It cannot have been more than two
or three years after Bunyan’s return home from
his short experience of a soldier’s life, that
he took the step which, more than any other, influences
a man’s future career for good or for evil.
The young tinker married. With his characteristic
disregard of all facts or dates but such as concern
his spiritual history, Bunyan tells us nothing about
the orphan girl he made his wife. Where he found
her, who her parents were, where they were married,
even her christian name, were all deemed so many irrelevant
details. Indeed the fact of his marriage would
probably have been passed over altogether but for the
important bearing it hid on his inner life. His
“mercy,” as he calls it, “was to
light upon a wife whose father was counted godly,”
and who, though she brought him no marriage portion,
so that they “came together as poor as poor
might be,” as “poor as howlets,”
to adopt his own simile, “without so much household
stuff as a dish or a spoon betwixt” them, yet
brought with her to the Elstow cottage two religious
books, which had belonged to her father, and which
he “had left her when he died.” These
books were “The Plain Man’s Pathway to
Heaven,” the work of Arthur Dent, the puritan
incumbent of Shoebury, in Essex “wearisomely
heavy and theologically narrow,” writes Dr.
Brown and “The Practise of Piety,”
by Dr. Lewis Bayley, Bishop of Bangor, and previously
chaplain to Prince Henry, which enjoyed a wide reputation
with puritans as well as with churchmen. Together
with these books, the young wife brought the still
more powerful influence of a religious training, and
the memory of a holy example, often telling her young
graceless husband “what a godly man her father
was, and how he would reprove and correct vice both
in his house and amongst his neighbours, and what
a strict and holy life he lived in his days both in
word and deed.” Much as Bunyan tells us
he had lost of the “little he had learnt”
at school, he had not lost it “utterly.”
He was still able to read intelligently. His
wife’s gentle influence prevailed on him to
begin “sometimes to read” her father’s
legacy “with her.” This must have
been entirely new reading for Bunyan, and certainly
at first not much to his taste. What his favourite
reading had been up to this time, his own nervous
words tell us, “Give me a ballad, a news-book,
George on Horseback, or Bevis of Southampton; give
me some book that teaches curious arts, that tells
of old fables.” But as he and his young
wife read these books together at their fireside, a
higher taste was gradually awakened in Bunyan’s
mind; “some things” in them he “found
somewhat pleasing” to him, and they “begot”
within him “some desires to religion,”
producing a degree of outward reformation. The
spiritual instinct was aroused. He would be
a godly man like his wife’s father. He
began to “go to church twice a day, and that
too with the foremost.” Nor was it a mere
formal attendance, for when there he tells us he took
his part with all outward devotion in the service,
“both singing and saying as others did; yet,”
as he penitently confesses, “retaining his wicked
life,” the wickedness of which, however, did
not amount to more than a liking for the sports and
games of the lads of the village, bell-ringing, dancing,
and the like. The prohibition of all liturgical
forms issued in 1645, the observance of which varied
with the strictness or laxity of the local authorities,
would not seem to have been put in force very rigidly
at Elstow. The vicar, Christopher Hall, was an
Episcopalian, who, like Bishop Sanderson, retained
his benefice unchallenged all through the Protectorate,
and held it some years after the Restoration and the
passing of the Act of Uniformity. He seems, like
Sanderson, to have kept himself within the letter
of the law by making trifling variations in the Prayer
Book formularies, consistent with a general conformity
to the old order of the Church, “without persisting
to his own destruction in the usage of the entire
liturgy.” The decent dignity of the ceremonial
of his parish church had a powerful effect on Bunyan’s
freshly awakened religious susceptibility a
“spirit of superstition” he called it
afterwards and helped to its fuller development.
“I adored,” he says, “with great
devotion, even all things, both the High Place” altars
then had not been entirely broken down and levelled
in Bedfordshire “Priest, Clerk, Vestment,
Service, and what else belonging to the church, counting
all things holy that were therein contained, and especially
the Priest and Clerk most happy, and without doubt
greatly blessed because they were the servants of
God and were principal in the Holy Temple, to do His
work therein, . . . their name, their garb, and work,
did so intoxicate and bewitch me.” If
it is questionable whether the Act forbidding the use
of the Book of Common Prayer was strictly observed
at Elstow, it is certain that the prohibition of Sunday
sports was not. Bunyan’s narrative shows
that the aspect of a village green in Bedfordshire
during the Protectorate did not differ much from what
Baxter tells us it had been in Shropshire before the
civil troubles began, where, “after the Common
Prayer had been read briefly, the rest of the day even
till dark night almost, except eating time, was spent
in dancing under a maypole and a great tree, when
all the town did meet together.” These
Sunday sports proved the battle-ground of Bunyan’s
spiritual experience, the scene of the fierce inward
struggles which he has described so vividly, through
which he ultimately reached the firm ground of solid
peace and hope. As a high-spirited healthy athletic
young fellow, all kinds of manly sports were Bunyan’s
delight. On week days his tinker’s business,
which he evidently pursued industriously, left him
small leisure for such amusements. Sunday therefore
was the day on which he “did especially solace
himself” with them. He had yet to learn
the identification of diversions with “all manner
of vice.” The teaching came in this way.
One Sunday, Vicar Hall preached a sermon on the sin
of Sabbath-breaking, and like many hearers before
and since, he imagined that it was aimed expressly
at him. Sermon ended, he went home “with
a great burden upon his spirit,” “sermon-stricken”
and “sermon sick” as he expresses it elsewhere.
But his Sunday’s dinner speedily drove away
his self-condemning thoughts. He “shook
the sermon out of his mind,” and went out to
his sports with the Elstow lads on the village green,
with as “great delight” as ever.
But in the midst of his game of tip-cat or “sly,”
just as he had struck the “cat” from its
hole, and was going to give it a second blow the
minuteness of the detail shows the unforgetable reality
of the crisis he seemed to hear a voice
from heaven asking him whether “he would leave
his sins and go to heaven, or keep his sins and go
to hell.” He thought also that he saw Jesus
Christ looking down on him with threatening countenance.
But like his own Hopeful he “shut his eyes
against the light,” and silenced the condemning
voice with the feeling that repentance was hopeless.
“It was too late for him to look after heaven;
he was past pardon.” If his condemnation
was already sealed and he was eternally lost, it would
not matter whether he was condemned for many sins
or for few. Heaven was gone already. The
only happiness he could look for was what he could
get out of his sins his morbidly sensitive
conscience perversely identifying sports with sin so
he returned desperately to his games, resolved, he
says, to “take my fill of sin, still studying
what sin was yet to be committed that I might taste
the sweetness of it.”
This desperate recklessness lasted
with him “about a month or more,” till
“one day as he was standing at a neighbour’s
shop-window, cursing and swearing and playing the
madman after his wonted manner, the woman of the house,
though a very loose and ungodly wretch,” rebuked
him so severely as “the ungodliest fellow for
swearing that ever she heard, able to spoil all the
youth in a whole town,” that, self-convicted,
he hung down his head in silent shame, wishing himself
a little child again that he might unlearn the wicked
habit of which he thought it impossible to break himself.
Hopeless as the effort seemed to him, it proved effectual.
He did “leave off his swearing” to his
own “great wonder,” and found that he
“could speak better and with more pleasantness”
than when he “put an oath before and another
behind, to give his words authority.” Thus
was one step in his reformation taken, and never retraced;
but, he adds sorrowfully, “all this while I
knew not Jesus Christ, neither did I leave my sports
and plays.” We might be inclined to ask,
why should he leave them? But indifferent and
innocent in themselves, an overstrained spirituality
had taught him to regard them as sinful. To indulge
in them wounded his morbidly sensitive conscience,
and so they were sin to him.
The next step onward in this religious
progress was the study of the Bible, to which he was
led by the conversation of a poor godly neighbour.
Naturally he first betook himself to the historical
books, which, he tells us, he read “with great
pleasure;” but, like Baxter who, beginning his
Bible reading in the same course, writes, “I
neither understood nor relished much the doctrinal
part,” he frankly confesses, “Paul’s
Epistles and such like Scriptures I could not away
with.” His Bible reading helped forward
the outward reformation he had begun. He set
the keeping the Ten Commandments before him as his
“way to Heaven”; much comforted “sometimes”
when, as he thought, “he kept them pretty well,”
but humbled in conscience when “now and then
he broke one.” “But then,”
he says, “I should repent and say I was sorry
for it, and promise God to do better next time, and
then get help again; for then I thought I pleased God
as well as any man in England.” His progress
was slow, for each step involved a battle, but it
was steadily onwards. He had a very hard struggle
in relinquishing his favourite amusements. But
though he had much yet to learn, his feet were set
on the upward way, and he had no mind to go back,
great as the temptation often was. He had once
delighted in bell-ringing, but “his conscience
beginning to be tender” morbid we
should rather say “he thought such
practise to be vain, and therefore forced himself
to leave it.” But “hankering after
it still,” he continued to go while his old
companions rang, and look on at what he “durst
not” join in, until the fear that if he thus
winked at what his conscience condemned, a bell, or
even the tower itself, might fall and kill him, put
a stop even to that compromise. Dancing, which
from his boyhood he had practised on the village green,
or in the old Moot Hall, was still harder to give
up. “It was a full year before I could
quite leave that.” But this too was at
last renounced, and finally. The power of Bunyan’s
indomitable will was bracing itself for severe trials
yet to come.
Meanwhile Bunyan’s neighbours
regarded with amazement the changed life of the profane
young tinker. “And truly,” he honestly
confesses, “so they well might for this my conversion
was as great as for Tom of Bedlam to become a sober
man.” Bunyan’s reformation was soon
the town’s talk; he had “become godly,”
“become a right honest man.” These
commendations flattered is vanity, and he laid himself
out for them. He was then but a “poor
painted hypocrite,” he says, “proud of
his godliness, and doing all he did either to be seen
of, or well spoken of by man.” This state
of self-satisfaction, he tells us, lasted “for
about a twelvemonth or more.” During this
deceitful calm he says, “I had great peace of
conscience, and should think with myself, ‘God
cannot choose but now be pleased with me,’ yea,
to relate it in mine own way, I thought no man in England
could please God better than I.” But no
outward reformation can bring lasting inward peace.
When a man is honest with himself, the more earnestly
he struggles after complete obedience, the more faulty
does his obedience appear. The good opinion
of others will not silence his own inward condemnation.
He needs a higher righteousness than his own; a firmer
standing-ground than the shifting quicksand of his
own good deeds. “All this while,”
he writes, “poor wretch as I was, I was ignorant
of Jesus Christ, and going about to establish my own
righteousness, and had perished therein had not God
in mercy showed me more of my state by nature.”
This revolution was nearer than he
imagined. Bunyan’s self-satisfaction was
rudely shaken, and his need of something deeper in
the way of religion than he had yet experienced was
shown him by the conversation of three or four poor
women whom, one day, when pursuing his tinker’s
calling at Bedford, he came upon “sitting at
a door in the sun, and talking of the things of God.”
These women were members of the congregation of “the
holy Mr. John Gifford,” who, at that time of
ecclesiastical confusion, subsequently became rector
of St. John’s Church, in Bedford, and master
of the hospital attached to it. Gifford’s
career had been a strange one. We hear of him
first as a young major in the king’s army at
the outset of the Civil War, notorious for his loose
and debauched life, taken by Fairfax at Maidstone in
1648, and condemned to the gallows. By his sister’s
help he eluded his keepers’ vigilance, escaped
from prison, and ultimately found his way to Bedford,
where for a time he practised as a physician, though
without any change of his loose habits. The
loss of a large sum of money at gaming awoke a disgust
at his dissolute life. A few sentences of a
pious book deepened the impression. He became
a converted man, and joined himself to a handful of
earnest Christians in Bedford, who becoming, in the
language of the day, “a church,” he was
appointed its first minister. Gifford exercised
a deep and vital though narrow influence, leaving behind
him at his death, in 1655, the character of a “wise,
tolerant, and truly Christian man.” The
conversation of the poor women who were destined to
exercise so momentous an influence on Bunyan’s
spiritual life, evidenced how thoroughly they had
drunk in their pastor’s teaching. Bunyan
himself was at this time a “brisk talker in
the matters of religion,” such as he drew from
the life in his own Talkative. But the words
of these poor women were entirely beyond him.
They opened a new and blessed land to which he was
a complete stranger. “They spoke of their
own wretchedness of heart, of their unbelief, of their
miserable state by nature, of the new birth, and the
work of God in their souls, and how the Lord refreshed
them, and supported them against the temptations of
the Devil by His words and promises.”
But what seems to have struck Bunyan the most forcibly
was the happiness which their religion shed in the
hearts of these poor women. Religion up to this
time had been to him a system of rules and restrictions.
Heaven was to be won by doing certain things and not
doing certain other things. Of religion as a
Divine life kindled in the soul, and flooding it with
a joy which creates a heaven on earth, he had no conception.
Joy in believing was a new thing to him. “They
spake as if joy did make them speak; they spake with
such pleasantness of Scripture language, and with
such appearance of grace in all they said, that they
were to me as if they had found a new world,”
a veritable “El Dorado,” stored with the
true riches. Bunyan, as he says, after he had
listened awhile and wondered at their words, left
them and went about his work again. But their
words went with him. He could not get rid of
them. He saw that though he thought himself
a godly man, and his neighbours thought so too, he
wanted the true tokens of godliness. He was convinced
that godliness was the only true happiness, and he
could not rest till he had attained it. So he
made it his business to be going again and again into
the company of these good women. He could not
stay away, and the more he talked with them the more
uneasy he became “the more I questioned
my own condition.” The salvation of his
soul became all in all to him. His mind “lay
fixed on eternity like a horse-leech at the vein.”
The Bible became precious to him. He read it
with new eyes, “as I never did before.”
“I was indeed then never out of the Bible, either
by reading or meditation.” The Epistles
of St. Paul, which before he “could not away
with,” were now “sweet and pleasant”
to him. He was still “crying out to God
that he might know the truth and the way to Heaven
and glory.” Having no one to guide him
in his study of the most difficult of all books, it
is no wonder that he misinterpreted and misapplied
its words in a manner which went far to unsettle his
brain. He read that without faith he could not
be saved, and though he did not clearly know what
faith was, it became a question of supreme anxiety
to him to determine whether he had it or not.
If not, he was a castaway indeed, doomed to perish
for ever. So he determined to put it to the
test. The Bible told him that faith, “even
as a grain of mustard seed,” would enable its
possessor to work miracles. So, as Mr. Froude
says, “not understanding Oriental metaphors,”
he thought he had here a simple test which would at
once solve the question. One day as he was walking
along the miry road between Elstow and Bedford, which
he had so often paced as a schoolboy, “the temptation
came hot upon him” to put the matter to the
proof, by saying to the puddles that were in the horse-pads
“be dry,” and to the dry places, “be
ye puddles.” He was just about to utter
the words when a sudden thought stopped him.
Would it not be better just to go under the hedge
and pray that God would enable him? This pause
saved him from a rash venture, which might have landed
him in despair. For he concluded that if he
tried after praying and nothing came of it, it would
prove that he had no faith, but was a castaway.
“Nay, thought I, if it be so, I will never try
yet, but will stay a little longer.” “Then,”
he continues, “I was so tossed betwixt the Devil
and my own ignorance, and so perplexed, especially
at sometimes, that I could not tell what to do.”
At another time his mind, as the minds of thousands
have been and will be to the end, was greatly harassed
by the insoluble problems of predestination and election.
The question was not now whether he had faith, but
“whether he was one of the elect or not, and
if not, what then?” “He might as well
leave off and strive no further.” And
then the strange fancy occurred to him, that the good
people at Bedford whose acquaintance he had recently
made, were all that God meant to save in that part
of the country, and that the day of grace was past
and gone for him; that he had overstood the time of
mercy. “Oh that he had turned sooner!”
was then his cry. “Oh that he had turned
seven years before! What a fool he had been to
trifle away his time till his soul and heaven were
lost!” The text, “compel them to come
in, and yet there is room,” came to his rescue
when he was so harassed and faint that he was “scarce
able to take one step more.” He found them
“sweet words,” for they showed him that
there was “place enough in heaven for him,”
and he verily believed that when Christ spoke them
He was thinking of him, and had them recorded to help
him to overcome the vile fear that there was no place
left for him in His bosom. But soon another fear
succeeded the former. Was he truly called of
Christ? “He called to them when He would,
and they came to Him.” But they could not
come unless He called them. Had He called him?
Would He call him? If He did how gladly would
he run after Him. But oh, he feared that He had
no liking to him; that He would not call him.
True conversion was what he longed for. “Could
it have been gotten for gold,” he said, “what
could I have given for it! Had I a whole world,
it had all gone ten thousand times over for this,
that my soul might have been in a converted state.”
All those whom he thought to be truly converted were
now lovely in his eyes. “They shone, they
walked like people that carried the broad seal of
heaven about them. Oh that he were like them,
and shared in their goodly heritage!”
About this time Bunyan was greatly
troubled, though at the same time encouraged in his
endeavours after the blessedness he longed for so
earnestly but could not yet attain to, by “a
dream or vision” which presented itself to him,
whether in his waking or sleeping hours he does not
tell us. He fancied he saw his four Bedford friends
refreshing themselves on the sunny side of a high
mountain while he was shivering with dark and cold
on the other side, parted from them by a high wall
with only one small gap in it, and that not found but
after long searching, and so strait and narrow withal
that it needed long and desperate efforts to force
his way through. At last he succeeded.
“Then,” he says, “I was exceeding
glad, and went and sat down in the midst of them,
and so was comforted with the light and heat of their
sun.”
But this sunshine shone but in illusion,
and soon gave place to the old sad questioning, which
filled his soul with darkness. Was he already
called, or should he be called some day? He would
give worlds to know. Who could assure him?
At last some words of the prophet Joel (chap. iii,
21) encouraged him to hope that if not converted already,
the time might come when he should be converted to
Christ. Despair began to give way to hopefulness.
At this crisis Bunyan took the step
which he would have been wise if he had taken long
before. He sought the sympathy and counsel of
others. He began to speak his mind to the poor
people in Bedford whose words of religious experiences
had first revealed to him his true condition.
By them he was introduced to their pastor, “the
godly Mr. Gifford,” who invited him to his house
and gave him spiritual counsel. He began to
attend the meetings of his disciples.
The teaching he received here was
but ill-suited for one of Bunyan’s morbid sensitiveness.
For it was based upon a constant introspection and
a scrupulous weighing of each word and action, with
a torturing suspicion of its motive, which made a
man’s ever-varying spiritual feelings the standard
of his state before God, instead of leading him off
from self to the Saviour. It is not, therefore,
at all surprising that a considerable period intervened
before, in the language of his school, “he found
peace.” This period, which seems to have
embraced two or three years, was marked by that tremendous
inward struggle which he has described, “as
with a pen of fire,” in that marvellous piece
of religious autobiography, without a counterpart
except in “The Confessions of St. Augustine,”
his “Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners.”
Bunyan’s first experiences after his introduction
to Mr. Gifford and the inner circle of his disciples
were most discouraging. What he heard of God’s
dealings with their souls showed him something of
“the vanity and inward wretchedness of his wicked
heart,” and at the same time roused all its hostility
to God’s will. “It did work at that
rate for wickedness as it never did before.”
“The Canaanites would dwell in the land.”
“His heart hankered after every foolish vanity,
and hung back both to and in every duty, as a clog
on the leg of a bird to hinder her from flying.”
He thought that he was growing “worse and worse,”
and was “further from conversion than ever before.”
Though he longed to let Christ into his heart, “his
unbelief would, as it were, set its shoulder to the
door to keep Him out.”
Yet all the while he was tormented
with the most perverse scrupulosity of conscience.
“As to the act of sinning, I never was more
tender than now; I durst not take a pin or a stick,
though but so big as a straw, for my conscience now
was sore, and would smart at every twist. I could
not now tell how to speak my words, for fear I should
misplace them. Oh! how gingerly did I then go
in all I did or said: I found myself in a miry
bog, that shook if I did but stir, and was as those
left both of God, and Christ, and the Spirit, and
all good things.” All the misdoings of
his earlier years rose up against him. There
they were, and he could not rid himself of them.
He thought that no one could be so bad as he was;
“not even the Devil could be his equal:
he was more loathsome in his own eyes than a toad.”
What then must God think of him? Despair seized
fast hold of him. He thought he was “forsaken
of God and given up to the Devil, and to a reprobate
mind.” Nor was this a transient fit of
despondency. “Thus,” he writes, “I
continued a long while, even for some years together.”
This is not the place minutely to
pursue Bunyan’s religious history through the
sudden alternations of hopes and fears, the fierce
temptations, the torturing illusions, the strange perversions
of isolated scraps of Bible language texts
torn from their context the harassing doubts
as to the truth of Christianity, the depths of despair
and the elevations of joy, which he has portrayed
with his own inimitable graphic power. It is
a picture of fearful fascination that he draws.
“A great storm” at one time comes down
upon him, “piece by piece,” which “handled
him twenty times worse than all he had met with before,”
while “floods of blasphemies were poured upon
his spirit,” and would “bolt out of his
heart.” He felt himself driven to commit
the unpardonable sin and blaspheme the Holy Ghost,
“whether he would or no.” “No
sin would serve but that.” He was ready
to “clap his hand under his chin,” to keep
his mouth shut, or to leap head-foremost “into
some muckhill-hole,” to prevent his uttering
the fatal words. At last he persuaded himself
that he had committed the sin, and a good but not
overwise man, “an ancient Christian,”
whom he consulted on his sad case, told him he thought
so too, “which was but cold comfort.”
He thought himself possessed by the devil, and compared
himself to a child “carried off under her apron
by a gipsy.” “Kick sometimes I did,
and also shriek and cry, but yet I was as bound in
the wings of the temptation, and the wind would carry
me away.” He wished himself “a dog
or a toad,” for they “had no soul to be
lost as his was like to be;” and again a hopeless
callousness seemed to settle upon him. “If
I would have given a thousand pounds for a tear I could
not shed one; no, nor sometimes scarce desire to shed
one.” And yet he was all the while bewailing
this hardness of heart, in which he thought himself
singular. “This much sunk me. I thought
my condition was alone; but how to get out of, or
get rid of, these things I could not.”
Again the very ground of his faith was shaken.
“Was the Bible true, or was it not rather a
fable and cunning story?” All thought “their
own religion true. Might not the Turks have
as good Scriptures to prove their Mahomet Saviour
as Christians had for Christ? What if all we
believed in should be but ‘a think-so’
too?” So powerful and so real were his illusions
that he had hard work to keep himself from praying
to things about him, to “a bush, a bull, a besom,
or the like,” or even to Satan himself.
He heard voices behind him crying out that Satan
desired to have him, and that “so loud and plain
that he would turn his head to see who was calling
him;” when on his knees in prayer he fancied
he felt the foul fiend pull his clothes from behind,
bidding him “break off, make haste; you have
prayed enough.”
This “horror of great darkness”
was not always upon him. Bunyan had his intervals
of “sunshine-weather” when Giant Despair’s
fits came on him, and the giant “lost the use
of his hand.” Texts of Scripture would
give him a “sweet glance,” and flood his
soul with comfort. But these intervals of happiness
were but short-lived. They were but “hints,
touches, and short visits,” sweet when present,
but “like Peter’s sheet, suddenly caught
up again into heaven.” But, though transient,
they helped the burdened Pilgrim onward. So
vivid was the impression sometimes made, that years
after he could specify the place where these beams
of sunlight fell on him “sitting in
a neighbour’s house,” “travelling
into the country,” as he was “going
home from sermon.” And the joy was real
while it lasted. The words of the preacher’s
text, “Behold, thou art fair, my love,”
kindling his spirit, he felt his “heart filled
with comfort and hope.” “Now I could
believe that my sins would be forgiven.”
He was almost beside himself with ecstasy.
“I was now so taken with the love and mercy of
God that I thought I could have spoken of it even
to the very crows that sat upon the ploughed lands
before me, had they been capable to have understood
me.” “Surely,” he cried with
gladness, “I will not forget this forty years
hence.” “But, alas! within less than
forty days I began to question all again.”
It was the Valley of the Shadow of Death which Bunyan,
like his own Pilgrim, was travelling through.
But, as in his allegory, “by and by the day
broke,” and “the Lord did more fully and
graciously discover Himself unto him.”
“One day,” he writes, “as I was
musing on the wickedness and blasphemy of my heart,
that scripture came into my mind, ‘He hath made
peace by the Blood of His Cross.’ By which
I was made to see, both again and again and again
that day, that God and my soul were friends by this
blood: Yea, I saw the justice of God and my sinful
soul could embrace and kiss each other. This
was a good day to me. I hope I shall not forget
it.” At another time the “glory and
joy” of a passage in the Hebrews (i-15)
were “so weighty” that “I was once
or twice ready to swoon as I sat, not with grief and
trouble, but with solid joy and peace.”
“But, oh! now how was my soul led on from truth
to truth by God; now had I evidence of my salvation
from heaven, with many golden seals thereon all banging
in my sight, and I would long that the last day were
come, or that I were fourscore years old, that I might
die quickly that my soul might be at rest.”
At this time he fell in with an old
tattered copy of Luther’s “Commentary
on the Galatians,” “so old that it was
ready to fall piece from piece if I did but turn it
over.” As he read, to his amazement and
thankfulness, he found his own spiritual experience
described. “It was as if his book had
been written out of my heart.” It greatly
comforted him to find that his condition was not,
as he had thought, solitary, but that others had known
the same inward struggles. “Of all the
books that ever he had seen,” he deemed it “most
fit for a wounded conscience.” This book
was also the means of awakening an intense love for
the Saviour. “Now I found, as I thought,
that I loved Christ dearly. Oh, methought my
soul cleaved unto Him, my affections cleaved unto
Him; I felt love to Him as hot as fire.”
And very quickly, as he tells us,
his “love was tried to some purpose.”
He became the victim of an extraordinary temptation “a
freak of fancy,” Mr. Froude terms it “fancy
resenting the minuteness with which he watched his
own emotions.” He had “found Christ”
and felt Him “most precious to his soul.”
He was now tempted to give Him up, “to sell
and part with this most blessed Christ, to exchange
Him for the things of this life; for anything.”
Nor was this a mere passing, intermittent delusion.
“It lay upon me for the space of a year, and
did follow me so continually that I was not rid of
it one day in a month, no, not sometimes one hour
in many days together, except when I was asleep.”
Wherever he was, whatever he was doing day and night,
in bed, at table, at work, a voice kept sounding in
his ears, bidding him “sell Christ” for
this or that. He could neither “eat his
food, stoop for a pin, chop a stick, or cast his eyes
on anything” but the hateful words were heard,
“not once only, but a hundred times over, as
fast as a man could speak, ‘sell Him, sell Him,
sell Him,’” and, like his own Christian
in the dark valley, he could not determine whether
they were suggestions of the Wicked One, or came from
his own heart. The agony was so intense, while,
for hours together, he struggled with the temptation,
that his whole body was convulsed by it. It
was no metaphorical, but an actual, wrestling with
a tangible enemy. He “pushed and thrust
with his hands and elbows,” and kept still answering,
as fast as the destroyer said “sell Him,”
“No, I will not, I will not, I will not! not
for thousands, thousands, thousands of worlds!”
at least twenty times together. But the fatal
moment at last came, and the weakened will yielded,
against itself. One morning as he lay in his
bed, the voice came again with redoubled force, and
would not be silenced. He fought against it as
long as he could, “even until I was almost out
of breath,” when “without any conscious
action of his will” the suicidal words shaped
themselves in his heart, “Let Him go if He will.”
Now all was over. He had spoken
the words and they could not be recalled. Satan
had “won the battle,” and “as a bird
that is shot from the top of a tree, down fell he
into great guilt and fearful despair.”
He left his bed, dressed, and went “moping into
the field,” where for the next two hours he
was “like a man bereft of life, and as one past
all recovery and bound to eternal punishment.”
The most terrible examples in the Bible came trooping
before him. He had sold his birthright like
Esau. He a betrayed his Master like Judas “I
was ashamed that I should be like such an ugly man
as Judas.” There was no longer any place
for repentance. He was past all recovery; shut
up unto the judgment to come. He dared hardly
pray. When he tried to do so, he was “as
with a tempest driven away from God,” while
something within said, “’Tis too late;
I am lost; God hath let me fall.” The
texts which once had comforted him gave him no comfort
now; or, if they did, it was but for a brief space.
“About ten or eleven o’clock one day,
as I was walking under a hedge and bemoaning myself
for this hard hap that such a thought should arise
within me, suddenly this sentence bolted upon me, ’The
blood of Christ cleanseth from all sin,’”
and gave me “good encouragement.”
But in two or three hours all was gone. The
terrible words concerning Esau’s selling his
birthright took possession of his mind, and “held
him down.” This “stuck with him.”
Though he “sought it carefully with tears,”
there was no restoration for him. His agony
received a terrible aggravation from a highly coloured
narrative of the terrible death of Francis Spira,
an Italian lawyer of the middle of the sixteenth century,
who, having embraced the Protestant religion, was
induced by worldly motives to return to the Roman
Catholic Church, and died full of remorse and despair,
from which Bunyan afterwards drew the awful picture
of “the man in the Iron Cage” at “the
Interpréter’s house.” The reading
of this book was to his “troubled spirit”
as “salt when rubbed into a fresh wound,”
“as knives and daggers in his soul.”
We cannot wonder that his health began to give way
under so protracted a struggle. His naturally
sturdy frame was “shaken by a continual trembling.”
He would “wind and twine and shrink under his
burden,” the weight of which so crushed him that
he “could neither stand, nor go, nor lie, either
at rest or quiet.” His digestion became
disordered, and a pain, “as if his breastbone
would have split asunder,” made him fear that
as he had been guilty of Judas’ sin, so he was
to perish by Judas’ end, and “burst asunder
in the midst.” In the trembling of his
limbs he saw Cain’s mark set upon him; God had
marked him out for his curse. No one was ever
so bad as he. No one had ever sinned so flagrantly.
When he compared his sins with those of David and
Solomon and Manasseh and others which had been pardoned,
he found his sin so much exceeded theirs that he could
have no hope of pardon. Theirs, “it was
true, were great sins; sins of a bloody colour.
But none of them were of the nature of his.
He had sold his Saviour. His sin was point
blank against Christ.” “Oh, methought
this sin was bigger than the sins of a country, of
a kingdom, or of the whole world; not all of them
together was able to equal mine; mine outwent them
every one.”
It would be wearisome to follow Bunyan
through all the mazes of his self-torturing illusions.
Fierce as the storm was, and long in its duration for
it was more than two years before the storm became
a calm the waves, though he knew it not,
in their fierce tossings which threatened to drive
his soul like a broken vessel headlong on the rocks
of despair, were bearing him nearer and nearer to the
“haven where he would be.” His vivid
imagination, as we have seen, surrounded him with
audible voices. He had heard, as he thought,
the tempter bidding him “Sell Christ;”
now he thought he heard God “with a great voice,
as it were, over his shoulder behind him,” saying,
“Return unto Me, for I have redeemed thee;”
and though he felt that the voice mocked him, for he
could not return, there was “no place of repentance”
for him, and fled from it, it still pursued him, “holloaing
after him, ‘Return, return!’” And
return he did, but not all at once, or without many
a fresh struggle. With his usual graphic power
he describes the zigzag path by which he made his
way. His hot and cold fits alternated with fearful
suddenness. “As Esau beat him down, Christ
raised him up.” “His life hung in
doubt, not knowing which way he should tip.”
More sensible evidence came. “One day,”
he tells us, “as I walked to and fro in a good
man’s shop” we can hardly be
wrong in placing it in Bedford “bemoaning
myself for this hard hap of mine, for that I should
commit so great a sin, greatly fearing that I should
not be pardoned, and ready to sink with fear, suddenly
there was as if there had rushed in at the window the
noise of wind upon me, but very pleasant, and I heard
a voice speaking, ’Did’st ever refuse
to be justified by the Blood of Christ?’”
Whether the voice were supernatural or not, he was
not, “in twenty years’ time,” able
to determine. At the time he thought it was.
It was “as if an angel had come upon me.”
“It commanded a great calm upon me. It
persuaded me there might be hope.” But
this persuasion soon vanished. “In three
or four days I began to despair again.”
He found it harder than ever to pray. The devil
urged that God was weary of him; had been weary for
years past; that he wanted to get rid of him and his
“bawlings in his ears,” and therefore
He had let him commit this particular sin that he
might be cut off altogether. For such an one
to pray was but to add sin to sin. There was
no hope for him. Christ might indeed pity him
and wish to help him; but He could not, for this sin
was unpardonable. He had said “let Him
go if He will,” and He had taken him at his word.
“Then,” he says, “I was always sinking
whatever I did think or do.” Years afterwards
he remembered how, in this time of hopelessness, having
walked one day, to a neighbouring town, wearied out
with his misery, he sat down on a settle in the street
to ponder over his fearful state. As he looked
up, everything he saw seemed banded together for the
destruction of so vile a sinner. The “sun
grudged him its light, the very stones in the streets
and the tiles on the house-roofs seemed to bend themselves
against him.” He burst forth with a grievous
sigh, “How can God comfort such a wretch as
I?” Comfort was nearer than he imagined.
“No sooner had I said it, but this returned
to me, as an echo doth answer a voice, ‘This
sin is not unto death.’” This breathed
fresh life into his soul. He was “as if
he had been raised out of a grave.” “It
was a release to me from my former bonds, a shelter
from my former storm.” But though the
storm was allayed it was by no means over. He
had to struggle hard to maintain his ground.
“Oh, how did Satan now lay about him for to
bring me down again. But he could by no means
do it, for this sentence stood like a millpost at
my back.” But after two days the old despairing
thoughts returned, “nor could his faith retain
the word.” A few hours, however, saw the
return of his hopes. As he was on his knees before
going to bed, “seeking the Lord with strong cries,”
a voice echoed his prayer, “I have loved Thee
with an everlasting love.” “Now I
went to bed at quiet, and when I awaked the next morning
it was fresh upon my soul and I believed it.”
These voices from heaven whether
real or not he could not tell, nor did he much care,
for they were real to him were continually
sounding in his ears to help him out of the fresh
crises of his spiritual disorder. At one time
“O man, great is thy faith,” “fastened
on his heart as if one had clapped him on the back.”
At another, “He is able,” spoke suddenly
and loudly within his heart; at another, that “piece
of a sentence,” “My grace is sufficient,”
darted in upon him “three times together,”
and he was “as though he had seen the Lord Jesus
look down through the tiles upon him,” and was
sent mourning but rejoicing home. But it was
still with him like an April sky. At one time
bright sunshine, at another lowering clouds.
The terrible words about Esau “returned on him
as before,” and plunged him in darkness, and
then again some good words, “as it seemed writ
in great letters,” brought back the light of
day. But the sunshine began to last longer than
before, and the clouds were less heavy. The
“visage” of the threatening texts was changed;
“they looked not on him so grimly as before;”
“that about Esau’s birthright began to
wax weak and withdraw and vanish.” “Now
remained only the hinder part of the tempest.
The thunder was gone; only a few drops fell on him
now and then.”
The long-expected deliverance was
at hand. As he was walking in the fields, still
with some fears in his heart, the sentence fell upon
his soul, “Thy righteousness is in heaven.”
He looked up and “saw with the eyes of his
soul our Saviour at God’s right hand.”
“There, I say, was my righteousness; so that
wherever I was, or whatever I was a-doing, God could
not say of me, ‘He wants my righteousness,’
for that was just before Him. Now did the chains
fall off from my legs. I was loosed from my
affliction and irons. My temptations also fled
away, so that from that time those dreadful Scriptures
left off to trouble me. Oh methought Christ,
Christ, there was nothing but Christ that was before
mine eyes. I could look from myself to Him,
and should reckon that all those graces of God that
now were green upon me, were yet but like those crack-groats,
and fourpence-halfpennies that rich men carry in their
purses, while their gold is in their trunks at home.
Oh, I saw my gold was in my trunk at home.
In Christ my Lord and Saviour. Further the Lord
did lead me into the mystery of union with the Son
of God. His righteousness was mine, His merits
mine, His victory also mine. Now I could see
myself in heaven and earth at once; in heaven by my
Christ, by my Head, by my Righteousness and Life,
though on earth by my body or person. These
blessed considerations were made to spangle in mine
eyes. Christ was my all; all my Wisdom, all
my Righteousness, all my Sanctification, and all my
Redemption.”