Flattery is dangerous, but self-flattery is more dangerous yet...

It might be a result of our fallenness, but we have a strange propensity to think that because we have talked about something, we have somehow done it. After much discussion of spiritual combat, and of the King’s protection, and after resolving to go out armed for battle, and to go out in the company of saints, Christian and Hopeful are caught remarkably off-guard by a man wearing a ‘very light robe’.

They are at a path within the Path, and unsure of the direction to take. They had been given directions by the Shepherds, but had forgotten to read them. And it turns out that such forgetfulness of the Word is dangerous for Pilgrims. It’s hard to know, initially, why this character is given the name Flatterer. He doesn’t say much of anything, let alone say much that could be considered flattery. This might be the danger. Perhaps there are times when it comes to temptation, that less is more. The cunning of this one who ‘masquerades as an angel of light’ (II Cor.11:14) is that he simply lets the Pilgrims assume they know ore than they do, that they are more spiritually switched-on than they are. That is flattery enough, quietly letting them believe they are better than they are. Although he is a ‘fine-spoken man’ his words bring confusion, corruption, and catastrophe

It may be that they feel they have come so far, won so many battles, overcome so many obstacles, that they begin to trust themselves to recognize a true guide, to find the way. And even as, by degrees, the road turns away, their failure to read the instructions given by the Shepherds means they blinded by their error. Their over-confidence and self-reliance leaves them susceptible to being deceived. Which in due course they are… Until ‘he led them both within the compass of a net, in which they were both so entangled they knew not what to do’ (Prov.29:5). Their subtle arrogance leads to their disregard for Scripture, and to do disaster.

No amount of tears, or self-reproach can free them. But God’s grace comes even to those Pilgrims who forget to cry out for it. A ‘shining one’ (a genuine angel of light, this time) brings freedom (Heb.1:14), but also brings rebuke. This is a sign of the Pilgrim’s maturity. My own sense is that the LORD is gentle with the immature, but as we grow, His Fatherliness more frequently finds expression in discipline as well as tenderness. There is no conflict here: ‘Endure hardship as discipline; God is treating you as his children…God disciplines us for our good, in order that we may share in his holiness’ (Heb.12:7&10).

The ‘Shining One’ confronts them with their sin (for forgetting His Word is sin). He reminds them that they enjoyed the benefits of the Delectable Mountains, that they had received instruction from the Shepherds, that they had been given directions, and that the Shepherds have even ‘bid them beware of the Flatterer’. Confessing their sin, they are chastised. This may seem quaint to us, perhaps even politically incorrect, but Bunyan is drawing attention to an important dynamic in our relationship with God. He will afflict, chasten, discipline us in the Way. Rev.3:19, Those whom I love I rebuke and discipline. So be earnest and repent.

Of course, such discipline doesn’t automatically produce the fruit of repentance and holiness. If we are foolish, it can make us resentful and bitter… Hence the warning of Heb.12:9, that we ‘…submit to the Father of [our] spirits and live’. Too often however, our response to suffering and trial is to rage against God, to accuse Him. We wonder why, if He loves us, such things happen; not realising that it is precisely because He loves us that such things occur. His discipline is accompanied by a promise. Heb.12:11 ‘Later on, it produces a harvest of righteousness and peace by those who have been trained by it’. Neither Christian nor Hopeful will resent this episode when they cross the threshold of the Celestial City.

‘They thanked him for his kindness’.

Such may seem strange to us. but it resonates with Biblical spirituality.

Ps.119:67-68 & 71, Before I was afflicted I went astray, but now I obey your word. You are good, and what you do is good; teach me your decrees … It was good for me to be afflicted so that I might learn your decrees.

Questions to ponder:

How do we endure suffering in a way shaped by faith?

Is all suffering and trial to be understood as the discipline of God?

...in which Little-faith gets mugged.

From first to last our discipleship rests on faith, and our experience of following Christ will ebb and flow depending on the extent to which we have, by the Spirit, cultivated our capacity to trust Him. Jesus often chastised those of little-faith in the Gospels (Matt.6:30; 8:25-26; 14:31-32 etc.). Bunyan seeks to help us understand why!

If we are weak in faith we are ill-prepared for the trials and difficulties of discipleship, and for the battles and temptations that lie between us and holiness. For such, their faith is genuine (unlike Turn-away, so I Jn.2:19) but they are not ‘trained’ in exercising their faith, and it remains weak. Bunyan is treading a fine line here. We are saved not by the strength or quality of our faith, but by the One who is the object of our faith. But the other side of the coin is that as our faith grows and develops we are more able to hear and put into practise what He teaches. Many of His commands require our commitment to certain corollary beliefs. Our not worrying depends on our faith in God’s goodness and provision… our ability to turn the other cheek depends on our faith in His justice and judgement… our ability to love our enemies depends in part on our faith in His love for us. His weakness of faith has meant his inability to walk faithfully after Christ’s teaching and example. He has veered to close to the world, and lingering near Broad-Way Gate, Little-faith fell asleep in Dead-Man’s Lane. And it is at this dangerous intersection with the world that Little-faith - who is travelling alone - lies vulnerable to attack.

The ‘three sturdy rogues’, Faint-heart, Mistrust, and Guilt, are all internal. Little-faith has a faint heart, which is unable to trust the Lord fully. He is thus unable to obey His teaching and is assaulted by an overwhelming sense of Guilt. Although they are not able to rob Little-faith of his certificate or jewels (his salvation, I think, and the riches of Christ, or perhaps the ‘deposit’ of the Spirit, so Eph.1:13-14), they do make off with his ‘spending-money’. There are aspects of his experience of discipleship that are beyond Little-faith because he will not ‘train himself to distinguish between good and evil’. Neither will he submit to the Fatherly discipline that ‘produces a harvest of righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it’ Heb.5:14 & 12:11). He has lost his spiritual comfort, his assurance and peace of mind. But with what he is left he will complete his journey.

This is the paradox Bunyan is trying to capture. Whilst the robbery did not threaten the final outcome of the journey, it did impact the experience of the journey itself. Little-faith pressed on, but he cuts a sorry figure, travelling hungry, and harassed and hindered by his own pain and grief. One passing comment that reveals Bunyan’s experience as a pastor: ‘I was told that he scattered almost all the rest of the way with nothing but doleful and bitter complaints; telling also to all…where he was robbed and how; how he was wounded, and that he hardly escaped with his life’. This has become the defining moment of Little-faith’s whole pilgrimage, and it is all he can talk about with anyone who will listen. He can’t be taken past it, and he will not allow ‘that relief which could from thence be administered to him’. He has become defined by his failure, rather than by his faith in Christ, who can forgive and restore. He refuses even wait to be helped by Great-grace. In a strange way he becomes comfortable with his victim-hood, and resents anyone who would deny him of it.

Is it any wonder Christian’s patience runs thin..?

Questions to ponder:

How do you train your faith, cultivating it so that it is strong enough to bear the weight of holiness?

When Death lurks on the path of life...

Spiritual growth can be a dangerous thing for humans still carrying the legacy of sin… Even - perhaps especially - as they mature, they can easily come within sight of ‘the country of Conceit’. The danger lies in our realising we’re making progress, and so being exposed to the temptation of pride. Leaving the Delectable Mountains, the Pilgrims could easily have drifted into ‘Conceit’. Thankfully, Christian and Hopeful stay on the Path, but they are joined on that Path by ‘a very brisk lad that came out of that country’, by the name of Ignorance. Christian’s suspicions are immediately aroused, for Ignorance did not enter the Narrow Way through the Narrow Gate. Rather, thinking himself to be a ‘good’ person, he simply joins the Path wherever and however is convenient and assumes that God will undoubtedly approve of ‘a good liver’… hence the name: Ignorance. After all, someone who thinks such things is truly and culpably ignorant of the Gospel.

There is an atmosphere of the Pharisee about Ignorance. ‘I pray, fast, pay tithes and give alms…’. Such religiosity has a passing appearance of genuine discipleship, but scratch the surface and it quickly becomes clear that it is an attempt to justify ourselves before God, rather than a throwing ourselves on Christ to be justified in Him. We don’t have to read far in the Gospels before we see what Jesus thinks of the Pharisees (see e.g. John 5:37-44, 8:42-47; Lk.18:9-14; Matt.5:17-37; Matt.23 etc.). Tragically there are still many in the Church who would go by the same name. The symptoms are clear. They see religion as a way of showing that they are good people, and assume that their efforts will be enough. They resent any talk of sinfulness or failure, and see religion’s job to affirm their resolution. They have a ‘live and let live’ attitude to religion, or as Ignorance puts it: ‘be content to follow the religion of your country, and I will follow the religion of mine. I hope all will be well’. They assume they know all they need to know about being a Christian, and see no need to be taught. They are, as Bunyan puts it, ‘wise in their own conceit’.

In passing he advises, through the dialogue between Hopeful and Christian, that it is best not to waste much time and energy on such conceited ‘christians’. ‘There is more hope of a fool than of him’, laments Christian. Such as Ignorance might be open to correction at some point, but the danger for them is that we don’t know what we don’t know. If we are conceited along with it, then we assume there is nothing more to know. This is such a stark contrast to Christian and Hopeful in their humility and eagerness to mine the immense riches of their faith. Legalism, Stagnation, Complacency are the children born of Ignorance and Conceit.

We have to wait till the end of Pilgrim’s Progress to discover the end of Ignorance. Vain-Hope ferries him through death with ease, and in his arrogant complacency he carries his false confidence right to the door of the Celestial City. Only then does he discover what he did not know. Only then does he realise that, more importantly, he is not known by the King. Bunyan describes his condemnation in the closing chilling words of the book: ‘Then I saw that there was a way to hell even from the gates of heaven…’.

Other spiritual disasters lurk along the borders of this terrible land. In a dark lane, Christian and Hopeful stumble on one of the most disturbing. Turn-away (a resident of the nearby town, Apostasy) is led away to Destruction. The encounter shakes the Pilgrims to the core, as well it should. To watch the ruin of a soul, as someone denies the faith they once professed is a terrifying thing to behold. We may shrug it off as a sad thing that we haven’t seen someone at Church for a while, or that they no longer seem particularly interested in Christ. But that is only because we don’t understand the reality of what is happening when someone stops coming to Church, or drifts away from their faith. Bunyan sees more clearly.

‘…it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted the heavenly gift, and have become partakers of the Holy Spirit, and have tasted the good word of God and the powers of the age to come, if they fall away, to renew them again to repentance, since they crucify again for themselves the Son of God, and put Him to an open shame’

(Heb.6:4–6).

Christian is right to tremble before the sight of one for whom there is no hope.

And we should too.

Questions to ponder:

How would you recognise conceit in yourself? …in another Christian?

Do you tremble at the thought of someone denying the faith they once professed? Do you think such a person was ever a Christian in the first place? Is it possible for someone who is genuinely saved to lose their salvation? Why / why not?

Growing up is hard to do...

The Shepherds continue to guide the Pilgrims through the Mountains, and as they come down into a valley, they are confronted by the third ‘wonder’, and likely the one we will find most traumatic. There is, even at this late stage in the pilgrimage, a ‘by-way to hell, a way that hypocrites go in at’. Hopeful is amazed at this: ‘I perceive that these had on them … a show of pilgrimage, as we have now, had they not?’ The Shepherds concur. Some, they say, had a show of pilgrimage that lasted even as far as the Delectable Mountains.

Two aspects of this are worth reflecting on. The first is more straightforward. It is to confront the uncomfortable truth that there are those who walk the way of Christ without integrity. Scripture not only shows us the danger of straying from the Path into Error, it warns us of God's wrath and judgment for those pretenders who walk the Path, but who persist in patterns of life and belief that are sinful. It is a simple matter of observation that people who have even been involved in leading Churches, ministries, and missions - high profile, influential figures - turn out to have been spiritual frauds. Indeed, Bunyan has introduced us to a number of characters who journey with Christian but who aren’t Pilgrims themselves. They are those who are caught up in the life of the Church for a host of diverse reasons which have in common only that they aren’t about devotion to Christ as revealed in the Scriptures. They aren’t about following Him. At some point they all leave the way, and stumble into destruction. It requires some measure of maturity to recognise this as a fact of Church life, and even more to discern it in real time.

One last insight into spiritual maturity. The Pilgrims aren’t satisfied even with all they enjoy in the Delectable Mountains. In due course, they long to press on. That in itself is a sign of growth. But before they go, the Shepherds long to give them a glimpse of the Celestial City. Spiritual growth turns our perspective on life increasingly towards the New Creation. The more mature a Christian, the more likely they are to focus on, and delight in the prospect of, Zion. It is the other side of the coin. As our centre of gravity swings slowly towards the age to come, we have deepening convictions about both heaven and hell. As our time on earth grows shorter, a Christian will find that the allure of this world grows weaker, and our desire for the glories of Christ in heaven (and ultimately in the New Creation) grows stronger. We do well to be concerned if we feel we are looking back, and grasping at a life that is slipping through our fingers, and that we should be content to leave behind. ‘To die is gain…’ (Phil.1:21).

Yet even as our Pilgrims stand atop the Hill Clear, their view is impeded. The reminder of past failure, and the conviction of present sin, and the reality of God’s judgement, cause their hands to shake so that ‘they could not look steadily through the glass’. Although their heart is gravitating towards the Celestial City, there is still too much of this world in them for their vision to be as clear as it could be, or perhaps should be. They are not yet so confident in the grace of God in Christ as to be undaunted at the prospect of Judgement. But it remains an inviolable spiritual truth that we can enjoy the prospect of the New Creation only to the extent that the Spirit has been able to make us fit to be there. The acquiring of such knowledge is not merely an intellectual pursuit. It is a spiritual reality, and requires a certain spiritual strength to gain and to bear.

And so their tour of ‘wonders’ is complete. The Shepherds have served them well. They are, after all, ‘servants of Christ and … those entrusted with the mysteries God has revealed’ (I Cor.4:1). But their service isn’t quite complete. They give the Pilgrims a ‘note of the way’, instruction on how to progress faithfully along the Narrow Path. They also impart a double caution, against the Flatterer, and against sleeping on the Enchanted Ground, both of which prove apposite, as we’ll see in due course.

Shaky though it was, the Pilgrims’ view of the City is enough to speed them on their way. And rather unexpectedly at this point, Bunyan wakes up, and the dream is interrupted! He is making sure that we register that we have passed a key division in the narrative, and that the Pilgrims have passed a significant milestone in their journey. When we pick up their story tomorrow, we will be entering with them into a new chapter of their Pilgrimage. There is continuity to be sure, but Christian has now ‘moved beyond the elementary teachings about Christ and been taken forward to maturity’ (Heb.6:1). There is a qualitative difference to Christian’s pilgrimage from this point on, and the challenges and difficulties he meets are those that are characteristic of a more mature disciple.

Questions to Ponder:

How clearly focussed are you on your future in the New Creation? To what extent does it shape how you make decisions in the present?

How do you feel about the idea that our ability to confront and accept the reality of judgement is a sign of spiritual maturity?

How have the challenges you face as a Christian changed as you have grown more spiritually mature?

A prayer about longing for heaven:

O My Lord

may I arrive where means of grace cease, and where I shall no more confess, fast, weep, watch;

where I will no longer need preaching, sacrament, intercession or confession;

where I will no longer be tempted, where nothing defiles, where there is no grief, sorrow, sin or death…

Where the more perfect the sight, the more beautiful the object,

the more perfect the appetite the sweeter the food,

the more complete the soul, the happier its joys,

and where there is full, clear knowledge of Thee.

There shall I be near Thee, shall I dwell with my family, shall I stand in Thy presence,

one with Him who is one with Thee;

and the exercise of all my powers of body, soul and spirit shall be in the enjoyment of Thee.

As praise in the mouth of the saints is fitting, so teach me to exercise this divine gift in the midst of your people today, as I hope to praise you eternally hereafter.

…taken from A Valley of Vision, ‘Heaven Desired’