
The Golden Scepter Held Forth to the Humble
ISBN: 97817321550779 Sermons on 2 Chronicles 7:14
"If My people, which are called by My name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land."
This text is one of the most quoted these days. But what does it mean for God's people to humble themselves? And it is not just that we must pray, but that we must turn from evil and seek God's face. And it is then that He will hear and heal our land. John Preston was one of the most celebrated and respected of the early English Puritans. He is most known for his Breastplate of Faith and Love, published by the Banner of Truth. But this important work needs to be as widely read and admired. Mostly it needs to be heeded and taken to heart.
Author:
John Preston was an English Puritan minister of the church, and master of Emmanuel College, Cambridge.
On Sunday, 20 July 1628, when he lay dying, they asked him if he feared death, now that it was so close. "No," whispered Preston; "I shall change my place, but I shall not change my company."
Endorsements:
"Based on the well-known text, 2nd Chronicles 7:14, 'The Golden Scepter' discusses several major practical subjects related to Christian living in a biblical, doctrinal, practical, and experiential manner. These subjects include affliction, humiliation, seeking God's face, turning from evil, forgiveness of sin, and sin itself. Like all of his other books, John Preston writes in a powerful and moving way, excelling in illustrations. Highly recommended!
--Dr. Joel R. Beeke, President, Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary, Grand Rapids, MI
"A vigorous of the probe, accompanied with abundance of healing balsam, is the general character of works on divinity that bear the date of our young Protestantism, even where the controversy is not so much as touched upon. So it is in this instance. We are covetous of such books. They startle by boldness of expression, by the stern energy of reproff and expostulation. They terrify, by the unvarnished display of those 'terrors of the Lord' which modern refinement love to wrap in circumlocution: and they win, by their striking views of Christ, in all the tenderness, all the fulness of his glorious character. Dr. Preston may be sasfely placed on the same shelf with Flavel, so far as this book enables us to judge."
--Charlotte Elizabeth, from 'The Christian Lady's Magazine
Additional Information:
Cover: | Hardcover |
Number of Pages: | 218 |
Publisher: | Northampton Press |
Publication Date: | 2020 |