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Answer:
Why does Edwards believe that some of his congregation do not fear Hell?
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BRIDGETT SUMNER, M.A. eNotes educator | CERTIFIED EDUCATOR
Edwards delivered his famous sermon during a revival movement intended to reinvigorate church attendance and bring more converts into the faith. He recognized that people were drifting away from church and relegating their faith to the background of their lives. The entire sermon is designed to shock listeners and instill a sense of urgency in their return to religion.
Edwards likely believed that Hell was an abstract notion to many of his listeners, and so he loaded the sermon with horrifying sense imagery to try to convince the congregation that Hell was a concrete place of eternal tortures.
An attitude or an emotion attached to a word's meaning is called Connotation.
Denotation is the literal meaning of the word, while origin and definition are unrelated.
Some similes in the book "Mrs. Frisby and the rat of Nimh" are:
"The floor looked like Christmas in the moring"
"As full of activities as a factory."
And so on!
The answer is: Echinoderms.
Echinoderm is the name given to marine animals whose adults are acknowledged to possess usually five-point radial symmetry, which is the balance of distribution of body parts and shapes. They are also found at the ocean bottom, so there are no land versions of echinoderms. Besides sea cucumbers and sea lilies, other examples of echinoderms include sea stars, urchins and sand dollars.