Notes
Regarding the Characters in
Pilgrim's
Progress
Lesson #14
Judge
Hate-Good - The
portrait of Judge hate-good in The Pilgrim's Progress is but a
poor replica, as our artists say, of the portrait of Judge Jeffreys in
our English history books. I am sure you have often read, with
astonishment at Bunyan’s literary power, his wonderful account of the
trial of Faithful, when, as Bunyan says, he was brought forth to his
trial in order to [bring about] his
condemnation. But, powerful as Bunyan’s whole picture of Judge
hate-good's court is, it is a tame and a poor picture compared with what
all the historians tell of the injustice and cruelty of the court of
Judge Jeffreys. Macaulay’s portrait of the Lord Chief Justice of
England for ferocity and fiendishness beats out of sight Bunyan's
picture of that judge who keeps Satan’s own seal in Bunyan’s Book. ...
Was Judge Jeffreys, some of you will ask me, born and bred in hell? Was
the devil his father, and original sin his mother? Or, was he not the
very devil himself come to earth for a season in English flesh? No, my
brethren, not so. Judge Jeffreys was one of ourselves. ... [B]e not
deceived by your own deceitful heart, nor by any other deceiver’s smooth
speeches. Judge Jeffreys is in yourself, only circumstances have not
yet let him fully show himself in you. Still, if you look close enough
and deep enough into your own hearts, you will see the same wicked light
glancing sometimes there that used so to terrify Judge Jeffrey’s
prisoners when they saw it in his wicked eyes. If you lay your ear
close enough to your own heart, you will sometimes hear something of
that same hiss with which that human serpent sentenced to torture and to
death the men and the women who would not submit to his command. The
same savage laughter also will sometimes all but escape your lips as you
think of how your enemy has been made to suffer in body and in estate.
O yes, the very same hell-broth that ran for blood in Judge Jeffreys’
heart is in all our hearts also; and those who have the least of its
poison left in their hearts will be the foremost to confess its
presence, and to hate and condemn and bewail themselves on account of
its terrible dregs. ... Before you say any more about yourself, and
before you leave the house of God, lift up your broken heart and with
all your might bless God that He has opened your eyes and taught you how
to look at yourself and how to hate yourself. There are hundreds of
honest Christian men and women in this house at this moment to whom God
has not done as, in His free grace, He has done to you. For He has not
only begun a good work in you, but He has begun that special and
peculiar work which, when it goes on to perfection, makes a great and an
eminent saint of God. To know your own heart as you evidently know it,
and to hate it as you say you hate it, and to hunger after a clean heart
as, with every breath, you hunger, - all that, if your would only
believe it, sets you, or will yet set you, high up among the people of
God. Be comforted; it is your bounden duty to be comforted. God
deserves it at your hands that you be more than comforted amid such
unmistakable signs of His eminent grace to you. And be patient under
your exceptional sanctification. Rome was not built in a day. You
cannot reverse the awful law of your sanctification. You cannot be
saved by Jesus Christ and his Holy Spirit without seeing yourself, and
you cannot see yourself without hating yourself, and you cannot begin to
hate yourself without all your hatred henceforth turning against
yourself. You are deep in the red-hot bosom of the refiner's fire. And
when you are once sufficiently tried by the Divine Refiner of Souls, He
will in His own good time and way bring you out as gold. Be patient,
therefore, till the coming of the Lord. (Whyte, pp. 191, 194-5, 199-200)
Pickthank
- Pickthank
represents a set of tools that persecutors continually use; namely, men
of no religious principle; who assume the appearance of zeal for any
party, as may best promote their interests; and who inwardly despise
both the superstitious and the spiritual worshipper. These men discern
little in the conduct or circumstances of believers to excite either
their rage, or envy; but if their superiors be disposed to persecute,
they will afford their assistance; for preferment runs in this channel.
(Scott, p. 219)

Faithful's Defense
- Christians in such circumstances should be more concerned for the
honour of God than for their own credit or safety. [A]nd they should
take occasion to bear a decided testimony to the truths, commandments
and institutions of the Scripture; ... . That faith, (by which alone we
approach God, and acceptably worship him,) has no other object than
divine revelation; nothing done without the express warrant of
Scripture can be profitable to eternal life, whatever may be said for
its expediency. ... Human faith may please men; but without a divine
faith it is impossible to please God, either in general or any
particular action. And, as we can seldom speak against the vile lusts
of men, without being judged by implication to rail against such as are
notoriously addicted to
them, we cannot be the followers of Him, ‘whom the world hated, because
he testified of it that its works were evil’, unless we be willing to
risk all consequences in copying his example. (Scott, p. 220-1)
notes taken
from:
Bunyan
Characters in the Pilgrim's Progress
by Alexander Whyte, London:Oliphant Anderson and Ferrier, 1902.
The
Pilgrim's Progress
by John Bunyan with Explanatory Notes by Thomas Scott, Swengel,
PA:Reiner Pub., 1976. |