The Life of Rev. David Brainerd, Chiefly Extracted from His Diary

audiobook

The Life of Rev. David Brainerd, Chiefly Extracted from His Diary

by David Brainerd

EN·~10 hours·15 chapters

Chapters

15 total
1

Transcriber’s Note:

0:48
2

THE LIFE OF REV. DAVID BRAINERD, CHIEFLY EXTRACTED FROM HIS DIARY.

0:50
3

CONTENTS

3:10
4

FROM PRESIDENT EDWARDS’ PREFACE.

7:28
5

CHAPTER I.

42:10
6

CHAPTER II.

21:48
7

CHAPTER III.

13:29
8

CHAPTER IV.

15:06
9

CHAPTER V.

1:01:15
10

CHAPTER VI.

1:06:03

Description

This intimate portrait follows a young minister’s journey from his restless youth in New England through a dramatic conversion that sent him to Yale and ultimately to the frontier. Drawing directly from his diary, the narrative records his daily “walking with God,” revealing a mind both fervently devoted and often shadowed by melancholy. The early sections trace his theological studies, the pain of expulsion, and the fierce resolve that propelled him toward a life of service.

The story then moves to Brainerd’s pioneering missionary work among the Native peoples of New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. Readers encounter his relentless travels through wilderness, the establishment of schools, and the heartfelt, sometimes painful, attempts to share his faith with communities far from the settled colonies. Through vivid entries, the book captures both the physical hardships of frontier life and the profound spiritual moments that marked his brief but impactful ministry.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~10 hours (622K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

KD Weeks, Brian Wilson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2021-04-12

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

David Brainerd

David Brainerd

1718–1747

Remembered for a brief, intense life of faith, this 18th-century missionary worked among Native American communities in the Northeast and left behind journals that deeply influenced later Christian readers. His story is often read not just for what he did, but for the honesty and spiritual urgency in how he wrote about it.

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