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So far coffee has created 772 blog entries.
1 05, 2020

ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: OUR FOREFATHERS’ COVENANTS, Part 21

2020-03-22T10:26:00+00:00May 1st, 2020|2020, ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK:|

I want to finish up with Daniel Webster today and then move on to a look at Alexander Hamilton. Yesterday, we finished up his December 1820 speech to the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention. Today, let's take a look at an address he made at Dartmouth. This speech must easily have taken an hour or more to deliver, and it would take a week of Coffee Breaks to try and cover the whole thing, so let me rather take some extracts from his address -- and address which clearly denotes his personal convictions and thought processes concerning the Lord and His interaction with mankind.  

24 04, 2020

ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: OUR FOREFATHERS’ COVENANTS, Part 20

2020-03-22T10:21:44+00:00April 24th, 2020|2020, ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK:|

We started talking about Daniel Webster yesterday, and I was concerned that the discussion would take up a whole lot more time than I wanted to spend for the day so we'll finish up talking about him today. We finished the day with a portion of his December 1820 speech to the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention; and in a minute, we'll go back to it for some more.

3 04, 2020

ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: OUR FOREFATHERS’ COVENANTS, Part 17

2020-04-03T07:16:10+00:00April 3rd, 2020|2020, ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK:|

In last week’s Coffee Break, I deviated somewhat from the discussions on our nation's founding fathers -- those who were actively involved in the politics and policies that brought those American colonists together to form a cohesive nation under God -- to talk about a couple of preachers (Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield) whose lives, whose teaching and preaching became integrated into the thoughts and decision-making processes that formulated our Articles of Association in 1774; the Declaration of Independence in 1776; the Articles of Confederation in 1781 and the United States Constitution in 1788.

27 03, 2020

ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: OUR FOREFATHERS’ COVENANTS, Part 16

2020-03-03T07:53:20+00:00March 27th, 2020|2020, ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK:|

We finished up last week talking about Roger Sherman and began talking about Jonathan Edwards. During the next two weeks, I’d like to talk about Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield, probably the two men who played the greatest part in the move of God we’ve come to know and refer to as “The Great Awakening.” These two men were as opposite as can be from one another in their upbringing, yet the move of God in their lives was almost beyond imagination. In their years of ministry, they came to know each other and became great friends.

20 03, 2020

ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: OUR FOREFATHERS’ COVENANTS, Part 15

2020-03-03T07:51:09+00:00March 20th, 2020|2020, ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK:|

Let me share with you today about one of the most prolific of our founding fathers. In the weeks to come, you will see how much this man was involved in the founding of this nation, and the part he played in the First Great Awakening – a phenomenal move of God that spanned the colonies and influenced so many of our early leaders. One of the founding fathers of this nation was man whose name is far less known than that of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams or Benjamin Franklin: Roger Sherman. Nevertheless, his influence and direct involvement in the affairs that led to our nation's Declaration of Independence and Constitution ranked as high, if not higher, than those names with which we are more familiar.

13 03, 2020

ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: OUR FOREFATHERS’ COVENANTS, Part 14

2020-03-03T07:48:14+00:00March 13th, 2020|2020, ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK:|

Have you ever seen the series on television that PBS did several years ago, titled: The Adams Chronicles? It recounts the activites of the Adams family, their faith in God, the trials and tribulations they went through, and the remarkable successes they experienced during their years before serving in politics, and the years that followed. One of the most remarkable men in our nation's history was John Adams, who served as Vice-President during the eight years of George Washington's presidency, and four years as President immediately succeeding Washington.

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