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The Happiness of Enjoying and Making a True and Speedy Use of Christ

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Alexander Grosse (1596-1654) was an able Puritan minister of presbyterian persuasion who wrote eight influential books from 1632 to 1656, none of which have been reprinted until now. This book, with its intriguing title about making a speedy use of Christ in every situation, is based on Colossians 2:9-10, 'For in him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily. And ye are complete in him, which is the head of all principality and power.' Grosse first sets forth Christ's fullness as above all created fullness and shows us the emptiness of everything compared to Christ. He contrasts the folly of not cleaving to and contenting ourselves with Christ to the wisdom of valuing Christ above all else. He then expounds how sinners come to Christ and obtain a saving interest in Him. Next, Grosse stresses how to make use of Christ and how to constantly submit to Him. He stresses the joy of those who are partakers of Christ and shows how believers mature spiritually by communion with Him. Their fullness flows out of apprehending the fullness of Christ. Finally, he expounds four marks that evidence the fullness of believers and provides four motives to labor for more mature fullness in personal spiritual life in and through Christ. Two appendices are added to this excellent, experiential Christ-exalting book the first on the danger of neglecting Christ and the opportunity of grace and the second on the Lord Jesus as the soul s sure and last refuge. Table of 1. Showing the Transcendency of Christ's Fullness above All Created Fullness and Opening the Scope of the Words2. Declaring the Vanity of Joining Human Observations to Christ Jesus3. Disclosing the folly of Not Cleaving to and Contenting Ourselves with Christ, but Instead Going Aside to Vain Inventions4. Setting Forth the Beauty of All Divine and Heavenly Fullness in Christ5. Setting Forth the Folly of Neglecting Christ and Seeking Fullness Elsewhere6. Discovering the Folly of Not Coming Fully Home to Christ, in Whom is All Fullness7. Showing How Christ is to Be Valued and Esteemed Above All8. Persuading to Come to and Get Interest in Christ9. Teaching How to Make Use of Christ10. Persuading to Full and Constant Yielding to Christ11. Declaring the Inseparable Union of Christ's Two Natures in One Person12. Showing that Man's Choicest Excellency Consists in Union with God13. Declaring the Perfection and Fullness of Christ Above the Fullness of all Creatures14. Setting Forth the Superlative Excellency of Christ above all Creatures15. Opening the Blessed and Happy Condition of them that are Partakers of Christ16. Ascribing Perfection in Christ to such Alone that are truly Blessed17. Outlining Four Grounds of the Saints Perfection18. Evidencing the Fullness of the Saints by Four Characteristics or Marks, with Four Motives to Labor for Fullness

Hardcover

First published August 20, 2015

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Alexander Grosse

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for MatthewMiller.
7 reviews3 followers
February 12, 2018
Alexander Grosse was a Puritan Presbyterian pastor of the 1600s. The book, in the author’s words, seeks to “ravish your souls with the apprehension of Christ’s beauties, to fill you more and more with Christ’s fullness.” His launch pad for this theme is through the verses of Colossians 2:9-10. He seeks to show you the fullness of Christ and emptiness of sin and even good things that would compete with the preeminence of Christ.
This book was good but not as good as I was hoping it to be. The beginning of the book and the end is the strongest. I found the middle section to be very repetitive; instead of building on his points, Grosse repeated them with different words and eloquent phrases. It’s also not a book you can read for hours. I would recommend it but best to read a chapter a day as a warm devotional.

Strengths:

- Christ-centered
- Filled with scripture references
- Short read (130 pages)
- Warming and convicting at times

Weaknesses:

- Repetitive
- General points without going in depth at times
-Not theological rich as I was hoping
Profile Image for David.
55 reviews
May 9, 2022
It is full of rich devotional thoughts of Christ. Grosse is particularly adept at analogy in describing the believer's union with our Lord Jesus. This said, his style makes him one of the more difficult Puritans to read (and Puritans as a class are difficult enough), as he repeats his similes many times, and it's difficult to track his flow of argument over several readings.
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