Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER I From his Birth to his entrance at College
- CHAPTER II His conduct at College, and preparation for the Ministry
- CHAPTER III Entrance on his Missionary Labours
- CHAPTER IV The first year of his Mission
- CHAPTER V The second year of his Missionary Labours; from April 1744, to April 1745
- CHAPTER VI The third year of his Misssionary Labours; from April 1745, to April 1746
- CHAPTER VII The fourth year of his Missionary Labours; from April 1746, to April 1747
- CHAPTER VIII His last Sickness and Death
- CHAPTER IX Concluding Remarks
- REMAINS OF MR. BRAINERD
CHAPTER VI - The third year of his Misssionary Labours; from April 1745, to April 1746
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER I From his Birth to his entrance at College
- CHAPTER II His conduct at College, and preparation for the Ministry
- CHAPTER III Entrance on his Missionary Labours
- CHAPTER IV The first year of his Mission
- CHAPTER V The second year of his Missionary Labours; from April 1744, to April 1745
- CHAPTER VI The third year of his Misssionary Labours; from April 1745, to April 1746
- CHAPTER VII The fourth year of his Missionary Labours; from April 1746, to April 1747
- CHAPTER VIII His last Sickness and Death
- CHAPTER IX Concluding Remarks
- REMAINS OF MR. BRAINERD
Summary
In this third year of Brainerd's labours, on which we are entering:, he had most signal and unexpected success among the Indians.
And what else, indeed, could be expected?—Such earnest and unwearied desires for the spiritual good of this people, such wrestling in prayer for their conversion, and so much self-denial and suffering for the obtaining of this end, could not be in vain. After all the interchanges of his hopes and discouragements, and after waiting in persevering prayer and labour and difficulty, through a long night of trial, at length the day dawns. “ Weeping may endure for a night; but joy cometh in the morning.” He went forth “weeping, and bearing precious seed,” and now he “ cometh again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him.”
And yet this success was not with these Indians with whom he had been so long labouring ; but took place at a time, in a situation, and on men, quite beside his expectation!
By desire of the Society in Scotland for Propagating Christian Knowledge, Brainerd drew up a relation of his success, in the form of a Journal, which was published under the title of ‘Mirabilia Dei inter Indicos: the Rise and Progress of a Remarkable Work of Grace, among a Number of the Indians in New-Jersey and Pennsylvania.’
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Life of the Rev. David BrainerdMissionary to the North American Indians, pp. 172 - 280Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1834