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                     Posted: Tue Jun 04, 2019 6:16 pm
		     
             
             
             
                    
                        
                            
                                                                    
        
        
        
			            © 2014 Desiring God
  Published by Desiring GodPost Office Box  2901 Minneapolis, MN 55402 www.desiringGod.org
  Permissions
  You are permitted and encouraged to reproduce and distribute this material in any format provided that you do not alter the wording in any way and do not charge a fee beyond the cost of reproduction. For web posting, a link to this document on our website is preferred. Any exceptions to the above must be approved by Desiring God.
  Please include the following statement on any distributed copy:© Desiring God. Website: desiringGod.org
  I do not doubt that the one volume of Pilgrim’s Progress, written by a man who knew hardly any book but his Bible, and was ignorant of Greek and Latin, will prove in the last day to have done more for the benefit of the world, than all the works of the schoolmen put together.  —J.C. Ryle         
        
        
		        
		         
     
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                     Posted: Tue Jun 04, 2019 6:20 pm
		     
             
             
             
                    
                        
                            
                                                                    
        
        
        
			            TABLE OF CONTENTS Foreword by Leland Ryken I To Live Upon God Who Is Invisible: The Life of John Bunyan by John Piper IX Preface by John Newton (1776) XXXIX The Pilgrim’s Progress The Jail 1 Conviction of the Necessity of Flying 5 The Slough of Despond 9 Evangelist Findeth Christian Under Mount Sinai, and Looketh Severely Upon Him 19 Proceeds to the Cross 39 Christian Saluted by the Three Shining Ones 41  The Hill of Difficulty 45 The Valley of Humiliation 61 Combat with Appolyon 65          
        
        
		        
		         
     
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                     Posted: Tue Jun 04, 2019 6:22 pm
		     
             
             
             
                    
                        
                            
                                                                    
        
        
        
			            Christian Overtakes Faithful 75
  Christian Has Another Companion 111
  The Delectable Mountains 135
  Christian, Hopeful, and the Shepherds 139
  Adventures on the Enchanted Ground 155
  Ministering Spirits Meet Christian and Hopeful 183
  The Conclusion 187
  Scripture Index 189
  Acknowledgements 197         
        
        
		        
		         
     
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                     Posted: Tue Jun 04, 2019 6:34 pm
		     
             
             
             
                    
                        
                            
                                                                    
        
        
        
			            FOREWORD Leland Ryken The  book  that  became  known  to  posterity  as  The  Pilgrim’s Progress is a Christian classic whose importance is impossible  to  overstate.  For  more  than  two  centuries  after  its  first publication, The  Pilgrim’s  Progress  ranked  just  behind  the King James Bible as the most important book in evangelical Protestant  households.  The  book  has  been  translated  into some  two  hundred  languages,  including  eighty  in  Africa. Any book that has achieved such popularity has a very large claim to our attention. Facts of Publication The Pilgrim’s Progress actually has two publication dates, cor-responding to the two books that comprise it. The first book was published in 1678 and bore the title The Pilgrim’s Prog-ress:     From This World  to That Which  Is  to  Come,  Delivered Under the Similitude of a Dream. It tells the story of the spiritual journey of the protagonist named Christian from the City of Destruction to the Celestial City (meaning heaven).Book II  was  published  six  years  later  as  part  of  an  old artistic tradition known as a “companion piece.” It tells the story  of  the  same  journey,  this  time  undertaken  by  Christian’s  wife,  Christiana,  and  their  four  sons.  The  two  books          
        
        
		        
		         
     
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                     Posted: Tue Jun 04, 2019 6:39 pm
		     
             
             
             
                    
                        
                            
                                                                    
        
        
        
			            continued to be published separately until 1728, not being published  as  a  combined  book  until  forty-four  years  after the first appearance of Book II. This new edition from Desiring  God  resembles  the  early  publication  strategy  of  The Pilgrim’s Progress by releasing Book I individually.     Additionally, in order to provide more insight into the life of Bunyan, this new edition features an introduction by John Piper that traces the character of Bunyan’s faith in the midst of suffering. This new edition also includes a preface written by John Newton in 1776. Newton’s preface accompanied  several  publications  of  The  Pilgrim’s  Progress  in  the eighteenth  century,  but  has  virtually  been  non-existent  for the last century. The recovery of this preface and incorporation into the present volume sets it apart from other editions currently in print. Author and Composition The author of  The Pilgrim’s Progress is John Bunyan (1628–1688.), one of the most famous preachers in English history as well as a popular British author. Externally Bunyan led a difficult life. He was poor from childhood. He married his first wife at the age of twenty, and Bunyan once claimed that when the couple married they had not “so much household stuff as a dish or spoon betwixt us both.” By Bunyan’s own account, he led a wild youth and was converted at the approximate age of thirty. Following his conversion, Bunyan felt a call to preach. Therein lay a difficulty. Religious tolerance had not yet arrived on the scene, and only one state-sanctioned Christian group  enjoyed  freedom  of  worship.  In  Bunyan’s  day  that group  was  the  Church  of  England,  also  known  as  the  Anglican Church. Bunyan was a Baptist preacher who refused to  stop  preaching  without  an  official  license.  As  a  result,          
        
        
		        
		         
     
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                     Posted: Tue Jun 04, 2019 6:43 pm
		     
             
             
             
                    
                        
                            
                                                                    
        
        
        
			            Bunyan found himself in and out of prison over a period of twelve years (1659–1671). While imprisoned, he eked out a living for his family by making shoe laces.     Much  great  literature  and  art  have  been  produced  in the  crucible  of  suffering,  and The  Pilgrim’s  Progress  is  such a work. The consensus of scholarly opinion is that Bunyan wrote Book I of his masterpiece while in prison. (He is also reputed to have secretly carved a flute from a table leg in the prison.)     Bunyan  was  emphatically  not  a  one-book  author.  Despite  his  chaotic  and  stressful  external  life  (including  the death of his first wife when he was approximately thirty and the blindness of his daughter Mary), Bunyan was a prolific author. He published over thirty books, mainly theological in nature.     Bunyan  was  also  one  of  the  most  famous  preachers  of his  day  (which  partly  explains  why  the  civil  and  Anglican officials  singled  him  our  for  particularly  harsh  treatment). After  his  release  from  prison,  Bunyan  sometimes  traveled all the way from his native Bedford to London to preach (a two-day journey in Bunyan’s day). On one recorded event, 1,200  Londoners  turned  out  on  a  cold  winter  morning  to hear Bunyan preach.     Bunyan’s death at the age of sixty was caused by pneumonia resulting from exposure to drenching rain while Bunyan made a two-day trip on horseback to heal relations between a  father  and  his  estranged  son.  Bunyan  was  buried  in  the famous  nonconformist  cemetery  in  London  called  Bunhill Fields. The monument on his tomb is today the most prominent site in the cemetery. On its side is the carved figure of a person carrying a burden on his back, a picture of the most famous  moment  in The  Pilgrim’s  Progress  where  Christian loses his burden of sin at the foot of the cross.         
        
        
		        
		         
     
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                     Posted: Tue Jun 04, 2019 6:48 pm
		     
             
             
             
                    
                        
                            
                                                                    
        
        
        
			            The Pilgrim’s Progress As a Literary Classic The Pilgrim’s Progress is a paradox. On the one hand it is a work of folk literature. This makes it a book of the common people,  just  like  the  Bible.  Through  the  ages,  parents  have read  The  Pilgrim’s  Progress  to  their  children  much  as  they read Bible stories to them. Reinforcing this identity of being a book for ordinary people rather than literary scholars is the religious nature of the book. It is a book of edification first, and beyond that it offers whatever entertainment value we might wish to find in it. But that is only half of the picture.  The Pilgrim’s Progress is also a complex work of literature, appealing to people of literary  sophistication  as  well  as  the  common  person.  Perhaps no other literary masterpiece incorporates as many different literary genres as  The Pilgrim’s Progress. The primary genre is narrative or story. This means that readers  need  to  be  ready  to  respond  to  the  three  narrative ingredients of setting, characters, and plot. Most storytellers excel in one of these or perhaps two, but we would be hard pressed to decide which of the three Bunyan is best at. He is good at all three. His ability to describe scenes cannot be surpassed. But just as we think that this is Bunyan’s specialty, we  remember  his  skill  with  character  creation  and  remind ourselves that few authors have given us a greater gallery of memorable  characters  than  Bunyan.  And  then  we  further recall that Bunyan’s skill with plot is breathtaking. What kind of story is  The Pilgrim’s Progress? The list of subgenres  is  nearly  endless.    The  main  storyline  is  a  travel story, in the specific form of a perilous journey (surely one of the five greatest story motifs of all time). The virtues of the  travel  story  are  one  of  the  leading  appeals  of   The  Pilgrim’s  Progress,  as  we  are  entranced  by  strange  settings  remote  from  our  daily  routine  (though  somehow  familiar),          
        
        
		        
		         
     
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                     Posted: Tue Jun 04, 2019 6:52 pm
		     
             
             
             
                    
                        
                            
                                                                    
        
        
        
			            encounters with unusual characters, and narrow escapes in abundance. Many travel stories are quest stories, and this is true of T he Pilgrim’s Progress. The protagonists of the two books—Christian  in  Book  I  and  Christiana  in  Book  II—leave  the City  of  Destruction  in  a  search  to  find  the  Celestial  City. The story of their quests is an adventure story par excellence. Danger and suspense greet us at every turn. An Allegory Much  more  could  be  said  about  the  story  qualities  of  The Pilgrim’s Progress, but the really essential final thing that we need to note is that Bunyan’s story is an allegory. An allegorical story is one in which the literal, physical level of action is intended as a picture of something else. Double meaning is at the heart of allegory. The details in an allegorical story stand for something else. In  The Pilgrim’s Progress, for example, a slough or bog (modeled, incidentally, on a notorious bog on the outskirts of Bunyan’s home town) stands for spiritual despair over one’s lost state. There is a right way and wrong way to deal with the allegorical aspect of  The Pilgrim’s Progress. The wrong way is to slight the literal, physical level of action on the premise that the religious meaning is what really matters. The right way is  to  abandon  ourselves  to  the  story  qualities  of  the  work and let the second level of understanding grow out of that narrative experience. Giant Despair first of all needs to be a terrifying giant in our imagination, and  then he becomes a picture of psychological and theological realities.Allegory can easily become reductionistic, but this need not  happen.  For  example,  a  character  with  the  allegorical name  of Talkative  is  immediately  recognizable  to  us:  he  is someone who talks too much. But the Bunyan magic is such          
        
        
		        
		         
     
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                     Posted: Tue Jun 04, 2019 6:57 pm
		     
             
             
             
                    
                        
                            
                                                                    
        
        
        
			            that Talkative  is  simultaneously  (a)  a  personality  type,  (b) a  social  type  (the  overly  talkative  person  who  quickly  be-comes a social pest), and (c) a spiritual reality (someone who substitutes talk for genuine faith and Christian action). The allegorical  names  of  Bunyan’s  characters  should  not  lull  us into thinking that they are one-dimensional. The Religious Vision of The Pilgrim’s Progress Bunyan was a belated Puritan. Puritanism was the English branch  of  the  Protestant  Reformation.    At  every  point  in  The  Pilgrim’s  Progress  we  can  see  Puritan  inclinations  of mind and belief. The preoccupations of the book are Puritan—the Bible as the authority for religious belief (the book is a virtual mosaic of Bible verses); human sinfulness as the natural state of all people; salvation of one’s soul as the one thing needful; the substitutionary atonement of Jesus as the basis for the forgiveness of sin; heaven as the ultimate longing of every person. But the picture is a little more complex than simply calling Bunyan a Puritan. When Bunyan was finally freed from imprisonment,  he  became  a  Baptist  preacher.  If  Bunyan were living today, we would call him an evangelical Christian, but more specifically a Reformed Calvinistic Baptist. Tips for Reading Bunyan’s Masterpiece The  Pilgrim’s  Progress  is  initially  a  difficult  book  for  modern readers. The first obstacle is the archaic language of the book.  The  language  of  The  Pilgrim’s  Progress  is  decidedly old-fashioned  (like  the  King  James  Bible,  which  it  more closely  resembles  than  any  other  English-language  literary work). The solution to the problem is to accept the archaic language  as  a  feature  of  the  book  and  enjoy  it  as  part  of          
        
        
		        
		         
     
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                     Posted: Tue Jun 04, 2019 6:59 pm
		     
             
             
             
                    
                        
                            
                                                                    
        
        
        
			            its  arresting  strangeness  (a  phrase  that  comes  from  J.R.R. Tolkien’s  endorsement  of  fantasy  and  fairy  tales  as  literary genres).
  Secondly,  the  taste  for  allegory  is  today  somewhat  out of  vogue  (though  it  has  always  remained  part  of  the  folk imagination). We will fare just fine with Bunyan’s allegorical story if we read it as a travel story and adventure story first, and then allow the theological and moral level to emerge as an extra source of enjoyment and edification.
  Some  people  read The  Pilgrim’s  Progress  for  edification and  receive  literary  enjoyment  as  a  byproduct.  Others  sit down to read it for its narrative qualities and gain edification as a byproduct. It makes absolutely no difference which of those  two  models  is  true  for  a  given  reader.  What  matters is that once we start to read the story we open ourselves to both aspects of the book—its literary qualities (which exist in abundance) and its religious meanings. The Pilgrim’s Progress is a “crossover” book that appears in lists of both literary classics  and  religious  (or  even  devotional)  classics.  It  is  an expansive book that holds up under virtually any approach that we bring to it. It is a book for all readers and all tastes.         
        
        
		        
		         
     
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                     Posted: Wed Jun 05, 2019 5:37 pm
		     
             
             
             
                    
                        
                            
                                                                    
        
        
        
			            TO LIVE UPON GOD WHO IS INVISIBLE 
  The Life of John Bunyan
  by John Piper          
        
        
		        
		         
     
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                     Posted: Wed Jun 05, 2019 6:00 pm
		     
             
             
             
                    
                        
                            
                                                                    
        
        
        
			            In 1672, about fifty miles northwest of London in Bedford, John  Bunyan  was  released  from  twelve  years  of  imprison-ment. He was forty-four years old. Just before his release he updated his spiritual autobiography called Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners. He looked back over the hardships of the last twelve years and wrote about how he was enabled by God  to  survive  and  even  flourish  in  the  Bedford  jail.  One of his comments gives me the title for this short biography.He quotes 2 Corinthians 1:9 where Paul says, “We had this sentence of death in ourselves, that we should not trust in  ourselves,  but  in  God  that  raiseth  the  dead.”  Bunyan writes,
  By this scripture I was made to see that if ever I would suffer rightly, I must first pass a sentence of death upon every thing that can be properly called a thing of this life, even to reckon myself, my wife, my children, my health, my enjoyment, and all, as dead to me, and myself as dead to them. The second was, to live upon God who is invisible, as Paul said in another place; the way not to faint, is to “look not at the things which are seen, 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.”
  The phrase that I have fastened on for the title, and focus of this study of Bunyan, is the phrase, “to live upon God who is  invisible.”  He  discovered  that  if  we  are  to  suffer  rightly we must die not only to sin, but to the innocent and precious  things  of  this  world,  including  family  and  freedom.         
        
        
		        
		         
     
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                     Posted: Wed Jun 05, 2019 6:04 pm
		     
             
             
             
                    
                        
                            
                                                                    
        
        
        
			            We must “live upon God who is invisible.” Everything else in the world we must count as dead to us and we to it. That was  Bunyan’s  passion  from  the  time  of  his  conversion  as  a young  married  man  to  the  day  of  his  death  when  he  was sixty years old. Suffering: Normal and Essential In all my reading of Bunyan, what has gripped me most is his suffering and how he responded to it—what it made of him, and what it might make of us. All of us come to our tasks  with  a  history  and  many  predispositions.  I  come  to John Bunyan with a growing sense that suffering is a normal, useful, essential, and God-ordained element in Christian life and ministry—not only for the sake of weaning us off the world and teaching us to live on God, as 2 Corinthians 1:9says, but also to make pastors who are more able to love the church  (2 Tim  2:10;  Col  1:24)  and  make  missionaries  who are more able to reach the nations (Matt 10:16–28.), so that they can learn to live on God and not the bread that perishes (John 6:27). I am influenced in the way I read Bunyan by both what I see in the world today and what I see in the Bible. As you read this book, there are sure to be flashpoints of suffering somewhere  in  the  world.  The  followers  of  Jesus  will  suffer as long as the world stays and the word of Jesus stands. “In the  world  you  have  tribulation”  (John  16:33).  “Behold,  I send you out as sheep in the midst of wolves” (Matt 10:16). Today  churches  are  being  burned  in  some  countries,  and Christians  are  being  killed  by  anti-Christian  mobs.  Christians endure systematic starvation and enslavement. China perpetuates  its  official  repression  of  religious  freedom  and lengthy  imprisonments.  India,  with  its  one  billion  people and  unparalleled  diversity,  heaves  with  tensions  between          
        
        
		        
		         
     
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                     Posted: Wed Jun 05, 2019 6:07 pm
		     
             
             
             
                    
                        
                            
                                                                    
        
        
        
			            major religions and extremist violence. There are consistent reports that thousands of Christians across the world die as martyrs every year.  And as I come to Bunyan’s life and suffering, I see in the Bible  that  “through  many  tribulations  we  must  enter  the kingdom”  (Acts  14:22);  and  the  promise  of  Jesus,  “If  they persecuted  me,  they  will  also  persecute  you”  (John  15:20); and the warning from Peter “not to be surprised at the fiery ordeal among you, which comes upon you for your testing, as  though  some  strange  thing  were  happening  to  you”  (1Pet  4:12);  and  the  utter  realism  of  Paul  that  we  who  “have the first fruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves,  waiting  eagerly  for our  adoption  as  sons,  the  re-demption of our body” (Rom 8:23); and the reminder that “our outer nature is wasting away” (2 Cor 4:16); and that the whole creation “was subjected to futility” (Rom 8:20). As  I  look  around  me  in  the  world  and  in  the  word  of God, my own sense is that what we need from Bunyan right now is a glimpse into how he suffered and how he learned to “live on God that is invisible.” I want that for myself, my family,  and  my  church—and  I  want  that  for  all  who  read this book. Nothing glorifies God more than when we maintain our stability and even our joy having lost everything but God (Hab 3:17–18.). That day is coming for each of us, and we do well to get ready. The Times of the Redwoods John Bunyan was born in Elstow, about a mile south of Bedford,  England  on  November  30,  1628,  the  same  year  that William  Laud  became  the  bishop  of  London  during  the reign of king Charles I. That connection with Bishop Laud is important because you can’t understand the sufferings of          
        
        
		        
		         
     
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                     Posted: Wed Jun 05, 2019 6:12 pm
		     
             
             
             
                    
                        
                            
                                                                    
        
        
        
			            Bunyan apart from the religious and political times in which he lived. In those days there were tremendous conflicts between Parliament  and  monarchy.  Bishop  Laud,  together  with Charles  I,  opposed  the  reforms  of  the  Church  of  England desired by the Puritans. But in 1640, Oliver Cromwell—an advocate  for  the  Puritans—was  elected  to  Parliament,  and civil war broke out in 1642 between the forces loyal to the king and those loyal to Parliament. In 1645, the Parliament took  control  of  the  Monarchy.  Bishop  Laud  was  executed that year and the use of the Book of Common Prayer was overthrown.  The  Westminster  Assembly  completed  the Westminster  Confession  for  the  dominant  Presbyterian church in 1646, and the king was beheaded in 1649. Cromwell led the new Commonwealth until his death in 1658. His main concern was a stable government with freedom of religion for Puritans, like John Bunyan and others, including Jews, who had been excluded from England since 1290 and finally allowed to return in 1655. After  Cromwell’s  death,  his  son  Richard  was  unable to  hold  the  government  together.  The  longing  for  stability with a new king swelled (How quickly the favor of man can turn!).  The  Parliament  turned  against  the  Nonconformists like John Bunyan and passed a series of acts that resulted in increasing  restrictions  on  the  Puritan  preachers.  Charles  II was brought home in what is known as the Restoration of the Monarchy, and proclaimed king in 1660, the same year that Bunyan was imprisoned for preaching without state approval. Two Thousand Pastors Ejected In 1662, the Act of Uniformity was passed that required acceptance of the Prayer Book and Episcopal ordination. That          
        
        
		        
		         
     
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