Share This Episode
Renewing Your Mind R.C. Sproul Logo

The Delectable Mountains

Renewing Your Mind / R.C. Sproul
The Truth Network Radio
November 6, 2025 12:01 am

The Delectable Mountains

Renewing Your Mind / R.C. Sproul

00:00 / 00:00
On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 2064 podcast archives available on-demand.

Broadcaster's Links

Keep up-to-date with this broadcaster on social media and their website.


November 6, 2025 12:01 am

In John Bunyan's classic allegory, The Pilgrim's Progress, the Lord's Day is depicted as a time of spiritual growth and renewal, a 'market day of the soul' where Christians can acquire spiritual blessings and draw closer to God. The Puritans saw the Lord's Day as a time to gather together under the oversight of godly shepherds, who feed and care for the flock, and to catch glimpses of heaven through the scriptures.

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE:
Science, Scripture & Salvation Podcast Logo
Science, Scripture & Salvation
John Morris
Faith And Finance Podcast Logo
Faith And Finance
Rob West
Focus on the Family Podcast Logo
Focus on the Family
Jim Daly

The Lord's Day is something to be enjoyed. They are delectable mountains and they are full of extraordinary blessings. The Puritans didn't see the Lord's Day as a burden. They didn't approach it in a legalistic fashion. They saw it as something to look forward to and anticipate.

It is the market day of the soul. In many places today, the Lord's Day, Sunday. is no longer esteemed or observed as it once was. In recent years, some even in the church have questioned whether or not it's important to gather together in person. But in the 17th century, The Puritans saw the Lord's Day as a blessing.

And John Bunyan describes it Like being on delectable mountains. You're listening to the Thursday edition of Renewing Your Mind? I'm Nathan W. Bingham. This week, we are walking through Bunyan's classic allegory, The Pilgrim's Progress.

And the main character of the tale is a man named Christian.

So far this week, he has walked through the Valley of the Shadow of Death and Vanity Fair. and he was held captive in Giant Despair's castle. But today, he finds himself somewhere delectable. what he called The Delectable Mountains. Here's a Legionnaier Teaching Fellow, Derek Thomas.

guide us through this section. and help us see the value and blessing of the Lord's Day and gathered worship. Welcome back. We come to the delectable mountains today. And uh Do you remember when Christian was in the palace beautiful and on the last day He was taken to a little spot where in the distance He could see The Delectable Mountains.

Well, since then he has been in many a different place, and none of them delectable. He has just emerged from doubting Castle And uh Giant Despair and uh Giant Despair's wife. Uh diffidence. They've been there from Wednesday. uh evening until Saturday uh evening.

And uh Saturday evening at midnight, And then you remember Uh that uh Christian suddenly remembers that he has a key in his pocket. Uh called promise and that has been the instrument. with which he managed to escape from the castle. Bunyan, of course, was teaching a lesson about prayer. Have we trials and temptations?

Is there trouble anywhere? You should never be discouraged, take it to the Lord. in prayer. Interesting that uh they were there in the castle. uh from Wednesday until Saturday.

I think I mentioned earlier In an early lecture, that might have reflected the period when Jesus. uh was tried and tested in the final week of his life and The darkness of the Saturday. uh when he was uh dead and buried uh and then resurrected on the Lord's Day. Perhaps also Bunyan is thinking of the story of uh Paul and Silas in Philippi. And then at midnight they're singing psalms, and it is at midnight that they are released.

uh from that imprisonment uh in Uh Philippi.

Well, Christian and hopeful. Uh make their way They're now back along the path, the bypath meadow, and they cross over the stile and they get back on to the road that they were supposed to be on. Uh all along. And now they head in the direction of the delectable Mountains. Vaughan Williams, Rafe Vaughan Williams, has a wonderful piece of music.

It lasts about twenty minutes or so. And it's called The Shepherds of the Delectable Mountains. 'Cause Vaughan Williams wrote something of an opera. It's not quite an opera in the classic genre of an opera, but he wrote an opera on Pilgrim's Progress. been revived of late.

It had been left in.

Something of a neglect throughout much of the late 20th century, but recently it has been. revived again and it has some extraordinarily beautiful. Uh music in it.

Well, let's pick up the story. Then I saw in my dream that on the morrow he got up to go forwards, but they desired him to stay till the next day also. And then, said they, we will, if the day be clear, show you the delectable mountains. This is back in the Palace Beautiful. which they said would yet further add to his comfort.

So he consented and stayed, and when the morning was up they had him to the top of the house and bid him look south.

So he did. And behold, at a great distance He saw a most plain pleasant mountainous country. beautified with woods, vineyards, Fruits of all sorts, flowers also, with springs and fountains. Very delectable to behold. Then he asked the name of the country.

And they said, it was. Emmanuel's Land. and when thou comest there, from thence, said they, Thou mayest see to the gate. of the celestial city.

So there's been some anticipation in getting to these delectable mountains because from the delectable mountains you can actually see the gate. of the celestial city.

Now, these delectable mountains are described then as having gardens and Orchards and vineyards and fountains of water. And on the top of the mountain, Christian and Hopeful encounter shepherds. And there. feeding their flocks. We're introduced to four of them.

Knowledge. Experience Watchful. and sincere.

Now who are they? And what does this place represent in Bunyan's allegory.

Now some have suggested that the delectable mountains represents what Mature Christian believers occasionally C. They rise to a spiritual maturity in which they. Catch little glimpses of Emmanuel's land, That there are these experiences in the lives of Christians. In which We catch a glimpse of heaven. We are taken, as it were, above.

Um the ordinary and the humdrum and the day-to-day and the routine. And we just catch a little. Foretaste, a little glimpse of Emmanuel's land. There would certainly have been Puritans in the 17th century who would have fought in that way. Perhaps, too, this is another description, just like Palace Beautiful.

This is another description of the church and Bunyan's love for the church and his love for. The ordinances of the church, and especially the shepherds, then would. Be the teaching elders or the ministers or the pastors. uh of the flock of god and Since they had left, you remember on a Saturday evening, this now, in your mind, this event that's about to take place is taking place on The Lord's Day. And therefore, there's something to be said about that second interpretation that Bunyan is actually thinking here about the church.

The blessings that come To the people of God through the means of grace and through church and through pastors and preaching and fellowship and so on.

So let's uh explore these uh delectable mountains together. I think the first thing we see is Uh the pattern of the Lord's Day. This would have been very important in the middle of the 17th century. It would have been important. Uh to Bunyan.

Bunyan, as all of the Puritans, had a theology of the Lord's Day. They had a A theology of the Sabbath. They saw the Lord's Day as a continuation. Of the Old Testament Sabbath, with some of the ceremonial aspects having been stripped away. but the continuity of the pattern.

of one day in seven. We've mentioned before in previous lectures John Geary. John Geary was an English Puritan and he wrote a little A little tract. He wrote it almost at the end of his life, and it was published in 1645. And that's uh That's about 20 years or so before Pilgrim's Progress, right in the middle of the Westminster Assembly, if that helps you.

put that into context. The character of an old English Puritan or non-conformist, and Bunyan certainly would have been a non-conformist. by John Geary. Preacher of the Word, sometime at Tewkesbury, but now at St. Albans.

published according to order in London. And this is what he has to say about the Lord's Day. The Lord's Day He esteemed, this is how a Puritan would view the Lord's Day. The Lord's Day he esteemed a divine ordinance. and rest on it necessary, so far as it is conducted to uh holiness.

He was very conscientious in observance of that day as the marked of the soul. at the market day of the soul.

So on the Lord's Day, you go to the marketplace and you acquire these wonderful things. And that's how John Geary and Puritans like Bunyan viewed the Lord's Day. as the market day of the soul. I sometimes say It's like going to Walmart. and you discover things that you didn't really realize that you needed.

You go along the shelves and you think, oh yes, I need that. And oh yes, I need that too. And the Lord's Day is a bit like that. You acquire things that you didn't realize that you needed.

So for Bunyan, I think the Lord's Day of the New Covenant follows the pattern. Of the Sabbath, of the old time. Testament, a cycle. a weekly cycle of one day in seven. Set apart for the worship of God, and on which day.

uh we acquire some wonderful Things.

Now the point I think here is that the Lord's Day is something to be enjoyed. They are delectable mountains and they are full of extraordinary water. blessings. The Puritans didn't see the Lord's Day as a burden. They didn't approach it in a legalistic fashion.

They saw it as something to look forward to and anticipate. It was the first day of the week. It was a pattern of the gospel, and in the Old Testament it was work followed by rest, and in the New Covenant it's rest. followed by work, and that's a gospel. A pattern.

And especially in Giri's language, It is the market day of the soul.

So first of all, then An emphasis on the Lord's Day and on the blessings. and happiness and contentment. of the Lord's Day. Second thing we see is the provision of godly elders or perhaps godly ministers in Bunyan's mind, these shepherds. Knowledge.

experience, watchful. and sincere.

These are the four that we're introduced to. and they're feeding the flock. Bunyan, of course, was involved, as many of the Puritans were in the 17th century. trying to work out an ecclesiology. And Banyin was a non-conformist, he was a Baptist.

And saw the provision of godly ministers as something that God gives to the church and a thing to be. Uh thankful for and Uh something to which uh we draw attention here. These are elders. Our terminology may be different. We view them as elders or Presbyters or bishops or shepherds reflecting.

Some Greek words pres buteros and episkopos and poimane. variously translated as a presbyter or a bishop or a shepherd. And it's the word shepherd especially that Bunyan. uh is drawing attention to. Ministers Elders are shepherds and they care for the sheep.

And he's thinking, I think, especially of shepherds who. who labor in the word. Who expound the word, who proclaim the word, who preach the word, who pastor according to the teaching. Uh of the word. We've already been introduced to The man In the House of Interpreter, that picture of the man on the wall, a very grave.

A person who has the best of books in his hand, and the world is to his back, and he begets children. He travels. In births. uh to produce children and to nurse them and to feed them uh when they are born. And it's a it's a picture of a of a godly elder and a shepherd who takes care of the flock.

Now Bunyan, of course, is And And one thinks of Him in prison for twelve years, and he had already been elected as the minister of the Church, the Bedford Baptist. uh church a non-conformist Uh church. And uh His longing and his desire to be a pastor. And you can imagine something of the pathos. uh with which he must have been uh thinking as he wrote this particular section.

of Pilgrim's Progress. Then Thirdly, in this section, the perseverance of the saints. Christian and Hopeful find themselves near three hills in the Delectable Mountains. Two of which have have warnings of danger. Have you noticed how many times in Pilgrim's progress, there are warnings of danger.

Warnings about not continuing, warnings about not persevering. This is the way that you go and not that way and not that way. Narrow is the path that leads to eternal life and Few there be that find it. And many times now as we've been reading and studying together, Pilgrim's Progress. We've seen examples of those.

who seem to be believers, they they seem to be genuine. They seemed to make a credible profession of faith. But they give up, they turn back, they are frightened. Timarus and his friend, when they saw the lions, they head backwards, terrified. And all along, even at the foot of the cross, you remember there were three.

Who were asleep and didn't see the warning signs of danger. We'll come across them again. in book two of Pilgrim's Progress. and their circumstances will be very grave indeed. Uh when we come to book two.

Well here too Christian and Hopeful see these signs, these warning signs of danger. And no sooner had Christian lost his burden Then he comes within sight of danger. And now that he's within sight of Bulaland, he's still getting warnings. about danger. He needs to persevere.

He that perseveres to the end shall be saved. emphasized the end. We need to persevere right up to the gates. of the celestial city.

The first hill is called Error. And it brought about the death of Hymeneus and Philetus. This is a reference, of course, to 2 Timothy chapter 2 and Verses seventeen and eighteen. They're teaching Hymenius and Philetus. Their teaching will spread like gangrene.

Among them are Hymeneus and Philetus, who have wandered away from the truth. They say that the resurrection has already taken place and they destroy the faith. of some Puritans read these passages in the New Testament, even though they believed in the perseverance of the saints that the elect will get to glory. Having begun a good work, he will complete it unto the day of Jesus Christ. But that was only true of the elect.

You could profess to be a Christian and not be one of the elect. you could make a credible profession of faith in the eyes of others around you and even in the eyes of the church and still not be one of the elect. You could be a Judas. And the Puritans emphasized that a great deal.

Now this hill sloped upward, innocently enough. But on the other side of the hill called error. There is a fearful Precipice. And over that precipice Many a professing Christian seems to fall. And that's what they see.

Then there's another hill and it's called caution. And uh Christian and hopeful. uh can see over the edge of the hill called caution, and down in the valley below they see blind men and they're walking uh about among the tombs. and they are those who have been blinded by giant despair. This is the castle from which they have just escaped.

And giant despair has blinded these men, and they're wandering about among the tombs. It's a very vivid picture and you can imagine They're wandering about and reaching out, and they're touching the headstones of these tombs, and perhaps there's a kind of mist. in the area and they look down, it's a very eerie sight and we're told that the pilgrims, Christian and hopeful, Uh look at each other and weep. for the sadness of it. And then the shepherds show them a door.

In the side of the hill, from which they hear tormented cries and they smell Brimstone. This is a byway to hell. A way that hypocrites go in.

Now, this puts the book, doesn't it, so firmly in the seventeenth century and These are Puritans Bunyan believed in hell Bunyan believed in eternal torment. But especially Bunyan believed that the Bible teaches That you can make a profession of faith, that you can even pass certain external standards and still be a hypocrite. You can still be a Judas. It's part of the teaching of the perseverance of the saints. The saints actually do persevere.

But there's always a possibility that you don't persevere. And if you don't persevere, you're not one of the saints. And even At this Late stage in the journey There is a door in the side of the hill, and if you enter that door, it leads straight. Right. To hell.

What a warning. How solemn. What urgency there would be to persevere, to keep on going. Yeah. to demonstrate that we do have Marks, signs, evidences that we are actually one of the elect, that we are regenerate.

that were indwelt by the Holy Spirit. The gospel is truly the foundation upon which we are building. Our lives.

Now Christian and hopeful Look at this, they see these three things. this precipice over which certain professing Christians are falling over. They're reminded of Hymenaeus and Philetus.

Now they see this tombstone area, this cemetery. In which blind folk, blinded by giant despair, are wandering about. And then they see this uh This doorway on the side of the hill. A byway to hell A way that hypocrites go in.

Well, they see a pattern of the Lord's Day, they see the wonderful provision for the godly. that they see something about the need to persevere to the end. But they also see in the fourth place a prospect of what is to come. Christian and Hopeful come near. The foothills of the delectable mountains, and they come to a ridge called.

clear. And from there, with the aid of what Bunyan calls A perspective glass, a telescope if you will, they see something like the gate. And also some of the glory. Of the place. They're looking now toward Bulaland, they're looking toward.

The Eternal City. They're looking Through this telescope, and they see Something like the gate. and also some of the glory of that place.

Now, do you understand what Bunin is saying? Remember, this is an allegory of the Lord's Day and of the church and of shepherds who are feeding you. And sometimes on the Lord's Day. Your catch with the aid of a perspective glass, The Bible the scriptures A little glimpse. of heaven, A little glimpse of Emmanuel's Land That was the Puritan view of the Lord's Day.

that you gather together under the oversight and teaching of godly shepherds and Every now and then you catch Just a little glimpse. of heaven. And that's why I think the Puritans loved the Lord's Day. And that's why they called it the Market Day. Of the soul.

Isn't that a beautiful image of the Lord's Day? And in a world that continues to get busier and noisier, We need these reminders to cherish Sunday. and gathered worship and as the market place of the soul, as delectable mountains. You're listening to the Thursday edition of Renewing Your Mind, as Derek Thomas is taking us on a guided tour through the classic Christian allegory, The Pilgrim's Progress. This book from Jean Bunyan is beloved by many families, mine included.

And we'll send you a copy of the book. Along with Dr. Thomas's 19-part guided tour through it, when you donate today at renewingyourmind.org, or when you call us at 800-435-4343. That's a book, a D V D, and digital access to the Messages and Study Guide as our way of saying thank you for supporting Renewing Your Mind and helping place trusted teaching into the hands of more Christians around the world. Donate today at renewingyourmind.org, especially as copies of the Pilgrim's Progress book Are While Supplies Last.

You can also use the link in the podcast show notes. Derek Thomas' series is an immersive study so that you don't miss the significance of the places and characters in The Pilgrim's Progress. If you live outside of the US and Canada, the series and study guide are available digitally for you at renewingyourmind.org slash global. Respond now before this offer ends tomorrow. Every journey must come to an end, and for Christian and his companion Hopeful, they're about to reach the celestial city.

And that'll be tomorrow, here on Renewing Your Mind.

Get The Truth Mobile App and Listen to your Favorite Station Anytime