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True Professors ;
Flavel John

True Professors ;

and, Mourners : two works

WordSpace (1996)
9781889298177
152 pages
Dewey 248.4/852
LC Classification BV4500 .F57 1996
LC Control No. 96061071

Genre

  • Homiletics (HML)

Subject

  • Christian Life - Early Works To 1800
  • Consolation - Early Works To 1800

Plot

Product Description John Flavel was an Oxford-educated Presbyterian clergyman contemporary with John Milton, who lived during one of the most turbulent periods in England's religious history. His devotional writings were popular well into the 19th century and his commentary on the Westminster Confession, written soon after the original Confession was signed, influenced Scottish theologians for decades. Flavel's religious beliefs, however, were never separated from their context of persecution and sudden death. His parents died of the plague which they contracted in Newgate prison after being arrested in an illegal religious meeting, and three of John Flavel's four wives died before him. Flavel knew suffering, and he wrote to the ordinary people of his day: those tempted by suicide and drunkenness, and concerned with illness, tenancy, death of children and spouses, and the state of the soul. Flavel's works echo with a deep sympathy for human weakness in an age of rapid social change, high mortality and religious and political turmoil. This volume reprints two of Flavel's most popular works, The Touchstone of Sincerity and A Token for Mourners, as well as the Life of John Flavel, written by an unnamed contemporary soon after Flavel's death in 1691. The Touchstone of Sincerity, first published in 1679, addresses those in doubt about the state of their own soul, outlining a "touchstone," or criteria by which the reader may do a self-evaluation. Flavel particularly addresses those Christians struggling with depression that comes from an oversensitive conscience which can overwhelm the spiritual person. He encourages a careful self-evaluation tempered with a gentle moderation. A Token for Mourners, first published in 1674 when Flavel was in his mid-30s, responds theologically to the grief that follows the premature death of children and loved ones. Flavel's was a world where disease and child mortality rates were high and women often died in childbirth. Widowed by the death of three successive wives, knew his subject. Condemning a stoic denial of sorrow as "pagan," Flavel attempts to come to grips, rationally and theologically, with a measure of grief so extensive it threatened to overwhelm one's ability and willingness to live. He speaks to himself and, through himself, to his readers who faced the stark social risk of death with every pregnancy, every child and every friend. From the Back Cover "Reader, pass not over this topic without some serious reflection in regard to your own spiritual state... It is is no easy thing to bring a man and his heart together... Hold fast integrity, whatever else you lose by it." John Flavel (1630-1691) was an Oxford-educated clergyman who lived during one of the most turbulent periods in England's religious history. His parents died of London's "great plague" in 1665, which they contracted in Newgate prison after being arrested for participating in illegal worship. John, too, experienced repeated political restrictions; exiled from his appointed parish at Dartmouth, he traveled and preached secretly in the neighboring countryside for nearly twenty years. He was a prolific and popular religious writer and his works were repeatedly reprinted for over 150 years after his death. This volume brings back into print for the modern reader two of his most popular treatises, The Touchstone of Sincerity and A Token for Mourners, as well as the brief Life of John Flavel written by an unnamed contemporary shortly after his death. Flavel wrote for the ordinary people of his time, those concerned with the death of spouse and children, illness, drunkenness, tenancy, and the spiritual pains of the soul. His call to the Christian to be a "true professor" of the faith echoes with a deep sympathy for human weakness in an age of high mortality, religious and political turmoil and rapid social change. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. From "The Life of the late Rev. Mr. John Flavel, Minister of

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