Light and Heat
Pastoral Book Reviews
A simplified guide to Puritan
Preaching.
What did the Puritans
believe about the pulpit and about preaching?
Dr. Bruce Bickel attempts to answer this question for the common
reader. This is not a deep
theological work to arouse those who love the puritans to find large
nuggets of gold, but is a work designed to bring an introduction to the
Christian concerning the Puritan’s view of preaching, and the
reverence held by them concerning the pulpit. Bickel uses some very good resources, but they are as
extensive as the purpose of the book allows.
They will not be difficult to handle for the beginning reader,
but not very extensive for the aged scholar.
Not
all books are designed to be thorough treatments of a subject, but Dr.
Bickel’s book also treats a second section concerning the teachings of
the puritan’s pulpit and not just the view of the pulpit itself.
He covers in section one “The View of the Pulpit,” “The
Direction of Preaching,” “The Demands of Preaching,” and “The
Duties of the Pastor.” In
section two he covers “The View of God,” “The View of Man,”
“The View of the Person and Work of Christ,” “The View of
Repentance and Faith,” and “The View of Assurance.” It is a good book, easy reading, and helpful for the beginner
who desires to know more about the Puritans.
Some
Quotes:
“Perhaps
another way of structuring the Puritan sermon would be the Declaration,
the Explanation, and the Application.”
“Their
high view of God made it infinitely more important that God should cross
the separation-gap and speak to them through the sermon than that they
should travel across it in prayer or praise.”
“The
Puritan view of man and his sin and God and His holiness would prohibit
any of those great heralds of the gospel from making such a statement
as, “God loves you and has a wonderful plan for your life.”
“Puritan
preaching was distinctly evangelical, but evangelical in much a
different sense from what is offered today in main line
evangelicalism.”
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