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.

As there are great saints and small ones in the church on earth, so there are angels of divers degrees in heaven; some greater than some; but the smallest saint, when he gets to heaven, shall have an angel’s dignity, an angel’s place.

    What goodly mansions He for them provides,
    Though here they meet rough winds and swelling tides;
    How brave a calm they will enjoy at last,
    Who to the Lord and to his ways hold fast.

Employments of heaven.

This love of Christ, if I may so say, will keep the saints in an employ, even when they are in heaven; though not an employ, that is laborsome, tiresome, burdensome, yet an employ that is dutiful, delightful, and profitable; for although the work and worship of saints in heaven is not particularly revealed as yet, and so it doth not yet appear what we shall be, yet in the general we may say, there will be that for them to do that has not yet by them been done; and by that work which they shall do there, their delight will be unto them.  Nor will this at all derogate from their glory.  The angels now wait upon God, and serve him; the Son of God is now a minister, and waiteth upon his service in heaven.  Some saints have been employed about service for God after they have been in heaven; and why we should be idle spectators when we come thither, I see not reason to believe.  It may be said, They there rest from their labors.  True, but not from their delights.  All things then that once were burdensome, whether in suffering or service, shall be done away, and that which is delightful and pleasurable shall remain.

Now, just as the gates were opened to let in the men, I looked in after them, and behold, the city shone like the sun; the streets also were paved with gold, and in them walked many men with crowns on their heads, palms in their hands, and golden harps to sing praises withal.  There were also of them that had wings; and they answered one another without intermission, saying, “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord.”  And after that they shut up the gates; which when I had seen, I wished myself among them.

“Strive to enter in.”  “Enter in”—­into heaven, that is the meaning, where the saved are and shall be—­into heaven, that place, that glorious place where God and Christ and angels are, and the souls of just men made perfect.  “Enter in:”  that thing included though not expressed in the words, is called in another place the “mount Zion, the heavenly Jerusalem, the general assembly and church of the first-born which are written in heaven.”  And therefore the words signify unto us that there is a state most glorious, and that when this world is ended; and that this place and state is likewise to be enjoyed by a generation of men forever.  Besides, this word “enter in” signifies that salvation to the full is to be enjoyed only there, and that there only is eternal safety; all other places and conditions are hazardous,

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The Riches of Bunyan from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.