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Hope

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Our society seems to be marked more by a sense of despair than of hope. Burroughs defines hope, and then shows its origin, its object, and how it is to be used.

150 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2005

57 people want to read

About the author

Jeremiah Burroughs

127 books89 followers
Jeremiah Burroughs (or Burroughes) was baptized in 1601 and admitted as a pensioner at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, in 1617. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1621 and a Master of Arts degree in 1624. His tutor was Thomas Hooker.

Burroughs’s ministry falls into four periods, all of which reveal him as a zealous and faithful pastor. First, from about 1627 until 1631, he was assistant to Edmund Calamy at Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk. Both men became members of the Westminster Assembly. Both men strongly opposed King James’s Book of Sports. Both refused to read the king’s proclamation in church that dancing, archery, vaulting, and other games were lawful recreations on the Lord’s Day.

Second, from 1631 to 1636, Burroughs was rector of Tivetshall, Norfolk, a church that still stands today. Despite the best efforts of his patron, Burroughs was suspended in 1636 and deprived in 1637 for refusing to obey the injunctions of Bishop Matthew Wren, especially regarding the reading of the Book of Sports, and the requirements to bow at the name of Jesus and to read prayers rather than speak them extemporaneously.

Third, from 1638 to 1640, Burroughs lived in the Netherlands, where he was teacher of a congregation of English Independents at Rotterdam, formerly ministered by William Ames. William Bridge was the pastor and Sidrach Simpson had established a second like-minded church in the city. Thus, three future dissenting brethren were brought together, all of whom would serve as propagandists for congregationalism later in the 1640s.

In the final period from 1640 to his death in 1646, Burroughs achieved great recognition as a popular preacher and a leading Puritan in London. He returned to England during the Commonwealth period and became pastor of two of the largest congregations in London: Stepney and St. Giles, Cripplegate. At Stepney, he preached early in the morning and became known as “the morning star of Stepney.” He was invited to preach before the House of Commons and the House of Lords several times. Thomas Brooks called him “a prince of preachers.”

As a member of the Westminster Assembly, Burroughs sided with the Independents, but he remained moderate in tone, acting in accord with the motto on his study door: Opinionum varietas et opinantium unitas non sunt ασυστατα (“variety of opinion and unity of opinion are not incompatible”). Richard Baxter said, “If all the Episcopalians had been like Archbishop Ussher, all the Presbyterians like Stephen Marshall, and all the Independents like Jeremiah Burroughs, the breaches of the church would soon have been healed.”

In 1644, Burroughs and several colleagues presented to Parliament their Apologetical Narration, which defended Independency. It attempted to steer a middle course between Presbyterianism, which they regarded as too authoritarian, and Brownism, which they regarded as too democratic. This led to division between the Presbyterians and Independents. Burroughs served on the committee of accommodation, which tried to reconcile the differences, but on March 9, 1646, he declared on behalf of the Independents that presbyteries were “coercive institutions.” Burroughs said he would rather suffer or emigrate than submit to presbyteries. Ultimately, the division between Presbyterians and Independents helped promote the cause of prelacy after the death of Oliver Cromwell.

Burroughs pursued peace to the end. He died in 1646, two weeks after a fall from his horse. The last subject on which he preached became his Irenicum to the Lovers of Truth and Peace, an attempt to heal divisions between believers. Many of his friends believed that church troubles hastened his death.

Burroughs was a prolific writer, highly esteemed by Puritan leaders of his day, some of whom published his writings after his death. Nearly all of his books are compilations of sermons.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Alex.
120 reviews
January 9, 2022
God gives His children hope to keep them from sinking in despair, in this life. Our hope has its basis in God’s promises. Even if we suffer many afflictions our whole lives long, our hope is set on the promised blessings found in His gracious covenant, for the life to come.
This is a hope that strengthens and purifies; it provides patience, joy and peace. The Christian hope is not like the world’s hope, as the Christian’s hope is lively and it is sure, whose object is Jesus Christ.

Appended to this volume is a timely sermon by Burroughs regarding the portion of those who are not Christ’s. Their hope is only in the things of this world, they are temporal and will die with them. Therefore the Christian should not envy those who do not have Christ as their portion.
Profile Image for Mark A Powell.
1,080 reviews33 followers
December 23, 2013
Hope is a word often misunderstood as “wishful thinking” when God’s Word sees it as “confident expectation.” It is along these latter lines that Puritan author Jeremiah Burroughs lays out the meaning and power of genuine hope. Outdated language and formatting make this more of a challenge than some might choose to endure, but there are certainly pearls to be harvested here. A sermon from Burroughs on some of these principles is included as an appendix.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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