"The value of the "Grace Abounding,"... as a work of experimental religion may be easily overestimated. It is not many who can study Bunyan's minute history of the various stages of his spiritual life with real profit. To some temperaments, especially among the young, the book is more likely to prove injurious than beneficial; it is calculated rather to nourish morbid imaginations, and a dangerous habit of introspection, than to foster the quiet growth of the inner life. ...Only those... who have known by experience the force of Bunyan's spiritual combat, can fully appreciate and profit by Bunyan's narrative. He tells us... that it was written "for the support of the weak and tempted people of God." For such the "Grace Abounding to the chief of sinners" will ever prove most valuable. Those for whom it was intended will find in it a message of comfort and strength."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
, Life of John Bunyan (1888) p. 130. Great Writers series.
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/John_Bunyan
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
John Bunyan
1628 β 1688
englischer Baptistenprediger und Schriftsteller
47 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by John Bunyan β
Related Quotes
"Geduld bringt rosen."
"About this time... in a Dream or Vision, presented to me. I saw, as if they were set on The Sunny side of some high Mβ¦"
"[I]n one of the streets of [Bedford], I came where there were three or four poor Women sitting at a door in the Sun, β¦"
"See that your cause be good, else Christ will not undertake it."
"When a man's cause is good, it will sufficiently plead for itself, yea, and for its master too."
"Now, therefore, they began to praise, to commend and to speak well of me, both to my face, and behind my back. Now, Iβ¦"
"Now, this... Mountain signified the Church of the living God; the Sun that shone thereon, the comfortable shining of β¦"
"By these things my Mind was now so turned that it lay like a Horse-leech at the Vein, still crying out, Give give, yeβ¦"
"[T]he Tempter came in with his delusion, That there was no way for me to know I had faith, but by trying to work someβ¦"
"And so I penned It down, until at last it came to be, For length and breadth, the bigness which you see."