Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Have You Yourself Read It Yet?

J. I. Packer offers many of us a gentle rebuke:

For two centuries Pilgrim's Progress was the best-read book, after the Bible, in all Chrisendom, but sadly it is not so today. When I ask my classes of young and youngish evangelicals, as I often do, who has read Pilgrim's Progress, not a quarter of the hands go up. Yet our rapport with fantasy writing, plus our lack of grip on the searching, humbling, edifying truths about spiritual life that the Puritans understood so well, surely mean that the time is ripe for us to dust off Pilgrim's Progress and start reading it again. Certainly, it would be great gain for modern Christians if Bunyan's masterpiece came back into its own in our day. Have you yourself, I wonder, read it yet?
J. I. Packer, "Pilgrim's Progress," in The Devoted Life: An Invitation to the Puritan Classics, ed. Kapic and Gleason (Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity Press: 2004), p. 198.


If you're looking for a handsome edition of the work, you can do no better than the edition produced by the Banner of Truth:

"This de luxe edition of Bunyan's great work comes as near as possible to the 'ideal'- with the original marginal notes and references from Scripture, both parts of the Progress, and a series of magnificent and evocative etchings by William Strang."

It's 396 pages, cloth-bound, and retails for $36. (ISBN=851512593)