Since it was first published in 1678, John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress has encouraged believers and pointed them to the Scriptures. C.H. Spurgeon said of this work:

Next to the Bible, the book that I value most is John Bunyan’s “Pilgrim’s Progress.” I believe I have read it through at least a hundred times. It is a volume of which I never seem to tire; and the secret of its freshness is that it is so largely compiled from the Scriptures. It is really Biblical teaching put into the form of a simple yet very striking allegory.

The book tells the story of man who is clothed in rags who begins reading a Book, the Word of God, and is awakened to the realities of sin and judgment. As his distress and conviction grows, it is represented by a great burden that weighs heavy on his back. He realizes the fearful consequences of sin and knows that he, his family and his city will be condemned unless “some way of escape can be found, whereby we may be delivered.”

Bunyan wrote his allegory during the time he spent in the Bedford jail, referred to in his day as “the den.” After the Restoration in 1660, Bunyan was arrested for preaching the gospel in a non-conformist church and spent most of the next twelve years in prison. During this imprisonment Bunyan wrote an autobiography, Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners, which told how God had graciously brought him from death unto life. He then began to shape his experiences of coming to faith in Christ and suffering for the gospel into an allegory which he entitled The Pilgrim’s Progress.

We invite you to read through the book with us one week at a time. Many riches and insights are contained in Bunyan’s work. These posts will seek to draw out a small portion and hopefully encourage you to search after more.

Archive:

  1. Christian Flees the City of Destruction
  2. Christian Addresses His Family
  3. Bearing Reproach
  4. Meeting Evangelist
  5. Flee from Wrath
  6. Christian is Pursued
  7. Attempt to Convince Obstinate
  8. Pliable Proves His Name
  9. Christian Gains a Companion
  10. Population of the Celestial City
  11. The Slough of Despond
  12. The Arrival of Help
  13. The Way Through Despair
  14. Pliable Arrives Home
  15. Mr. Worldly Wiseman
  16. Questionable Advice
  17. Our Great Burden
  18. The Burden’s Source
  19. The Village Morality
  20. Approaching Legality
  21. Evangelist Questioning
  22. Evangelist Corrects
  23. Mr. Worldly Wise-Man Unmasked
  24. Legality’s Impotence
  25. Evangelist Comforts Christian
  26. The Wicket Gate
  27. Traveling Alone