While he was well known for his lifelong fascination with the nature of religious experience, the colonial American pastor and theologian Jonathan Edwards is seldom associated with a specifically Trinitarian spirituality. This study explores the central connections Edwards drew between his doctrines of religious experience and the Trinity: the person and work of the Holy Spirit. Edwards envisioned the Spirit's inter-Trinitarian work as the affectionate bond of union between the Father and the Son, a work that, he argued, is reduplicated in a finite way in the work of redemption. Salvation is ultimately all about being drawn in love into the Trinitarian life of the Godhead. This study takes us through the major regions of Edwards's theology, including his Trinitarianism, his doctrine of the end for which God created the world, his Christology, and his doctrines of justification, sanctification, and glorification, to demonstrate the centrality of the Holy Spirit throughout his theology. ""Much has been said about Edwards' remarkable vision of the God of Scripture, but comparatively little about the way that vision was rooted in the Triunity of God. For this reason this new work is welcome, for Caldwell shows us that Edwards was first and foremost a Trinitarian theologian. His work is doubly welcome for the way that Caldwell also argues that Edwards' Trinitarianism turns on a familiar theme of western theology--the Holy Spirit as the bond of union within the Godhead--and then details how this pneumatological perspective informs a number of key areas of Edwardsean thought. In a word, this is a valuable work that deserves a hearing in the current renaissance of interest in the theologian of the eighteenth century."" --Michael A. G. Haykin, Toronto Baptist Seminary and Bible College ""This work makes an important contribution to the increasing attention on Jonathan Edwards as theologian. By offering a sustained study of Edwards's pneumatology, Professor Caldwell insightfully reveals a prominent yet under emphasized feature of Edwards's thought. This book not only deftly argues for Edwards's pneumatological insight as central to his thought, it also makes a compelling case that the recovery of Edwards's insight can revitalize contemporary theology. A must for those who think Edwards still has something meaningful to say to the church."" --Stephen J. Nichols, Lancaster Bible College and Graduate School ""Edwards once wrote that, 'All divine communion, or communion