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T H E First Preached at Pinners Hall and now Enlarged and Published for Good. By J O H N.B U N Y A N. L O N D O N, Printed for Benjamin Alsop, at the Angel and Bible in the Poultry, 1682. Faithfully reprinted from the Author's First Edition. Written six years before John Bunyan's death. |
[WHAT THE SOUL IS.]
IRST, I shall show you what the soul is, both as to the various
names it goes under, as also, by describing of it by it's powers and properties,
though in all I shall be but brief, for I intend no long discourse.[3]
[Names of the Soul .]
1. The soul is often called the heart of man, or that, in and by which things to
either good or evil, have their rise; thus desires are of the heart or soul; yea,
before desires, the first conception of good or evil is in the soul, the heart. The
heart understands, wills, affects, reasons, judges, but these are the faculties of
the soul; wherefore, heart and soul are often taken for one and the same. My son,
give me thine heart (Prov 23:26). Out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, etc. (Matt
15:19; 1 Peter 3:15; Psa 26:2).
2. The soul of man is often called the spirit of a man; because it not only giveth
being, but life to all things and actions in and done by him. Hence soul and spirit
are put together, as to the same notion. With my soul have I desired thee in the
night; yea, with my spirit within me will I seek thee early (Isa 26:9). When he saith,
Yea, with my spirit - will I seek thee, he explaineth not only with what kind of
desires he desired God, but with what principal matter his desires were brought forth.
It was with my soul, saith he; to wit, with my spirit within me. So that of Mary,
My soul, saith she, doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit hath rejoiced in God my
Saviour (Luke 1:46,47). Not that soul and spirit are, in this place, to be taken
for two superior powers in man; but the same great soul is here put under two names,
or terms, to show that it was the principal part in Mary; to wit, her soul, that
magnified God, even that part that could spirit and put life into her
whole self to do it. Indeed, sometimes spirit is not taken so largely, but is confined
to some one power or faculty of the soul, as the spirit of my understanding, (Job
20:3) and be renewed in the spirit of your mind. And sometime by spirit we are to
understand other things; but many times by spirit we must understand the soul, and
also by soul the spirit.
3. Therefore, by soul we understand the spiritual, the best, and most noble part
of man, as distinct from the body, even that by which we understand, imagine, reason,
and discourse. And, indeed, as I shall further show you presently, the body is but
a poor, empty vessel, without this great thing called the soul. The body without
the spirit, or soul, is dead (James 2:26). Or nothing but (her soul departed from
her, for she died). It is, therefore, the chief and most noble part of man.
4. The soul is often called the life of man, not a life of the same stamp and nature
of the brute; for the life of man that is, of the rational creature is, that, as
he is such, wherein consisteth and abideth the understanding and conscience etc.
Wherefore, then, a man dieth, or the body ceaseth to act, or live in the exercise
of the thoughts, which formerly used to be in him, when the soul departeth, as I
hinted even now, her soul departed from her, for she died; and, as another good man
saith, in that very day his thoughts perish, etc. (Psa 146:4). The first text is
more emphatical; Her soul was in departing (for she died). There is the soul of a
beast, a bird, etc., but the soul of a man is another thing; it is his understanding,
and reason, and conscience, etc. And this soul, when it departs, he dies. Nor is
this life, when gone out of the body, annihilate, as is the life of a beast; no,
this, in itself, is immortal, and has yet a place and being when gone out of the
body it dwelt in; yea, as quick, as lively is it in it's senses, if not far more
abundant, than when it was in the body; but I call it the life, because so long as
that remains in the body, the body is not dead. And in this sense it is to be taken
where he saith He that loseth his life for my sake shall find it unto life eternal;
and this is the soul that is intended in the text, and not the breath, as in some
other places is meant. And this is evident, because the man has a being, a sensible
being, after he has lost the soul. I mean not by the man a man in this world, nor
yet in the body, or in the grave; but by man we must understand, either the soul
in hell, or body and soul there, after the judgment is over. And for this the text,
also, is plain, for therein we are presented with a man sensible of the damage that
he has sustained by losing of his soul. What shall a man give in exchange for his
soul? But,
5. The whole man goeth under this denomination; man, consisting of body and soul,
is yet called by that part of himself that is most chief and principal. Let every
soul, that is, let every man, be subject unto the higher powers (Rom 13:1). Then
sent Joseph, and called his father Jacob to him , and all his kindred, three-score
and fifteen souls (Acts 7:14). By both these, and several other places, the whole
man is meant, and is also so to be taken in the text; for whereas here he saith,
What shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?
It is said elsewhere, For what is a man advantaged if he gain the whole world, and
lose himself? (Luke 9:25) and so, consequently, or, What shall a man give in exchange
(for himself) for his soul? His soul when he dies, and body and soul in and after
judgment.
6. The soul is called the good mans darling. Deliver, Lord, saith David, my soul
from the sword; my darling from the power of the dog (Psa 22:20). So, again, in another
place, he saith, Lord, how long wilt thou look on? rescue my soul from their destructions,
my darling from the [power of the] lions (Psa 35:17). My darling, this sentence must
not be applied universally, but only to those in whose eyes their souls, and the
redemption thereof, is precious. My darling, most men do, by their actions, say of
their soul, my drudge, my slave; nay, thou slave to the devil and sin; for what sin,
what lust, what sensual and beastly lust is there in the world that some do not cause
their souls to bow before and yield unto? But David, here, as you see, calls it his
darling, or his choice and most excellent thing; for, indeed, the soul is a choice
thing in itself, and should, were all wise, be every mans darling, or chief treasure.
And that it might be so with us, therefore, our Lord Jesus hath thus expressed the
worth of the soul, saying, What shall a man give in exchange for his soul? But if
this is true, one may see already what misery he is like to sustain that has, or
shall lose his soul; he has lost his heart, his spirit, his best part, his life,
his darling, himself, his whole self, and so, in every sense, his all. And now, what
shall a man, what would a man, but what can a man that has lost his soul, himself,
and his all, give in exchange for his soul? Yea, what shall the man that has sustained
this loss do to recover all again, since this man, or the man put under this question,
must needs be a man that is gone from hence, a man that is cast in the judgment,
and one that is gone down the throat of hell?
But to pass this, and to proceed.
[Powers and Properties of the Soul .]
I come next to describe the soul unto you by such things as it is set out by in the
Holy Scriptures, and they are, in general, three. First , The powers of the soul.
Second , The senses, the spiritual senses of the soul. Third , The passions of the
soul.
Of the powers of the soul.
First , We will discourse of the powers, I may call them the members of the soul;
for, as the members of the body, being many, do all go to the making up of the body,
so these do go to the completing of the soul.
1. There is the understanding, which may be termed the head; because in that is placed
the eye of the soul; and this is that which, or by which the soul, discerning things
that are presented to it, and that either by God or Satan; this is that by which
a man conceiveth and apprehendeth things so deep and great that cannot, by mouth,
or tongue, or pen, be expressed.
2. There is, also, belonging to the soul, the conscience, in which I may say, is
placed the Seat of Judgment; for, as by the understanding things are let into the
soul, so by the conscience the evil or good of such things are tried; especially
when in the
3. Third place, there is the judgment, which is another part of this noble creature,
has passed, by the light of the understanding, his verdict upon what is let into
the soul.[4]
4. There is, also, the fancy or imagination, another part of this great thing, the
soul: and a most curious thing this fancy is; it is that which presenteth to the
man the idea, form, or figure of that, or any of those things, wherewith a man is
either frighted or taken, pleased or displeased. And,
5. The mind, another part of the soul, is that unto which this fancy presenteth it's
things to be considered of; because without the mind nothing is entertained in the
soul.
6. There is the memory too, another part of the soul; and that may be called the
register of the soul; for it is the memory that receiveth and keepeth in remembrance
what has passed, or has been done by the man, or attempted to be done unto him; and
in this part of the soul, or from it, will be fed the worm that dieth not, when men
are cast into hell; also, from this memory will flow that peace at the day of judgment
that saints shall have in their service for Christ in the world.
7. There are the affections too, which are, as I may call them, the hands and arms
of the soul; for they are they that take hold of, receive, and embrace what is liked
by the soul, and it is a hard thing to make the soul of a man cast from it what it's
affections cleave to and have embraced. Hence the affections are called for, when
the apostle bids men seek the things above; set your affections upon them, saith
he (Col 3), or, as you have it in another place, Lay hold of them; for the affections
are as hands to the soul, and they by which it fasteneth upon things.
8. There is the will, which may be called the foot of the soul, because by that the
soul, yea, the whole man, is carried hither and thither, or else held back and kept
from moving.[5]
These are the golden things of the soul, though, in carnal men, they are every one
of them made use of in the service of sin and Satan. For the unbelieving are throughout
impure, as is manifest, because their mind and conscience (two of the masterpieces
of the soul) is defiled (Titus 1:15). For if the most potent parts of the soul are
engaged in their service, what, think you, do the more inferior do? But, I say, so
it is the more is the pity; nor can any help it. This work ceaseth for ever, unless
the great God, who is over all, and that can save souls, shall himself take upon
him to sanctify the soul, and to recover it, and persuade it to fall in love with
another master.
But, I say, what is man without this soul, or wherein lieth this preeminence over
a beast? (Eccl 3:19-21). Nowhere that I know of; for both, as to mans body, go to
one place, only the spirit or soul of a man goes upward to wit, to God that gave
it, to be by Him disposed of with respect to things to come, as they have been, and
have done in this life, But,
Of the senses of the soul.
Second , I come, in the next place, to describe the soul by it's senses, it's spiritual
senses , for so I call them; for as the body hath senses pertaining to it, and as
it can see, hear, smell, feel, and taste, so can the soul; I call, therefore, these
the senses of the soul, in opposition to the senses of the body, and because the
soul is the seat of all spiritual sense, where supernatural things are known and
enjoyed; not that the soul of a natural man is spiritual in the apostles sense, for
so none are, but those that are born from above (1 Cor 3:1-3) nor they so always
neither. But to go forward.
Of sight.
1. Can the body see? hath it eyes? so hath the soul. The eyes of your understanding
being enlightened (Eph 1:18). As, then, the body can see beasts, trees, men, and
all visible things, so the soul can see God, Christ, angels, heaven, devils, hell,
and other things that are invisible; nor is this property only peculiar to the souls
that are illuminate by the Holy Ghost, for the most carnal soul in the world shall
have a time to see these things, but not to it's comfort, but not to it's joy , but
to it's endless woe and misery, it dying in that condition. Wherefore, sinner, say
not thou, I shall not see Him; for judgment is before Him, and He will make thee
see Him (Job 35:14).
Of hearing.
2. Can the body hear? hath it ears? so hath the soul (Job 4:12,13). It is the soul,
not the body, that hears the language of things invisible. It is the soul that hears
God when He speaks in and by His Word and Spirit; and it is the soul that hears the
devil when he speaks by his illusions and temptations. True, there is such an union
between the soul and the body, that oft times, if not always, that which is heard
by the ears of the body doth influence the soul, and that which is heard by the soul
doth also influence the body; but yet as to the organ of hearing, the body hath one
of it's own, distinct from that of the soul, and the soul can hear and regard even
then, when the body doth not nor cannot; as in time of sleep, deep sleep and trances,
when the body lieth by as a thing that is useless. For God speaketh once, yea twice,
yet man , (as to his body) perceiveth it not. In a dream, in a vision of the night,
when deep sleep falleth upon men, in slumberings upon the bed; then he openeth the
ears of men, and sealeth their instruction, etc. (Job 33:14-16). This must be meant
of the ears of the soul, not of the body; for that at this time is said to be in
deep sleep; moreover this hearing, it is a hearing of dreams, and the visions of
the night. Jeremiah also tells us that he had the rare and blessed visions of God
in his sleep (Jer 21:26). And so doth Daniel too, by the which they were greatly
comforted and refreshed; but that could not be, was not the soul also capable of
hearing. I heard the voice of His words, said Daniel, and when I heard the voice
of His words, then was I in a deep sleep on my face, and my face toward the ground
(Dan 10:8,9).
Of tasting.
3. As the soul can see and hear, so it can taste and relish, even as really as doth
the palate belonging to the body.[6] But then the things so tasted must be that
which is suited to the temper and palate of the soul. The souls taste lieth not in,
nor is exercised about meats, the meats that are for the belly. Yet the soul of a
saint can taste and relish God's Word (Heb 6:5), and doth oft times find it sweeter
than honey (Psa 19:10) nourishing as milk (1 Peter 2:2), and strengthening like to
strong meat (Heb 5:12-14). The soul also of sinners, and of those that are unsanctified,
can taste and relish, though not the things now mentioned, yet things that agree
with their fleshly minds, and with their polluted, and defiled, and vile affections.
They can relish and taste that which delighteth them; yea, they can find soul-delight
in an alehouse, a whorehouse, a playhouse. Ay, they find pleasure in the vilest things,
in the things most offensive to God, and that are most destructive to themselves.
This is evident to sense, and is proved by the daily practice of sinners. Nor is
the Word barren as to this: They feed on ashes (Isa 44:20). They spend their money
for that which is not bread (Isa 55:2). Yea, they eat and suck sweetness out of sin.
They eat up the sin of My people as they eat bread (Hosea 4:8).
Of smelling.
4. As the soul can see, hear, and taste, so it can smell, and brings refreshment
to itself that way. Hence the church saith, My fingers dropped with sweet-smelling
myrrh; and again, she saith of her beloved, that his lips dropped sweet-smelling-myrrh
(Song 5:5,13). But how came the church to understand this, but because her soul did
smell that in it that was to be smelled in it, even in his word and gracious visits?
The poor world, indeed, cannot smell, or savour anything of the good and fragrant
scent and sweet that is in Christ; but to them that believe, Thy name is as ointment
poured forth, therefore do the virgins love thee (Song 1:3).
Of feeling.
5. As the soul can see, taste, hear, and smell, so it hath the sense of feeling,
as quick and as sensible as the body. He knows nothing that knows not this; he whose
soul is past feeling, has his conscience seared with a hot iron (Eph 4:18, 19; 1
Tim 4:2). Nothing so sensible as the soul, nor feeleth so quickly the love and mercy,
or the anger and wrath of God. Ask the awakened man, or the man that is under the
convictions of the law, if he doth not feel? and he will quickly tell you that he
faints and dies away by reason of God's hand, and His wrath that lieth upon him.
Read the first eight verses of the 38th Psalm; if thou knowest nothing of what I
have told thee by experience; and there thou shalt hear the complaints of one whose
soul lay at present under the burden of guilt, and that cried out that without help
from heaven he could by no means bear the same. They also that know what the peace
of God means, and what an eternal weight there is in glory know well that the soul
has the sense of feeling, as well as the senses of seeing, hearing, tasting, and
smelling. But thus much for the senses of the soul.
Of the passions of the soul.
Third , I come, in the next place, to describe the soul by the passions of the soul.
The passions of the soul, I reckon, are these, and such like, to wit, love, hatred,
joy, fear, grief, anger, etc. And these passions of the soul are not therefore good,
nor therefore evil, because they are the passions of the soul, but are made so by
two things, to wit, principle and object. The principle I count that from whence
they flow, and the object that upon which they are pitched. To explain myself.
Of love.
1. For that of love. This is a strong passion; the Holy Ghost saith it is strong
as death, and cruel as the grave (Song 8:6,7). And it is then good, when it flows
from faith, and pitcheth itself upon God in Christ as the object, and when it extendeth
itself to all that is good, whether it be the good Word, the good work of grace,
or the good men that have it, and also to their good lives. But all soul-love floweth
not from this principle, neither hath these for it's object. How many are there that
make the object of their love the most vile of men, the most base of things, because
it flows from vile affections, and from the lusts of the flesh? God and Christ, good
laws and good men, and their holy lives, they cannot abide, because their love wanteth
a principle that should sanctify it in it's first motion, and that should steer it
to a goodly object. But that is the first.
Of hatred.
2. There is hatred, which I count another passion of the soul; and this, as the other,
is good or evil, as the principle from whence it flows and the object of it are.
Ye that love the Lord, hate evil (Psa 97:10). Then, therefore, is this passion good,
when it singleth out from the many thousand of things that are in the world that
one filthy thing called sin ; and when it setteth itself, the soul, and the whole
man, against it, and engageth all the powers of the soul to seek and invent it's
ruin.[7] But, alas, where shall this hatred be found? What man is there whose soul
is filled with this passion, thus sanctified by the love of God, and that makes sin,
which is God's enemy, the only object of it's indignation? How many be there, I say,
whose hatred is turned another way, because of the malignity of their minds.
They hate knowledge (Prov 1:22). They hate God (Deu 7:10; Job 21:14). They hate the
righteous (2 Chron 29:2; Psa 34:21; Prov 29:10). They hate God's ways (Mal 3:14;
Prov 8:12). And all is, because the grace of filial fear is not the root and principle
from whence their hatred flows. For the fear of the Lord is to hate evil: wherefore,
where this grace is wanting for a root in the soul, there it must of necessity swerve
in the letting out of this passion; because the soul, where grace in wanting, is
not at liberty to act simply, but is biased by the power of sin; that, while grace
is absent, is present in the soul. And hence it is that this passion, which, when
acted well, is a virtue, is so abused, and made to exercise it's force against that
for which God never ordained it, nor gave it license to act.
Of joy.
3. Another passion of the soul is joy; and when the soul rejoiceth virtuously, it
rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth (1 Cor 13:6). This joy is a
very strong passion, and will carry a man through a world of difficulties; it is
a passion that beareth up, that supporteth and strengtheneth a man, let the object
of his joy be what it will. It is this that maketh the soul fat in goodness, if it
have it's object accordingly; and that which makes the soul bold in wickedness, if
it indeed doth rejoice in iniquity.
Of fear.
4. Another passion of the soul is fear, natural fear; for so you must understand
me of all the passions of the soul, as they are considered simply and in their own
nature. And, as it is with the other passions, so it is with this; it is made good
or evil in it's acts, as it's principle and objects are; when this passion of the
soul is good, then it springs from sense of the greatness, and goodness and majesty
of God; also God himself is the object of this fear. I will forewarn you, says Christ,
whom ye shall fear. Fear him that can destroy both body and soul in hell; yea, I
say unto you, Fear him (Matt 5:28; Luke 7:5). But in all men this passion is not
regulated and governed by these principles and objects, but is abused and turned,
through the policy of Satan, quite into another channel. It is made to fear men (Num
14:9), to fear idols (2 Kings 17:7,38), to fear devils and witches, yea, it is made
to fear all the foolish, ridiculous, and apish fables that every old woman or atheistical
fortune teller has the face to drop before the soul. But fear is another passion
of the soul.
Of grief.
5. Another passion of the soul is grief, and it, as those afore-named, acteth even
according as it is governed. When holiness is lovely and beautiful to the soul, and
when the name of Christ is more precious than life, then will the soul sit down and
be afflicted, because men keep not God's law. I beheld the transgressors, and was
grieved; because they kept not Thy word (Psa 119:158). So Christ; He looked round
about with anger, being grieved for the hardness of their hearts (Mark 3:5). But
it is rarely seen that this passion of the soul is thus exercised. Almost everybody
has other things for the spending of the heat of this passion upon. Men are grieved
that they thrive no more in the world; grieved that they have no more carnal, sensual,
and worldly honour; grieved that they are suffered no more to range in the lusts
and vanities of this life; but all this is because the soul is unaquainted with God,
sees no beauty in holiness, but is sensual, and wrapt up in clouds and thick darkness.
Of anger.
6. And lastly, There is anger, which is another passion of the soul; and that, as
the rest, is extended by the soul, according to the nature of the principle by which
it is acted, and from whence it flows. And, in a word, to speak nothing of the fierceness
and power of this passion, it is then cursed when it breaketh out beyond the bounds
that God hath set it, the which to be sure it doth, when it shall by it's fierceness
or irregular motion, run the soul into sin. Be ye angry, and sin not (Eph 4:26),
is the limitation wherewith God hath bounded this passion; and whatever is more than
this, is a giving place to the devil. And one reason, among others, why the Lord
doth so strictly set this bound, and these limits to anger, is, for that it is so
furious a passion, and for that it will so quickly swell up the soul with sin, as
they say a toad swells with it's poison. Yea, it will in a moment so transport the
spirit of a man, that he shall quickly forget himself, his God, his friend, and all
good rule. But my business is not now to make a comment upon the passions of the
soul, only to show you that there are such, and also which they are.
And now, from this description of the soul, what follows but to put you in mind what
a noble, powerful, lively, sensible thing the soul is, that by the text is supposed
may be lost, through the heedlessness, or carelessness, or slavish fear of him whose
soul it is; and also to stir you up to that care of, and labour after, the salvation
of your soul, as becomes the weight of the matter. If the soul were a trivial thing,
or if a man, though he lost it, might yet himself be happy, it were another matter;
but the loss of the soul is no small loss, nor can that man that has lost his soul,
had he all the world, yea, the whole kingdom of heaven, in his own power be but in
a most fearful and miserable condition. But of these things more in their place.
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