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Devoted to the Service of the Temple: Piety, Persecution, and Ministry in the Writings of Hercules Collins
Devoted to the Service of the Temple: Piety, Persecution, and Ministry in the Writings of Hercules Collins
Devoted to the Service of the Temple: Piety, Persecution, and Ministry in the Writings of Hercules Collins
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Devoted to the Service of the Temple: Piety, Persecution, and Ministry in the Writings of Hercules Collins

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While largely forgotten in modern times, Hercules Collins (1646/1702) was highly influential among the late 17th and early 18th century Calvinistic Baptists of London. Through a biographical sketch and 35 sample selections collected from Collin's writings, Michael A.G. Haykin and Steve Weaver introduce us to the vibrant spirituality of this colossal figure.

Series Description

Seeking, then, both to honor the past and yet not idolize it, we are issuing these books in the series Profiles in Reformed Spirituality . The design is to introduce the spirituality and piety of the Reformed Profiles in Reformed Spirituality tradition by presenting descriptions of the lives of notable Christians with select passages from their works. This combination of biographical sketches and collected portions from primary sources gives a taste of the subjects’ contributions to our spiritual heritage and some direction as to how the reader can find further edification through their works. It is the hope of the publishers that this series will provide riches for those areas where we are poor and light of day where we are stumbling in the deepening twilight.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 1, 2008
ISBN9781601783967
Devoted to the Service of the Temple: Piety, Persecution, and Ministry in the Writings of Hercules Collins

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    Devoted to the Service of the Temple - Reformation Heritage Books

    Devoted to the Service of the Temple:

    Piety, Persecution, and Ministry in the Writings of Hercules Collins

    Introduced by

    Michael A. G. Haykin

    Edited by

    Michael A. G. Haykin and Steve Weaver

    with a foreword by

    James M. Renihan

    Reformation Heritage Books

    Grand Rapids, Michigan

    © 2007 by Michael A. G. Haykin and Steve Weaver, 2007

    Published by

    Reformation Heritage Books

    2965 Leonard St. NE

    Grand Rapids, MI 49525

    616-977-0889 / Fax: 616-285-3246

    e-mail: [email protected]

    website: www.heritagebooks.org

    ISBN 978-1-60178-022-5

    Printed in the United States of America

    13 14 15 16 17 18/10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2

    ISBN 978-1-60178-396-7 (epub)

    Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

    Collins, Hercules, d. 1702.

    Devoted to the service of the temple: piety, persecution, and ministry in the writings of Hercules Collins / introduced by Michael A.G. Haykin; edited by Michael A.G. Haykin and Steve Weaver; with a foreword by James M. Renihan.

    p. cm. — (Profiles in reformed spirituality)

    Includes bibliographical references and index.

    ISBN 978-1-60178-022-5 (pbk.: alk. paper)

    1. Reformed Baptists—Doctrines. I. Haykin, Michael A. G. II. Weaver, Steve. III. Title.

    BX6389.297.C65 2007

    286’.5—dc22

    2007024470

    For additional Reformed literature, request a free book list from Reformation Heritage Books at the above address.

    To

    Kirk and Debbie Wellum, for their friendship

    and their love for our precious Baptist heritage

    &

    to

    My wife, Gretta Weaver, and our children—

    Haddon, Hannah, Isaac,

    Jonathan, and Lydia—

    for their love and encouragement

    PROFILES IN REFORMED SPIRITUALITY

    series editors—Joel R. Beeke and Michael A. G. Haykin

    Michael Haykin, A Consuming Fire: The Piety of Alexander Whyte of Free St. George’s

    Michael Haykin, A Sweet Flame: Piety in the Letters of Jonathan Edwards

    Michael Haykin and Steve Weaver, Devoted to the Service of the Temple: Piety, Persecution, and Ministry in the Writings of Hercules Collins

    Michael Haykin and Darrin R. Brooker, Christ Is All: The Piety of Horatius Bonar

    J. Stephen Yuille, Trading and Thriving in Godliness: The Piety of George Swinnock

    Joel R. Beeke, The Soul of Life: The Piety of John Calvin

    Thabiti Anyabwile, May We Meet in the Heavenly World: The Piety of Lemuel Haynes

    Joel R. Beeke and Mark Jones, A Habitual Sight of Him: The Christ-Centered Piety of Thomas Goodwin

    Matthew Vogan, The King in His Beauty: The Piety of Samuel Rutherford

    James M. Garretson, A Scribe Well-Trained: Archibald Alexander and the Life of Piety

    Roger D. Duke and Phil A Newton, Venture All for God: Piety in the Writings of John Bunyan

    Adam Embry, An Honest, Well Experienced Heart: The Piety of John Flavel

    Ryan M. McGraw, The Foundation of Communion with God: The Trinitarian Piety of John Owen

    Table of Contents

    Profiles in Reformed Spirituality

    Foreword

    Acknowledgments

    The Piety of Hercules Collins (1646/7–1702)

    1. An old gospel

    2. Preaching from prison

    3. The Christ-finding soul

    4. Hold fast what thou hast

    5. God is the gospel

    6. The mercy of repentance

    7. Prison comforts

    8. Leaning on the promises

    9. Spiritual liberty

    10. Divine sovereignty and human responsibility

    11. God’s eternal will

    12. A sovereign and supreme will

    13. God—everywhere personally present

    14. Submitting to God’s will

    15. Words of light

    16. The sweetness of the Word in the school of affliction

    17. The value of the ordinances in the school of affliction

    18. Singing—sweet incense

    19. Grace sweetens the music

    20. Training elders within the Church

    21. The essential necessity of the Holy Spirit

    22. The art of preaching

    23. The value of pastoral ministry

    24. Some rules for interpreting Scripture

    25. Plain preaching

    26. Sermon preparation

    27. Preaching the whole counsel of God

    28. Some nuggets of advice about preaching

    29. The use of notes in preaching

    30. Calling a pastor

    31. Praying for the outpouring of the Spirit

    32. The laying on of hands

    33. Peace

    34. The believer’s ultimate comfort

    35. For thy blest Temple’s sake

    Appendix: John Piggott’s funeral sermon for Hercules Collins

    Bibliography

    Profiles in Reformed Spirituality

    Charles Dickens’s famous line in A Tale of Two CitiesIt was the best of times, it was the worst of times—seems well suited to western evangelicalism since the 1960s. On the one hand, these decades have seen much for which to praise God and to rejoice. In His goodness and grace, for instance, Reformed truth is no longer a house under siege. Growing numbers identify themselves theologically with what we hold to be biblical truth, namely, Reformed theology and piety. And yet, as an increasing number of Reformed authors have noted, there are many sectors of the surrounding western evangelicalism that are characterized by great shallowness and a trivialization of the weighty things of God. So much of evangelical worship seems barren. And when it comes to spirituality, there is little evidence of the riches of our heritage as Reformed evangelicals.

    As it was at the time of the Reformation, when the watchword was ad fontesback to the sources—so it is now: The way forward is backward. We need to go back to the spiritual heritage of Reformed evangelicalism to find the pathway forward. We cannot live in the past; to attempt to do so would be antiquarianism. But our Reformed forebearers in the faith can teach us much about Christianity, its doctrines, its passions, and its fruit.

    And they can serve as our role models. As R. C. Sproul has noted of such giants as Augustine, Martin Luther, John Calvin, and Jonathan Edwards: These men all were conquered, overwhelmed, and spiritually intoxicated by their vision of the holiness of God. Their minds and imaginations were captured by the majesty of God the Father. Each of them possessed a profound affection for the sweetness and excellence of Christ. There was in each of them a singular and unswerving loyalty to Christ that spoke of a citizenship in heaven that was always more precious to them than the applause of men.1

    To be sure, we would not dream of placing these men and their writings alongside the Word of God. John Jewel (1522–1571), the Anglican apologist, once stated: What say we of the fathers, Augustine, Ambrose, Jerome, Cyprian?… They were learned men, and learned fathers; the instruments of the mercy of God, and vessels full of grace. We despise them not, we read them, we reverence them, and give thanks unto God for them. Yet…we may not make them the foundation and warrant of our conscience: we may not put our trust in them. Our trust is in the name of the Lord.2

    Seeking, then, both to honor the past and yet not idolize it, we are issuing these books in the series Profiles in Reformed Spirituality. The design is to introduce the spirituality and piety of the Reformed tradition by presenting descriptions of the lives of notable Christians with select passages from their works. This combination of biographical sketches and collected portions from primary sources gives a taste of the subjects’ contributions to our spiritual heritage and some direction as to how the reader can find further edification through their works. It is the hope of the publishers that this series will provide riches for those areas where we are poor and light of day where we are stumbling in the deepening twilight.

    —Joel R. Beeke

    Michael A. G. Haykin

    1. R. C. Sproul, An Invaluable Heritage, Tabletalk 23, no. 10 (October 1999): 5–6.

    2. Cited in Barrington R. White, Why Bother with History? Baptist History and Heritage 4, no. 2 (July 1969): 85.

    Foreword

    As his name is, so is he. Thus says 1 Samuel 25:25, words appropriate for the subject of this book. Hercules Collins was indeed a mighty man of God. Though his name is not well known among his spiritual heirs, his labors for the kingdom of God continue to bear fruit. This little volume is evidence of the ongoing usefulness of the works of this seventeenth-century London pastor.

    Like most of his Particular Baptist brothers, Collins faced a multitude of disadvantages and troubles. Since the English Universities were closed to dissenters, he had no formal preparation for his ministry and yet he proved to be a careful student of the Scriptures. For much of his pastoral life, he served an illegal church, outlawed by the oppressive regime of the royally established Church, but that congregation never missed a Lord’s Day’s worship, even when Collins was imprisoned. Faithful, persevering, dedicated—these terms well describe him.

    By all accounts, he was driven by a love for Christ, His people, and His church—or we might say, as this book

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