
Transcribed from the 1831 Roake and Varty edition by David Price. Many thanks to the British Library for making their copy available.
A humble parish priest once drafted a sermon for an October service, only to have the weather keep him from delivering it. Rather than let the words gather dust, he printed the address for his congregation, hoping it might also reach those beyond his village. The piece feels intimate, as if spoken directly to neighbors gathered in a modest church.
In the sermon the speaker recalls God’s original command to keep the Sabbath holy, describing the dramatic scene on Mount Sinai with thunder, fire, and a blazing trumpet. He stresses that the awe‑inspiring delivery was meant to imprint the duty on every generation, and he urges listeners to treat the day with reverence rather than casual neglect. The language is vivid yet earnest, blending biblical narrative with pastoral concern.
Beyond its historical setting, the sermon offers a window into early‑19th‑century rural faith, where sermons served both as spiritual guidance and community instruction. Listeners today can hear a voice that strives to connect timeless divine mandates with everyday life, inviting reflection on the meaning of rest and devotion.
Language
en
Duration
~31 minutes (30K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2021-12-27
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1770–1841
An Anglican clergyman who published under the name John Warton, he is best remembered for Death-bed Scenes, and Pastoral Conversations, a widely circulated devotional work from the early nineteenth century. The book blends pastoral counsel with stories of illness, dying, and faith in a way that spoke strongly to its original readers.
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