
audiobook
by Newton Smart
Transcribed from the 1832 J. G. & F. Rivington edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
A fervent appeal from the early nineteenth‑century, this work wrestles with the uneasy mood that gripped Europe as disease and unrest seemed to signal a divine warning. Drawing on biblical prophecy and the language of a preacher from Oxford, it frames the era’s anxieties as a call for a nation to examine its conscience and turn to God in humility. The author’s vivid descriptions of pestilence, famine and social turmoil create a compelling picture of a people on the brink of a spiritual reckoning.
Within its pages, the writer urges Christians to respond with collective prayer, fasting, and sincere repentance, suggesting that such acts can temper the wrath they believe underlies worldly calamities. By interweaving scriptural counsel with practical advice for communal worship, the text offers a thoughtful meditation on how faith might guide societies through crisis. Listeners will find a stirring reminder that the challenges of the past still echo in today’s conversations about moral responsibility and national well‑being.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (337K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2015-06-03
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
d. 1879
A 19th-century Anglican clergyman and religious writer, he is best remembered for a forceful 1832 sermon-book written in response to a time of public fear and disease. His surviving work gives a clear sense of a preacher trying to connect national crisis with personal faith and moral responsibility.
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