THE RECOMMENDATION. To the EDITOR. Dear SIR, Sincerely thank you for the Perufal of your on the Chriftian Pilgrim's Progrefs; I really think your Plan is well adapted; the Notes judicious, spiritual, and evangelical; that they at once bid fair to inform the Reader's Judgment, and warm his Heart. You have, Sir, my best Wishes and Prayers, that the LORD the Spirit may graciously breathe upon them, and make them a lafting Bleffing to many Souls. If think little Name may in the leaft Degree affift in recommending a Work I very much approve of, you are most cordially welcome to it. I am, dear Sir, you my With great Respect, Your most obedient and obliged Servant, LEEDS, April 6, 1775 JOHN EDWARDS. PRE PREF A CE. By the EDITOR of this IMPRESSION. TH gone HE many Editions this Work has through, and the cordial Acceptation it hath met with from Perfons of every Denomination, at once demonftrate its fingular Excellency. The Method of Writing adopted by our pious Author, in his most valuable. Book, has ever been acknowledged, the most useful and inftructive, because the most engaging and agreeable. To offer any Arguments, in Favour of a Work so universally approved of, would be fuperfluous; the almost unequalled Simplicity of the Stile, and the great Depth of Christian Experience it contains, will ever render it a Book of real Worth. To this Edition is now firft added explanatory Notes, which are written rather in the Form of a Paraphrafe, as the Author's Intention was to take feveral Pages together, in one Point of View, that the Notes might be rendered more generally useful; at the same Time the moft ftriking Circumstances contained in the Text are alluded to, and implied, if not fully expreffed in the Paraphrase. The Propriety of his Plan and Execution, must be left to the Determination of of the serious and candid Reader. He is happy in embracing this Opportunity of publicly making his thankful Acknowledgments, of the Efteem and Friendship of those Gentlemen, who have been pleased to exprefs their Approbation of his Defign, and hopes it will be accompanyed with their Prayers, that the Whole may be made useful to themfelves and others. He has not intentionally written a Sentence' but what, he trufts, was clearly deducible from the Paffage before him; neither has he attempted to pervert, or wire-draw, a fingle Pofition. His Endeavour hath been to offer a few plain Hints, fuch as the Subject naturally fuggested to him, with a practical View to reach the Heart. Reader, In the Course of these Notes, thou wilt find the careless Sinner alarmed of his extreme Danger; the Formalift detected in all the Splendor of a mere nominal Profeffion, and the true Believer furnished with fome neceffary Hints for Self Examination and Watchfulness. May the eternal God accompany the Whole with his Bleffing, and make it useful to the Souls of Men. 1 The EDITOR. THE AUTHOR's APOLOGY FOR HIS BOO 0 K. in hand, W HEN at the first I took my pen And thus it was: I writing of the way Well, so I did; but yet I did not think To fhew to all the world my pen and ink In fuch a mode; I only thought to make I knew not what; nor did I undertake b There Thereby to please my neighbour, no, not I; Neither did I but vacant feafons spend In this my fcribble; nor did I intend But to divert myself in doing this, From worfer thoughts, which make me do amifs. Thus I fet pen to paper with delight, And quickly had my thoughts in black and white. It down, until it came at last to be Well, when I had thus put my ends together I fhew'd them others, that I might see whether They would condemn them, or them justify; And fome faid let them live; fome, let them die ; Some faid, John, print it; others said not so, Some faid it might do good; others faid, no. Now I was in a strait, and did not fee Which was the best thing to be done by me: At laft I thought, fince you are thus divided, I print it will; and fo the cafe decided. For, thought I, fome I fee would have it done, Tho' others in that channel do not run : To prove then who advised for the best, Thus I thought fit to put it to the test. I farther thought, if now I did deny Those that would have it, thus to gratify; I did not know, but hinder them I might Of that which would to them be great delight; For those which were not for its coming forth, I faid to them, Offend you I am loth: Yet |