THE HEAVENLY FOOTMAN;
OR,
A DESCRIPTION OF THE MAN THAT GETS TO
HEAVEN:
TOGETHER WITH THE WAY HE RUNS IN, THE
MARKS HE GOES BY; ALSO, SOME DIRECTIONS HOW TO RUN SO AS TO
OBTAIN.
‘And it came to pass, when they had
brought them forth abroad, that he said, Escape for thy
life; look not behind thee, neither stay thou in all the
plain: escape to the mountain, lest thou be
consumed.’—Genesis 19:17.
London: Printed for John Marshall, at the
Bible in Gracechurch Street, 1698.
ADVERTISEMENT BY THE
EDITOR.
About forty years ago a gentleman, in whose
company I had commenced my pilgrimage, and who had joined
me in communion with a Baptist church, about four years
previously, came to my house one Monday morning, greatly
delighted with the sermon which our pastor had preached on
the previous day, while I was engaged in superintending the
Sunday school. It had caused a very remarkable sensation,
which, if properly followed up, bid fair to occasion an
extraordinary revival of religion in the neighbourhood. He,
with the deacons, had begged of our minister to fill up his
outline, and prepare the sermon for publication, to which
he had consented. He wished to ascertain from me, as a
publisher, the expense of printing five thousand copies,
being sure that the sale of it would be unprecedented, not
only throughout the kingdom, but as far as the English
language was spoken. In about a week, the copy fairly
written was left with me. The text was Hebrews 12:1,
‘Let us run with patience the race that is set before
us.’ After the introduction that all men desire
heaven, but all do not run for it—the word run was
explained as a flying, pressing, persevering. Then
seven reasons, and nine directions, were
followed by nine motives and nine uses. This,
and the striking ideas and language of the sermon, brought
Bunyan to my recollection, and, on comparison, it proved to
be the Heavenly Footman, with very slight
alterations. Having then very recently purchased a neat
edition of the book, at a very low price, my inquiry was,
whether they would not prefer having the book in its
genuine state, especially as it was ready for delivery. I
need not add, that all thoughts of circulating the sermon
was at once abandoned. In conversation with my excellent
pastor, who afterwards for many years bore the honour of a
D.D., he acknowledge his obligation to me for detecting the
plagiarism before the sermon was published, and explained
to me that, when very young, he had read Bunyan’s
Heavenly Footman with intense interest, and made a full
analysis of it, in the shape of notes, which, having
committed to memory, he preached to a very delighted and
deeply impressed congregation; that after a lapse of many
years, looking over the outlines of his early sermons, he
was struck with it, and believing it to be his own
composition, had again used it with such extraordinary
success, as led his deacons and members to request him to
print it. Doubtless Bunyan being dead has often similarly
spoken—may his voice never be lost in silence or be
forgotten.
The title of ‘Heavenly Footman’
was probably suggested by the words of the prophet
Jeremiah, ‘If thou hast run with the footmen, and
they have wearied thee, then how canst thou contend with
horses? And in the land of peace thou trustedst, then how
wilt thou do in the swelling of Jordan?’ (12:5), and
‘Let us run with patience the race that is set before
us’ (Heb 12:1). The word footman does not refer to
that class of servants who are badged and dressed in livery
to gratify the pride of their masters, nor to that
description of foot-soldiers or infantry, whose business is
designated by the blood-stained colour of their clothes.
But it refers to those who are travelling on foot to a
distant country, engaged on a pilgrimage from earth to
heaven. It is worthy of remark, that the whole of the
children of God, of every age and clime, class and kindred,
the richest and the poorest, all are upon terms of perfect
equality in running the race set before them. No
wealth, nor grade, can procure a horse to carry them, or a
carriage to ride in; all must run on foot. The only
carriage for the foot-sore, weary pilgrim is the bosom of
Christ; he carries the lambs in his bosom, and there is
room enough for all; the poorest labourer and the noblest
aristocrat meet there upon a level with each other; there
is no first class for the rich, and parliamentary train for
the poor. It is all first class. In the varied
adventures of Christian and his associates, and of
Christiana, her children, and her lovely friend Mercy, they
never ride. The little one is led by the hand up the steep
and rough hill Difficulty, but his own feet carry him
throughout the wearisome road. The only carriage was the
fiery chariot which carried the soul of the martyred
Faithful to the Celestial City; there is no riding to
heaven while in the body. Wealth may procure many pleasures
to clog the soul in its journey. It may purchase
indulgencies; it may incline some disciples to look at
sinful imperfections through the wrong end of the
telescope; it may purchase prayers—but devotional
exercises, bought by gold, will freeze the soul. It is the
poor disciple that receives the faithful admonitions of his
equally poor fellow-saints. The rich have more ceremony,
while the labourer enjoys more richly, more free from
restraint, the warm outpourings of a devotional spirit.
Still there is nothing to prevent the greatest nobleman or
monarch from running to heaven in company with the
disciples of our lowly Master. If he refuses this road and
this company, he must pursue his downward course to
destruction.
The order in which the allegorical works of
Bunyan were written, very naturally suggest itself from his
own narratives, and from the dates of their publication. It
was thus, while suffering his tedious and dangerous
imprisonment for Christ’s sake, he was led to write
an account of the dealings of God with his soul, which work
he published in 1666, under the title of Grace Abounding
to the Chief of Sinners. While engaged in writing this
remarkable narrative, the almost unbounded allegorical
powers of his mind were brought into
exercise—
‘And thus it was: I writing of the
way
And race of saints, in this our
gospel-day,
Fell suddenly into an allegory
About their journey, and the way to
glory.’
Having finished his Grace Abounding,
he allowed his fertile imagination its full scope, and
again wrote the result of his experience in the form of an
allegorical narrative, called the Pilgrim’s
Progress from this World to that which is to Come. At
first the thoughts pressed upon him as fast as he could
write them, yet he says—
‘I did not think
To show to all the world my pen and
ink
In such a mode.’
And it was several years before he ventured
to publish his beautiful allegory. He was released from
prison in 1672, having been chosen in the previous year to
be the pastor, or ministering elder of the church at
Bedford. His time was then much occupied in re-organizing
the church, after years of tempest and fiery persecution.
At length, having overcome his own and his friends’
reluctance to publish so solemn a work on the conversion of
a sinner and his way to heaven, in the form of an allegory,
the Pilgrim’s Progress was printed in 1678.
The wonderful popularity of this book, and the great good
it produced, led him again to turn his Grace
Abounding into a different form of narrative, in the
more profound allegory of the Holy War; this was
published in 1682, and in two years afterwards he completed
the Pilgrim by a delightful second part. His long
incarceration, followed by sudden and great activity,
probably brought down his robust constitution; and as the
end of his course drew nigh, he was doubly diligent, for in
1688, before his death-day, which was in August, he
published six important treatises, and had prepared
fourteen or fifteen others for the press. Among these were
his final and almost dying instructions to the pilgrim,
under the title of The Heavenly Footman, the man
whom he describes in the poetical apology to the
Pilgrim’s Progress, as he that
‘Runs and runs,
Till he unto the gate of glory
comes.’
This treatise sheds a lustre over the latter
days of our immortal allegorist. It is evidently the
production of a mind expanded and chastened with the rich
experience of sanctified age. In it we are reminded of
those important directions to heavenly footmen, contained
in his most admired books. Is there a Slough of Despond to
be passed, and a hill Difficulty to be overcome? Here the
footman is reminded of ‘many a dirty step, many a
high hill, a long and tedious journey through a vast
howling wilderness’; but he is encouraged, ‘the
land of promise is at the end of the way.’ Must the
man that would win eternal glory draw his sword, put on his
helmet, and fight his way into the temple—the
heavenly footman must press, crowd, and thrust through all
that stand between heaven and his soul. Did Ignorance, who
perished from the way, say to the pilgrims, ‘You go
so fast, I must stay awhile behind?’ He who runs to
heaven is told that the heavy-heeled, lazy, wanton, and
foolish professor will not attain the prize. The
wicket-gate, at the head of the way, is all-important; none
can get to heaven unless they enter by Christ, the door and
way, so the footman is reminded that it matters not how
fast he runs, he can never attain the prize, if he is in
the wrong road. Did the pilgrims so severely suffer from
entering upon Byepath-meadow, and even after that bitter
experience were they again misled into a bye path, by a
black man clothed in white raiment? Our footman is
warned—Beware then of bye and crooked paths that lead
to death and damnation; the way to heaven is one, still
there are many well-beaten bye paths that butt or shoot
down upon it, and which lead to destruction. To prevent
vain and foolish company from calling you out of the path,
or from loitering in it, say, I am in haste, I am running
for a prize; if I win I am made, I win ALL; if I lose I
lose all, and am undone. So it was with Faithful when even
Christian, who saw him before, cried Ho ho, so ho. Faithful
answered, ‘No, I am upon my life, the avenger of
blood is behind me.’ In the same way the pilgrims
refused the invitations of Demas with his silver mine. No,
says the heavenly footman, I am running for heaven, for my
soul, for God, for Christ, from hell and everlasting
damnation. Did the poor pilgrims go grunting, puffing, and
sighing, one tumbleth over a bush, another sticks fast in
the dirt, one cries out, I am down, and another, Ho! where
are you? Pilgrim’s Progress. So the footman is
told that he will ‘meet with cross, pain, and
wearisomeness to the flesh, with briars and quagmires, and
other encumbrances,’ through all which he must
persevere. Did Formalist and Hypocrite turn off into bye
ways at the foot of the hill Difficulty, and miserably
perish? Did Mistrust and Timorous run back for fear of the
persecuting lions, Church and State? So the man that runs
for heaven is cautioned— ‘Some when they come
at the cross can go no further, but back again to their
sins they go, stumble and break their necks, or turn aside
to the left or to the right, and perish.’ Be not
ready to halt, nor run hobbling and halting, but, like my
Lord Will-be-will in the Holy War, when fighting
against Diabolus, get thy will tipt with heavenly grace,
and go full speed for heaven. These quotations tend to
prove that this invaluable treatise is a summary of the
guide books which Bunyan had before written. It was
doubtless one of the last productions of his prolific
pen.
Two passages in the Heavenly Footman
appear to favour the idea, that a period in life is, in
some cases, fixed, beyond which there is no repentance;
thus in a solemn warning against procrastination he says,
‘Dost thou know whether the day of grace will last a
week longer or no? For the day of grace is past with some
before their life is ended’; and ‘sometimes
sinners have not heaven gates open to them so long as they
suppose; and if they be once shut against a man, they are
so heavy that all the men in the world, nor all the angels
in heaven, can open them. Francis Spira can tell thee what
it is to stay till the gate of mercy be quite shut.’
It becomes an interesting inquiry as to who Bunyan means by
the ‘some’ of whom he says, ‘that the day
of grace is past before their life is ended.’ This
cannot refer to those who, neglecting the Saviour, are in a
perishing condition. No minister felt a more ardent desire
to rouse them to a sense of their danger and to guard them
against despair than John Bunyan. In his Jerusalem
Sinner Saved he thus argues ‘Why despair? thou
art yet in the land of the living.’ ‘It is a
sin to begin to despair before one sets his foot over the
threshold of hell gates.’ ‘What, despair of
bread in a land that is full of corn? Despair of mercy when
our God is full of mercy, thou scrupulous fool; despair
when we have a redeeming Christ alive. Let them despair
that dwell where there is no God, and that are confined to
those chambers of death which can be reached by no
redemption.’ In Bunyan’s Come and
Welcome, he proves that it would be ‘high
blasphemy and damnable wickedness’ to imagine that
Christ would cast out any that come to God by him. He
cannot mean the backslider, for Bunyan was such. David
also, to an awful extent, and Peter to the denial of his
Lord. No, he may mean those who, while neglecting the
Saviour, are overtaken by madness, or more probably to such
as Judas, Spira, and others who sell their Master, or
renounce him. If a man abandons the Saviour, there is no
other name under heaven whereby he can be saved;
‘there remaineth no more sacrifice for sin’; he
is a despiser of God’s way of salvation, and tramples
under foot the Son of God. While such a career continues,
fiery indignation must be his wretched destiny. They who
contemn the heavenly gift—the Holy Ghost—the
word of God—the powers of the world to come—if
they persevere unto death in such sentiments, the day of
grace is past. There have been some who, like Esau, having
sold their birthright, sought repentance even with tears,
but found it not—they sought it not in God’s
appointed way. All hope depends upon such sinners coming
unto Christ, humbled and broken-hearted. He is willing, He
is able to save even then to the uttermost, but they will
not. He has promised, and will perform his word, ‘him
that cometh to me I will in nowise cast out.’ The
volume of inspiration is crowned at its close with the same
cheering encouragement, ‘And the Spirit and the bride
say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And WHOSOEVER
WILL, let him take the water of life freely.’ I
cannot imagine that any man would have sung with greater
pleasure than Bunyan that hymn of Dr.
Watts’—
‘Life is the time to serve the
Lord,
The time to insure the great
reward;
And while the lamp holds out to
burn,
The vilest sinner may
return.’
They only who reject the counsel and mercy
of God, shut heaven’s gates against their own souls,
and rush upon Jehovah’s buckler like Judas, or Spira,
or like one of Bunyan’s early friends, John Childs,
who apostatized for fear of persecution, and perished by
his own hand. To such only the day of grace is past; they
have set themselves in the scorner’s seat, from which
they will be hurled into unutterable
wretchedness.
Bunyan well knew that idleness engenders
poverty and crime, and is the parent of every evil; and he
exhorts his runner to the greatest diligence, not to
‘fool away his soul’ in slothfulness, which
induces carelessness, until the sinner is remediless. Our
first care is to get into the right way, and then so
to run that ‘the devil, who is light of foot,’
may not overtake and trip us up. Running to heaven does not
prevent the true, the real enjoyment of earthly blessings,
but sanctifies and heightens them. The great impetus in our
course is love to the prize—to Christ, to heaven;
‘having our affections set upon things above.’
Looking unto Jesus. His righteousness imputed unto us by
the shedding of his blood, marks all the road, and while we
keep that in sight we cannot err. In all earthly things we
anticipate too much—but in the glories of heaven, our
anticipations are feeble indeed, compared with eternal
realities. Could the saints in glory impart to us a sense
of their indescribable happiness, with what activity and
perseverance we should run. The case of Lot, when flying
from destruction, is put by Bunyan with peculiar
force—he dared not to look back even to see what had
become of his wife, lest death should overtake his own
soul. O, my reader, may we be stimulated so to run as to
obtain that crown of glory which is imperishable, immortal,
and eternal.
Charles Doe, one of Bunyan’s personal
friends, having purchased the copyright of this work, kept
it for some years, in hope of publishing it with other
treatises, as a second folio volume, to complete his works;
but failing in this object, he printed it separately in
1698, and appended an interesting list of Bunyan’s
works, with thirty cogent reasons why these invaluable
labours should be preserved and handed down, to bless
succeeding ages.
An earnest desire to preserve, in their
perfect integrity, all the treatises as they were
originally published, will induce me, at the end of the
works, to reprint those interesting additions.
GEO. OFFOR.
AN EPISTLE TO ALL THE SLOTHFUL AND
CARELESS PEOPLE.
Friends,
Solomon saith, that ‘The desire of the
slothful killeth him’; and if so, what will
slothfulness itself do to those that entertain it? (Prov
21:25). The proverb is, ‘He that sleepeth in harvest
is a son that causeth shame’ (Prov 10:5). And
this I dare be bold to say, no greater shame can befall a
man, than to see that he hath fooled away his soul, and
sinned away eternal life. And I am sure this is the next
way to do it; namely, to be slothful; slothful, I say, in
the work of salvation. The vineyard of the slothful man, in
reference to the things of this life, is not fuller of
briars, nettles, and stinking weeds, than he that is
slothful for heaven, hath his heart full of heart-choaking
and soul-damning sin.
Slothfulness hath these two evils: First, To
neglect the time in which it should be getting of heaven;
and by that means doth, in the Second place, bring in
untimely repentance. I will warrant you, that he who shall
lose his soul in this world through slothfulness, will have
no cause to be glad thereat when he comes to
hell.
Slothfulness is usually accompanied with
carelessness, and carelessness is for the most part
begotten by senselessness; and senselessness doth again put
fresh strength into slothfulness, and by this means the
soul is left remediless.
Slothfulness shutteth out Christ;
slothfulness shameth the soul (Cant 5:2-4; Prov
13:4).
Slothfulness, it is condemned even by the
feeblest of all the creatures. ‘Go to the ant, thou
sluggard, consider her ways and be wise (Prov 6:6). The
sluggard will not plow by reason of the cold’ (20:4);
that is, he will not break up the fallow ground of his
heart, because there must be some pains taken by him that
will do it; ‘therefore shall he beg in
harvest,’ that is, when the saints of God shall have
their glorious heaven and happiness given to them; but the
sluggard shall ‘have nothing,’ that is,
be never the better for his crying for mercy, according to
that in Matthew 25:10-12.
If you would know a sluggard in the things
of heaven, compare him with one that is slothful in the
things of this world. As, 1. He that is slothful is loth to
set about the work he should follow: so is he that is
slothful for heaven. 2. He that is slothful is one that is
willing to make delays: so is he that is slothful for
heaven. 3. He that is a sluggard, any small matter that
cometh in between, he will make it a sufficient excuse to
keep him off from plying his work: so it is also with him
that is slothful for heaven. 4. He that is slothful doth
his work by the halves; and so it is with him that is
slothful for heaven. He may almost, but he shall never
altogether obtain perfection of deliverance from hell; he
may almost, but he shall never, without he mend, be
altogether a saint. 5. They that are slothful, do usually
lose the season in which things are to be done: and thus it
is also with them that are slothful for heaven, they miss
the season of grace. And therefore, 6. They that are
slothful have seldom or never good fruit: so also it will
be with the soul-sluggard. 7. They that are slothful they
are chid for the same: so also will Christ deal with those
that are not active for him. Thou wicked or slothful
servant, out of thine own mouth will I judge thee; thou
saidst I was thus, and thus, wherefore then gavest not thou
my money to the bank? &c. (Luke 19:22). Take the
unprofitable servant, and cast him into utter darkness,
where shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth (Matt
25:26-30).
WHAT SHALL I SAY? Time runs; and will you be
slothful? Much of your lives are past; and will you be
slothful? Your souls are worth a thousand worlds; and will
you be slothful? The day of death and judgment is at the
door; and will you be slothful? The curse of God hangs over
your heads; and will you be slothful? Besides, the devils
are earnest, laborious, and seek by all means every day, by
every sin, to keep you out of heaven, and hinder you of
salvation; and will you be slothful? Also your neighbours
are diligent for things that will perish; and will you be
slothful for things that will endure for ever? Would you be
willing to be damned for slothfulness? Would you be willing
the angels of God should neglect to fetch your souls away
to heaven when you lie a-dying, and the devils stand by
ready to scramble for them?[1] Was Christ
slothful in the work of your redemption? Are his ministers
slothful in tendering this unto you? And, lastly, If all
this will not move, I tell you God will not be slothful or
negligent to damn you—whose damnation now of a long
time slumbereth not—nor the devils will not neglect
to fetch thee, nor hell neglect to shut its mouth upon
thee.
Sluggard, art thou asleep still? art thou
resolved to sleep the sleep of death? Wilt neither tidings
from heaven or hell awake thee? Wilt thou say still,
‘Yet a little sleep, a little slumber,’
and ‘a little folding of the hands to sleep?’
(Prov 6:10). Wilt thou yet turn thyself in thy sloth, as
the door is turned upon the hinges? O that I was one that
was skilful in lamentation, and had but a yearning heart
towards thee, how would I pity thee! How would I bemoan
thee! O that I could with Jeremiah let my eyes run down
with rivers of water for thee! Poor soul, lost soul, dying
soul, what a hard heart have I that I cannot mourn for
thee! If thou shouldst lose but a limb, a child, or a
friend, it would not be so much, but poor man it is THY
SOUL; if it was to lie in hell but for a day, but for a
year, nay, ten thousand years, it would (in comparison) be
nothing. But O it is for ever! O this cutting EVER! What a
soul-amazing word will that be, which saith, ‘Depart
from me, ye cursed, into EVERLASTING fire’!
&c.[2]
Object. But if I should set in, and
run as you would have me, then I must run from all my
friends; for none of them are running that way.
Answ. And if thou dost, thou wilt run
into the bosom of Christ and of God, and then what harm
will that do thee?
Object. But if I run this way, then I
must run from all my sins.
Answ. That is true indeed; yet if
thou dost not, thou wilt run into hell-fire.
Object. But if I run this way, then I
shall be hated, and lose the love of my friends and
relations, and of those that I expect benefit from, or have
reliance on, and I shall be mocked of all my
neighbours.
Answ. And if thou dost not, thou art
sure to lose the love and favour of God and Christ, the
benefit of heaven and glory, and be mocked of God for thy
folly, ‘I also will laugh at your calamity; I will
mock when your fear cometh’; and if thou wouldst not
be hated and mocked, then take heed thou by thy folly dost
not procure the displeasure and mockings of the great God;
for his mocks and hatred will be terrible, because they
will fall upon thee in terrible times, even when
tribulation and anguish taketh hold on thee; which will be
when death and judgment comes, when all the men in the
earth, and all the angels in heaven, cannot help thee (Prov
1:26-28).
Object. But surely I may begin this
time enough, a year or two hence, may I not?
Answ. 1. Hast thou any lease of thy
life? Did ever God tell thee thou shalt live half a year,
or two months longer? nay, it may be thou mayst not live so
long. And therefore, 2. Wilt thou be so sottish and unwise,
as to venture thy soul upon a little uncertain time? 3.
Dost thou know whether the day of grace will last a week
longer or no? For the day of grace is past with some before
their life is ended: and if it should be so with thee,
wouldst thou not say, O that I had begun to run before the
day of grace had been past, and the gates of heaven shut
against me. But, 4. If thou shouldst see any of thy
neighbours neglect the making sure of either house or land
to themselves, if they had it proffered to them, saying,
Time enough hereafter, when the time is uncertain; and
besides, they do not know whether ever it will be proffered
to them again, or no: I say, Wouldst thou not then call
them fools? And if so, then dost thou think that thou art a
wise man to let thy immortal soul hang over hell by a
thread of uncertain time, which may soon be cut asunder by
death?
But to speak plainly, all these are the
words of a slothful spirit. Arise man, be slothful no
longer; set foot, and heart, and all into the way of God,
and run, the crown is at the end of the race; there also
standeth the loving fore-runner, even Jesus, who hath
prepared heavenly provision to make thy soul welcome, and
he will give it thee with a willinger heart than ever thou
canst desire it of him. O therefore do not delay the time
any longer, but put into practice the words of the men of
Dan to their brethren, after they had seen the goodness of
the land of Canaan: ‘Arise,’ say they, &c.,
‘for we have seen the land, and behold it is
very good; and are ye still,’ or do you
forbear running? ‘Be not slothful to go, and
to enter to possess the land’ (Judg 18:9).
Farewell.
I wish our souls may meet with comfort at
the journey’s end.
JOHN BUNYAN
THE HEAVENLY FOOTMAN
‘So run, that ye may
obtain.’—1 Corinthians 9:24.
Heaven and happiness is that which every one
desireth, insomuch that wicked Balaam could say, ‘Let
me die the death of the righteous, and let my last end be
like his’ (Num 23:10). Yet for all this, there are
but very few that do obtain that ever-to-be-desired glory,
insomuch that many eminent professors drop short of a
welcome from God into his pleasant place.
The apostle, therefore, because he did
desire the salvation of the souls of the Corinthians, to
whom he writes this epistle, layeth them down in these
words, such counsel, which if taken, would be for their
help and advantage. First, Not to be wicked, and sit
still, and wish for heaven; but TO RUN for it.
Second, Not to content themselves with every kind of
running; but, saith he, ‘So RUN, that ye may
obtain.’ As if he should say, Some, because they
would not lose their souls, they begin to run betimes (Eccl
12:1), they run apace, they run with patience (Heb 12:1),
they run the right way (Matt 14:26). Do you so run? Some
run from both father and mother, friends and companions,
and thus, that they may have the crown. Do you so run? Some
run through temptations, afflictions, good report, evil
report, that they may win the pearl (1 Cor 4:13; 2 Cor 6).
Do you so run? ‘So run that ye may
obtain.’
These words, they are taken from men’s
running for a wager: a very apt similitude to set before
the eyes of the saints of the Lord. ‘Know ye not that
they which run in a race run all, but one receiveth the
prize? So run, that ye may obtain.’ That is, do not
only run, but be sure you win as well as run. ‘So
run, that ye may obtain.’
I shall not need to make any great ado in
opening the words at this time, but shall rather lay down
one doctrine that I do find in them; and in prosecuting
that, I shall show you, in some measure, the scope of the
words.
[I. THE DOCTRINE OF THE
TEXT.]
The doctrine is this: THEY THAT WILL HAVE
HEAVEN, MUST RUN FOR IT; I say, they that will have heaven,
they must run for it. I beseech you to heed it well.
‘Know ye not that they which run in a race run all,
but one receiveth the prize? So run ye.’ The prize is
heaven, and if you will have it, you must run for it. You
have another scripture for this in the 12th of the Hebrews,
the 1st, 2d, and 3rd verses: ‘Wherefore seeing we
also,’ saith the apostle, ‘are compassed about
with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every
weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us,
and let us run with patience the race that is set before
us.’ And LET US RUN, saith he. Again, saith Paul,
‘I therefore so run, not as uncertainly, so fight
I,’ &c.
[II. THE WORD RUN
OPENED.]
But before I go any further,
observe,
First—FLYING—That this
running is not an ordinary, or any sort of running, but it
is to be understood of the swiftest sort of running; and
therefore in the 6th of the Hebrews it is called ‘a
fleeing’; that ‘we might have a strong
consolation, who have fled for refuge, to lay hold upon the
hope set before us.’ Mark, ‘who have
fled.’ It is taken from that 20th of Joshua,
concerning the man that was to flee to the city of refuge,
when the avenger of blood was hard at his heels, to take
vengeance on him for the offence he had committed;
therefore it is a RUNNING or FLYING for one’s life. A
running with all might and main, as we use to say. So
run!
Second—PRESSING—this
running in another place is called a pressing. ‘I
press toward the mark’ (Phil 3:14); which signifieth,
that they that will have heaven, they must not stick at any
difficulties they meet with; but press, crowd, and thrust
through all that may stand between heaven and their souls.
So run!
Third—CONTINUING—this
running is called in another place, ‘a continuing in
the way of life. If ye continue in the faith grounded, and
settled, and be not moved away from the hope of the
gospel’ of Christ (Col 1:23). Not to run a little now
and then, by fits and starts, or half-way, or almost
thither; but to run for my life, to run through all
difficulties, and to continue therein to the end of the
race, which must be to the end of my life. ‘So run,
that ye may obtain.’
[III. SEVERAL REASONS FOR CLEARING THIS
DOCTRINE.]
And the reasons for this point are
these,
First. Because all or every one that
runneth doth not obtain the prize; there be many that do
run, yea, and run far too, who yet miss of the crown that
standeth at the end of the race. You know that all that run
in a race do not obtain the victory; they all run, but one
wins. And so it is here; it is not every one that runneth,
nor every one that seeketh, nor every one that striveth for
the mastery, that hath it (Luke 13). Though a man do strive
for the mastery, saith Paul, ‘yet he is not
crowned, except he strive lawfully’; that is, unless
he so run, and so strive, as to have God’s
approbation (2 Tim 2:5). What, do you think that every
heavy-heeled professor will have heaven? What, every lazy
one; every wanton and foolish professor, that will be
stopped by anything, kept back by anything, that scarce
runneth so fast heaven-ward as a snail creepeth on the
ground? Nay, there are some professors do not go on so fast
in the way of God as a snail doth go on the wall; and yet
these think, that heaven and happiness is for them. But
stay, there are many more that run than there be that
obtain; therefore he that will have heaven must RUN for
it.
Second, Because you know that though
a man do run, yet if he do not overcome, or win, as well as
run, what will he be the better for his running? He will
get nothing. You know the man that runneth, he doth do it
that he may win the prize; but if he doth not obtain, he
doth lose his labour, spend his pains and time, and that to
no purpose; I say, he getteth nothing. And ah! how many
such runners will there be found at the day of judgment!
Even multitudes, multitudes that have run, yea, run so far
as to come to heaven gates, and not able to get any
further, but there stand knocking, when it is too late,
crying, Lord, Lord, when they have nothing but rebukes for
their pains. Depart from me, you come not here, you come
too late, you run too lazily; the door is
shut.[3] ‘When once the master of the
house is risen up,’ saith Christ, ‘and hath
shut to the door, and ye begin to stand without, and to
knock at the door, saying, Lord, Lord, open unto us, I will
say, I know ye not, Depart,’ &c. (Luke 13:25). O
sad will the estate of those be that run and miss;
therefore, if you will have heaven, you must run for it;
and ‘so run that ye may obtain.’
Third, Because the way is long (I
speak metaphorically), and there is many a dirty step, many
a high hill, much work to do, a wicked heart, world, and
devil, to overcome; I say, there are many steps to be taken
by those that intend to be saved, by running or walking, in
the steps of that faith of our father Abraham. Out of Egypt
thou must go through the Red Sea; thou must run a long and
tedious journey, through the vast howling wilderness,
before thou come to the land of promise.
Fourth, They that will go to heaven
they must run for it; because, as the way is long, so the
time in which they are to get to the end of it is very
uncertain; the time present is the only time; thou hast no
more time allotted thee than that thou now enjoyest.
‘Boast not thyself of tomorrow, for thou knowest not
what a day may bring forth’ (Prov 27:1). Do not say,
I have time enough to get to heaven seven years hence; for
I tell thee, the bell may toll for thee before seven days
more be ended;[4] and when death comes, away
thou must go, whether thou art provided or not; and
therefore look to it; make no delays; it is not good
dallying with things of so great concernment as the
salvation or damnation of thy soul. You know he that hath a
great way to go in a little time, and less by half than he
thinks of, he had need RUN for it.
Fifth, They that will have heaven
they must run for it; because the devil, the law, sin,
death, and hell, follow them. There is never a poor soul
that is going to heaven, but the devil, the law, sin,
death, and hell, make after that soul. ‘Your
adversary, the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about,
seeking whom he may devour’ (1 Peter 5:8). And I will
assure you, the devil is nimble, he can run apace, he is
light of foot, he hath overtaken many, he hath turned up
their heels, and hath given them an everlasting fall. Also
the law, that can shoot a great way, have a care thou keep
out of the reach of those great guns, the ten commandments.
Hell also hath a wide mouth; it can stretch itself further
than you are aware of. And as the angel said to Lot, Take
heed, ‘look not behind thee, neither tarry thou in
all the plain,’ that is, any where between this and
heaven, ‘lest thou be consumed’ (Gen
19:17).[5] So say I to thee, Take heed, tarry
not, lest either the devil, hell, death, or the fearful
curses of the law of God, do overtake thee, and throw thee
down in the midst of thy sins, so as never to rise and
recover again. If this were well considered, then thou, as
well as I, wouldst say, They that will have heaven must run
for it.
Sixth, They that will go to heaven
must run for it; because perchance the gates of heaven may
be shut shortly. Sometimes sinners have not heaven-gates
open to them so long as they suppose; and if they be once
shut against a man, they are so heavy, that all the men in
the world, nor all the angels in heaven, are not able to
open them. I shut, ‘and no man openeth,’ saith
Christ. And how if thou shouldst come but one quarter of an
hour too late? I tell thee, it will cost thee an eternity
to bewail thy misery in. Francis Spira can tell thee what
it is to stay till the gate of mercy be quite shut; or to
run so lazily, that they be shut before thou get within
them.[6] What, to be shut out! what, out of
heaven! Sinner, rather than lose it, run for it; yea, and
‘so run that thou mayst obtain.’
Seventh, Lastly, Because if thou
lose, thou losest all, thou losest soul, God, Christ,
heaven, ease, peace, &c. Besides, thou layest thyself
open to all the shame, contempt, and reproach, that either
God, Christ, saints, the world, sin, the devil, and all,
can lay upon thee. As Christ saith of the foolish builder,
so will I say of thee, if thou be such a one who runs and
missest; I say, even all that go by will begin to mock at
thee, saying, This man began to run well, but was not able
to finish (Luke 14:28-30). But more of this
anon.
Quest. But how should a poor soul do
to run? For this very thing is that which afflicteth me
sore, as you say, to think that I may run, and yet fall
short. Methinks to fall short at last, O, it fears me
greatly. Pray tell me, therefore, how I should
run.
Answ. That thou mightest indeed be
satisfied in this particular, consider these following
things.
[IV. NINE DIRECTIONS HOW TO
RUN]
The First Direction. If thou wouldst
so run as to obtain the kingdom of heaven, then be sure
that thou get into the way that leadeth thither. For it is
a vain thing to think that ever thou shalt have the prize,
though thou runnest never so fast, unless thou art in the
way that leads to it. Set the case, that there should be a
man in London that was to run to York for a wager; now,
though he run never so swiftly, yet if he run full south,
he might run himself quickly out of breath, and be never
the nearer the prize, but rather the further off. Just so
is it here; it is not simply the runner, nor yet the hasty
runner, that winneth the crown, unless he be in the way
that leadeth thereto.[7] I have observed, that
little time which I have been a professor, that there is a
great running to and fro, some this way, and some that way,
yet it is to be feared most of them are out of the way, and
then, though they run as swift as the eagle can fly, they
are benefitted nothing at all.
Here is one runs a-quaking, another
a-ranting; one again runs after the Baptism, and another
after the Independency. Here is one for free-will, and
another for Presbytery; and yet possibly most of all these
sects run quite the wrong way, and yet every one is for his
life, his soul, either for heaven or
hell.[8]
If thou now say, Which is the way? I tell
thee it is CHRIST, THE SON OF MARY, THE SON OF GOD, Jesus
saith, ‘I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no
man cometh unto the Father but by me’ (John 14:6). So
then thy business is, if thou wouldst have salvation, to
see if Christ be thine, with all his benefits; whether he
hath covered thee with his righteousness, whether he hath
showed thee that thy sins are washed away with his
heart-blood, whether thou art planted into him, and whether
thou have faith in him, so as to make a life out of him,
and to conform thee to him. That is, such faith as to
conclude that thou art righteous, because Christ is thy
righteousness, and so constrained to walk with him as the
joy of thy heart, because he saveth thy soul. And for the
Lord’s sake take heed, and do not deceive thyself,
and think thou art in the way upon too slight grounds; for
if thou miss of the way, thou wilt miss of the prize; and
if thou miss of that, I am sure thou wilt lose thy soul,
even that soul which is worth more than the whole
world.
But I have treated more largely on this in
my book of the two covenants, and therefore shall pass it
now; only I beseech thee to have a care of thy soul, and
that thou mayest so do, take this counsel: Mistrust thy own
strength, and throw it away; down on thy knees in prayer to
the Lord for the spirit of truth; search his word for
direction; fly seducers’ company; keep company with
the soundest Christians, that have most experience of
Christ; and be sure thou have a care of Quakers, Ranters,
Freewillers; also do not have too much company with some
Anabaptists, though I go under that name myself. I tell
thee this is such a serious matter, and I fear thou wilt so
little regard it, that the thoughts of the worth of the
thing, and of thy too light regarding of it, doth even make
my heart ache whilst I am writing to thee. The Lord teach
thee the way by his Spirit, and then I am sure thou wilt
know it. SO RUN.
Only by the way, let me bid thee have a care
of two things, and so I shall pass to the next
thing.
I. Have a care of relying on the outward
obedience to any of God’s commands, or thinking
thyself ever the better in the sight of God for that. 2.
Take heed of fetching peace for thy soul from any inherent
righteousness; but if thou canst believe that as thou art a
sinner, so thou art justified freely by the love of God,
through the redemption that is in Christ; and that God for
Christ’s sake hath forgiven thee, not because he saw
any thing done, or to be done, in or by thee, to move him
thereunto to do it; for that is the right way; the Lord put
thee into it, and keep thee in it.
The Second Direction. As thou
shouldst get into the way so thou shouldst also be much in
studying and musing on the way. You know men that would be
expert in any thing, they are usually much in studying of
that thing, and so likewise is it with those that quickly
grow expert in any way. This therefore thou shouldst do;
let thy study be much exercised about Christ, which is the
way; what he is, what he hath done, and why he is what he
is, and why he hath done what is done; as, why ‘He
took upon him the form of a servant,’ why he
‘was made in the likeness of men’ (Phil 2:7).
Why he cried; why he died; why he bear the sin of the
world; why he was made sin, and why he was made
righteousness; why he is in heaven in the nature of man,
and what he doth there? (2 Cor 5:21). Be much in musing and
considering of these things; be thinking also enough of
those places which thou must not come near, but leave some
on this hand, and some on that hand; as it is with those
that travel into other countries, they must leave such a
gate on this hand, and such a bush on that hand, and go by
such a place, where standeth such a thing. Thus, therefore,
thou must do: Avoid such things which are expressly
forbidden in the Word of God. ‘Withdraw thy foot far
from her, and come not nigh the door of her house, for her
steps take hold on hell, going down to the chambers of
death’ (Prov 5, 7). And so of every thing that is not
in the way, have a care of it, that thou go not by it; come
not near it, have nothing to do with it. SO RUN.
The Third Direction. Not only thus,
but, in the next place, thou must strip thyself of those
things that may hang upon thee to the hindering of thee in
the way to the kingdom of heaven, as covetousness, pride,
lust, or whatever else thy heart may be inclining unto,
which may hinder thee in this heavenly race. Men that run
for a wager, if they intend to win as well as run, they do
not use to encumber themselves, or carry those things about
them that may be a hindrance to them in their running.
‘Every man that striveth for the mastery is temperate
in all things’ (1 Cor 9:25), that is, he layeth aside
every thing that would be any ways a disadvantage to him;
as saith the apostle, ‘Let us lay aside every weight,
and the sin which doth so easily beset us, and let us run
with patience the race that is set before us’ (Heb
12:1). It is but a vain thing to talk of going to heaven,
if thou let thy heart be encumbered with those things that
would hinder. Would you not say that such a man would be in
danger of losing, though he run, if he fill his pockets
with stones, hang heavy garments on his shoulders, and
great lumpish shoes on his feet?[9] So it is
here; thou talkest of going to heaven, and yet fillest thy
pocket with stones, i.e., fillest thy heart with this
world, lettest that hang on thy shoulders, with its profits
and pleasures. Alas, alas, thou art widely mistaken! If
thou intendest to win, thou must strip, thou must lay aside
every weight, thou must be temperate in all things. Thou
must SO RUN.
The Fourth Direction. Beware of
by-paths; take heed thou dost not turn into those lanes
which lead out of the way. There are crooked paths, paths
in which men go astray, paths that lead to death and
damnation, but take heed of all those (Isa 59:8). Some of
them are dangerous because of practice (Prov 7:25); some
because of opinion, but mind them not; mind the path before
thee, look right before thee, turn neither to the right
hand nor to the left, but let thine eyes look right on,
even right before thee (Prov 3:17). ‘Ponder the path
of thy feet, and let all thy ways be established. Turn not
to the right hand nor to the left. Remove thy foot
far from evil’ (Prov 4:26,27). This counsel being
not so seriously taken as given, is the reason of that
starting from opinion to opinion, reeling this way and that
way, out of this lane into that lane, and so missing the
way to the kingdom. Though the way to heaven be but one,
yet there are many crooked lanes and by-paths shoot down
upon it, as I may say. And again, notwithstanding the
kingdom of heaven be the biggest city, yet usually those
by-paths are most beaten, most travellers go those ways;
and therefore the way to heaven is hard to be found, and as
hard to be kept in, by reason of these. Yet, nevertheless,
it is in this case as it was with the harlot of Jericho;
she had one scarlet thread tied in her window, by which her
house was known (John 2:18). So it is here, the scarlet
streams of Christ’s blood run throughout the way to
the kingdom of heaven;[10] therefore mind that,
see if thou do find the besprinkling of the blood of Christ
in the way, and if thou do, be of good cheer, thou art in
the right way; but have a care thou beguile not thyself
with a fancy, for then thou mayst light into any lane or
way; but that thou mayst not be mistaken, consider, though
it seem never so pleasant, yet if thou do not find that in
the very middle of the road there is writing with the
heart-blood of Christ, that he came into the world to save
sinners, and that we are justified, though we are ungodly;
shun that way; for this it is which the apostle meaneth
when he saith, We have ‘boldness to enter into the
holiest by the blood of Jesus, by a new and living way
which he hath consecrated for us, through the vail, that is
to say, his flesh’ (Heb 10:19,20). How easy a matter
is it in this our day, for the devil to be too cunning for
poor souls, by calling his by-paths the way to the kingdom!
If such an opinion or fancy be but cried up by one or more,
this inscription being set upon it by the devil,
‘This is the way of God,’ how speedily,
greedily, and by heaps, do poor simple souls throw away
themselves upon it; especially if it be daubed over with a
few external acts of morality, if so good.[11]
But this is because men do not know painted by-paths from
the plain way to the kingdom of heaven. They have not yet
learned the true Christ, and what his righteousness is,
neither have they a sense of their own insufficiency; but
are bold, proud, presumptuous, self-conceited. And
therefore.
The Fifth Direction. Do not thou be
too much in looking too high in thy journey heavenwards.
You know men that run in a race do not use to stare and
gaze this way and that, neither do they use to cast up
their eyes too high, lest happily,[12] through
their too too much gazing with their eyes after other
things, they in the meantime stumble and catch a fall. The
very same case is this; if thou gaze and stare after every
opinion and way that comes into the world; also if thou be
prying overmuch into God’s secret decrees, or let thy
heart too much entertain questions about some nice foolish
curiosities, thou mayst stumble and fall, as many hundreds
in England have done, both in Ranting and Quakery, to their
own eternal overthrow; without the marvellous operation of
God’s grace be suddenly stretched forth to bring them
back again. Take heed therefore, follow not that proud and
lofty spirit, that, devil-like, cannot be content with his
own station. David was of an excellent spirit where he
saith, ‘Lord, my heart is not haughty, nor mine eyes
lofty, neither do I exercise myself in great matters, or in
things too high for me. Surely I have behaved and quieted
myself as a child that is weaned of his mother: my soul
is even as a weaned child’ (Psa 131:1,2). Do thou
SO RUN.
The Sixth Direction. Take heed that
you have not an ear open to every one that calleth after
you as you are in your journey. Men that run, you know, if
any do call after them, saying, I would speak with you, or
go not too fast, and you shall have my company with you, if
they run for some great matter, they use to say, Alas, I
cannot stay, I am in haste, pray talk not to me now;
neither can I stay for you, I am running for a wager: if I
win I am made, if I lose I am undone, and therefore hinder
me not. Thus wise are men when they run for corruptible
things, and thus should thou do, and thou hast more cause
to do so than they, forasmuch as they run but for things
that last not, but thou for an incorruptible glory. I give
thee notice of this betimes, knowing that thou shalt have
enough call after thee, even the devil, sin, this world,
vain company, pleasures, profits, esteem among men, ease,
pomp, pride, together with an innumerable company of such
companions; one crying, Stay for me; the other saying, Do
not leave me behind; a third saying, And take me along with
you. What, will you go, saith the devil, without your sins,
pleasures, and profits? Are you so hasty? Can you not stay
and take these along with you? Will you leave your friends
and companions behind you? Can you not do as your
neighbours do, carry the world, sin, lust, pleasure,
profit, esteem among men, along with you? Have a care thou
do not let thine ear now be open to the tempting, enticing,
alluring, and soul-entangling flatteries of such
sink-souls[13] as these are. ‘My
son,’ saith Solomon, ‘if sinners entice thee,
consent thou not’ (Prov 1:10).
You know what it cost the young man which
Solomon speaks of in the 7th of the Proverbs, that was
enticed by a harlot, ‘With her much fair speech
she’ won him, and ‘caused him to yield, with
the flattering of her lips she forced him,’ till he
went after her ‘as an ox to the slaughter, or as a
fool to the correction of the stocks’; even so far,
‘till the dart struck through his liver, and knew not
that it was for his life. Hearken unto me now
therefore,’ saith he, ‘O ye children, and
attend to the words of my mouth, let not thine heart
decline to her ways, go not astray in her paths, for she
hath cast down many wounded, yea, many strong men
have been slain by her,’ that is, kept out of heaven
by her, ‘her house is the way to hell, going
down to the chambers of death.’ Soul, take this
counsel and say, Satan, sin, lust, pleasure, profit, pride,
friends, companions, and everything else, let me alone,
stand off, come not nigh me, for I am running for heaven,
for my soul, for God, for Christ, from hell and everlasting
damnation: if I win, I win all, and if I lose, I lose all;
let me alone, for I will not hear. SO RUN.
The Seventh Direction. In the next
place, be not daunted though thou meetest with never so
many discouragements in thy journey thither. That man that
is resolved for heaven, if Satan cannot win him by
flatteries, he will endeavour to weaken him by
discouragements; saying, thou art a sinner, thou hast broke
God’s law, thou art not elected, thou comest too
late, the day of grace is past, God doth not care for thee,
thy heart is naught, thou art lazy, with a hundred other
discouraging suggestions. And thus it was with David, where
he said, ‘I had fainted, unless I had believed
to see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the
living’ (Psa 27:13,14). As if he should say, the
devil did so rage and my heart was so base, that had I
judged according to my own sense and feeling, I had been
absolutely distracted; but I trusted to Christ in the
promise, and looked that God would be as good as his
promise, in having mercy upon me, an unworthy sinner; and
this is that which encouraged me, and kept me from
fainting. And thus must thou do when Satan, or the law, or
thy own conscience, do go about to dishearten thee, either
by the greatness of thy sins, the wickedness of thy heart,
the tediousness of the way, the loss of outward enjoyments,
the hatred that thou wilt procure from the world, or the
like; then thou must encourage thyself with the freeness of
the promises, the tender-heartedness of Christ, the merits
of his blood, the freeness of his invitations to come in,
the greatness of the sin of others that have been pardoned,
and that the same God, through the same Christ, holdeth
forth the same grace free as ever. If these be not thy
meditations, thou wilt draw very heavily in the way to
heaven, if thou do not give up all for lost, and so knock
off from following any farther; therefore, I say, take
heart in thy journey, and say to them that seek thy
destruction, ‘Rejoice not against me, O mine enemy,
when I fall I shall arise, when I sit in darkness the Lord
shall be a light unto me’ (Micah 7:8). SO
RUN.
The Eighth Direction. Take heed of
being offended at the cross that thou must go by, before
thou come to heaven. You must understand, as I have already
touched, that there is no man that goeth to heaven but he
must go by the cross. The cross is the standing way-mark by
which all they that go to glory must pass by. ‘We
must through much tribulation enter into the kingdom of
God’ (Acts 14:22). ‘Yea, and all that will live
godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution’ (2
Tim 3:12). If thou art in the way to the kingdom, my life
for thine thou wilt come at the cross shortly—the
Lord grant thou dost not shrink at it, so as to turn thee
back again. ‘If any man will come after
me,’ saith Christ, ‘let him deny himself, and
take up his cross daily, and follow me’ (Luke 9:23).
The cross it stands, and hath stood, from the beginning, as
a way-mark to the kingdom of heaven.[14] You
know if one ask you the way to such and such a place, you,
for the better direction, do not only say, this is the way,
but then also say, you must go by such a gate, by such a
style, such a bush, tree, bridge, or such like. Why, so it
is here; art thou inquiring the way to heaven? Why, I tell
thee, Christ is the way; into him thou must get, into his
righteousness, to be justified; and if thou art in him,
thou wilt presently see the cross, thou must go close by
it, thou must touch it, nay, thou must take it up, or else
thou wilt quickly go out of the way that leads to heaven,
and turn up some of those crooked lanes that lead down to
the chambers of death.
How thou mayest know the cross by
these six things. 1. It is known in the doctrine of
justification. 2. In the doctrine of mortification. 3. In
the doctrine of perseverance. 4. In self-denial. 5.
Patience. 6. Communion with poor saints.
1. In the doctrine of justification; there
is a great deal of the cross in that: a man is forced to
suffer the destruction of his own righteousness for the
righteousness of another. This is no easy matter for a man
to do; I assure to you it stretcheth every vein in his
heart before he will be brought to yield to it. What, for a
man to deny, reject, abhor, and throw away all his prayers,
tears, alms, keeping of sabbaths, hearing, reading, with
the rest, in the point of justification, and to count them
accursed;[15] and to be willing, in the very
midst of the sense of his sins, to throw himself wholly
upon the righteousness and obedience of another man,
abhorring his own, counting it as deadly sin, as the open
breach of the law; I say, to do this in deed and in truth,
is the biggest piece of the cross; and therefore Paul
calleth this very thing a suffering; where he saith,
‘And I have SUFFERED the loss of all things,’
which principally was his righteousness, ‘that I
might win Christ, and be found in him, not having,’
but rejecting, ‘mine own righteousness’ (Phil
3:8,9). That is the first.
2. In the doctrine of mortification is also
much of the cross. Is it nothing for a man to lay hands on
his vile opinions, on his vile sins, of his bosom sins, of
his beloved, pleasant, darling sins, that stick as close to
him, as the flesh sticketh to the bones? What, to lose all
these brave things that my eyes behold, for that which I
never saw with my eyes? What, to lose my pride, my
covetousness, my vain company, sports, and pleasures, and
the rest? I tell you this is no easy matter; if it were,
what need all those prayers, sighs, watchings? What need we
be so backward to it? Nay, do you not see, that some men,
before they will set about this work, they will even
venture the loss of their souls, heaven, God, Christ, and
all? What means else all those delays and put-offs, saying,
Stay a little longer, I am loth to leave my sins while I am
so young, and in health? Again, what is the reason else,
that others do it so by the halves, coldly and seldom,
notwithstanding they are convinced over and over; nay, and
also promise to amend, and yet all’s in vain? I will
assure you, to cut off right hands, and to pluck out right
eyes, is no pleasure to the flesh.
3. The doctrine of perseverance is also
cross to the flesh; which is not only to begin, but for to
hold out, not only to bid fair, and to say, Would I had
heaven, but so to know Christ, to put on Christ, and walk
with Christ as to come to heaven. Indeed, it is no great
matter to begin to look for heaven, to begin to seek the
Lord, to begin to shun sin. O but it is a very great matter
to continue with God’s approbation! ‘My servant
Caleb,’ saith God, is a man of ‘another spirit,
he hath followed me,’ followed me always, he hath
continually followed me, ‘fully, he shall possess the
land’ (Num 14:24). Almost all the many thousands of
the children of Israel in their generation, fell short of
perseverance when they walked from Egypt towards the land
of Canaan. Indeed they went to the work at first pretty
willingly, but they were very short-winded, they were
quickly out of breath, and in their hearts they turned back
again into Egypt.
It is an easy matter for a man to run hard
for a spurt, for a furlong, for a mile or two; O, but to
hold out for a hundred, for a thousand, for ten thousand
miles: that man that doth this, he must look to meet with
cross, pain, and wearisomeness to the flesh, especially if
as he goeth he meeteth with briars and quagmires, and other
incumbrances, that make his journey so much the more
painfuller.
Nay, do you not see with your eyes daily,
that perseverance is a very great part of the cross? why
else do men so soon grow weary? I could point out a many,
that after they have followed the ways of God about a
twelvemonth, others it may be two, three, or four, some
more, and some less years, they have been beat out of wind,
have taken up their lodging and rest before they have got
half-way to heaven, some in this, and some in that sin; and
have secretly, nay, sometimes openly said, that the way is
too strait, the race too long, the religion too holy, and
cannot hold out, I can go no farther.
4, 5, 6. And so likewise of the other three,
to wit, patience, self-denial, communion, and communication
with and to the poor saints. How hard are these things? It
is an easy matter to deny another man, but it is not so
easy a matter to deny one’s self; to deny myself out
of love to God, to his gospel, to his saints, of this
advantage, and of that gain; nay, of that which otherwise I
might lawfully do, were it not for offending them. That
scripture is but seldom read, and seldomer put in practice,
which saith, ‘I will eat no flesh while the world
standeth, if it make my brother to offend’ (1 Cor
8:13). Again, ‘We that are strong ought to bear the
infirmities of the weak, and not to please ourselves’
(Rom 15:1). But how froward, how hasty, how peevish, and
self-resolved are the generality of professors at this day!
Also, how little considering the poor, unless it be to say,
Be thou warmed and filled! But to give is a seldom work;
also especially to give to any poor (Gal 6:10). I tell you
all things are cross to flesh and blood; and that man that
hath but a watchful eye over the flesh, and also some
considerable measure of strength against it, he shall find
his heart in these things like unto a starting horse, that
is rid without a curbing bridle, ready to start at
everything that is offensive to him; yea, and ready to run
away too, do what the rider can.
It is the cross which keepeth those that are
kept from heaven. I am persuaded, were it not for the
cross, where we have one professor, we should have twenty;
but this cross, that is it which spoileth all.
Some men, as I said before, when they come
at the cross they can go no farther, but back again to
their sins they must go. Others they stumble at it, and
break their necks; others again, when they see the cross is
approaching, they turn aside to the left hand, or to the
right hand, and so think to get to heaven another way; but
they will be deceived. ‘Yea, and all that will live
godly in Christ Jesus SHALL,’ mark, shall be sure to
‘suffer persecution’ (2 Tim 3:12). There are
but few when they come at the cross, cry, ‘Welcome
cross,’ as some of the martyrs did to the stake they
were burned at. Therefore, if thou meet with the cross in
thy journey, in what manner soever it be, be not daunted,
and say, Alas, what shall I do now! But rather take
courage, knowing, that by the cross is the way to the
kingdom. Can a man believe in Christ and not be hated by
the devil? Can he make a profession of this Christ, and
that sweetly and convincingly, and the children of Satan
hold their tongue? Can darkness agree with light? or the
devil endure that Christ Jesus should be honoured both by
faith and a heavenly conversation, and let that soul alone
at quiet? Did you never read, that ‘the dragon
persecuteth the woman?’ (Rev 12). And that Christ
saith, ‘In the world ye shall have tribulation’
(John 16:33).
The Ninth Direction. Beg of God that
he would do these two things for thee: First,
Enlighten thine understanding. And, Second, Inflame
thy will. If these two be but effectually done, there is no
fear but thou wilt go safe to heaven.
[First, Enlighten thine
understanding.] One of the great reasons why men and
women do so little regard the other world, it is because
they see so little of it.[16] And the reason why
they see so little of it is because they have their
understandings darkened. And therefore, saith Paul, do not
you believers ‘walk as do other Gentiles, even in the
vanity of their minds, having the understanding darkened,
being alienated from the life of God through the
ignorance,’ or foolishness ‘that is in them,
because of the blindness of their heart’ (Eph
4:17,18). Walk not as those, run not with them: alas, poor
souls, they have their understandings darkened, their
hearts blinded, and that is the reason they have such
undervaluing thoughts of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the
salvation of their souls. For when men do come to see the
things of another world, what a God, what a Christ, what a
heaven, and what an eternal glory there is to be enjoyed;
also when they see that it is possible for them to have a
share in it, I tell you it will make them run through thick
and thin to enjoy it. Moses, having a sight of this,
because his understanding was enlightened, he feared not
the wrath of the king, but chose ‘rather to suffer
affliction with the people of God, than to enjoy the
pleasures of sin for a season.’ He refused to be
called the son of the king’s daughter; accounting it
wonderful riches to be counted worthy of so much as to
suffer for Christ, with the poor despised saints; and that
was because he saw him who was invisible, and ‘had
respect unto the recompence of the reward’ (Heb
11:24-27). And this is that which the apostle usually
prayeth for in his epistles for the saints, namely,
‘That they might know what is the hope of God’s
calling, and the riches of the glory of his inheritance in
the saints’ (Eph 1:18). And that they might ‘be
able to comprehend with all saints, what is the
breadth, and length, and depth, and height, and to know the
love of Christ which passeth knowledge’ (Eph
3:18,19). Pray therefore that God would enlighten thy
understanding: that will be very great help unto thee. It
will make thee endure many a hard brunt for Christ; as Paul
saith, ‘After ye were illuminated, ye endured a great
fight of afflictions. You took joyfully the spoiling of
your goods, knowing in yourselves that ye have in heaven a
better and an enduring substance’ (Heb 10:32-34). If
there be never such a rare jewel lie just in a man’s
way, yet if he sees it not, he will rather trample upon it
than stoop for it, and it is because he sees it not. Why,
so it is here, though heaven be worth never so much, and
thou hast never so much need of it, yet if thou see it not,
that is, have not thy understanding opened or enlightened
to see it, thou wilt not regard at all: therefore cry to
the Lord for enlightening grace, and say, Lord, open my
blind eyes: Lord, take the vail off my dark heart, show me
the things of the other world, and let me see the
sweetness, glory, and excellency of them for Christ his
sake. This is the first.
[Second, Inflame thy will.] Cry to
God that he would inflame thy will also with the things of
the other world. For when a man’s will is fully set
to do such or such a thing, then it must be a very hard
matter that shall hinder that man from bringing about his
end. When Paul’s will was set resolvedly to go up to
Jerusalem, though it was signified to him before what he
should there suffer, he was not daunted at all; nay, saith
he, ‘I am ready,’ or willing, ‘not to be
bound only, but also to die at Jerusalem for the name of
the Lord Jesus’ (Acts 21:13). His will was inflamed
with love to Christ; and therefore all the persuasions that
could be used wrought nothing at all. Your self-willed
people nobody knows what to do with them; we used to say,
He will have his own will, do all what you can. Indeed to
have such a will for heaven, is an admirable advantage to a
man that undertaketh the race thither; a man that is
resolved, and hath his will fixed, saith he, I will do my
best to advantage myself; I will do my worst to hinder my
enemies; I will not give out as long as I can stand; I will
have it or I will lose my life; ‘though he slay me
yet will I trust in him’ (Job 13:15). ‘I will
not let thee go except thou bless me’ (Gen 32:26). I
WILL, I WILL, I WILL, O this blessed inflamed will for
heaven! What is like it? If a man be willing, then any
argument shall be matter of encouragement; but if
unwilling, then any argument shall give discouragement;
this is seen both in saints and sinners; in them that are
the children of God, and also those that are the children
of the devil. As,
1. The saints of old, they being willing and
resolved for heaven, what could stop them? Could fire or
faggot, sword or halter, stinking dungeons, whips, bears,
bulls, lions, cruel rackings, stoning, starving, nakedness,
&c. (Heb 11). ‘Nay, in all these things they were
more than conquerors, through him that loved them’
(Rom 8:37); who had also made them ‘willing in the
day of his power.’
2. See again, on the other side, the
children of the devil, because they are not willing [to run
to heaven], how many shifts and starting-holes they will
have. I have married a wife, I have a farm, I shall offend
my landlord, I shall offend my master, I shall lose my
trading, I shall lose my pride, my pleasures, I shall be
mocked and scoffed, therefore I dare not come. I, saith
another, will stay till I am older, till my children are
out of sight, till I am got a little aforehand in the
world, till I have done this and that, and the other
business; but alas, the thing is, they are not willing; for
were they but soundly willing, these, and a thousand such
as these, would hold them no faster than the cords held
Samson when he broke them like burned flax (Judg 15:14). I
tell you the will is all: that is one of the chief things
which turns the wheel either backwards or forwards; and God
knoweth that full well, and so likewise doth the devil; and
therefore they both endeavour very much to strengthen the
will of their servants. God, he is for making of his a
willing people to serve him; and the devil, he doth what he
can to possess the will and affection of those that are
his, with love to sin; and therefore when Christ comes
close to the matter, indeed, saith he, ‘Ye will not
come to me’ (John 5:40). ‘How often would I
have gathered you as a hen doth her chickens, and ye
would not’ (Luke 13:34). The devil had possessed
their wills, and so long he was sure enough of them. O
therefore cry hard to God to inflame thy will for heaven
and Christ: thy will, I say, if that be rightly set for
heaven, thou wilt not be beat off with discouragements; and
this was the reason that, when Jacob wrestled with the
angel, though he lost a limb, as it were, and the hollow of
his thigh was put out of joint, as he wrestled with him,
yet, saith he, ‘I will not,’ mark, ‘I
WILL NOT let thee go except thou bless me’ (Gen
32:24-26). Get thy will tipt with the heavenly grace, and
resolution against all discouragements, and then thou goest
full speed for heaven; but if thou falter in thy will, and
be not found there, thou wilt run hobbling and halting all
the way thou runnest, and also to be sure thou wilt fall
short at the last. The Lord give thee a will and
courage!
Thus have I done with directing thee how to
run to the kingdom; be sure thou keep in memory what I have
said unto thee, lest thou lose thy way. But because I would
have thee think of them, take all in short in this little
bit of paper.
1. Get into the way. 2. Then study on it. 3.
Then strip, and lay aside everything that would hinder. 4.
Beware of bye-paths. 5. Do not gaze and stare too much
about thee, and be sure to ponder the path of thy feet. 6.
Do not stop for any that call after thee, whether it be the
world, the flesh, or the devil; for all these will hinder
thy journey, if possible. 7. Be not daunted with any
discouragements thou meetest with as thou goest. 8. Take
heed of stumbling at the cross. 9. Cry hard to God for an
enlightened heart, and a willing mind, and God give thee a
prosperous journey. Yet before I do quite take my leave of
thee, let me give thee a few motives along with thee. It
may be they will be as good as a pair of spurs to prick on
thy lumpish heart in this rich
voyage.[17]
[V. NINE MOTIVES TO URGE US ON IN THE
WAY.]
The First Motive. Consider there is
no way but this, thou must either win or lose. If thou
winnest, then heaven, God, Christ, glory, ease, peace,
life, yea, life eternal, is thine; thou must be made equal
to the angels in heaven; thou shalt sorrow no more, sigh no
more, feel no more pain; thou shalt be out of the reach of
sin, hell, death, the devil, the grave, and whatever else
may endeavour thy hurt. But contrariwise, and if thou lose,
then thy loss is heaven, glory, God, Christ, ease, peace,
and whatever else which tendeth to make eternity
comfortable to the saints; besides, thou procurest eternal
death, sorrow, pain, blackness, and darkness, fellowship
with devils, together with the everlasting damnation of thy
own soul.
The Second Motive. Consider that this
devil, this hell, death and damnation, followeth after thee
as hard as they can drive, and have their commission so to
do by the law, against which thou hast sinned; and
therefore for the Lord’s sake make haste.
The Third Motive. If they seize upon
thee before thou get to the city of Refuge, they will put
an everlasting stop to thy journey. This also cries, Run
for it.
The Fourth Motive. Know also, that
now heaven gates, the heart of Christ, with his arms, are
wide open to receive thee. O methinks that this
consideration, that the devil followeth after to destroy,
and that Christ standeth open-armed to receive, should make
thee reach out and fly with all haste and speed! And
therefore,
The Fifth Motive. Keep thine eye upon the
prize; be sure that thy eyes be continually upon the
profit thou art like to get. The reason why men are so apt
to faint in their race for heaven, it lieth chiefly in
either of these two things:
1. They do not seriously consider the worth
of the prize; or else if they do, they are afraid it is too
good for them; but most lose heaven for want of considering
the price and the worth of it. And therefore, that thou
mayst not do the like, keep thine eye much upon the
excellency, the sweetness, the beauty, the comfort, the
peace, that is to be had there by those that win the prize.
This was that which made the apostle run through anything;
good report, evil report, persecution, affliction, hunger,
nakedness, peril by sea, and peril by land, bonds and
imprisonments. Also it made others endure to be stoned,
sawn asunder, to have their eyes bored out with augurs,
their bodies broiled on gridirons, their tongues cut out of
their mouths, boiled in cauldrons, thrown to the wild
beasts, burned at the stakes, whipped at posts, and a
thousand other fearful torments, ‘while they looked
not at the things which are seen,’ as the things of
this world, ‘but at the things which are not seen;
for the things which are seen are temporal; but the
things which are not seen are eternal’ (2 Cor
4:18). O this word ‘eternal,’ that was it that
made them, that when they might have had deliverance, they
would not accept of it; for they knew in the world to come
they should have a better resurrection (Heb
11:35).
2. And do not let the thoughts of the
rareness of the place make thee say in thy heart, This is
too good for me; for I tell thee, heaven is prepared for
whosoever will accept of it, and they shall be entertained
with hearty good welcome. Consider, therefore, that as bad
as thou have got thither; thither went
scrubbed,[18] beggarly Lazarus, &c. Nay, it
is prepared for the poor: ‘Hearken, my beloved
brethren,’ saith James, take notice of it,
‘Hath not God chosen the poor of this world rich in
faith, and heirs of the kingdom?’ (James 2:5).
Therefore take heart and RUN, man. And,
The Sixth Motive. Think much of them
that are gone before. First, How really they got into the
kingdom. Secondly, How safe they are in the arms of Jesus;
would they be here again for a thousand worlds? Or if they
were, would they be afraid that God would not make them
welcome? Thirdly, What would they judge of thee if they
knew thy heart began to fail thee in thy journey, or thy
sins began to allure thee, and to persuade thee to stop thy
race? would they not call thee a thousand fools? and say,
O, that he did but see what we see, feel what we feel, and
taste of the dainties that we taste of! O, if he were here
one quarter of an hour, to behold, to see, to feel, to
taste and enjoy but the thousandth part of what we enjoy,
what would he do? What would he suffer? What would he leave
undone? Would he favour sin? Would he love this world
below? Would he be afraid of friends, or shrink at the most
fearful threatenings that the greatest tyrants could invent
to give him? Nay, those who have had but a sight of these
things by faith, when they have been as far off from them
as heaven from earth, yet they have been able to say with a
comfortable and merry heart, as the bird that sings in the
spring, that this and more shall not keep them from running
to heaven. Sometimes, when my base heart hath been
inclining to this world, and to loiter in my journey
towards heaven, the very consideration of the glorious
saints and angels in heaven, what they enjoy, and what low
thoughts they have of the things of this world together,
how they would befool me if they did but know that my heart
was drawing back; [this] hath caused me to rush forward, to
disdain these poor, low, empty, beggarly things, and to say
to my soul, Come, soul, let us not be weary; let us see
what this heaven is; let us even venture all for it, and
try if that will quit the cost. Surely Abraham, David,
Paul, and the rest of the saints of God, were as wise as
any are now, and yet they lost all for this glorious
kingdom. O! therefore, throw away stinking lusts, follow
after righteousness, love the Lord Jesus, devote thyself
unto his fear, I’ll warrant thee he will give thee a
goodly recompense. Reader, what sayst thou to this? Art
[thou] resolved to follow me? Nay, resolve if thou canst to
get before me. ‘So run, that ye may
obtain.’
The Seventh Motive. To encourage thee
a little farther, set to the work, and when thou hast run
thyself down weary, then the Lord Jesus will take thee up,
and carry thee. Is not this enough to make any poor soul
begin his race? Thou, perhaps, criest, O but I am feeble, I
am lame, &c.: well, but Christ hath a bosom; consider,
therefore, when thou hast run thyself down weary, he will
put thee in his bosom: ‘He shall gather the lambs
with his arms, and carry them in his bosom,
and shall gently lead those that are with young’
(Isa 40:11). This is the way that fathers take to encourage
their children, saying: Run, sweet babe, while thou art
weary, and then I will take thee up and carry thee.
‘He will gather his lambs with his arm, and carry
them in his bosom.’ When they are weary they
shall ride.[19]
The Eighth Motive. Or else he will
convey new strength from heaven into thy soul, which will
be as well— ‘The youths shall faint and be
weary, and the young men shall utterly fall; but they that
wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they
shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run and not
be weary, they shall walk and not faint’ (Isa
40:30,31). What shall I say besides what hath already been
said? Thou shalt have good and easy lodging, good and
wholesome diet, the bosom of Christ to lie in, the joys of
heaven to feed on. Shall I speak of the satiety and of the
duration of all these? Verily to describe them to the
height it is a work too hard for me to
do.[20]
The Ninth Motive. Again methinks the
very industry of the devil, and the industry of his
servants, &c., should make you that have a desire to
heaven and happiness to run apace. Why, the devil, he will
lose no time, spare no pains, also neither will his
servants, both to seek the destruction of themselves and
others: and shall not we be as industrious for our own
salvation? Shall the world venture the damnation of their
souls for a poor corruptible crown; and shall not we
venture the loss of a few trifles for an eternal crown?
Shall they venture the loss of eternal friends, as God to
love, Christ to redeem, the Holy Spirit to comfort, heaven
for habitation, saints and angels for company, and all this
to get and hold communion with sin, and this world, and a
few base, drunken, swearing, lying, covetous wretches, like
themselves? And shall not we labour as hard, run as fast,
seek as diligently, nay, a hundred times more diligently,
for the company of these glorious eternal friends, though
with the loss of such as these, nay, with the loss of ten
thousand times better than these poor, low, base,
contemptible things? Shall it be said at the last day, that
wicked men made more haste to hell than you did make to
heaven?[21] That they spent more hours, days,
and that early and late, for hell, than you spent for that
which is ten thousand thousand of thousands times better? O
let it not be so, but run with all might and
main.
Thus you see I have here spoken something,
though but little. Now I shall come to make some use and
application of what hath been said, and so
conclude.
[VI. NINE USES OF THIS
SUBJECT.]
The first use. You see here, that he
that will go to heaven, he must run for it; yea, and not
only run, but so run, that is, as I have said, to run
earnestly, to run continually, to strip off every thing
that would hinder in his race with the rest. Well then, do
you so run? And now let us examine a little.
1. Art thou got into the right way? Art thou
in Christ’s righteousness? Do not say yes in thy
heart, when in truth there is no such matter. It is a
dangerous thing, you know, for a man to think he is in the
right way, when he is in the wrong. It is the next way for
him to lose his way, and not only so, but if he run for
heaven, as thou sayst thou dost, even to lose that too. O
this is the misery of most men, to persuade themselves that
they run right, when they never had one foot in the way!
The Lord give thee understanding here, or else thou art
undone for ever. Prithee, soul, search when was it thou
turned out of thy sins and righteousness into the
righteousness of Jesus Christ. I say, dost thou see thyself
in him? and is he more precious to thee than the whole
world? Is thy mind always musing on him? Dost thou love to
be talking of him—and also to be walking with him?
Dost thou count his company more precious than the whole
world? Dost thou count all things but poor, lifeless,
empty, vain things, without communion with him? Doth his
company sweeten all things—and his absence embitter
all things? Soul, I beseech thee, be serious, and lay it to
heart, and do not take things of such weighty concernment
as the salvation or damnation of thy soul, without good
ground.
2. Art thou unladen of the things of this
world, as pride, pleasures, profits, lusts, vanities? What!
dost thou think to run fast enough with the world, thy sins
and lusts in thy heart? I tell thee, soul, they that have
laid all aside, every weight, every sin, and are got into
the nimblest posture, they find work enough to run; so to
run as to hold out. To run through all that opposition, all
these jostles, all these rubs, over all these
stumbling-blocks, over all the snares from all these
entanglements, that the devil, sin, the world, and their
own hearts, lay before them; I tell thee, if thou art
agoing heavenward, thou wilt find it no small or easy
matter. Art thou therefore discharged and unladen of these
things? Never talk of going to heaven if thou art not. It
is to be feared thou wilt be found among the many that
‘will seek to enter in, and shall not be able’
(Luke 13:24).
The second use. If so, then, in the
next place, what will become of them that are grown weary
before they are got half way thither? Why, man, it is he
that holdeth out to the end that must be saved; it is he
that overcometh that shall inherit all things; it is not
every one that begins. Agrippa gave a fair step for a
sudden, he steps almost into the bosom of Christ in less
than half an hour. Thou, saith he to Paul, hast
‘almost persuaded me to be a Christian’ (Acts
26:26). Ah! but it was but almost; and so he had as good
have been never a whit; he stept fair indeed, but yet he
stept short; he was hot while he was at it, but he was
quickly out of wind. O this but almost! I tell you, this
but almost, it lost his soul. Methinks I have seen
sometimes how these poor wretches that get but almost to
heaven, how fearfully their almost, and their but almost,
will torment them in hell; when they shall cry out in the
bitterness of their souls, saying, I was almost a
Christian. I was almost got into the kingdom,
almost out of the hands of the devil, almost out
of my sins, almost from under the curse of God;
almost, and that was all; almost, but not
altogether. O that I should be almost at heaven, and
should not go quite through! Friend, it is a sad thing to
sit down before we are in heaven, and to grow weary before
we come to the place of rest; and if it should be thy case,
I am sure thou dost not so run as to obtain. But
again,
The third use. In the next place,
What then will become of them that some time since were
running post-haste to heaven, insomuch that they seemed to
outstrip many, but now are running as fast back again? Do
you think those will ever come thither? What, to run back
again, back again to sin, to the world, to the devil, back
again to the lusts of the flesh? O! ‘It had been
better for them not to have known the way of righteousness,
than after they have known it, to turn,’ to
turn back again, ‘from the holy commandment’ (2
Peter 2:22). Those men shall not only be damned for sin,
but for professing to all the world that sin is better than
Christ; for the man that runs back again, he doth as good
as say, ‘I have tried Christ, and I have tried sin,
and I do not find so much profit in Christ as in
sin.’[22] I say, this man declareth this,
even by his running back again. O sad! what a doom they
will have, who were almost at heaven-gates, and then run
back again. ‘If any draw back,’ saith
Christ [by his apostle], ‘my soul shall have no
pleasure in him’ (Heb 10:38). Again, ‘No man
having put his hand to the plough,’ that is, set
forward, in the ways of God, ‘and looking
back,’ turning back again, ‘is fit for the
kingdom of God’ (Luke 9:62). And if not fit for the
kingdom of heaven, then for certain he must needs be fit
for the fire of hell. And therefore, saith the apostle,
those that ‘bring forth’ these apostatizing
fruits, as ‘briars and thorns, are rejected, and nigh
unto cursing, whose end is to be burned’ (Heb 6:8). O
there is never another Christ to save them by bleeding and
dying for them! And if they shall not escape that neglect,
then how shall they escape that reject and turn their back
upon ‘so great a salvation?’ (Heb 2:3). And if
the righteous, that is, they that run for it, will find
work enough to get to heaven, ‘then where will the
ungodly’ backsliding ‘sinner appear?’ or
if Judas the traitor, or Francis Spira the backslider, were
but now alive in the world to whisper these men in the ear
a little, and tell them what it hath cost their souls for
backsliding, surely it would stick by them and make them
afraid of running back again, so long as they had one day
to live in this world.
The fourth use. So again, fourthly,
how unlike to these men’s passions[23]
will those be that have all this while sat still, and have
not so much as set one foot forward to the kingdom of
heaven. Surely he that backslideth, and he that sitteth
still in sin, they are both of one mind; the one he will
not stir, because he loveth his sins, and the things of
this world; the other he runs back again, because he loveth
his sins, and the things of this world: is it not one and
the same thing? They are all one here, and shall not one
and the same hell hold them hereafter! He is an ungodly one
that never looked after Christ, and he is an ungodly one
that did once look after him and then ran quite back again;
and therefore that word must certainly drop out of the
mouth of Christ against them both, ‘Depart from me,
ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil
and his angels’ (Matt 25:41).
The fifth use. Again, here you may
see, in the next place, that is, they that will have heaven
must run for it; then this calls aloud to those who began
but a while since to run, I say, for them to mend their
pace if they intend to win; you know that they which come
hindmost, had need run fastest. Friend, I tell thee, there
be those that have run ten years to thy one, nay, twenty to
thy five, and yet if thou talk with them, sometimes they
will say they doubt they shall come late enough. How then
will it be with thee? Look to it therefore that thou delay
no time, not an hour’s time, but speedily part with
all, with everything that is an hindrance to thee in thy
journey, and run; yea, and so run that thou mayest
obtain.
The sixth use. Again, sixthly, You
that are old professors, take you heed that the young
striplings of Jesus, that began to strip but the other day,
do not outrun you, so as to have that scripture fulfilled
on you, ‘The first shall be last, and the last
first’; which will be a shame to you, and a credit
for them. What, for a young soldier to be more courageous
than he that hath been used to wars! To you that are
hindmost, I say, strive to outrun them that are before you;
and you that are foremost, I say, hold your ground, and
keep before them in faith and love, if possible; for indeed
that is the right running, for one to strive to outrun
another; even for the hindmost to endeavour to overtake the
foremost, and he that is before should be sure to lay out
himself to keep his ground, even to the very utmost. But
then,
The seventh use. Again, How basely do
they behave themselves, how unlike are they to win, that
think it enough to keep company with the hindmost? There
are some men that profess themselves such as run for heaven
as well as any; yet if there be but any lazy, slothful,
cold, half-hearted professors in the country, they will be
sure to take example by them; they think if they can but
keep pace with them they shall do fair; but these do not
consider that the hindmost lose the prize. You may know it,
if you will, that it cost the foolish virgins dear for
their coming too late— ‘They that were ready
went in with him, and the door was shut. Afterward,’
mark, ‘afterward came the other,’ the foolish,
‘virgins, saying, Lord, Lord, open to us; but he
answered, and said,’ Depart, ‘I know you
not’ (Matt 25:10-12). Depart, lazy professors, cold
professors, slothful professors. O! methinks the Word of
God is so plain for the overthrow of you lazy professors,
that it is to be wondered men do take no more notice of it.
How was Lot’s wife served for running lazily, and for
giving but one look behind her, after the things she left
in Sodom? How was Esau served for staying too long before
he came for the blessing? And how were they served that are
mentioned in the 13th of Luke, ‘for staying till the
door was shut?’ Also the foolish virgins; a heavy
after-groan will they give that have thus staid too long.
It turned Lot’s wife into a pillar of salt (Gen
19:26). It made Esau weep with an exceeding loud and bitter
cry (Heb 12:17). It made Judas hang himself: yea, and it
will make thee curse the day in which thou wast born, if
thou miss of the kingdom, as thou wilt certainly do, if
this be thy course. But,
The eighth use. Again, How, and if
thou by thy lazy running shouldst not only destroy thyself,
but also thereby be the cause of the damnation of some
others, for thou being a professor thou must think that
others will take notice of thee; and because thou art but a
poor, cold, lazy runner, and one that seeks to drive the
world and pleasure along with thee: why, thereby others
will think of doing so too. Nay, say they, why may not we
as well as he? He is a professor, and yet he seeks for
pleasures, riches, profits; he loveth vain company, and he
is proud, and he is so and so, and professeth that he is
going for heaven; yea, and he saith also he doth not fear
but he shall have entertainment; let us therefore keep pace
with him, we shall fare no worse than he. O how fearful a
thing will it be, if that thou shalt be instrumental of the
ruin of others by thy halting in the way of righteousness!
Look to it, thou wilt have strength little enough to appear
before God, to give an account of the loss of thy own soul;
thou needest not have to give an account for others; why,
thou didst stop them from entering in. How wilt thou answer
that saying, You would not enter in yourselves, and them
that would you hinder; for that saying will be eminently
fulfilled on them that through their own idleness do keep
themselves out of heaven, and by giving of others the same
example, hinder them also.
The ninth use. Therefore, now to
speak a word to both of you, and so I shall
conclude.
1. I beseech you, in the name of our Lord
Jesus Christ, that none of you do run so lazily in the way
to heaven as to hinder either yourselves or others. I know
that even he which runs laziest, if he should see a man
running for a temporal life, if he should so much neglect
his own well-being in this world as to venture, when he is
a-running for his life, to pick up here and there a lock of
wool that hangeth by the way-side, or to step now and then
aside out of the way for to gather up a straw or two, or
any rotten stick, I say, if he should do this when he is
a-running for his life, thou wouldst condemn him; and dost
thou not condemn thyself that dost the very same in effect,
nay worse, that loiterest in thy race, notwithstanding thy
soul, heaven, glory, and all is at stake. Have a care, have
a care, poor wretched sinner, have a care.
2. If yet there shall be any that,
notwithstanding this advice, will still be flaggering and
loitering in the way to the kingdom of glory, be thou so
wise as not to take example by them. Learn of no man
further than he followeth Christ. But look unto Jesus, who
is not only ‘the author and finisher of faith,’
but who did, ‘for the joy that was set before him,
endured the cross, despising the shame, and is now set down
at the right hand of God’ (Heb 12:2). I say, look to
no man to learn of him no further than he followeth Christ.
‘Be ye followers of me,’ saith Paul,
‘even as I also am of Christ’ (1 Cor
11:1). Though he was an eminent man, yet his exhortation
was, that none should follow him any further than he
followed Christ.
VII. PROVOCATION. [TO RUN WITH THE
FOREMOST.]
Now that you may be provoked to run with the
foremost, take notice of this. When Lot and his wife were
running from cursed Sodom to the mountains, to save their
lives, it is said that his wife looked back from behind
him, and she became a pillar of salt; and yet you see that
neither her practice, nor the judgment of God that fell
upon her for the same, would cause Lot to look behind him.
I have sometimes wondered at Lot in this particular; his
wife looked behind her, and died immediately, but let what
would become of her, Lot would not so much as look behind
him to see her. We do not read that he did so much as once
look where she was, or what was become of her; his heart
was indeed upon his journey, and well it might: there was
the mountain before him, and the fire and brimstone behind
him; his life lay at stake and he had lost it if he had but
looked behind him. Do thou so run: and in thy race remember
Lot’s wife, and remember her doom; and remember for
what that doom did overtake her; and remember that God made
her an example for all lazy runners, to the end of the
world: and take heed thou fall not after the same example.
But, if this will not provoke thee, consider
thus,
1. Thy soul is thy own soul, that is either
to be saved or lost; thou shalt not lose my soul by
thy laziness. It is thy own soul, thy own ease, thy
own peace, thy own advantage, or disadvantage. If it were
my soul that thou art desired to be good unto, methinks
reason should move thee somewhat to pity it. But alas, it
is thy own, thy own soul. ‘What shall it profit a man
if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own
soul?’ (Mark 8:36). God’s people wish well to
the souls of others, and wilt not thou wish well to thy
own? And if this will not provoke thee, then think
again,
2. If thou lose thy soul, it is thou also
that must bear the blame. It made Cain stark mad to
consider that he had not looked to his brother Abel’s
soul. How much more will it perplex thee to think, that
thou hadst not a care of thy own? And if this will not
provoke thee to bestir thyself, think again,
3. That if thou wilt not run, the people of
God are resolved to deal with thee even as Lot dealt with
his wife, that is, leave thee behind them. It may be thou
hast a father, mother, brother, &c., going post-haste
to heaven, wouldst thou be willing to be left behind them?
Surely no. Again,
4. Will it not be a dishonour to thee to see
the very boys and girls in the country to have more wit
than thyself? It may be the servants of some men, as the
horsekeeper, ploughman, scullion, &c., are more looking
after heaven than their masters. I am apt to think
sometimes, that more servants than masters, that more
tenants than landlords, will inherit the kingdom of heaven.
But is not this a shame for them that are such? I am
persuaded you scorn, that your servants should say that
they are wiser than you in the things of this world; and
yet I am bold to say, that many of them are wiser than you
in the things of the world to come, which are of great
concernment.
VIII. A SHORT
EXPOSTULATION.
Well then, sinner, what sayest thou? Where
is thy heart? Wilt thou run? Art thou resolved to strip? Or
art thou not? Think quickly, man, it is no dallying in this
matter. Confer not with flesh and blood; look up to heaven,
and see how thou likest it; also to hell—of which
thou mayst understand something by my book, called, A
few Sighs from Hell; or the Groans of a damned Soul;
which I wish thee to read seriously over—and
accordingly devote thyself. If thou dost not know the way,
inquire at the Word of God. If thou wantest company, cry
for God’s Spirit. If thou wantest encouragement,
entertain the promises. But be sure thou begin by times;
get into the way; run apace and hold out to the end; and
the Lord give thee a prosperous journey.
Farewell.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] It was the commonly received opinion
that, at the moment of death, the angels and devils strove
to carry away the soul. If the dying man had received the
consecrated wafer, the devils were scared at it, and lost
their victim. Hence the prayer— ‘From
lightning, battle, murder, and sudden death, good
Lord, deliver us’; a curious contrast to, ‘Thy
will be done’! Were they sinners above all men upon
whom the tower in Siloam fell and slew them? (Luke 13:4). O
that men would rely upon the righteousness of Christ
stimulating them to run for glory, as heavenly footmen, and
not upon the nostrums of Antichrist!—Ed.
[2] In a very beautifully ornamented Liturgy
of the Church of England, prior to the Reformation, after
the Salisbury use, printed in 1526 (in the Editor’s
library), is this direction— ‘These iii.
prayers be wrytten in the chapel of the holy crosse in
Rome, who that deuoutly say them they shall obteyne ten
hundred thousand years of pardon for deadly sins graunted
of oure holy father Jhon xxii pope of Rome.’ The
three prayers only occupy twenty-six short lines, and may
be gravely repeated in two minutes. Such was and IS
Popery!! But at the end of all this promised pardon for a
million of years—what then? Will eternal torments
commence?—Ed.
[3] How awfully is this pictured to the soul
in that solemn account of the day of death and judgment in
Matthew 25; and how strikingly applied in the
Pilgrim’s Progress in the character of
Ignorance.—Ed.
[4] ‘When the bell begins to
toll,
Lord have mercy on the
soul.’
The Papists imagine that there is an
extraordinary power in the bell hallowed by baptism to
drive away the spirits of darkness, so that the departing
soul may take its journey without molestation!! It was also
intended to rouse the faithful to pray for the dead
person’s soul. This, and other superstitious
practices, were suspended during the Protectorate in some
parishes, if not generally, but were revived at the
Restoration, because the omission injured the revenues of
the church.—See Brand’s Popular
Antiquities.—Ed.
[5] This quotation, probably made from
memory, is a mixture of the Genevan and the present
version.—Ed.
[6] Francis Spira, in 1548, being a lawyer
in great repute in Italy, professed gospel principles, but
afterwards relapsed into Popery, and became a victim of
black despair. The man in the iron cage, at the
Interpreter’s house, probably referred to Spira. The
narrative of his fearful state is preceded by a
poem:—
‘Here see a soul that’s all
despair, a man
All hell, a spirit all wounds. Who
can
A wounded spirit bear?
Reader, wouldst see what you may never
feel,
Despair, racks, torments, whips of burning
steel?
Behold this man, this furnace, in whose
heart
Sin hath created hell. O! in each
part
What flames appear?
His thoughts all stings; words,
swords;
Brimstone his breath;
His eyes, flames; wishes, curses; life, a
death,
A thousand deaths live in him, he not
dead—
A breathing corpse in living scalding
lead.’—Ed.
[7] How plain and important is this
direction. Saul the persecutor ran fast, but the faster he
ran in his murderous zeal the further he ran from the
prize. Let every staunch sectarian examine prayerfully his
way, especially if the sect he belongs to is patronized by
princes, popes, or potentates, and endowed with worldly
honours. He may be running from and not to
heaven.—Ed.
[8] He that trusts in the sect to which he
belongs is assuredly in the wrong way, whether it be the
Church of Rome or England, Quaking, Ranting, Baptists, or
Independents. Trust in Christ must be all in all. First be
IN Christ, then run for heaven, looking unto Christ. Keep
fellowship with those who are the purest, and run fastest
in the ordinances of the gospel which are revealed in the
Word. Follow no human authority nor craft, seek the
influence of the Holy Spirit for yourself, that you may be
led into all truth, then you will so run as to
obtain.—Ed.
[9] How plain is this direction, and how
does it commend itself to our common-sense; lumpish shoes,
and pockets filled with stones, how absurd for a man who is
running a race!! Stop, my dear reader, have you cast away
all useless encumbrances, and all easily besetting sins? Is
your heart full of mammon, or pride, or debauchery? if so,
you have no particle of strength to run for heaven, but are
running upon swift perdition.—Ed.
[10] This is one of those beautiful ideas
which so abound in all Bunyan’s works. Our way to the
kingdom is consecrated by the cross of Christ, and may be
known throughout by the sprinkling of his blood, his
groans, his agonies. All the doctrines that put us in the
way are sanctified by the atonement; all the spurs to a
diligent running in that way are powerful as motives, by
our being bought with that precious price, the death of
Emmanuel. O! my soul, be thou found looking unto Jesus, he
is THE WAY, the only way to heaven.—Ed.
[11] Strange infatuation, desperate pride,
that man should reject the humbling simplicity of Divine
truth, and run so anxiously, greedily, and in hosts, in the
road to ruin, because priestcraft calls it ‘the way
of God’; preferring the miserable sophistry of Satan
and his emissaries to the plain directions of Holy Writ. O!
reader, put not your trust in man, but, while God is ready
to direct you, rely solely on his Holy
Word.—Ed.
[12] ‘Happily,’ or haply, were
formerly used to express the same
meaning.—Ed.
[13] ‘Sink-souls’ is one of
Bunyan’s strong Saxonisms, full of meaning,
‘Sink’ is that in which filth or foulness is
deposited.
‘She poured forth out of her hellish
sink,
Her fruitful cursed
spawn.’—Spencer.—Ed.
[14] This is one of Bunyan’s most
deeply expressive directions to the heaven-ward pilgrim;
may it sink into our hearts. Christ is the way, the cross
is the standing way-mark throughout the road, never out of
sight. In embracing the humbling doctrines of grace, in
sorrow for sin, in crucifying self, in bearing each
other’s burdens, in passing through the river that
will absorb our mortality—from the new birth to our
inheritance—the cross is the
way-mark.—Ed.
[15] Our holiest, happiest duties, IF they
interfere with a simple and exclusive reliance upon Christ
for justification, must be accursed in our esteem; while,
if they are fulfilled in a proper spirit of love to him,
they become our most blessed privileges. Reader, be jealous
of your motives.—Ed.
[16] This is very solemn warning. But is it
asked how are we to see that that is invisible, or to
imagine bliss that is past our understanding? The reply is,
treasure up in your heart those glimpses of glory contained
in the Word. Be daily in communion with the world of
spirits, and it may be your lot, with Paul, to have so
soul-ravishing a sense of eternal realities, as scarcely to
know whether you are in the body or
not.—Ed.<