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Lifting Up For The Downcast

William Bridge

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These thirteen sermons on Psalm 42:11, preached at Stepney, London, in the year 1648 are the work of a true physician of souls. In dealing with believers suffering from spiritual depression, Bridge manifests great insight into the causes of the saints’ discouragements such as great sins, weak grace, failure in duties, want of assurance, temptation, desertion and affliction. A correct diagnosis is more than half the cure but Bridge does not leave his readers there. He gives directions for applying the remedy. For example in dealing with ‘great sins’ he says, ‘If you would be truly humbled and not be discouraged; not be discouraged and yet be humbled; then beat and drive up all your sin to your unbelief, and lay the stress and weight of all your sorrow upon that sin.’ The general causes of spiritual depression are the same in every age. Downcast Christians of the twenty-first century can find help here as surely as did past generations.

Publisher: Banner of Truth
Type: Paperback
ISBN: 9781848716858

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Born in Cambridgeshire around 1600, William Bridge entered Emmanuel College, Cambridge in 1619, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in 1623 and a master’s degree in 1626, before serving as a fellow at the college. He was ordained a priest in the Church of England in 1627, and served in Saffron Walden and Colchester in Essex, then becoming rector of St. Peter Hungate in Norwich in 1632. In 1636 he was forced to flee to Rotterdam in Holland, because of Bishop Matthew Wren’s campaign against nonconformity, and co-pastored a church there with John Ward and then Jeremiah Burroughs. Returning to England in 1641, the following year he was appointed a member of the Westminster Assembly, and proved himself a noted Independent. That same year he accepted a position as town preacher at Yarmouth, where he organized an Independent church, and formally became its pastor in autumn 1643. He laboured there until 1662, when he was ejected by the Act of Uniformity. Bridge spent his last years at Yarmouth and Clapham, Surrey, where he died in March 1670. William Bridge was an excellent preacher, able scholar, and prolific writer with a well-furnished library, but he was no ivory tower theologian. His parishioners viewed him as a charitable and candid pastor whose ministry helped many people.

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‘I cannot say enough of the excellence of this work and how it has benefited my soul. Martyn-Lloyd Jones’ “Spiritual Depression is also excellent on this subject but Mr. Bridge almost exhausts it. He begins with the Christian should never be discouraged no matter what the circumstances. He anticipates every instance imaginable. Even if you have sinned you should not be discouraged. Take this excerpt from page 69: “And if you look into Scripture, you will find that the Lord does not condemn a man, no not a wicked man, barely for the act of his former sin , but because he will not turn from it. Psalm 7.11,12…The Lord has prepared instruments of death against every wicked man; but yet, notwithstanding, though a man be never so wicked, if he turn unto the Lord, God will not discharge those instruments of death upon him, yea, though his sins have been never so great; but says the text, ‘If he turn not’ (not because he hath sinned before, only, but because he turns not from his sin), ‘ He will whet his sword; he hath bent his bow, and made it ready.’ Now there is, always, in the saints and people of God, a turning disposition , although they do sin against God; there is always, I say, a turning disposition in them, and therefore the Lord will not discharge the instruments of death upon them: surely, then, they have no reason to be quite discouraged in this respect.” Bridge finishes the chapter on discouragements due to sin with: “Now therefore , if at any time you find your soul in any sin, then say, This has my unbelief done.” He says to trace all your sins to unbelief. Bridge concludes with the remedy for discouragement to be faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. This work is a true balm to the soul and anyone suffering from this affliction should read it and highlight. There is also a long explanation of the doctrine of election starting on page 249 and explains why it is a comfort to the afflicted soul. There is just so much good spiritual food to feed on. Please read it for yourself.’ Benjamin Campbell