THE AUTHOR TO THE READER.
Friend, because it is a dangerous thing to be walking
towards the lace of darkness and anguish; and again,
because it is (notwithstanding) the journey that most of the
poor souls in the world are taking, and that with delight and
gladness, as if THERE was the only happiness to be found,
I have therefore thought it my duty, being made sensible of
the danger that will befal those that fall therein, for the
preventing of thee, O thou poor man or woman! to tell thee,
by opening this parable, what sad success those souls have
had, and are also like to have, that have been, or shall be
found persevering therein.
We use to count him a friend that will forewarn his
neighbour of the danger, when he knoweth thereof, and
doth also see that the way his neighbour is walking in doth
lead right thereto, especially when we think that our
neighbour may be either ignorant or careless of his way.
Why friend, it may be, nay twenty to one, but thou hast
been, ever since thou didst come into the world, with thy
back towards heaven, and thy face towards hell; and thou, it
may be, either through ignorance or carelessness, which is
as bad, if not worse, hast been running full hastily that way
ever since. Why friend? I beseech thee put a little stop to
thy earnest race, and take a view of what entertainment
thou art like to have, if thou do in deed and in truth persist
in this thy course. Friend, thy way leads ‘down to death,’
and thy ‘steps take hold on hell’ (Prov 5:5). It may be the
path indeed is pleasant to the flesh, but the end thereof will
be bitter to thy soul. Hark, dost thou not hear the bitter cries
of them that are but newly gone before, saying, Let him
‘dip the tip of his finger in water, and cool my tongue; for I
am tormented in this flame?’ (Luke 16:24). Dost thou not
hear them say, Send out from the dead, to prevent my
father, my brother, and my father’s house, from coming
‘into this place of torment?’ Shall not then these mournful
groans pierce thy flinty heart? Wilt thou stop thine ears,
and shut thy eyes? And wilt thou not regard? Take warning
and stop thy journey before it be too late. Wilt thou be like
the silly fly, that is not quiet unless she be either entangled
in the spider’s web, or burned in the candle? Wilt thou be
like the bird that hasteth to the snare of the fowler? Wilt
thou be like that simple one named in the seventh of
Proverbs, that will be drawn to the slaughter by the cord of
a silly lust? O sinner, sinner, there are better things than
hell to be had, and at a cheaper rate by the thousandth part!
O! there is no comparison, there is heaven, there is God,
there is Christ, there is communion with an innumerable
company of saints and angels. Hear the message then that
God doth send, that Christ doth send, that saints do bring,
nay, that the dead do send unto thee: ‘I pray thee, therefore,
that thou wouldst send him to my father’s house’; ‘if one
went unto them from the dead they would repent.’ ‘How
long, ye simple ones, will ye love simplicity? And the
scorners delight in their scorning? And fools hate
knowledge?’ ‘Turn you at my reproof: behold,’ saith God,
‘I will pour out my Spirit unto you, I will make known my
words unto you.’ I say, hear this voice, O silly one, and turn
and live, thou sinful soul, lest he make thee hear that other
saying, But, ‘because I have called, and ye refused, I have
stretched out my hand, and no man regarded; I also will
laugh at your calamity, I will mock when your fear cometh’
(Prov 1:22-26).
O poor soul, If God and Christ did [thus] with thee for thine
harm, it would be another matter; then if thou didst refuse,
thou mightest have some excuse to make, or fault to find,
and ground to make delays. But this is for thy profit, for thy
advantage, for the pardoning of thy sins, the salvation of
thy soul, the delivering of thee from hell fire, from the
wrath to come, from everlasting burnings, into favor with
God, Christ, and communion with all happiness, that is so
indeed.
But it may be thou wilt say, All that hath been spoken to in
this discourse is but a parable, and parables are no realities.
I could put thee off with this answer, That though it be a
parable, yet it is a truth, and not a lie; and thou shalt find it
so too, to thy cost, if thou shalt be found a slighter of God,
Christ, and the salvation of thy own soul.
But secondly, know for certain, that the things signified by
parables are wonderful realities. O what a glorious reality
was there signified by that parable, ‘The kingdom of
heaven is like unto a net that was cast into the sea,’ &c.
Signifying, that sinners of all sorts, of all nations, should be
brought into God’s kingdom, by the net of the gospel. And
O! how real a thing shall the other part thereof be, when it
is fulfilled, which saith, And ‘when it was full they drew to
shore, and gathered the good into vessels, but cast the bad
away’ (Matt 13:47,48). Signifying the mansions of glory
that the saints should have, and also the rejection that God
will give to the ungodly, and to sinners. And also that
parable, what a glorious reality is there in it, which saith,
‘Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it
abideth alone; but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit’
(John 12:24). To signify that unless Jesus Christ did indeed
spill his blood, and die the cursed death, he should abide
alone; that is, have never a soul into glory with him; but if
he died, he should bring forth much fruit; that is, save many
sinners. And also how real a truth there was in that parable
concerning the Jews putting Christ to death, which the poor
dispersed Jews can best experience to their cost; for they
have been almost ever since a banished people, and such as
have had God’s sore displeasure wonderfully manifested
against them, according to the truth of the parable (Matt
21:33-41). O therefore, for Jesus Christ’s sake, do not slight
the truth, because it is discovered in a parable! For by this
argument thou mayest also, nay, thou wilt slight almost all
the things that our Lord Jesus Christ did speak; for he spake
them for the most part, if not all, in parables. Why should it
be said of thee as it is said of some, These things are
spoken to them that are without ‘in parables, that seeing
they might not see, and hearing they might not
understand?’ (Luke 8:10). I say, take heed of being a
quarreller against Christ’s parables, lest Christ also object
against the salvation of thy soul at the judgment day.
Friend, I have no more to say to thee now. If thou dost love
me pray for me, that my God would not forsake me, nor
take his Holy Spirit from me; and that God would fit me to
do and suffer what shall be from the world or devil inflicted
upon me. I must tell thee, the world rages, they stamp and
shake their heads, and fain they would be doing; the Lord
help me to take all they shall do with patience; and when
they smite the one cheek, to turn the other to them, that I
may do as Christ hath bidden me; for then the Spirit of
God, and of glory, shall rest upon me. Farewell.
I am thine, if thou be not ashamed to own me, because of
my low and contemptible descent in the world. [3]
JOHN BUNYAN
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* Index
End Notes
[3] In the second and subsequent editions, this was altered to
‘I am thine to serve in the Lord Jesus.’—Ed.