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ADVICE TO A YOUNG CHRISTIAN On the Importance of Aiming at an Elevated Standard of Piety Jared B. Waterbury with Introductory Essay by Archibald Alexander
This was originally released in 1827 by an anonymous author simply called A Village Pastor with an outstanding Introductory Essay by Archibald Alexander. It went on to be one of the best selling books by the American Tract Society. It was also published in the UK by the Religious Tract Society of London where it became very popular.
"Years ago, my wife 'found an old book' for me at a flea market. It was an 1843 printing of ADVICE TO A YOUNG CHRISTIAN On the Importance of Aiming at an Elevated Standard of Piety by a Village Pastor. (The title alone is instructive!) Since that day, I have loved this sweet little volume and have hoped someone would reprint it! It has often been useful to me as a devotional prod toward my own spiritual duties. I've read snippets in family worship and in prayer meetings, and I've shared portions with guests around the table on Lord's Day afternoons. Originally penned as private letters by a pastor to a young woman in his charge, these brief chapters are striking in the warm and winsome care that the writer shows for the eternal prosperity of his young reader. Fellow pastors will also be challenged by the extent of this man's effort toward the well being of a single young lamb, 'until Christ be formed' in her (Gal. 4:19). May these very pastoral encouragements once again achieve the author's 'ardent prayer' that they may comfort and edify many." - Pastor Murray Wilson, Trinity Reformed Baptist Church, Baltimore, MD
"To the lambs of Christ's flock, whom Peter was enjoined by the Good Shepherdf to feed, I dedicate this little book. The letters which compose it were written to instruct one of their number, the daughter of a highly valued friend. Since they are now made public, it is the ardent prayer of the author, that they may comfort and edify many more." - the Author
"The following letters are well calculated to turn the attention of the Christian public to the importance of diligence and punctuality in performing the duties of the closet. They were forwarded to me by an esteemed young clergyman, who is settled as a pastor in a distant and retired village. These letters are seasonable, judicious, and pious, and that as they are written in an animated style they will be extensively perused by the young." - Archilbald Alexander
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Biographical Sketch
Biographical Sketch |
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JARED BELL WATERBURY, clergyman, born in New York city, 11 August, 1799; died in Brooklyn, New York, 31 December, 1876. He was graduated at Yale in 1822, studied two years in Princeton theological seminary, and was licensed to preach in 1825. In that year he was an agent for the American Bible society, and in 1826-'9 he was pastor of the Congregational church in Hatfield, Massachusetts He was pastor of Presbyterian churches in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, from 1829 till 1832, and in Hudson, New York, in 1833, of the Bowdoin street Congregational church in Boston, Massachusetts, from 1846 till 1857, and of the Central church in Brooklyn, New York, in 1859. Subsequently he served as city missionary there until his death. Union gave him the degree of S. T. D. in 1841. He was the author of "Advice to a Young Christian" (New York, 1827) ; " The Brighter Age," a poem (Boston, 1830);" Child of the Covenant" (1853); " Voyage of Life" (1853); " Tile Soldier from Home" (New York, 1862); "The Soldier on Guard" (1863); "Sketches of Eloquent Preachers" (1864); " Southern Planters and Freedmen " (1865): and a life of Reverend John Scudder (1870).
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