Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PREFACE
- THE JOURNAL OF DAVID BRAINERD
- Part One Mirabilia Dei inter Indicos; or, The Rise and Progress of a Remarkable Work of Grace amongst a Number of the Indians in the Provinces of New Jersey and Pennsylvania
- Part Two Divine Grace Displayed; or, The Continuance and Progress of a Remarkable Work of Grace among the Indians
- THE FIRST APPENDIX TO THE JOURNAL
- THE SECOND APPENDIX TO THE JOURNAL
- THE REMAINS OF DAVID BRAINERD
THE FIRST APPENDIX TO THE JOURNAL
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PREFACE
- THE JOURNAL OF DAVID BRAINERD
- Part One Mirabilia Dei inter Indicos; or, The Rise and Progress of a Remarkable Work of Grace amongst a Number of the Indians in the Provinces of New Jersey and Pennsylvania
- Part Two Divine Grace Displayed; or, The Continuance and Progress of a Remarkable Work of Grace among the Indians
- THE FIRST APPENDIX TO THE JOURNAL
- THE SECOND APPENDIX TO THE JOURNAL
- THE REMAINS OF DAVID BRAINERD
Summary
I should have concluded what I had at present to offer respecting my mission, but that I lately received, from the President of the Correspondents, the copy of a letter directed to him from the Society for Propagating Christian Knowledge, dated at Edinburgh, March 21, 1745, expressly enjoining upon their missionaries: “That they give an exact account of the methods they make use of for instructing themselves in the Indian language, and what progress they have already made in it. What methods they are now taking to instruct the Indians in the principles of our holy religion; and particularly, that they set forth in their Journals what difficulties they have already met with, and the methods they make use of for surmounting the same.”
As to the two former of these particulars, I trust that what I have already noted in my Journals from time to time might have been in a good measure satisfactory to the Honourable Society, had these Journals arrived safely and seasonably, which I am sensible they have not in general done, by reason of their falling into the hands of the enemy, although I have been at the pains of sending two copies of every Journal for more than two years past, lest one might miscarry in the passage. But with relation to the latter of these particulars, I have purposely omitted saying anything considerable, and that for these two reasons.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Journal of David Brainerd , pp. 183 - 236Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1802