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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: David M Powers , Meredith M NeumanPublisher: Wipf & Stock Publishers Imprint: Wipf & Stock Publishers Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.481kg ISBN: 9781498243179ISBN 10: 1498243177 Pages: 220 Publication Date: 30 August 2017 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews"""These series of sermons from the 1640s, recorded by Pynchon as Moxon preached, reflect both a particular religious culture and the difficulties faced by the English settlers--an impressive reconstruction. Even more impressive, however, is the work Powers has done to retrieve these words. Deciphering seventeenth-century script is challenging enough, but he has done the hard detective work of figuring out obsolete shorthand systems, and the result is this real national treasure."" --Kenneth Minkema, Executive Editor and Director, Jonathan Edwards Center, Yale University ""A manuscript mystery has been solved, thanks to David Powers. Reading John Pynchon's unique script in notes of sermons from the 1640s caused whole words to leap off the page. But they were surrounded by a maze of indecipherable symbols--a vexing problem for the museum's staff, but an irresistible challenge to David. As a result, we now have a unique perspective into life in early Springfield."" --Maggie Humberston, Head of Library and Archives, Lyman and Merrie Wood Museum of Springfield History, Springfield, Massachusetts ""David Powers' careful, learned, and imaginative scholarship brings us yet another step closer to the lived experience of New England's first settlers. Like no other study, this one takes us right into church and sits us down on a bench; we can almost hear the spoken words of the sermon, still ringing in the ears of the hearers. Powers has provided a unique and valuable addition to our understanding of the ordinary people who made Puritan New England possible."" --Margaret Bendroth, Executive Director, The Congregational Library and Archives, Boston, Massachusetts" These series of sermons from the 1640s, recorded by Pynchon as Moxon preached, reflect both a particular religious culture and the difficulties faced by the English settlers--an impressive reconstruction. Even more impressive, however, is the work Powers has done to retrieve these words. Deciphering seventeenth-century script is challenging enough, but he has done the hard detective work of figuring out obsolete shorthand systems, and the result is this real national treasure. --Kenneth Minkema, Executive Editor and Director, Jonathan Edwards Center, Yale University A manuscript mystery has been solved, thanks to David Powers. Reading John Pynchon's unique script in notes of sermons from the 1640s caused whole words to leap off the page. But they were surrounded by a maze of indecipherable symbols--a vexing problem for the museum's staff, but an irresistible challenge to David. As a result, we now have a unique perspective into life in early Springfield. --Maggie Humberston, Head of Library and Archives, Lyman and Merrie Wood Museum of Springfield History, Springfield, Massachusetts David Powers' careful, learned, and imaginative scholarship brings us yet another step closer to the lived experience of New England's first settlers. Like no other study, this one takes us right into church and sits us down on a bench; we can almost hear the spoken words of the sermon, still ringing in the ears of the hearers. Powers has provided a unique and valuable addition to our understanding of the ordinary people who made Puritan New England possible. --Margaret Bendroth, Executive Director, The Congregational Library and Archives, Boston, Massachusetts """These series of sermons from the 1640s, recorded by Pynchon as Moxon preached, reflect both a particular religious culture and the difficulties faced by the English settlers--an impressive reconstruction. Even more impressive, however, is the work Powers has done to retrieve these words. Deciphering seventeenth-century script is challenging enough, but he has done the hard detective work of figuring out obsolete shorthand systems, and the result is this real national treasure."" --Kenneth Minkema, Executive Editor and Director, Jonathan Edwards Center, Yale University ""A manuscript mystery has been solved, thanks to David Powers. Reading John Pynchon's unique script in notes of sermons from the 1640s caused whole words to leap off the page. But they were surrounded by a maze of indecipherable symbols--a vexing problem for the museum's staff, but an irresistible challenge to David. As a result, we now have a unique perspective into life in early Springfield."" --Maggie Humberston, Head of Library and Archives, Lyman and Merrie Wood Museum of Springfield History, Springfield, Massachusetts ""David Powers' careful, learned, and imaginative scholarship brings us yet another step closer to the lived experience of New England's first settlers. Like no other study, this one takes us right into church and sits us down on a bench; we can almost hear the spoken words of the sermon, still ringing in the ears of the hearers. Powers has provided a unique and valuable addition to our understanding of the ordinary people who made Puritan New England possible."" --Margaret Bendroth, Executive Director, The Congregational Library and Archives, Boston, Massachusetts" Author InformationDavid Powers is a native of Springfield, Massachusetts, and has long been interested in its earliest days, particularly the part that William Pynchon played in shaping its life. He traces his fascination with the area's history to finding a map of the early days of Pynchon's settlement in a book by Springfield historian Harry Andrew Wright. In time his interest led to a paper for C. Conrad Wright's American Church History class at Harvard Divinity School. Through extensive research since retirement in both New England and Old, Powers has explored as much of the story as he could for Damnable Heresy. In the course of this study Powers deciphered coded notes that John Pynchon, William's young son, wrote down while the settlement's minister, the Rev. George Moxon, preached on Sundays in the 1640s. The teenager's jottings comprise a small booklet, which is one of the very earliest artifacts from Springfield. These notes, transcribed in Good and Comfortable Words, reveal the concerns the minister addressed. They also reveal him to be an able, engaging speaker who offered encouragement--and challenge--to the growing settlement he faithfully served through its earliest years on the edge of the wilderness. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |