Book detail: Apospasmatia Sacra, Or A Collection of Posthumous and Orphan Lectures is presented as a focused source page for quotations connected with this book, collection, transcript, or source record.
The title employs Greek and Latin terminology to indicate its nature as a collection of sacred fragments or scattered pieces brought together from the author's remaining papers. The word "Apospasmatia" derives from Greek roots suggesting things torn away or collected in pieces, while "Sacra" denotes the religious subject matter. The subtitle clarifies that these were lectures left unpublished at the time of the author's death, and the additional designation "orphan" suggests these texts lacked the author's final revision or editorial oversight. Such collections were common in early modern English publishing, when executors, editors, or colleagues would assemble and print materials found among a deceased divine's papers, often with prefatory matter explaining the circumstances of their preservation and the rationale for their publication. The volume likely contains sermons or theological lectures intended for oral delivery, now preserved in printed form for continued edification of readers. Works of this kind contributed to the circulation of religious thought and preaching styles beyond the immediate audiences who originally heard them spoken.
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