22 February 1680 A.D. Thomas Goodwin Passes—English Congregationalist & Dissenter
22 February 1680 A.D. Thomas Goodwin
Passes—English Congregationalist & Dissenter
Graves, Dan. “Goodwin Found Death a Smiling
Friend.” Christianity.com. May
2007. http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/1601-1700/goodwin-found-death-a-smiling-friend-11630162.html. Accessed 18 Jul 2014.
When Thomas Goodwin was born in 1600, he was a
premature baby. Consequently, his health was a rather shaky. But since his
godly parents hoped to see him in the pulpit, rather than farming or
soldiering, bodily weakness was not a serious impediment to his future. The
couple provided their son with the best education they could afford, and it
paid off. At thirteen he went to Christ's College, Cambridge University, where
he did very well in his studies. Proud of his abilities, his whole thought was
how he might turn them to personal advantage. He seemed destined to become
another professional clergyman of the type that is scholastically brilliant but
spiritually arid.
Instead, he became a Puritan
great, a man who influenced his own generation through his preaching; and
future generations through his printed works. Alexander Whyte, a famed Scottish
preacher, tells what his discovery of Goodwin meant: "In those far-off
years I read my Goodwin every Sabbath morning and every Sabbath night. Goodwin
was my every Sabbath-day meat and my every Sabbath-day drink. And during my
succeeding years as a student, and as a young minister, I carried about a
volume of Goodwin wherever I went. I read him in railway carriages and on
steamboats. I read him at home and abroad. I read him on my holidays among the
Scottish Grampians and among the Swiss Alps. I carried his volumes about with
me till they fell out of their original cloth binding, and till I got my
bookbinder to put them into his best morocco. I have read no other author so
much and so often. And I continue to read him till this day as if I had never
read him before."
How did such a transformation come
about? For some time Goodwin avoided serious sermons. They made him uneasy. A
frivolous companion, hearing a bell toll for a funeral, suggested they attend
the service. Goodwin was reluctant, but went. The preacher, Dr. Thomas
Bainbridge spoke of Christ weeping over unrepentant Jerusalem. Bainbridge
reminded his listeners that "today is the day of salvation."
If we put off repentance, we never know that we will have another opportunity.
"I was so far affected,"
wrote Goodwin, "that I said to a companion of mine who came to church with
me, and indeed had brought me to that sermon, 'That I hope to be the better for
this sermon as long as I live'." He fell under deep conviction
of sin and confessed his wickedness to Christ, but was unable to find assurance
of salvation until he realized that he must not trust his salvation to
improvements in himself, but rather fix his eyes on Jesus.
He became a notable pastor.
Favoring a congregational approach to church organization, he resigned a high
position at Cambridge. For some years, he lived in exile in Holland to escape
persecution by William Laud. When Charles I was driven from the throne, Goodwin
preached to Parliament. After the restoration, he was expelled from the
presidency of Magdalen College, Oxford by a hostile monarchy.
Goodwin died on
this day, February 22, 1680. His last words were: "Ah, is
this dying? How I have dreaded as an enemy this smiling friend."
Bibliography:
Davies, Guy.Thomas Goodwin; His Life, Times and Quest for
Assurance. (www.puritansermons.com/pdf/good04.pdf).
Goodwin,Thomas. The Works of Thomas Goodwin , D.D., sometime
president of Magdalene Colledge in Oxford ... [microform] London:
Printed by J.D. and S.R. for T.G., 1704.
"Index to Thomas Goodwin." Fire and Ice;
Puritan Sermons. (www.puritansermons.com/goodwin/goodindx.htm).
Whyte, Alexander. "Brief Biography [of Thomas
Goodwin]." (www.newble.co.uk/goodwin/biography.html).
Various encyclopedia and internet articles.
Last updated May, 2007.
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