Today we come to our third reading in Jeremiah Burroughs’ The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment. If you have not yet started the book but would like to read along with us, you’re not too late. We are only three chapters in and you can still easily catch up. Another couple of weeks and it may be difficult to catch up, so join in while you still can!
Summary
This is going to be a bit of an abbreviated summary. We’ve got sick people in the home and I’ve got to split my day between work and doctoring (or, at least, running to the store to buy soda crackers and ginger ale).Last week, in chapter two, Burroughs introduced “The Mystery of Contentment.” The business of this book, he says, is to do just this—to open to you the art and mystery of contentment. The mystery is this: how can a person be content with his affliction and yet thoroughly sensible of it at the same time, so that he even endeavors to remove it. “How to join these two together: to be sensible of an affliction as much as a man or woman who is not content; I am sensible of it as fully as they, and I seek ways to be delivered from it as well as they, and yet still my heart abides content—this is, I say, a mystery, that is very hard for a carnal heart to understand.” In the second chapter he provided seven “things for opening the mystery of contentment.” This week he continued with six more.
First, he (the Christian) lives upon the dew of God’s blessing. Like a person does not know what a grasshopper feeds upon (at least, he did not know back then), “in the same way a Christian can get food that the world does not know of; he is fed in a secret way by the dew of the blessing of God.” In other words, a Christian receives contentment in a way that is a mystery to the unbeliever. Here Burroughs offers five considerations of why a Christian finds contentment in what he has even though it may be only very little: all that he has is an expression of God’s love to him; what he has is sanctified to him for good; a gracious heart has what he has free of cost; what he has he has by right of Jesus Christ, by the purchase of Christ; and every bit of what he has is a down payment of sorts, a shadowing of the greater good that is to come. “Just as every affliction that the wicked have is but the beginning of sorrows, and forerunner of those eternal sorrows that they are likely to have hereafter in Hell, so every comfort you have is a forerunner of those eternal mercies you shall have with God in Heaven.”
Second, in all the afflictions, all the evils that befall him, the Christian can see the love, and can enjoy the sweetness of love in his afflictions as well as his mercies. Or, to quote Jerome, “He is a happy man who is beaten when the stroke is a stroke of love.”
Third, a godly man sees contentment as a mystery because just as he sees all his afflictions come from the same love that Jesus Christ did, so he sees them all sanctified in Jesus Christ, sanctified in a Mediator. The Christian can have all taken away from him and realize that Jesus, too, had no place to lay his head. He can be persecuted and realize that Jesus, too, was persecuted. And so “the exercising of faith on what Christ endured is the way to get contentment in the midst of our pains.”
Fourth, a gracious heart has contentment by getting strength from Jesus Christ; he is able to bear his burden by getting strength from someone else. Through faith a Christian is able to gain the strength of Christ. And so “faith is the great grace that is to be acted under afflictions.”
Fifth, a godly heart enjoys much of God in everything he has, and knows how to make up all wants in God himself. Here he uses an interesting and effective illustration that relies on pipes. “This indeed is an excellent art, to be able to draw from God what one had before in the creature. Christian, how did you enjoy comfort before? Was the creature anything to you but a conduit, a pipe, that conveyed God’s goodness to you? ‘The pipe is cut off,’ says God, ‘come to me, the fountain, and drink immediately.’” An extended quote will help, I think:
Now the Lord would not have the affections of his children to run waste; he does not care for other men’s affections, but yours are precious, and God would not have them to run waste; therefore he has cut off your other pipes that your heart might flow wholly to him. If you have children, and because you let your servants perhaps feed them and give them things, you perceive that your servants are stealing away the hearts of your children, you would hardly be able to bear it; you would be ready to send away such a servant. When the servant is gone, the child is at a great loss, it has not got the nurse, but the father or mother intends by sending her away, that the affections of the child might run more strongly towards himself or herself, and what loss is it to the child that the affections that ran in a rough channel before towards the servant, run now towards the mother? So those affections that run towards the creature, God would have run towards himself, that so he may be all in all to you here in this world.
Finally, for this chapter, a gracious heart gets contentment from the Covenant that God has made with him. This section will receive more attention in the next chapter.
And so Burroughs continues to do what he does so well—sharing biblical wisdom in a pointed, relevant, compassionate way. He uses occasional illustrations but useful ones. And through it all, he is pastoral, constantly drawing the Christian’s heart to the Savior. I continue to really enjoy this book.
Next Week
For next week, simply read chapter 4. Then, on Thursday, swing back by this site and we can discuss the chapter together a little bit.Your Turn
The purpose of this program is to read these classics together. So if there is something you’d like to share about what you read, please feel free to do so. You can leave a comment or a link to your blog and we’ll make this a collaborative effort.


Comments (11) »
1. Jude St.John
July 2, 2009
10:09 AM
Great summary Tim! I hope the ‘health index’ of your family raises in the coming week.
I focused on the fourth point that you summarized. Here is an excerpt from my post:
We see in point 11 that we do not find contentment by enduring and carrying burdens in our own strength; “I say, the eleventh mystery in contentment is this: A gracious heart has contentment by getting strength from Jesus Christ; he is able to bear his burden by getting strength from someone else.” Indeed, how many Christians would list the following verse as one of their favorites: I can do all things through him who strengthens me (Philippians 4:13).
It seems though, that Burroughs has considered the context of this verse. The two preceding verses are as follows: Not that I am speaking of being in need, for I have learned in whatever situation I am to be content. I know how to be brought low, and I know how to abound. In any and every circumstance, I have learned the secret of facing plenty and hunger, abundance and need. (Philippians 4: 11-12)
You can read the rest of my post here.
2. Laurie M.
July 2, 2009
11:35 AM
I’ve posted an overview of the chapter with some thoughts of my own here: http://lauriemo.blogspot.com/2009/07/rare-jewel-chapter-three.html
I plan to put up and additional post pertaining to Point 8 “He lives upon the dew of God’s blessing” a bit later.
3. Jessica Watson
July 2, 2009
11:51 AM
Point four reminds me of a favorite C.S. Lewis quote - “Aim at Heaven and you will get earth thrown in; aim at earth and you will get nothing.” ” Every good gift is from above,’ is how James puts it. Burroughs draws this thought out well in this point, expressing how although the wicked have forfeited all their rights to the comforts of this world, what a child of God has is his own, purchased for him by Christ. This is why we can be content, no matter how little our earthly possessions are; we truly possess them and can truly enjoy them.
I was also blessed by the last two pages where he discusses how God removes the evil from the evil that befalls us! What an awesome God, only He could do this. He will bring about His glory!
4. Dave Jaspers
July 2, 2009
12:24 PM
The blessings from reading this book are very rich. I actually read this third chapter a few weeks ago and I find myself excited to see the dew on my car in the morning when I go out to pick up my paper. It makes me think of this chapter.
The reminder of seeing afflictions as coming from the hand of God reminded me of Jonathan Edward’s excellent work “Charity and its Fruits.” He deals extensively with this theme, in fact, he devotes an entire lecture (Lecture IV) to a proper view of afflictions when they come in the form of injury at the hands of others. Amazing insights!
I re-read chapter three today and was blessed more than the first time through. Thanks for hosting this exercise in personal enrichment and sanctification.
5. Colleen
July 2, 2009
1:15 PM
I have been pondering what in my life has shared with God my affection. God would have the full steam of my affection run to Him. God has removed some of those things and it has not been an easy process but it has been a good one. The Lord is my portion, saith my soul (Lam. 3:24). Indeed my heritage is beautiful to me. (Psalm 16:6)
6. Lisa notes...
July 2, 2009
2:35 PM
How does Jesus help us when we need strength? Do we settle for too little of it? I focused on that point in my blog post about chapter 3.
I really enjoyed re-reading this chapter more slowly this week (I hurriedly read it last week), and now look forward to chapter 4. So much food for thought. The comments from others have also been very helpful.
7. Patrick Eaks
July 2, 2009
3:03 PM
“The truth is that afflictions of God’s people come from the same eternal love that Jesus Christ came from….All God’s strokes are strokes of love and mercy, all God’s ways are mercy and truth, to those that fear him and love him.”
I love this quote from Burroughs. This really does bring to light Romans 8:28 - And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose.
Praise God for His great love for us, in All things!
Patrick
8. Michael Duenes
July 2, 2009
5:10 PM
I was greatly encouraged by Burrough’s point that if we have God, we have all, even if we have nothing of this earth. this reminded me of 1 Cor.3:21-23, “All things belong to you…and you belong to Christ, and Christ belongs to God.” What reassurance there is in this.
I wasn’t sure I agreed with Burrough’s assertion that in heaven we will have no houses or clothes or what not. It seems to me that this is overspiritualizing the eternal state, but I’m not well versed in this area of theology.
Also, seeing our afflictions as sanctified in Christ was very encouraging. If we are poor, Christ was also poor. If we are ridiculed, so was Christ. If we are persecuted and killed, so was Christ.
I’m greatly benefitting from this book.
9. Debbie Blair
July 3, 2009
9:08 PM
I love how this chapter pointed to God as being my “all in all”. Since God is fully and eternally satisfied and content in Himself, then why would I think it possible to be fully satisfied and content in anything but Him alone?!
I am also reminded about how C.S. Lewis said “it would seem that Our Lord finds our desires, not too strong, but too weak. We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with… ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.”
“So those affections that run towards the creature, God would have run towards himself, that so he may be all in all to you here in this world.”
Tim’s summaries and everyone’s comments have been an additional blessing to me as I read this book!
10. Laurie M.
July 3, 2009
9:37 PM
I’ve just posted a compilation of my lecture and class discussion notes from this Chapter arranged in manner that, hopefully, makes them readable. Anyone interested can find them here: http://lauriemo.blogspot.com/2009/07/more-thoughts-on-mystery-of-contentment.html
11. Joseph Mancuso
July 3, 2009
10:49 PM
Jeremiah Burroughs is one of my favorite Puritan authors and this book is one of my favorites. It just so happens I am reading through it again right now apart from knowing that you are going through it! I am even at just about the same place! Looking forward to reading it along with you all now.