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| | Wrath to the Uttermost by Jonathan Edwards |
 | | There will be nothing to alleviate his wrath; his heavy wrath will lie on them, without any thing to lighten the burden, or to keep off, in any measure, the full weight of it from pressing the soul.?His eye will not spare, neither will he regard the sinner's cries and lamentations, however loud and bitter. |
 | | Wrath may, in some sense, be coming upon them, in the present life, to the uttermost, for ought we know. |
 | | When it is said of the Jews, 128 "The wrath is come upon them to the uttermost," respect is had, not only to the execution of divine wrath on that people in hell, but that terrible destruction of Judea and Jerusalem, which was then near approaching, by the Romans. |
| www.monergism.com /thethreshold/articles/onsite/edwards_wrath.html (4072 words) |
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