John
Bunyan
1628 1688
It was his blind daughter Mary, a teenager,
who upset him most when he was in prison. Day by day she groped and stumbled her way to
the jail where her father was to spend thirteen years, supplementing the wretched prison
fare with whatever food she could carry. Bunyan was haunted by what might befall her in a
cruel world. If he died in prison, who would look out for her? How could a penniless blind
woman survive?
Already the shock of his sudden imprisonment had caused his wife
Elizabeth to miscarry. Seeing his agitation, prison authorities informed him that he need
not remain in jail; in fact, he could go home that afternoon. All he had to do was sign a
paper promising never to preach again. Immediately he knew what he head to do: he had been
called to preach and would no nothing else.
John Bunyan was born at Elstow, near Bedford, England. When only
sixteen he was conscripted for the Parliamentary (that is, the anti-Royalist) Army in the
English Civil War. The Parliamentary Army included many soldiers and officers of the
Puritan persuasion. Two sermons were preached to the men every Sunday (plus another on
Thursday!), while scripture reading and prayers customarily began the soldiers
work-day. A twelve pence fine was assessed any soldier found swearing. (Bunyans
vocabulary, at this time, contained little else.)
In the unforeseeable providence of God, it was while he was an
unbeliever, hostile to the Christian faith and rendering enforced military service, that
Puritan tenets began to seep into his mind and heart. He became convinced of the authority
of scripture, the need for holy living, the centrality of preaching in worship, and
Gods sovereign ordering of life. Seeds were sown which later brought for the fruit
in profusion.
Discharged from the Parliamentary Army, Bunyan returned to the
family trade of tinker. (Tinkers were blacksmiths who worked in assorted metals from heavy
iron to kitchen cooking utensils.) One morning, looking as usual for business from
homemakers, he came upon three or four poor women who were resting briefly from their
domestic responsibilities. Bunyan sidled closer and found them talking earnestly to each
other. "They talked of how God had visited their souls with his love in the Lord
Jesus. . . ." Bunyan later reported. "They spake as if joy did make them speak .
. . they were to me as if they had found a new world." And so they had.
The women were members of the Puritan Free Church of Bedford. Its
pastor, John Gifford, had been an officer-physician in the Royalist (anti-Puritan!) Army.
Grace had subsequently overwhelmed this notorious blasphemer, drunkard and gambler. He
gave up his medical practice in Bedford to become the first pastor of the Nonconformist
congregation. Under the threefold influence of the women, the pastor, and Luthers
commentary on Galatians, the tinker was forged into that force whose name would become
known throughout the English-speaking world.
Bunyans ministry unfolded just as the Royal Restoration of
1660 rendered illegal all worship not conducted according to the forms of the Church of
England. In no time Bunyan was arrested and sentenced. Prison conditions were unspeakable.
Yet it was in prison that his preaching and counselling brought salvation and comfort to
scores of men whose bleak prospects were otherwise unalterable. It was also in these most
trying circumstances that he produced at least nine books! (He wrote more than sixty.)
Upon his release from prison he drafted the masterpiece which was
to be a trophy of Puritan thought and a classic of English literature. Who will ever
forget the characters from Pilgrims Progress? Mr. Talkative; Mr. Formalist;
Mr. Ready-to-Halt; Judge Hategood; even the young woman, Dull. Not to mention Giant
Despair, who lurked near the Slough of Despond and Doubting Castle. (Release from the
Castle was secured only as Christian used the Key of Promise.)
Courageous in the face of social and political harassment, Bunyan
exemplified the apostle Pauls "in any and all circumstances" (Phil. 4:12),
for while in prison he upheld the gospel at the same time as he made thousands of
bootlaces to support his family. Rightly distinguishing between the core of the gospel
(which cannot be compromised) and church practices (which admit of different
interpretations), Bunyan refused to take sides in the denominational wrangle over
believers versus infant baptism. He insisted that faith alone rendered one a
Christian, and faith was sufficient to endear Christians to each other and make them
welcome at each others communion table.
In August, 1688, he began a forty-mile ride on horseback from
Bedford to London. An icy rain drenched him. In two days he was delirious with pneumonia.
Within two weeks he was dead.
Bunyans remains are buried in Bunhill Fields, London,
surrounded by the remains of the other saints. John Owen, the greatest Puritan intellect;
Isaac Watts, the finest English hymnwriter; William Blake, poet; Susanna Wesley, mother of
John and Charles.
Bunyans influence is inestimable. By 1692 one hundred
thousand copies of Pilgrims Progress were in print. Today the book is found
in over one hundred translations. When Chinas Communist government printed two
hundred thousand copies as an example of Western cultural heritage, the printing sold out
in three days.
While Bunyan lacked almost all formal education, his English was
singularly precise, fluid and expressive. What accounts for it? Robert Browning, the poet,
offered this explanation:
His language was not ours;
Tis my belief God spake;
No tinder has such powers.