Through the profound words and opinion of Jonathan Edward, he uses a cumulative sentence to complete his main idea and gradually builds that idea throughout the sentence and even the passage. The quote above and the following sentences after it justify Edward’s reasoning that Sinners will ultimately get what they deserve, as God will not save them from those “slippery places” no longer. From this …show more content…
Edward asks the question to his readers, “What are we, that we should think to stand before him, at whose rebuke the earth trembles, and before whom the rocks are thrown down?” The audacity we must have, Edward is saying, to believe that we as inferiors are above Him. Edwards is clearly on the side of God and is baffled by the idea that there are people who view themselves as higher ranked than what he views as the highest of all beings. He relates God and Us to the worm and a person who eventually crushes an innocent worm on the ground. Edward states just as easy it is for a person to step on a worm and kill it, God can place any enemy of his to