Who Are We Talking About?
Notes
Transcript
Questions to answer in this Equipping Hour
1. Who exactly were the Puritans?
2. What can they contribute to your everyday walk with
the Lord?
De ning “Theology”
“…the science of living blessedly forever.” — William Perkins
“…the science of living to God.” — William Ames
fi
“The knowledge of God and spiritual things has this proportion
unto practical sciences, that the end of all its notions and doctrines
consists in practice.” — John Owen
Why study the Puritans?
fi
“The answer, in one word, is maturity. Maturity is a compound of
wisdom, goodwill, resilience, and creativity. The Puritans
exempli ed maturity; we don’t. We are spiritual dwarfs…They
were great souls serving a great God. In them clear-headed passion
and warm-hearted compassion combined. Visionary and practical,
idealistic and realistic too, goal-oriented and methodical, they were
great believers, great hopers, great doers, and great sufferers.”
— J. I. Packer
De ning “Puritanism” (Poorly)
“Puritanism is the haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be
happy.” — H. L. Mencken
“The Puritans hated bear-baiting not because it gave pain to the bear,
but because it gave pleasure to the spectators.” — Thomas Macaulay
fi
“(Puritanism) damages the human soul, renders it hard and gloomy,
deprives it of sunshine and happiness.” — Langdon Mitchell
De ning “Puritanism” (Better)
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“Puritanism was at heart a spiritual movement,
passionately concerned with God and godliness…
Puritanism was essentially a movement for church reform,
pastoral renewal and evangelism, and spiritual revival…”
— J. I. Packer
De ning “Puritanism” (Better)
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“The most important trait of the Puritans that contributes to
their being misunderstood today is the one that really did unite
them all: their passionate love for the Bible as the written Word
of God, for Bible study, and for listening to sermons that
faithfully and fully expounded the Bible. This was the
foundation of their faith, their thought, their teaching, their
worship, and their daily lives.”
— Joel Beeke & Michael Reeves
De ning “Puritanism” (Better)
fi
1. The need for Biblical preaching and the teaching of sound
Reformed Doctrine
2. The need for Biblical, personal piety that stresses the work
of the Holy Spirit in the faith and life of the believer
3. The need to restore Biblical simplicity in liturgy, vestments,
and church government, so that a well-ordered church life
would promote the worship of the triune God
— Peter Lewis
Martin Luther’s 95 Theses (1517)
Henry VIII
(Reigns 1509-1547)
Edward VI
(Reigns 1547-1553)
Mary I
(Reigns 1553-1558)
Elizabeth I
(Reigns 1558-1603)
De ning “Puritanism”
fi
“What was wrong with the way things were?…The state
church had far too many ministers of any real competence as
preachers at a moment when the doorway to salvation was
shifting from a sacrament-centered theology to a theology of
the Word…The heart of the matter was pastoral, the
church’s betrayal of the people of God.”
— David Hall
De ning “Puritanism”
fi
“All experience tells me that in this way
(Puritan way of life) is the least company,
and that those which do walk openly in this
way shall be despised, pointed at, hated of
the world, made a by word, reviled,
slandered, rebuked, made a gazing stock,
called Puritans…”
— Nehemiah Wallington (1598-1658)
Elizabeth I
(Reigns 1558-1603)
James I
(Reigns 1603-1625)
Charles I
(Reigns 1625-1649)
Oliver Cromwell
(Rules 1649-1658)
Charles II
(Reigns 1660-1685)