The Puritans: pilgrims and warriors
Maybe it’s vaguer for you than that. Maybe you think of the word “puritanical”, which the Online Dictionary says is “usually disparaging”, meaning “strict in moral or religious outlook”, with synonyms like “severe, disapproving, stuffy, fanatical, bigoted, prim, narrow-minded, prudish, strait-laced, rigorous, proper”. Not exactly an attractive portrait, is it?
“Puritanism” was a term of abuse given by opponents, as if I was to call you “kill-joy”, “pedantic” or “picky”. The Puritans were seen as narrow in their theology, finicky in their church practices, and overly scrupulous in their morality. You may have picked this up in Pilgrim’s Progress, where characters like By-Ends accuse Christian of being "strict", "precise" and "rigid".
You won’t find yourself agreeing with everything they said. In Grace Abounding, John Bunyan agonised over playing sport on Sundays. Like many Puritans, he sought assurance not just by trusting God's promises, but by feeling them applied to him emotionally. Some Puritan strictures on church-life seem odd to us, although there are still churches today which don’t use musical instruments during the singing (I grew up in one!).
But the Puritans have an immense amount to teach us. Here are some of the things we can learn from them:
A big view of God.
The Puritans were men and women who knew their God: vast beyond our understanding, sovereign over every circumstance, rich in grace. Deeply satisfied in the relationships of the Trinity, God has no need of us: he creates and saves us freely, from the overflow of the infinite storehouses of his own love and joy.
Enjoyment of God.
I'm so glad the Puritans taught me that God rejoices in us, and calls us to rejoice in him. God's truth isn't just to be believed: it powerfully changes the heart and captures the emotions. Puritan sermons, books and diaries are filled with intense enjoyment of God. In Grace Abounding, John Bunyan exclaims, “Oh! It is a goodly thing to be on our knees, with Christ in our arms, before God.”
Finding God in the ordinary.
Serving God in marriage, family, work and recreation.
Caring for the weak.
Spiritual disciplines.
Every moment of the Puritan day had its suggested devotional activities: meditations for morning, dressing and bed-time, frequent reflection on God during the day, twice-daily Bible reading and prayer alone and with the household. We have forgotten so many valuable spiritual disciplines once cherished by Christians: meditation on God's truth, creation and heaven; Bible memorisation; and preaching to yourself.
A serious call to pilgrimage and to battle.
Look out for these things as you read Pilgrim’s Progress. This is just a start: there are many other things we’ll learn from John Bunyan as we look together at Pilgrim’s Progress. But I hope it helps you to get excited about the things you might learn.
If you'd like to know more about what the Puritans were like, and what they taught about God, I've found these two books the most helpful: J.I.Packer's Quest for Godliness and Lelan Ryken's Worldy Saints: The Puritans as they Really Were.