Major Works
Nature of True Virtue (1765)
INTRODUCTION
This dissertation has become widely discussed for its ethical implications, and deservedly so. For Edwards, there are different levels of virtue, as the title, with its distinction of “true virtue,” implies. There is common morality and true virtue, or saving virtue, with the former being a secondary or inferior type of virtue. True virtue must be based on a benevolence or love to “Being, simply considered,” which is God. By extension, too, true virtue consists in a “union of heart” to “Being in general.” In other words, other beings with true virtue, or love to God, will inspire in us a love for them. This, Edwards states, is the “consent of beings to Being.”
We are in the process of preparing this text for publication in the Works of Jonathan Edwards Online, which currently features some 25,000 pages of Edwards manuscripts. Until the text is ready, please click here to download a PDF file of a representative selection.


