Greatest miracle of the Old Testament?

Jonathan Edwards, the great American theologian, wrote the following in his series of sermons published as A HISTORY OF THE WORK OF REDEMPTION….

But this preservation of the children of Israel for so long a time in the wilderness, was on some accounts more remarkable than any of them [other previous miracles, including Noah and the ark]; for it was by a continual miracle of so long duration. There was, as may be fairly computed, at first two millions of souls in that congregation, that could not subsist any better without meat and drink than other men. But if this had been withheld, they must all have perished, every man, woman, and child, in less than one month’s time, so that there would not have been one of them left. But this vast multitude subsisted for forty years together, in a dry barren wilderness, without sowing or reaping, or tilling any land, having their bread daily rained down to them our of heaven and being furnished with water to satisfy them all, our of a rock; and the same clothes with which they came our of Egypt, lasting without wearing out all that time. Never was any instance like this, of a nation being so upheld for so long a time together. Thus God upheld his church by a continue miracle and kept alive that people in who was the blessing, the promised seed, and great Redeemer of the world.
(page 85)

As you ponder that great preservation of God’s people in the wilderness, do not miss the intended application: God will so preserve His present people in the midst our current wilderness of this world!

Great is the Lord our God!
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Cotton’s birthday!

John Cotton that is!

Born on Dec. 4, 1584, in Derby, England, John Cotton was a famous puritan minister and author. Perhaps his most famous sermon is God’s Promise to His Plantation, preached in 1630 at the departure of John Winthrop’s fleet for New England.

In 1633, he fled himself to the American colonies to escape persecution as a Puritan. He pastored a church in Boston, becoming one of the most respected leaders of New England.

Cotton’s written legacy includes a shorter catechism for children titled Milk for Babes (1646), considered the first children’s book by an American and was later incorporated into The New England Primer which was the mainstay of primary education in America for over 150 years! The NE Primer included this now famous prayer —

Now I lay me down to sleep, I pray thee, Lord, my soul to keep;

If I should die before I wake, I pray thee, Lord, my soul to take.

He is father-in-law to Increase Mather (who tried to bring a calm and cool perspective during the Salem Witch Trials), and grandfather of Cotton Mather.

John Cotton died on December 23, 1652, and is buried in Boston.