登陆注册
18893100000144

第144章 VALIANT-FOR-TRUTH(1)

"--They are not valiant for the truth."--Jeremiah "--Ye should contend earnestly for the faith."--Jude.

"Forget not Master Valiant-for-the-Truth, That man of courage, tho' a very youth.

Tell every one his spirit was so stout, No man could ever make him face about."

Bunyan.

"I am of Dark-land, for there was I born, and there my father and mother are still." "Dark-land," said the guide; "doth not that lie upon the same coast as the City of Destruction?" "Yes, it doth,"

replied Valiant-for-truth. "And had I not found incommodity there, I had not forsaken it at all; but finding it altogether unsuitable to me, and very unprofitable for me, I forsook it for this way.

Now, that which caused me to come on pilgrimage was this. We had one Mr. Tell-true came into our parts, and he told it about what Christian had done, that went from the City of Destruction. That man so told the story of Christian and his travels that my heart fell into a burning haste to be gone after him, nor could my father and mother stay me, so I got from them, and am come thus far on my way."

1. A very plain and practical lesson is already read to us all in Valiant-for-truth's explanation of his own pilgrimage. He tells the guide that he was made a pilgrim just by having the story of The Pilgrim told to him. All that Tell-true did was just to recite the story of the pilgrim, when young Valiant's heart fell into a burning haste to be a pilgrim too. My brethren, could any lesson be plainer? Read the Pilgrim's Progress with your children. And, after a time, read it again till they call it beautiful, and till you see the same burning haste in their hearts that young Valiant felt in his heart. Circulate the Pilgrim's Progress. Make opportunities to give the Pilgrim's Progress to the telegraph boys and errand boys at your door. Never go on a holiday without taking a dozen cheap and tasteful copies of The Pilgrim to give to boys and girls in the country. Make sure that no one, old or young, of your acquaintance, in town or country, is without a good copy of The Pilgrim. And the darker their house is, make all the more sure that John Bunyan is in it.

"Now may this little book a blessing be, To those that love this little book and me And may its buyer have no cause to say His money is but lost or thrown away."

2. But the great lesson of Valiant's so impressive life lies in the tremendous fight he had with three ruffians who all set upon him at once and well-nigh made an end of him. For, when we put by the curtains here again, and turn up the metaphors, what do we find? What, but a lesson of first-rate importance for many men among ourselves; for many public men, many ministers, and many other much-in-earnest men. For Valiant, as his name tells us, was set to contend for the truth. He had the truth. The truth was put into his keeping, and he was bound to defend it. He was thrown into a life of controversy, and thus into all the terrible temptations--worse than the temptations to whoredom or wine--that accompany a life of controversy. The three scoundrels that fell upon Valiant at the mouth of the lane were Wildhead, Inconsiderate, and Pragmatic. In other words, the besetting temptations of many men who are set as defenders of the truth in religion, as well as in other matters, is to be wild-headed, inconsiderate, self-

conceited, and intolerably arrogant. The bloody battle that Valiant fought, you must know, was not fought at the mouth of any dark lane in the midnight city, nor on the side of any lonely road in the moonless country. This terrible fight was fought in Valiant's own heart. For Valiant was none of your calculating and cold-blooded friends of the truth. He did not wait till he saw the truth walking in silver slippers. Let any man lay a finger on the truth, or wag a tongue against the truth, and he will have to settle it with Valiant. His love for the truth was a passion.

There was a fierceness in his love for the truth that frightened ordinary men even when they were on his own side. Valiant would have died for the truth without a murmur. But, with all that, Valiant had to learn a hard and a cruel lesson. He had to learn that he, the best friend of truth as he thought he was, was at the same time, as a matter of fact, the greatest enemy that the truth had. He had to take home the terrible discovery that no man had hurt the truth so much as he had done. Save me from my friend! the truth was heard to say, as often as she saw him taking up his weapons in her behalf. We see all that every day. We see Wildhead at his disservice of the truth every day. Sometimes above his own name, and sometimes with grace enough to be ashamed to give his name, in the newspapers. Sometimes on the platform; sometimes in the pulpit; and sometimes at the dinner-table. But always to the detriment of the truth. In blind fury he rushes at the character and the good name of men who were servants of the truth before he was born, and whose shield he is not worthy to bear. How shall Wildhead be got to see that he and the like of him are really the worst friends the truth can possibly have? Will he never learn that in his wild-bull gorings at men and at movements, he is both hurting himself and hurting the truth as no sworn enemy of his and of the truth can do? Will he never see what an insolent fool he is to go on imputing bad motives to other men, when he ought to be prostrate before God on account of his own? More than one wild-

headed student of William Law has told me what a blessing they have got from that great man's teaching on the subject of controversy.

同类推荐
  • 浔阳记

    浔阳记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 评琴书屋医略

    评琴书屋医略

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 台阳诗话

    台阳诗话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 中蛊门

    中蛊门

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 观经

    观经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 格斗高手在都市

    格斗高手在都市

    一个叫做陈,陈年旧事的陈,一个高手,回到东方国,用他的拳头,征服无数的男人,让无数的女人跪着唱征服。
  • 异空神话

    异空神话

    茫茫星海,强者众多,传说无数,危机四伏。一个机遇与危机并存,守护与毁灭同在,和平与战争共舞的时代,一个青年,带着信念,背负着承诺,走出了家园,走向不知是黑暗,还是光明的,一片天。
  • 仙霸传

    仙霸传

    张铮来到了这个修真的世界,机缘巧合得到上古至宝。为了生存,从此走上一条艰苦修炼成仙之路。看张铮如何叱咤风云,得法宝除妖邪,最终成就仙图霸业,尽在于此……
  • 女孩最喜欢读的108个好故事(中华少年成长必读书)

    女孩最喜欢读的108个好故事(中华少年成长必读书)

    故事似三月飘落的丝丝春雨,孕育着孩子希望的种子,装点着他们五彩缤纷的梦。故事像支支彩笔,描绘着他们美好的未来。故事似晨曦中的一颗启明星,迎接着孩子人生中那轮喷薄而出的太阳,照耀着他们多姿多彩的人生,在女孩的成长过程中,好故事以其无穷的影响力穿透女孩富于想象的心灵,在他们的记忆中烙下难以磨灭的印记。我们真诚地希望这本书能够在女孩子的心中生根发芽,伴随他们健康、快乐地成长。
  • 纵横悬世

    纵横悬世

    睁开双眼,这是一个陌生却又不是完全无法融入的世界。他冷静,淡定,但是他也疯狂。这个世界,存在着很多原来世界没有的东西。妖王即将重现,需要修行者拯救大陆。可是,他的修行只是想要回到自己的时代。两个世界是否存在联系呢?能回去吗?
  • 其实我是一个好人

    其实我是一个好人

    这是一个关于魔兽争霸的故事。
  • 与鬼厮混的日子

    与鬼厮混的日子

    这是个关于阴阳秘术,江湖奇人的小说,当今许多秘术,道法,都已经失传,但有一些人,仍然保存着老祖宗留下的东西,他们通阴阳,晓道法,身怀绝技,或隐藏在都市之中,或修道与山野乡村。这是个神鬼与人界限不在分明的时代,也是个色彩斑斓信仰缺失的时代,两个倒霉蛋,一路跌跌撞撞的闯进了阴阳道法的世界,揭开了一个个隐藏在阳光下的阴影迷雾。
  • 碎破苍天

    碎破苍天

    生逢乱世,天灾还是人祸,沉沦还是崛起;不可思议的玄妙,名震天下的传奇!千刀万剑,看李致如何一飞冲天!
  • 万荣笑话宝典

    万荣笑话宝典

    本书主要内容:七叔断案,没法换座,她改嫁了还省一人吃饭哩,叫你男人捣就不呛啦,有福,咱不心疼,你们不出去我出去,请给我们这里拨点雨,劳动布裤我穿上啦,我不信旧车子没人要,喝酒也有下数哩等。
  • 大叔,抱一抱

    大叔,抱一抱

    一次无意的交集,她成了他捧在手心中的小公主。他宠她、让她,任她如何胡作非为都无所谓。可她夏晴要的不是这个。她说:“古默我不要当你妹妹,既然你给不了我爱情,就放我离开。天高海阔,我总能忘了你!”他说:“女人,事到如今还想天高海阔忘了我?门都没有。”