New England Dogmatics. Maltby Geltson

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New England Dogmatics - Maltby Geltson

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      And mocking say ‘Come save the land

      Come try yourself to free.’

      A soldier pierced him when he died

      Then healing streams came from his side

      And thus my lord was crucified

      Stern justice now is satisfied,

      Sinners for you and me.

      Behold he mounts the throne of state

      He fills the mediatorial seat

      While millions lowing at his feet

      With loud hosannas tell.

      Though he endured exquisite pain

      He led the monster death in chains

      Ye seraphs raise your loudest strains

      With music fell bright Eden’s plains

      He conquered death and Hell.

      ‘Tis done the dreadful debt is plain

      The great atonement now is made

      Sinners on him your guilt was laid

      For you he spilt his blood.

      For you his tender soul did move

      For you he left the courts above

      That you the length and breadth might prove

      And height of depth of perfect love

      In Christ your smiling God.

      All glory be to God on high

      Who reigns enthroned above the sky

      Who sent his Son to bleed and die

      Glory to him be given

      While heaven above his praised resound

      O Zion sing his grace abounds

      I hope to shout eternal sounds

      In flaming love that knows no bounds

      Beyond these few historical facts and the testimony to the effectual ministration of his church duties, there is little extent biographical material about Gelston and even less about his time under the instruction of Edwards Jr. This is somewhat problematic at one level. For, we want to be careful not to read Gelston’s Systematic Collection too far afield from the historical context wherein it was composed. With that in mind, and as there is so scant a record of Gelston’s life at the time, his particular place in and value to the New England theological tradition has (for our purposes) a great deal more to do with the particular answers that his Systematic Collection supplies us with than it does with the circumstances of its composition. For this reason, let us briefly and more broadly consider the occasion of his composition, after which we will turn our attention to the significance of its content, paying particular attention to what it says about the nature of the atonement.

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