Product Description
Thomas Boston
(1676-1732)
Of the many great
divines who have adorned the ecclesiastical and theological scene in
Scotland, Thomas Boston must be reckoned as among the greatest. Dr.
Andrew Thomsom who wrote Thomas Boston : his life and times,
asserts that "if Scotland had been searched during the
early part of the eighteenth century there was not a minister of
Christ within its bounds who, alike in personal character and in the
discharge of his pastoral functions, approached nearer the apostolic
model than did this man of God".
Thomas Boston was born
at Duns in Berwickshire, in the year 1676. In his Memoirs, he
inform us that, at about the age of seven, he "began to conceive
a remarkable pleasure" in reading the Bible. Some four years
later, under a sermon by Henry Erskine, he was "awakened to a
deep concern about the eternal state" of his soul. After
receiving the elements of education at the local grammar school, he
proceeded to the University of Edinburgh. At the end of the usual
three years' course, he was licensed to preach by the Presbytery of
Duns and Chirnside. It was during the period of his probationership
that Boston penned his little classic: A Soliloquy on the Art of
Man-Fishing. While reading the Scriptures in private, the
words of Matthew 4:19, "Follow me and I will make you fishers of
men", deeply impressed him, and his heart "cried our"
for their accomplishment.
In
1699, Boston was ordained and inducted to the small pastoral charge
of Simprin, a village within a few miles of his home town. While he
was understandably discouraged by the fewness of his hearers, such
were his self-effacing views that he felt Simprin, or any other
place, good enough for him, and "rather superior" to his
"small talents". Under his anointed ministry, however, the
wilderness was to blossom as the rose. Boston remained at Simprin
until 1707 when he was translated to Ettrick. It was here he died in
1732, in the fifty-seventh year of his life. His biographer remarks
that even before Boston's death, young and old had come to pronounce
his name with reverence. It has become "a synonym for holy
living".
It
was while Boston was at Simprin that a copy of Edward Fisher's Marrow
of Modern Divinity came into his hands. The book was to have a
profound effect upon him. He writes: "I rejoiced in it as a
light which the Lord had seasonably struck up to me in my darkness".
Up to this time, Boston had felt a certain inhibition in proclaiming
the free and universal offer of Christ to men. This inhibition arose
from the supposed antinomy between the decree of election and the
indiscriminate offer of salvation to all men. But once he had grasped
the formula, according to the theology of the Marrow , that
"Jesus Christ is the Father's deed of gift and grant unto all
mankind lost", his inhibition faded away,. and he began to
preach with a fulness and freeness he had hitherto not known. his
parishioners could not fail to recognise the deep transformation in
their pastor and his ministrations.
One
of Boston's acquaintances, the worthy Rev. Thomas Davidson of
Bruntee, affirmed that he looked upon the frequent opportunities he
had of hearing him preach as one of the most exquisite privileges
with which he was favoured. There was, he wrote, a "majestic
energy" about Boston's preaching, and while there were few (if
any) who courted popularity less than Boston did, yet, "like his
shadow, it followed him whereever he went".
Boston's
popularity still persists among those who relish the truth as it is
in Jesus. He invariably studied with pen in hand, and his sermons
were written out in full before he delivered them. These facts, under
the divine providence, contributed to the perpetuation of his
productions. Due to this self-diffidence, however, Boston was very
reluctant to publish, but he was prevailed on by those who recognised
his genius as a preacher and theologian. The book for which he is
most remembered is, of course, his Human Nature in Its Fourfold
State a book which was designed by God to lead thousands to
Christ. But apart from the Fourfold State, a Collection of
Sermons, and an edition of the Marrow which he annotated,
no other book by Boston issued from the press in his life-time. Among
those published posthumously are his View of The Covenant of
Works and of Grace, The Crook in The Lot, to mention but a
few. Between 1720 and 1776, sixteen different works by Boston were
published.
Very
few today are so fortunate as to possess the whole of Boston's works.
The Beauties, originally published in 1831, was compiled by
the Rev. Samuel M'Millan with the worthy object of presenting the
public with a compend of Bostonian theology, which he hoped would
effect much spiritual good, and countervail "the leaven of the
Arminian scheme". In his preface, M'Millan wrote: "Boston
was eminently blessed with a happy talent for using his great
learning just as every godly minister should use it; not in flights
of oratory, calculated to dazzle and astonish, but in bringing down
the high mysteries of the gospel to the common capacity and in making
them quite intelligible to the meanest understanding'. It was the
editor's prayer that this volume would be greatly blessed by God in
turning sinners from darkness to light and from the power of Satan
unto God. This, we may add, is the prayer of the present publishers.
In the last letter he
wrote, Boston left his MSS. to the Lord and the management of his
friends as the Lord would direct them. It gives us much pleasure to
be the instruments in taking up his writings again, under God's
direction we trust, and in furthering Ralph Erskine's prediction of
their illustrious author: Whose golden pen to future times will
bear His fame, till in the clouds his Lord appear.
~From:
http://www.thomasboston.net/Bio/who.htm