The Riches of Bunyan eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 591 pages of information about The Riches of Bunyan.

The Riches of Bunyan eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 591 pages of information about The Riches of Bunyan.

Can you give me some motive to self-denial?  Yes, the Lord Jesus denied himself for thee:  what sayest thou to that?

Oh, I have thought sometimes what bloody creatures hath sin made us.  The beasts of the field must be slain by thousands before Christ came, to signify to us that we should have ’a Saviour; and after that, he must come himself and die a worse death than died those beasts, before the work of saving could be finished.  O redemption, redemption by blood, is the heart-endearing consideration!  This is that which will make the water stand in our eyes, that will break a heart of flint, and that will make one do as they do that are in bitterness for their firstborn.

Perhaps in the day of thy conversion thou wast more unruly than many.  Like a bullock unaccustomed to the yoke, hardly tamed, thou wast brought home by strong hands.  Thou wouldst not drive:  the Lord Jesus must take thee up, lay thee upon his shoulder, and carry thee home to his Father’s house.  This should engage thy heart to study to advance the grace of God.

It may do thee no harm but good to cast an eye over thy shoulder, at those that now lie roaring under the vengeance of eternal fire; it may put thee in mind of what thou wast once, and of what thou must yet assuredly be, if grace by Christ preventeth not:  keep then thy conscience awake with wrath and grace, with heaven and hell; but let grace and heaven bear sway.

Get thou thy soul possessed with the spirit of the Son, and believe thou art perfectly set free by him from whatsoever thou by sin hast deserved at the hand of revenging justice.  This doctrine unlooseth thy hands, takes off thy yoke, and lets thee go upright; this doctrine puts spiritual and heavenly inclinations into thy soul, and the faith of this truth doth show thee that God hath so surprised thee and gone beyond thee with his blessed and everlasting love, that thou canst not but reckon thyself his debtor for ever.  “Therefore, brethren, we are debtors not to the flesh, to live after the flesh.”  Rom. 8:  12.

If thou wouldst be faithful to that work that God hath allotted thee to do in this world for his name, then labor to see a beauty and glory in holiness and in every good work; this tends much to the engaging of thy heart.  O worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness; fear before him all the earth; and for thy help in this, think much on this in general, that “thus saith the Lord” is the wind-up of every command; for indeed much of the glory and beauty of duties doth lie in the glory and excellency of the person that doth command them; and hence it is, that “Be it enacted by the king’s most excellent majesty” is the head of every law, that that law should therefore be reverenced by and be made glorious and beautiful to all.  And we see upon this very account, what power and place the precepts of kings do take in the hearts of their subjects, every one loving and reverencing the statute because

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The Riches of Bunyan from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.