden of Merton College, and consecrated bishop of Norwich.
Edited by John Rogers Pitman