Do not even such things as are most bitter to the flesh, tend to awaken Christians to faith and prayer, to a sight of the emptiness of this world, and the fadingness of the best it yield? Doth not God by these things (ofttimes) call our sins to remembrance, and provoke us to amendment of life? How then can we be offended at things by which we receive so much good?....
Therefore if mine enemy hunger, let me feed him; if he thirst, let me give him drink. Now in order to do this,
i) we must see good in that, in which other men see none.
ii) we must pass by those injuries that other men would revenge.
iii) We must show we have grace, and that we are made to bear what other men are not acquainted with.
iv) many of our graces are kept alive, by those very things that are the death of other men's souls...the devil, (they say) is good when he is pleased; but Christ and His saints, when displeased.
John Bunyan, as quoted in A Puritan Golden Treasury, p14
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