This is a Blog for those interested in following hard after His heart. Those willing to strive to live a moment-by-moment life as we go through the transformation process with Him. It is not an easy life, but the Father expects each of us to become an offering for His pleasure. So, if this is you, then let’s journey together hand in hand. I am humbled that you have chosen to walk with me. Thanks!
03 March, 2023
Works of John Bunyan —BUNYAN IS BAPTIZED, AND ENTERS INTO COMMUNION WITH A CHRISTIAN CHURCH AT BEDFORD- 5th Period
02 March, 2023
Works of John Bunyan —BUNYAN IS BAPTIZED, AND ENTERS INTO COMMUNION WITH A CHRISTIAN CHURCH AT BEDFORD- PERIOD SIXTH
It appears from this deed that Bunyan continued in business as a brazier, and it is very probable that he carried it on until his decease. This deed secured to his wife what little he possessed, without the trouble or expense of applying to the ecclesiastical courts for probate of a will.
Among other opinions which then divided the Christian world, was a very important one relative to the law of the ten commandments, whether it was given to the world at large, or limited to the Jews as a peculiar nation until the coming of Messiah, and whether our Lord altered or annulled the whole or any part of that law. This question involves the observance of the seventh-day Sabbath. An awful curse is denounced upon those who do not continue in ALL things which are written in the book of the law to do them (Gal 3:10; Deut 27:26). When an innovation upon the almost universal practice of infant baptism had become an object of inquiry only to be answered from the New Testament, it is not surprising that the serious question, why God's Sabbath-day had been altered, should also be agitated with deep feeling. Generally, those who advocated the restoration of the Jewish Sabbath were decided of the opinion that believers only were fit subjects for baptism, and that the scriptural mode of administering it was by immersion; hence they were called Seventh-day Baptists—Sabbatarians, or Sabbath-keepers.
Bunyan entered with very proper and temperate zeal into this controversy. The popular feeling had no influence over him; nor could he submit to the opinions of the ancient fathers. His storehouse of knowledge was limited to the revealed will of God, and there he found ample material to guide his opinion. His work on this subject is called, Questions about the Nature and Perpetuity of the Seventh-day Sabbath; and proof that the First Day of the Week is the Christian Sabbath. It is one of the smallest of his volumes, but so weighty in argument as never to have been answered.
We now arrive at the last year of his eventful and busy life, during which he published six important volumes, and left twelve others in manuscript, prepared for publication. A list of these will be found in The Struggler; they are upon the most important subjects, which are very admirably treated. We notice among these, The Jerusalem Sinner Saved, or Good News for the Vilest of Men. It is a specimen of preaching calculated to excite the deepest interest and afford the strongest consolation to a soul oppressed with the sense of sin. Great sinner! thou art called to mercy by name.
Arise! shoulder thy way into court through any crowd,—'say, Stand away, the devil; stand away all discouragements; my Saviour calls me to receive mercy.' In this treatise, Bunyan has repeated from memory what he had read in some book when in prison, four and twenty years before. It is a curious legend, which he doubtless believed to be true, and it displays his most retentive memory. His poetry, like his prose, was not written to gain a name, but to make a deep impression. One of his professed admirers made a strange mistake when he called them doggerel rhymes. His Caution to Watch Against Sin is full of solemn and impressive thoughts, the very reverse of doggerel or burlesque. his poem on the house of God is worthy of a most careful perusal, and thousands have been delighted and improved with his emblems. One rhyme in the Pilgrim can never be forgotten—
'He that is down need fear no fall;
He that is low no pride;
He that is humble ever shall
Have God to be his guide,' &c.
The careful perusal of every one of his treatises has excited in my mind a much livelier interest than any other religious works which, in a long life, have come under my notice. In fact, the works of Bunyan to a country minister may be compared to a vast storehouse, most amply replenished with all those solemn subjects which call for his prayerful investigation; well arranged, ready of access, striking in their simplicity, full of vivid ideas conveyed in language that a novice may understand. They are all so admirably composed that pious persons, whether in houses of convocation or of parliament or the inmates of a workhouse, may equally listen to them with increasing delight and instruction. No man ever more richly enjoyed the magnificent language of Job. He called it 'that blessed book.' The deep interest that he took in its scenery may be traced through all his writings. His spirit, with its mighty powers, grasped the wondrous truths so splendidly portrayed in that most ancient book. The inspired writings, which so eminently give wisdom to the simple, expanded his mind, while his mental powers were strengthened and invigorated by his so deeply drinking into the spirit of the inspired volume.
01 March, 2023
Works of John Bunyan —BUNYAN IS BAPTIZED, AND ENTERS INTO COMMUNION WITH A CHRISTIAN CHURCH AT BEDFORD- PERIOD SIXTH
This godly jealousy made him sacrifice worldly interests to an extent not justifiable if all the
facts appear. When told that a very worthy citizen of London would take his son
Joseph as an apprentice without fee, and advance his interests, he refused, saying,
'God did not send me to advance my family, but to preach the gospel.'
At this time, he manifested his lion heart by writing and preparing for the press a fearless treatise on Antichrist and his Ruin. In this, he shows that human interference
with Divine worship, by penal laws or constraint, is 'Antichrist'—that which pretends
to regulate thought and thus reduce the kingdom of Christ to a level with
the governments of this world. In this treatise, he clearly exhibits the
meaning of that passage, so constantly quoted by the advocates of tyranny and
persecution (Ezra 7:26), and shows that the laws interfered not with Divine
worship, but that they upheld to the fullest extent the principle of voluntary
obedience (v 13); so that any man putting constraint upon another in religious
affairs, would be guilty of breaking the law, and subject him to extreme
punishment. This was one of the last treatises that Bunyan prepared for the
press as if in his dying moments he would aim a deadly thrust at Apollyon.
Reader, it is worth your most careful perusal, as showing the certain downfall
of the Antichrist, and the means by which it must be accomplished.
Feeling the extreme
uncertainty of life, and that he might be robbed of all his worldly goods,
under a pretense of fines and penalties, he, on the 23rd of December 1685,
executed a deed of gift, vesting what little he possessed in his wife. It is a
singular instrument, especially as having been sealed with a silver two-penny
piece. The original is in the church book, at Bedford:—
'To all people to
whom this present writing shall come, J. Bunyan of the parish of St. Cuthbert’s,
in the Towne of Bedford, in the county of Bedford, Brazier sends greeting. Know
ye, that I the said John Bunyan as well for, and in consideration of the
natural affection and Love which I have, and bear unto my well-beloved wife,
Elizabeth Bunyan, as also for divers other good causes and concerns, me
at this present especially morning, have given and granted, and by these
presents, do give, grant, and confirm unto the said Elizabeth Bunyan, my said
wife, all and singular my goods, chattels, debts, ready money, plate, rings,
household stuff, apparel, utensils, brass, pewter, bedding, and all other my
substance, whatsoever movable and immovable, of what kind, nature, quality, or
condition soever the same are or be, and in what place or places soever the
same be, shall or may be found as well in mine own custody, possession, as in
the possession, hands, power, and custody of any other person, or persons whatsoever.
To have and to hold
all and singular the said goods, chattels, debts, and all other, the aforesaid
premises unto the said Elizabeth, my wife, her executors, administrators, and
assigns to her and their proper uses and behooves, freely and quietly without
any matter of challenge, claim, or demand of me the said John Bunyan, or of any
other person, or persons, whatsoever for me in my name, by my means caves or
procurement, and without any money or other thing, therefore to be yielded,
paid or done unto me the said John Bunyan, my executors, administrators or
assigns. And I, the said John Bunyan, all and singular, the aforesaid goods,
chattels, and premises to the said Elizabeth my wife, her executors,
administrators, and assign to the use aforesaid, against all people do warrant
and forever defend by these presents. And further, know ye, that I the said
John Bunyan have put the said Elizabeth, my wife, in peaceable and quiet
possession of all and singular the aforesaid premises, by the delivery unto her
at the unsealing hereof one coin piece of silver, commonly called two pence,
fixed on the seal of these presents.
'In witness whereof,
I the said John Bunyan have hereunto set my hand and seal this 23d day of
December, in the first year of the reign of our sovereign lord, King James the
Second of England, &c., in the year of our lord and saviour, Jesus Christ,
1685.
28 February, 2023
Works of John Bunyan —BUNYAN IS BAPTIZED, AND ENTERS INTO COMMUNION WITH A CHRISTIAN CHURCH AT BEDFORD- PERIOD SIXTH
In 1684, he completed his Pilgrim's Progress, with the Journey of a Female Christian, her Children, and the Lovely Mercy; and now, as his invaluable and active life drew towards its close, his labors were redoubled. In his younger days, there appeared to have been no presentiment on his part that the longest term of human life would with him be shortened, but rather an expectation of living to old age, judging from an expression in his Grace Abounding. when he enjoyed a good hope and bright anticipation of heavenly felicity, 'I should often long and desire that the last days came.
O! thought I, that I was fourscore years old now, that I might die quickly and be gone to rest.' At that time he did not anticipate twelve years' imprisonment in a wretched jail, nor the consequent effects it must have upon his robust frame, well calculated to stand all weathers, but easily sapped and undermined by a damp dungeon. Symptoms of decay, after having enjoyed his liberty for about a year, led him to close his Affectionate Advice to his Beloved Flock, on their Christian Behaviour; with these words, 'Thus have I written to you, before I die, to provoke you to faith and holiness, and to love one another, when I am deceased, and shall be in paradise, as through grace I comfortably believe; yet it is not there, but here, I must do you good.' It is remarkable that Bunyan escaped all the dangers of the trying reign of James II, who, at times, was a persecutor, and at times endeavored, in vain, by blandishments, to win the Nonconformists. his minions had their eyes upon our pilgrim, but were foiled in every attempt to apprehend him; all that he suffered was the occasional spoiling of his goods.
Neither violence nor allurements induced him to deviate from his line of duty. No fear of man appeared to agitate his breast—he richly enjoyed that 'perfect love,' which 'casteth out fear' (1 John 4:18). James did all that an unprincipled man could do to cajole the Dissenters, that by their aid he might pull down the walls of Protestantism, and give full sway to the Papacy. He attempted, among many others, to bribe John Bunyan. He knew not how well he was read in the Book of Martyrs; how well he was aware that 'the instruments of cruelty are in their habitations,' and that the only advantage he could have received, would have been the same that Polypheme, the monstrous giant of Sicily, allowed to Ulysses, that he would eat his men first, and do him the favor of being eaten last. Mr. Doe states that 'Regulators were sent into all cities and towns corporate to new-model the magistracy, by turning out some and putting in others.
Against this Bunyan expressed his zeal with great anxiety, foreseeing the bad consequences that would attend it, and labored with his
congregation to prevent they are being imposed on in this kind. And when a great
man in those days, coming to Bedford upon some such errand, sent for him, as it
is supposed, to give him a place of public trust, he would by no means come at
him, but sent his excuse.' He knew that in his flesh he possessed what he
calls 'Adam's legacy, a conduit pipe, through which the devil conveys his
poisoned spawn and venom,' and he wisely avoided this subtle temptation.
He detested the 'painted Satan, or devil in fine clothes.' It was one of
these hypocritical pretenses to correct evil, while really meaning to increase
it, which Bunyan calls, 'the devil correcting vice.' He was watchful, lest
'his inward man should catch a cold,' and every attempt to entangle him
failed.
27 February, 2023
Works of John Bunyan —BUNYAN IS BAPTIZED, AND ENTERS INTO COMMUNION WITH A CHRISTIAN CHURCH AT BEDFORD- PERIOD SIXTH
November 12, 1681,
Bunyan's friend and fellow laborer Samuel Fenn, was removed from this world,
and in the following year, persecution raged severely. The church was, for a
season, driven from the meeting-house, and obliged to assemble in the fields.
The Word of the Lord was precious in those days.
In 1682, while surrounded by persecution, he prepared and published his most profound and beautiful allegory, The Holy War, made by Shaddai upon Diabolus, for the Regaining of the Metropolis of the World; or, The Losing and Taking again the Town of Mansoul. The frontispiece is the most accurate likeness of Bunyan that is extant; it is engraved by White, from a drawing, also by him, now preserved in the print department of the British Museum. From this drawing, carefully compared with the print, we have furnished the expressive likeness which forms the frontispiece to this volume. It has also a correct whole-length portrait, with emblematical devices.
This exceedingly beautiful and most finished
allegory has never been so popular as The Pilgrim's Progress, for reasons which
are shown in the introduction to The Holy War. The whole narrative of this
wondrous war appears to flow as naturally as did that of the pilgrimage from
the highly imaginative mind of the author. Man, in his innocence, attracts the
notice and hatred of Apollyon. Nothing could be accomplished by force—all by
subtlety and deceit. He holds a council of war—selects his
officers—approaches—parleys, and gains admittance—then fortifies the town
against its king—Immanuel determines to recover it—vast armies, under
appropriate leaders, surround the town, and attack every gate.
The ear is garrisoned by Captain Prejudice and his deaf men. But he who rides forth conquering and to conquer is victorious. All the pomp, and parade, and horrors of a siege are as accurately told, as if by one who had been at the sacking of many towns. The author had learned much in a little time, at the siege of Leicester. All the sad elements of war appear and make us shudder—masses of armed men with their slings and battering rams—clarions and shouts—wounded and slain, all appear as in a panorama. The mind becomes entranced, and when sober reflection regains her command, we naturally inquire, can all this have taken place in my heart?
Then the armies of Diabolus, with his thousands of Election Doubters, and as
many Vocation Doubters, and his troops of Blood-men—thousands were slain, and yet
thousands start into existence. And all this in one man! How numberless are our
thoughts—how crafty the approaches of the enemy—how hopeless and helpless is the
sinner, unless Immanuel undertakes his recovery. The Holy War is a most
surprising narrative of the fall and of the recovery of man's soul, as accurate
as it is most deeply interesting. It is one of the most perfect allegories.
There is as vast a superiority in Bunyan's Holy War over that by Chrysostom, as
there is in the sun over a rushlight.
26 February, 2023
Works of John Bunyan —BUNYAN IS BAPTIZED, AND ENTERS INTO COMMUNION WITH A CHRISTIAN CHURCH AT BEDFORD- PERIOD SIXTH
The purifying influence
of The Pilgrim's Progress may be traced in the writings of many imaginative
authors. How does it in several parts beautify the admirable tale of Uncle Tom and his Cabin? In that inimitable scene, the death of the lovely Eva, the
distressed negro, watching with intense anxiety the progress of death, says,
'When that blessed child goes into the kingdom, they'll open the door so wide,
we'll all get a look in at the glory.' Whence came to this strange idea—not
limited to the poor negro, but felt by thousands who have watched over
departing saints? It comes from the entrance of Christian and Hopeful into the
celestial city—'I looked in after them, and, behold, the city shone like the
sun; the streets, also, were paved with gold, and in them, they walked with
crowns on their heads, palms in their hands, and golden harps to sing praises,
which, when I had seen, I wished myself among them.'
How often has Bunyan's wit sparkled in
sermons, and even in speeches delivered in the senate? Recently, in a speech on
the collation ministry, the following reference was introduced: —' Mr. Facing both ways, of honest John Bunyan, is not a creature mankind can regard
with any complacency; nor will they likely suffer anyone to act with one party
and reserve his principles for another.' It has also been strangely quoted in
novel writing—thus in Bell's Villette—visiting a Godmother in a pleasant
retreat, is said 'to resemble the sojourn of Christian and Hopeful, beside the
pleasant stream, with green trees on each bank, and meadows beautified with
lilies all the year round.' It is marvelous that a picture of nature should
have been so beautifully and strikingly described by an unlettered artisan, as
to be used in embellishing an elegant novel, written nearly two centuries after
his decease.
The Pilgrim was
followed by a searching treatise on The Fear of God. The value of this book led
to its republication by the Tract Society, and 4000 copies have been
circulated. It is a neat and acceptable volume, but why altered? and a psalm
omitted. Bunyan says, 'Your great ranting, swaggering, rosters'; this is
modernized into 'Your ranting boasters.' Then followed, the Come and Welcome to
Jesus Christ. This was frequently reprinted, and hundreds of thousands have
been circulated to benefit the world. His popularity increased with his years;
efforts were made, but in vain, to steal him from his beloved charge at
Bedford. 'He hath refused a more plentiful income to keep his station,' is the
language of his surviving friend, Charles Doe.
It is not surprising that he was thus tempted
to leave his poor country church, for we are told by the same biographer, that
'When Mr. Bunyan preached in London if there were but one day's notice given,
there would be more people come together to hear him preach than the meetinghouse
could hold. I have heard him preach, by my computation, about 1200 at a
morning lecture, by seven o'clock, on a working day, in the dark wintertime. I
also computed about 3000 that came to hear him one Lord's-day, at London, at a
town's end meeting house, so that half were fain to go back again for want of
room, and then himself was fain at a back door to be pulled almost over people
to get upstairs to his pulpit.'
This took place in a
large meetinghouse, erected in Zoar Street, either on the site or near the
Globe Theatre, Southwark. On this spot, the prince of dramatists amused and
corrupted crowded houses; while in the immediate vicinity were the stews and
bear garden, frequented by libertines of the lowest caste. One Sunday, in 1582,
many were killed or miserably wounded while attending the brutal sport of bearbaiting.
Here, in the heart of Satan's empire, the prince of allegorists attracted
multitudes, to be enlightened by his natural eloquence, and to be benefited by
the fruits of his prolific and vivid imagination, at all times curbed and
directed by the holy oracles. It was a spacious building, covering about 2000
feet of ground (50 by 40), with three galleries, quite capable of holding the number
computed by Mr. Doe.
We have, from correct
drawings, furnished our subscribers with the plan and elevation of this ancient
meetinghouse. Having preached with peculiar warmth and enlargement, one of his
friends took him by the hand, and could not help observing what a sweet sermon
he had delivered; 'Ay,' said he, 'you need not remind me of that, for the devil
told me of it before I was out of the pulpit!' Amongst his hearers were to be
found the learned and the illiterate. It was well known that Dr. John Owen when he had the opportunity, embraced it with pleasure, and sat at the feet of
the unlearned, but eloquent tinker. Charles II, hearing of it, asked the
learned D.D., 'How a man of his great erudition could sit to hear a tinker
preach?' to which the doctor replied, 'May it please your Majesty, if I could
possess the tinker's abilities, I would gladly give in exchange all my
learning.'
25 February, 2023
Works of John Bunyan —BUNYAN IS BAPTIZED, AND ENTERS INTO COMMUNION WITH A CHRISTIAN CHURCH AT BEDFORD- PERIOD SIXTH
BUNYAN IS DELIVERED FROM
PRISON—CONTROVERSY WITH THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH ON Works of John Bunyan —BUNYAN IS
BAPTIZED, AND ENTERS INTO COMMUNION WITH A CHRISTIAN CHURCH AT BEDFORD- PERIOD
SIXTH.THE SUBJECT OF THE LORD'S SUPPER—PUBLISHES THE PILGRIM'S PROGRESS, AND
MANY BOOKS, AND BECOMES EXTREMELY POPULAR—HIS DEATH AND CHARACTER.
And yet the God that he carried it thus towards doth give me his breakfast, dinner, and supper; clothes him well, and when night comes, has him to bed, gives him good rest, blesses his field, his corn, his cattle, his children, and raises him to the high estate; yea and this our God doth not only once or twice, but until these transgressors become old; his patience is thus extended years after years, that we might learn of him to do well. All the works of Bunyan abound with such striking lessons, as to render them extremely valuable, especially to Sunday school teachers and ministers, to enliven their addresses and sermons.
But, in The Pilgrim's Progress, the world has acknowledged one train of beauties; picture after picture, most beautifully finished, exhibiting the road from destruction to the celestial city; our only difficulty in such a display is to decide as to which is the most interesting and striking piece of scenery. The editor's introduction to that extraordinary book is intended to prove that it was written while the author was imprisoned for refusing to submit his conscience to human laws and that it is a perpetual monument to the folly of persecution; the peculiar qualifications of the author are displayed in its having been a spontaneous effusion of his own mind, unaided by any previous writer; an analysis is given of all prior pilgrimages, in which, more especially in The Pilgrims, The Pilgrimage of the Soule, Grande Amore, and in The Pilgrim of Loretto, the reader will find a faithful picture of some of the singularities of Popery drawn by itself; an account of the editions, forgeries, errors in printing, versions, and translations of this wonderful book; the opinions of the learned and pious of its merits, principal scenes, and a synopsis.
It has been the source of very numerous courses of lectures by ministers of all denominations; and has been turned into a handsome volume of hymns, adapted for public worship, by the late Mr. Purdy, a friend of John Wesley's, and a laborious preacher for more than half a century.
Great efforts have been made by the most popular artists to enliven the scenes of the pilgrimage, but no colour glows like the enchanting words of Bunyan. No figures are so true to nature, and so life-like. Those eminent engravers, Sturt and Strut, Stoddard and Martin, with the prize efforts excited by the Art Union of England, and the curious outlines by Mrs. McKenzie, the daughter of a British admiral, have endeavored to exhaust the scenes in this inexhaustible work of beautiful scenery. The most elegant and correct edition is the large-paper, sumptuous volume by Mr. Bogue, admirably illustrated with new designs, engraved on wood in superior style—a volume worthy the drawing room of queens and emperors.
The designs, also, of the late David Scott, recently published at Edinburgh, are new, and peculiarly striking. His entrance to the Valley of the Shadow of Death is mysteriously impressive, a fit accompaniment to Bunyan's description, which is not excelled by anything in Dante, Spencer, or Milton. In both parts of The Pilgrim's Progress, this scene is full of terrific sublimity. But we must be excused, if we most warmly recommend our own offspring—the present edition—as combining accuracy, elegance, and cheapness, with the addition of very numerous notes, which, we trust, will prove highly illustrative and entertaining.
The carping criticisms of Mr. Dunlop, in his History of Fiction, and of an author in the Penny Encyclopedia, are scarcely worth notice. The complaint is a want of benevolence in the hero of the tale. How singular it is, and what a testimony to its excellence, that an intelligent writer of fiction should have been so overpowered with this spiritual narrative, as to confound it with temporal things. Christian leaves his wife and children, instead of staying with them, to be involved in destruction—all this relates to inward spiritual feelings, and to these only. Visited by compunctions of heart, Christian strives to inspire his wife and children with the same, but in vain; he attends solitarily to his spiritual state, taunted by his family, while, as to temporal things, he becomes a better husband and father than ever he was—but this is not prominent, because it is entirely foreign to the author's object, which is to display the inward emotions of the new birth, the spiritual journey alone, apart from all temporal affairs.
Multitudes read it as if it was really a dream, the old sleeping portrait confirming the idea. In the story, Christian most mysteriously embodies all classes of men, from the prince to the peasant—the wealthiest noble, or merchant, to the humbles mechanic or laborer—and it illustrates the most solemn, certain truth, that, with respect to the salvation of the soul, the poorest creature in existence is upon a perfect equality with the lordly prelate, or magnificent emperor, with this word ringing in their ears, 'the POOR have the gospel preached to them.' The Grace Abounding, or Life of Bunyan, is key to all the mysteries of The Pilgrim's Progress, and Holy War.
24 February, 2023
Works of John Bunyan —BUNYAN IS BAPTIZED, AND ENTERS INTO COMMUNION WITH A CHRISTIAN CHURCH AT BEDFORD- PERIOD SIXTH
To this time, Bunyan
was only known as an extraordinarily talented and eloquent man, whose retentive
memory was most richly stored with the sacred Scriptures. All his sermons and
writings were drawn from his own mental resources, aided, while in prison, only
by the Bible, the Concordance, and Fox's Book of Martyrs. Very emphatically he
says, 'I am for drinking water out of my own cistern.' 'I find such a spirit of
idolatry in the learning of this world, that had I it at command I durst not
use it, but only use the light of the Word and Spirit of God.' 'I will not take
off it from a thread even to a shoe latchet.' It must not be understood that he
read no other works but his Bible and Book of Martyrs, but that he only used
those in composing his various treatises while in confinement. He certainly had
and read The Plain Man's Pathway, Practice of Piety, Luther on the Galatians,
Clarke's Looking glass for Saints and Sinners, Dodd on the Commandments,
Andrews' Sermons, Fowler's Design of Christianity, Danvers and Paul on Baptism,
and doubtless all the books which were within his reach, calculated to increase
his store of knowledge.
About this time, he
published a small quarto tract, in which he scripturally treats the doctrine of
eternal election and reprobation. This rare book, published for sixpence, we
were glad to purchase at a cost of one guinea and a half, because a modern
author rejected its authenticity! It is included in every early list of
Bunyan's works, and especially in that published by himself, in 1688, to guard
his friends against deception; for he had become so popular an author that several
forgeries had been published under his initials. These few pages on election
contain a scriptural treatise upon a very solemn subject, written by one whose
mind was so imbued by the fear of God, as to have cast out the fear of man,
which so generally embarrasses writers upon this subject. It was translated
into Welsh, and is worth attentive perusal, especially by those who cannot
see the difference between God's foreknowledge and his foreordination.
A new era was now
dawning upon him, which, during the last ten years of his life, added tenfold
to his popularity. For many years his beautifully simple, but splendid
allegory, The Pilgrim's Progress, lay slumbering in his drawer. Numerous had
been his consultations with his pious associates and friends, and various had
been their opinions, whether it was serious enough to be published. All of them
had a solemn sense of the impropriety of anything like trifling as to the way
of escape from destruction, and the road to the celestial city. It appears
strange to us, who have witnessed the very solemn impressions, in all cases,
made by reading that book, that there could have been a doubt of the propriety
of treating in a colloquial manner, and even under the fashion of a dream,
those most important truths. Some said, 'John, print it'; others said, 'not
so.' Some said, 'it might do good'; others said, 'no.' The result of all those
consultations was his determination, 'I print it will,' and it has raised an
imperishable monument to his memory.
Up to this time, all Bunyan's popularity arose
from his earlier works, and his sermons. Leaving out of the question those most
extraordinary books, The Pilgrim's Progress and Holy War, his other writings
ought to have handed down his name, with honor and popularity, to the latest
posterity. While the logical and ponderous works of Baxter and Owen are well
calculated to furnish instruction to those who are determined to obtain
knowledge, the works of Bunyan create that very determination and furnish that
very knowledge, so blended with amusement, as to fix it in the memory. Let one
illustration suffice. It is our duty to love our enemies, but it is a hard
lesson; we must learn it from the conduct of the Divine Creator—' There is a man who hates God, blasphemes his name, despises his being; yea, says there is no God.
23 February, 2023
Works of John Bunyan —BUNYAN IS BAPTIZED, AND ENTERS INTO COMMUNION WITH A CHRISTIAN CHURCH AT BEDFORD- PERIOD SIXTH
BUNYAN IS DELIVERED FROM
PRISON—CONTROVERSY WITH THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH ON Works of John Bunyan —BUNYAN IS
BAPTIZED, AND ENTERS INTO COMMUNION WITH A CHRISTIAN CHURCH AT BEDFORD- PERIOD
SIXTH.THE SUBJECT OF THE LORD'S SUPPER—PUBLISHES THE PILGRIM'S PROGRESS, AND
MANY BOOKS, AND BECOMES EXTREMELY POPULAR—HIS DEATH AND CHARACTER.
The late Mr. Kilpin of Bedford considered the whole of this letter to be entered in the minutes in Bunyan's handwriting.
There is also in the church book the copy of a letter, in 1674, addressed to the 'church sometime walking with our brother Jesse,' refusing to dismiss to them Martha Cumberland, unless they were certified that they continued in the practice of mixed communion. In these sentiments, Bunyan lived and died. His church remains the same to the present day. In the new, commodious, and handsome meetinghouse, opened in 1850, there is a baptistery, frequently used. The present minister, the amiable and talented John Jukes, baptizes infants and receives the assistance of a neighboring Baptist minister to baptize adults.
Not only had Bunyan clear, well-defined, and most decided views of the ordinances of the gospel, but also of all its doctrines. His knowledge of those solemn subjects was drawn exclusively from the sacred pages; nor dared he swerve in the slightest degree from the path of duty; still he belonged to no sect, but that of Christianity, and the same freedom which had guided him in forming his principles, he cheerfully allowed to others. Hitherto, water baptism had been considered a pre-requisite to the Lord's table by all parties.
The Episcopalians, Presbyterians, and Independents had denounced the Baptists as guilty of a most serious heresy, or blasphemy, in denying the right of infants to baptism; not only did they exclude the Baptists from communion with their churches, but they persecuted them with extreme rigor. When the Independents made laws for the government of their colony in America, in 1644, one of the enactments was, 'That if any person shall either openly condemn, or oppose the baptizing of infants, or seduce others, or leave the congregation during the administration of the rite, they shall be sentenced to banishment.' The same year a poor man was tied up and whipped, for refusing to have his child baptized. 'The Rev. J. Clarke, and Mr. O. Holmes, of Rhode Island, for visiting a sick Baptist brother in Massachusetts, instead of being admitted to the Lord's table, they were arrested, fined, imprisoned, and whipped.' At this very time, the Baptists formed their colony in Rhode Island, and the charter concludes with these words, 'All men may walk as their consciences persuade them, everyone in the name of his God.' This is probably the only spot in the world where persecution was never known. The Baptists considered that immersion in water was the marriage rite between the believer and Saviour; that to sit at the Lord's table without it was spiritual adultery, to be abhorred and avoided, and therefore refused to admit any person to the Lord's table who had not been baptized in water upon a personal profession of faith in the Saviour.
This was the state of parties when Bunyan, at the commencement of his pastorate, entered into the controversy. He had been promised a commendation for his book by the great, the grave, 'the sober' Dr. Owen, but he withdrew his sanction. 'And perhaps it was more for the glory of God, that truth should go naked into the world,' said Bunyan, 'than as seconded by so weighty an armor-bearer as he.' Bunyan denied that water could form a wedding garment or that water baptism was a pre-requisite for the Lord's table, or that being immersed in water was putting on our Lord's livery, by which disciples may be known. 'Away, fond man, do you forget the text, "By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples if ye have love one to another."' And the attempt was made to embroil Bunyan in a public disputation in London upon this subject, which he very wisely avoided. This controversy will be found in our second volume, and is deeply interesting, making allowance for the esprit de corps manifested on all sides. A verse in the emblems is very pertinent to the violence of this dispute:—
22 February, 2023
Works of John Bunyan —BUNYAN IS BAPTIZED, AND ENTERS INTO COMMUNION WITH A CHRISTIAN CHURCH AT BEDFORD- PERIOD SIXTH
'The 7th of the
Twelfth Month, 1676 (Feb. 1677).
'The church of Christ
in and about Bedford, to the church of Christ in and about Braintree, sendeth
greeting,
'Holy and beloved—We, fellow heirs with you of the grace of life, having considered your request concerning our honored and beloved brother, Samuel Hensman: that he shall be given up to you for your mutual edification, and his furtherance and joy of faith; and considering also, in the capacity he now standeth by reason of his habitation amongst you, his edification is to be from you, not from us—he is, by God's providence (by which he disposeth the world), placed at such a distance from us.
And considering, also, the great end of Christ our Lord, in ordaining the communion of saints, is his glory in their edification, and that all things are to be done by his command to the edification of the body in general, and of every member in particular, and that this we oft (ought?) to design in our receiving him, and giving up to other churches, and not to please ourselves: do as before God and the elect angels, grant and give up to you our elect brother, to be received by you in the Lord, and to be nourished, in the church at Braintree, with you as one that is dear to the Father and our Lord Jesus Christ; and this we the willinger do, because, as we are informed concerning you, beloved, you are not rigid in your principles, but are for communion with saints as saints, and have been taught by the Word to receive the brotherhood, because they are beloved, and received of the Father and the Son, to whose grace we commend you, with the brother of late a member with us, but now one of you. Grace be with you all.
Written by the appointment of the church here, and subscribed, in her name, by your brethren, as followeth:
John Bunyan
Sam.
Fenn. Oliver Stot.
John Fenn. Thomas Cooper.
Luke Astwood. John Croker.