Edwards, B. B.; Park, Edwards A. Writings of Professor B. B. Edwards, with a Memoir (Volume II). Boston: John P. Jewett and Company, 1853. [11214]
Volume 2 only of a 2 volume set.
Black publisher's cloth, boards blind stamped, gilt to spine, 7 3/4 x 5 1/4 inches, tight. 1853 gift inscription on the ffep. 500 clean pp. Very good. Hardcover.
This volume consists of 16 Essays, Addresses, and Lectures.
The topics covered are The Roman Catholic Religion in Italy; Slavery in Ancient Greece, in Early Christian Times, and in the Middle Ages; Classical Studies; Female Education; the Poetry of Wordsworth; Reasons for the Study of the Hebrew Language; Early English Versions of the Bible; Authenticity and Genuineness of the Pentateuch; The Imprecations of the Scriptures; Hebrew Poetry; Importance of Theological Education; Human Depravity; and a couple of lectures on Christian Doctrine, and Piety and the Intellect.
Rev. Bela Bates Edwards, D.D. (1802-1852), born in Southampton, Mass., on July 4th. He graduated at Amherst College in 1824 and at Andover Seminary in 1830.
“In 1837 he was ordained as a minister of the Gospel, and was also appointed professor of Hebrew in Andover Theological Seminary; and in 1848 he was elected associate professor of sacred literature, as successor of Professor Moses Stuart, in the same institution. From 1828 to 1842 he edited the American Quarterly Register. He established in 1833 the American Quarterly Observer. After publishing two volumes he united it with the Biblical Repository, and was sole editor of the combined periodicals from…1835 to…1838. From 1844 to 1852 he was the senior editor of the Bibliotheca Sacra. For twenty-three years he was employed superintending periodical literature, and, with the assistance of several associates, has left thirty-one octavo volumes as the monuments of his enterprise and industry in this department of labor…He was distinguished not only for his soundness of judgment, skill as an instructor, and eloquence as a preacher, but also for his delicacy of taste, his tender sensibilities, and, above all, his deep, earnest, and uniform piety. Some of his discourses and essays, with a memoir of his life by E. A. Park, were published in Boston in 1853 in two duodecimo volumes.” – M’Clintock & Strong.