A CONTINUATION OF MR. BUNYAN’S
LIFE, BEGINNING WHERE HE LEFT OFF, AND CONCLUDING WITH THE
TIME AND MANNER OF HIS DEATH AND BURIAL, TOGETHER WITH HIS
TRUE CHARACTER.
Reader, the painful and industrious author
of this book has already given you a faithful and very
moving relation of the beginning and middle of the days of
his pilgrimage on earth; and since there yet remains
somewhat worthy of notice and regard, which occurred in the
last scene of his life; the which, for want of time, or
fear that some over-censorious people should impute it to
him, as an earnest coveting of praise from men, he has not
left behind him in writing. Wherefore, as a true friend and
long acquaintance of Mr. Bunyan’s, that his good end
may be known as well as his evil beginning, I have taken
upon me, from my knowledge, and the best account given by
other of his friends, to piece this to the thread, too soon
broke off, and so lengthen it out to his entering upon
eternity.
He has told you at large of his birth and
education; the evil habits and corruptions of his youth;
the temptations he struggled and conflicted so frequently
with; the mercies, comforts, and deliverances he found; how
he came to take upon him the preaching of the gospel; the
slanders, reproaches, and imprisonments that attended him;
and the progress he notwithstanding made, by the assistance
of God’s grace, no doubt to the saving of many souls.
Therefore take these things as he himself has methodically
laid them down in the words of verity; and so I pass on as
to what remains.
After his being freed from his twelve
years’ imprisonment and upwards, for nonconformity,
wherein he had time to furnish the world with sundry good
books, &c.; and, by his patience, to move Dr. Barlow,
the then Bishop of Lincoln,[1] and other churchmen, to pity
his hard and unreasonable sufferings, so far as to stand
very much his friends in procuring his enlargement, or
there perhaps he had died by the noisesomeness and ill
usage of the place; being now, I say, again at liberty, and
having, through mercy, shaken off his bodily fetters, for
those upon his soul were broken before, by the abounding
grace that filled his heart, he went to visit those that
had been a comfort to him in his tribulation, with a
Christian-like acknowledgment of their kindness and
enlargement of charity; giving encouragement by his example
if it happened to be their hard haps to fall into
affliction or trouble, then to suffer patiently for the
sake of a good conscience, and for the love of God in Jesus
Christ towards their souls; and, by many cordial
persuasions, supported some whose spirits began to sink low
through the fear of danger that threatened their worldly
concernment, so that the people found a wonderful
consolation in his discourse and admonitions.
As often as opportunity would admit, he
gathered them together in convenient places, though the law
was then in force against meetings, and fed them with the
sincere milk of the Word, that they might grow up in grace
thereby. To such as were anywhere taken and imprisoned upon
these accounts, he made it another part of his business to
extend his charity, and gather relief for such of them as
wanted.
He took great care to visit the sick, and
strengthen them against the suggestions of the tempter,
which at such times are very prevalent; so that they had
cause for ever to bless God, who had put into his heart, at
such a time, to rescue them from the power of the roaring
lion, who sought to devour them; nor did he spare any pains
or labour in travel, though to the remote counties, where
he knew, or imagined, any people might stand in need of his
assistance, insomuch that some of these visitations that he
made, which was two or three every year, some, though in
jeering manner, no doubt, gave him the epithet of Bishop
Bunyan, whilst others envied him for his so earnestly
labouring in Christ’s vineyard, yet the seed of the
Word he, all this while, sowed in the hearts of his
congregation, watered with the grace of God, brought forth
in abundance, in bringing in disciples to the church of
Christ.
Another part of his time he spent in
reconciling differences, by which he hindered many
mischiefs, and saved some families from ruin; and, in such
fallings out, he was uneasy, till he found a means to
labour a reconciliation, and become a peace maker, on whom
a blessing is promised in Holy Writ: and, indeed, in doing
this good office, he may be said to sum up his days, it
being the last undertaking of his life, as will appear in
the close of this paper.
When, in the late reign, liberty of
conscience was unexpectedly given and indulged to
Dissenters of all persuasions,[2] his piercing with
penetrated the veil, and found that it was not for the
Dissenters’ sake they were so suddenly freed from the
prosecutions that had long lain heavy upon them, and set,
in a manner, on an equal foot with the Church of England,
which the Papists were undermining, and about to subvert.
He foresaw all the advantages that could have redounded to
the Dissenters, would have been no more than what
Poliphemus, the monstrous giant of Sicily, would have
allowed Ulysses, viz., That he would eat his men first, and
do him the favour of being eaten last. For, although Mr.
Bunyan, following the examples of others, did lay hold of
this liberty, as an acceptable thing in itself, knowing
that God is the only lord of conscience, and that it is
good at all times to do according to the dictates of a good
conscience, and that the preaching the glad tidings of the
gospel is beautiful in the preacher; yet, in all this, he
moved with caution and a holy fear, earnestly praying for
averting the impendent judgments, which he saw, like a
black tempest hanging over our heads, for our sins, and
ready to break upon us, and that the Ninevites’
remedy was now highly necessary. Hereupon, he gathered his
congregation at Bedford, where he mostly lived, and had
lived, and had spent the greatest part of his life; and
there being no convenient place to be had, for the
entertainment of so great a confluence of people as
followed him, upon the account of his teaching, he
consulted with them, for the building of a meeting house;
to which they made their voluntary contributions, with all
cheerfulness and alacrity; and the first time he appeared
there to edify, the place was so thronged, that many were
constrained to stay without, though the house was very
spacious, every one striving to partake of his
instructions, that were of his persuasion; and show their
good will towards him, by being present at the opening of
the place; and here he lived in much peace and quiet of
mind, contenting himself with that little God had bestowed
upon him, and sequestering himself from all secular
employments, to follow that of his call to the ministry;
for, as God said to Moses, he that made the lips and heart,
can give eloquence and wisdom, without extraordinary
acquirements in a university.
During these things, there were regulators
sent into all cities and towns corporate, to new-model the
government in the magistracy, &c., by turning out some,
and putting in others. Against this, Mr. Bunyan expressed
his zeal with some weariness, as foreseeing the bad
consequence that would attend it, and laboured with his
congregation to prevent their 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.
When he was at leisure from writing and
teaching, he often came up to London, and there went among
the congregations of the nonconformists, and used his
talent to the great good liking of the hearers; and even
some, to whom he had been misrepresented, upon the account
of his education, were convinced of his worth and knowledge
in sacred things, as perceiving him to be a man of sound
judgment, delivering himself plainly and powerfully;
insomuch that many who came as mere spectators, for
novelty’s sake, rather than to be edified and
improved, went away well satisfied with what they heard,
and wondered, as the Jews did at the apostles, viz., whence
this man should have these things; perhaps not considering
that God more immediately assists those that make it their
business industriously and cheerfully to labour in his
vineyard.
Thus he spent his latter years, in imitation
of his great Lord and Master, the ever-blessed Jesus; he
went about doing good, so that the most prying critic, or
even malice herself, is defied to find, even upon the
narrowest search or observation, any sully or stain upon
his reputation with which he may be justly charged; and
this we note as a challenge to those that have had the
least regard for him, or them of his persuasion, and have,
one way or other, appeared in the front of those that
oppressed him, and for the turning whose hearts, in
obedience to the commission and commandment given him of
God, he frequently prayed, and sometimes sought a blessing
for them, even with tears, the effects of which they may,
peradventure, though undeservedly, have found in their
persons, friends, relations, or estates; for God will hear
the prayers of the faithful, and answer them, even for
those that vex them, as it happened in the case of
Job’s praying for the three persons that had been
grievous in their reproach against him, even in the day of
his sorrow.
But yet let me come a little nearer to
particulars and periods of time for the better refreshing
the memories of those that knew his labour and suffering,
and for the satisfaction of all that shall read this
book.
After he was sensibly convicted of the
wicked state of his life, and converted, he was baptized
into the congregation and admitted a member thereof, viz.,
in the year 1655, and became speedily a very zealous
professor; but, upon the return of King Charles to the
crown, in 1660, he was, on the 12th of November,
taken, as he was edifying some good people that were got
together to hear the Word, and confined in Bedford jail for
the space of six years, till the Act of Indulgence to
Dissenters being allowed, he obtained his freedom by the
intercession of some in trust and power that took pity of
his sufferings; but within six years afterwards [from his
first imprisonment] he was again taken up, viz., in the
year 1666, and was then confined for six years more, when
even the jailer took such pity of his rigorous sufferings
that he did as the Egyptian jailer did to Joseph, put all
the care and trust into his hands. When he was taken this
last time, he was preaching on these words, viz.,
“Dost thou believe on the Son of God?” and this
imprisonment continued six years; and when this was over,
another short affliction, which was an imprisonment of half
a year, fell to his share. During these confinements he
wrote these following books, viz.: Of Prayer by the Spirit,
The Holy City, Resurrection, Grace Abounding,
Pilgrim’s Progress, the first part.
[Defence of Justification by Jesus
Christ.]
In the last year of his twelve years’
imprisonment, the pastor of the congregation at Bedford
died, and he was chosen to that care of souls on the
12th of December 1671. And in this his charge,
he often had disputes with scholars, that came to oppose
him, as supposing him an ignorant person, and though he
argued plainly and by Scripture without phrases and logical
expressions; yet he nonplussed one who came to oppose him
in his congregation, by demanding whether or no we had the
true copies of the original Scriptures; and another, when
he was preaching, accused him of uncharitableness, for
saying, It was very hard for most to be saved; saying, by
that, he went about to exclude most of his congregation;
but he confuted him and put him to silence with the parable
of the stony ground and other texts out of the
13th of Matthew, in our Saviour’s sermon
out of a ship, all his method being to keep close to the
Scriptures; and what he found not warranted there, himself
would not warrant nor determine, unless in such cases as
were plain, wherein no doubts or scruples did
arise.
But not to make any further mention of this
kind, it is well known that this person managed all his
affairs with such exactness as if he had made it his study,
above all other things, not to give occasion of offence,
but rather suffer many inconvencies to avoid; being never
heard to reproach or revile any, what injury soever he
received, but rather to rebuke those that did; and as it
was in his conversation, so it is manifested on those books
he has caused to be published to the world; where, like the
archangel disputing with Satan about the body of Moses, as
we find it in the epistle of Jude, he brings no railing
accusation, but leaves the rebukers, those that persecuted
him, to the Lord.
In his family he kept up a very strict
discipline in prayer and exhortations; being in this like
Joshua, as that good man expresses it, viz., Whatsoever
others did, as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord;
and, indeed, a blessing waited on his labours and
endeavours, so that his wife, as the Psalmist says, was
like a pleasant vine upon the walls of his house, and his
children like olive branches round his table; for so shall
it be with the man that fears the Lord; and though by
reason of the many losses he sustained by imprisonment and
spoil, of his chargeable sickness, &c., his earthly
treasures swelled not to excess, he always had sufficient
to live decently and creditably, and with that he had the
greatest of all treasures, which is content; for, as the
wise man says, that is a continual feast.
But where content dwells, even a poor
cottage is a kingly palace; and this happiness he had all
his life long, not so much minding this world as knowing he
was here as a pilgrim and stranger, and had no tarrying
city, but looking for one not made with hands, eternal in
the highest heavens; but at length, worn out with
sufferings, age, and often teaching, the day of his
dissolution drew near, and death, that unlocks the prison
of the soul, to enlarge it for a more glorious mansion, put
a stop to his acting his part on the stage of mortality;
heaven, like earthly princes when it threatens war, being
always so kind as to call home its ambassadors before it be
denounced; and even the last act or undertaking of his was
a labour of love and charity; for it so falling out, that a
young gentleman, a neighbour of Mr. Bunyan, happening into
the displeasure of his father, and being much troubled in
mind upon that account, as also for that he had heard his
father purposed to disinherit him, or otherwise deprive him
of what he had to leave, he pitched upon Mr. Bunyan as a
fit man to make way for his submission, and prepare his
father’s mind to receive him; and he, as willing to
do any good office as it could be requested, as readily
undertook it; and so, riding to Reading, in Berkshire, he
then there used such pressing arguments and reasons against
anger and passion, as also for love and reconciliation,
that the father was mollified, and his bowels yearned
towards his returning son.
But Mr. Bunyan, after he had disposed all
things to the best for accommodation, returning to London,
and being overtaken with excessive rains, coming to his
lodging extreme wet, fell sick of a violent fever, which he
bore with much constancy and patience; and expressed
himself as if he desired nothing more than to be dissolved,
and to be with Christ, in that case esteeming death as
gain, and life only a tedious delaying of felicity
expected; and finding his vital strength decay, having
settled his mind and affairs, as well as the shortness of
his time and the violence of his disease would admit, with
a constant and Christian patience, he resigned his soul
into the hands of his most merciful Redeemer, following his
pilgrim from the City of Destruction to the New Jerusalem;
his better part having been all along there, in holy
contemplation, pantings, and breathings after the hidden
manna, and water of life; as by many holy and humble
consolations expressed in his letters to several persons,
in prison and out of prison, too many to be here inserted
at present.[3] He died at the house of one Mr. Straddocks,
a grocer, at the Star on Snowhill, in the parish of St.
Sepulchre, London, on the 12th of August 1688,
and in the sixtieth year of his age, after ten days’
sickness; and was buried in the new burying place near the
Artillery Ground; where he sleeps to the morning of the
resurrection, in hopes of a glorious rising to an
incorruptible immortality of joy and happiness; where no
more trouble and sorrow shall afflict him, but all tears be
wiped away; when the just shall be incorrupted, as members
of Christ their head, and reign with him as kings and
priests for ever.[4]
A BRIEF CHARACTER OF MR. JOHN
BUNYAN.
He appeared in countenance to be of a stern
and rough temper; but in his conversation mild and affable,
not given to loquacity or much discourse in company, unless
some urgent occasion required it; observing never to boast
of himself, or his parts, but rather seem low in his own
eyes, and submit himself to the judgment of others;
abhorring lying and swearing, being just in all that lay in
his power to his word, not seeming to revenge injuries,
loving to reconcile differences, and make friendship with
all; he had a sharp quick eye, accomplished with an
excellent discerning of persons, being of good judgment and
quick wit. As for his person, he was tall of stature,
strong-boned, though not corpulent, somewhat of a ruddy
face, with sparkling eyes, wearing his hair on his upper
lip, after the old British fashion; his hair reddish, but
in his latter days, time had sprinkled it with grey; his
nose well-set, but not declining or bending, and his mouth
moderate large; his forehead something high, and his habit
always plain and modest. And thus have we impartially
described the internal and external parts of a person,
whose death hath been much regretted; a person who had
tried the smiles and frowns of time; not puffed up in
prosperity, nor shaken in adversity, always holding the
golden mean.
In him at once did three great worthies
shine,
Historian, poet, and a choice
divine;
Then let him rest in undisturbed
dust,
Until the resurrection of the
just.
POSTSCRIPT.
In this his pilgrimage, God blessed him with
four children, one of which, names Mary, was blind, and
died some years before; his other children are Thomas,
Joseph, and Sarah; and his wife Elizabeth, having lived to
see him overcome his labour and sorrow, and pass from this
life to receive the reward of his works, long survived him
not, but in 1692 she died; to follow her faithful pilgrim
from this world to the other, whither he was gone before
her; while his works, which consist of sixty books, remain
for the edifying of the reader, and the praise of the
author. Vale.
FOOTNOTES:
1. Application was made to Bishop Barlow,
through Dr. Owen, to use his powerful influence in
obtaining liberty for this Christian captive; but he
absolutely refused to interfere. See Preface to
Owen’s Sermons, 1721. Bunyan, upon his petition,
heard by the king in council, was included in the pardon to
the imprisoned and cruelly-treated Quakers. Whitehead, the
Quaker, was the honoured instrument in releasing
him.—Introduction to Pilgrim’s Progress,
Hanserd Knollys Edition.—Ed.
2. See an authentic copy of this Royal
Declaration, and observations upon it, in the Introduction
to the Pilgrim’s Progress, published by the
Hanserd Knollys Society, 1847.—Ed.
3. All these letters, and nearly all his
autographs, have disappeared. Of his numerous manuscripts,
books, and letters, not a line is now known to exist. If
discovered, they would be invaluable.—Ed.
4. Strongly does the departure of Bunyan, on
his ascent to the celestial city, remind us of Rev 14:13,
‘And I heard a voice from heaven, saying unto me,
Write, Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord, from
henceforth. Yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from
their labours; and their works do follow them.’ What
an exchange! From incessant anxious labour; from sighing
and sorrow; from corruption and temptation; to commence an
endless life of holiness and purity, rest and peace. To be
with and like his Lord! His works have followed, and will
follow him, till time shall be no
more.—Ed.