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Wouldn't claim to agree with everything Baxter preaches, but was surprised by how applicable much of it is for today.
 
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KoestK | 16 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 21, 2023 |
good
"Edward Boltwood
June 30th 1855
 
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GoshenMAHistory | 1 weitere Rezension | Jul 10, 2022 |
Incredibly convicting, intellectually stimulating, and pastorally invigorating. This is a must-have for any who sense the call for ministry.
 
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ARad555 | 16 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 11, 2021 |
You can hear him pleading!

What a great book! Heart breaking and heart stirring!! Lord, help me to be so much more passionate and concerned about eternal welfare... Give me a love for people that offers You and You alone as remedy 💜
 
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Isaiah40 | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 7, 2021 |
this might be a new fave of all puritans... Baxter is always amazing. he cuts to the truth so carefully and thoroughly while offering so much hope and encouragement. he never holds back. this is NOT an ear-tickling book... but a gracious beckon to walk in the light and live in light of Christ's return... which can happen at any moment.
 
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Isaiah40 | 1 weitere Rezension | Sep 7, 2021 |
The Reason of this Work.

To all unsanctified per∣sons that shall read this Book; Especially of my Hearers in the Burrough and Parish of Kederminster.
The Contents.

These Books following of the same Authors, are also Print∣ed for Nevil Simmons Book-sel∣seller in Kederminster.

A CALL TO THE Unconverted.
 
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OLibrary | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 1, 2021 |
Richard Baxter is one of my favorite Puritan authors. His The Reformed Pastor is a classic that still bears the standard for all pastoral care instruction manuals. I think highly of Baxter, his ministry, and his writing.

Dying Thoughts was a bit of a disappointment for me. It was a challenging book, not only because of muddling through old english, but because Baxter's logic is not always easy to follow. The book was written later in his life as he faced the imminence of his own graduation to heaven. He writes about the hope that we have as Christians in the afterlife. I found nuggets of wisdom and joy, but they were not easily mined. For those looking for a book on heaven or on death, I would encourage them to look first at Randy Alcorn's Heaven. Baxter is simply too difficult of a read in this case (for the average layperson). This book has value for researchers, church historians, and pastors who want to comfort others as they approach death.

KEY QUOTES:

"None can use earth well, that prefer not heaven; and none but infants can come to heaven, that are not prepared for it by well using earth. heaven must have our highest esteem, and our habitual love, desire, and joy; but earth must have more of our daily thoughts for present practice" (6).

"We can love no farther than we know; and the more we know of jGod and glory, the more we shall love, desire, and trust" (35).

"If, therefore, my soul sees undeniable evidence of immortality, and is able by irrefragable arguments to prove a future blessedness; if I am convinced that divine promises are true, and trust my soul, and all my hope upon them; then neither my averseness to dying nor my irrational fear of entering upon eternity can invalidate the reasons of my hope or prove the unsoundness of my faith, but only the weakness of it" (36).

"My celestial advancement, therefore, will be no dilution but an inconceivable increase of my desirable knowledge of things on earth" (52).

"God is the same God in heaven as on earth, but I shall not be the same man. Here the windows of my soul are not open to his light; sin has raised clouds, and consequently storms, against my comforts. The entrances to my soul by the straits of flesh and sense are narrow, and they are made narrower by sin than they were by nature" (79, 80).½
 
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RobSumrall | 1 weitere Rezension | Jun 20, 2017 |
This book has great things to say about pastoral self care, pastoral vocation and the priority of catachesis. I do think Baxter is a little dour and I would question how some of his methodology would translate, but I am wowed by the sacredness in which he views his vocation and the attentiveness he had towards his flock.
 
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Jamichuk | 16 weitere Rezensionen | May 22, 2017 |
Used in a Pastoral Theology & Administration class in college.
 
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LeviDeatrick | 16 weitere Rezensionen | Oct 6, 2016 |
This is No. 16 of the "Great Christian Classics" series. This book is an abridged version of Richard Baxter's "The Reformed Pastor: A Discourse on the Pastoral Office" (written in 1808).
 
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faithfilly | Jan 29, 2016 |
Good content, but as as these were taken from sermons and speeches that Baxter gave in the 1600's, can be a little difficult to read through. Highly recommend it for the content though, especially for pastors that don't understand their calling as shepherds very well.
 
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mdubois | 16 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 14, 2013 |
I needed to read a this book to do research for a paper. I ended up reading the whole book. Yes, it is typically puritan in that it is quite wordy. Unless you have a real interest in this type of work it would be boring. However, his sincere concern to serve Christ by caring for those individuals in his care and aiding them in being faithful shines through. It's not a fast read although it's an easy read. It's not fast because it's not the kind of book that you can sit down and read in one fell swoop.

Baxter also approaches issues that are interesting in today's church world. He speak's quite openly and critically of churches that understaff parishes, and of clergy that accept such understaffing. He maintains that it is impossible for a minister to do more than public ministry in an understaffed church and that is not sufficient to build up the people, and when there is insufficient care for the people then the church suffers.
 
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mjperry | 16 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 30, 2013 |
It can result in more earthly good than you realize.
 
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kijabi1 | Jan 6, 2012 |
This is a must-read for the pastor and someone who believes they are called or desire the office of Elder/pastor. In fact, it should be an annual read. Baxter convicts the reader of the sheer magnitude of the work and inherent laziness that may creep in to the pastor's life. A masterpiece from one of the greats.
 
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soakland | 16 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 1, 2011 |
A wonderful and expansive volume which cover a wide range of issues by one of the greatest men of the Puritan era. This edition is published by Soli Deo Gloria. This volume is clothbound. The type is small with double columns. However, it will still likely be one of the larger books on your shelf (not one you're likely to carry to the doctors office!).
 
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cmsheffield | 1 weitere Rezension | Oct 31, 2010 |
The Reformed Pastor by Richard Baxter is an extremely slow read. Being that it was written such a long time ago, the language has that sense of dry archaism. While I found it a chore to read, I understand its importance, but more for people who are wanting to be, or are, pastors.

Baxter makes many good points about the purpose of a pastor, addressing his contemporaries who, it seems, were abusing their positions of authority. It was a different world back then, with some pastors profiteering in the name of God. I’m sure there’s no such pastor alive today who would DARE do such a thing.

But if there were, I’d highly recommend they read this book, and learn what it means to be a pastor, and not just an entertainment figure whose watered-down gospel tastes more like Chicken Soup than the fruit of the spirit.½
 
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aethercowboy | 16 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 16, 2010 |
As a church leader I was strongly challenged and heartily encouraged by this book. Baxter is absolutely on fire for Jesus and utterly focussed on seeing people know Jesus better. I'm not entirely convinced that his methodology is as clearly scripturally mandated as he is, or that it's appropriate or possible in today's Western culture. Despite that, I was absolutely inspired by his passion and zeal for people and his conviction that our actions and decisions now have eternal consequences.½
 
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tcarter | 16 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 23, 2010 |
The Reformed Pastor is perhaps one of the most potent and piercing works on the pastoral ministry ever written. Richard Baxter holds nothing back and with every line seeks to rattle the Minister of Christ out of his slumber to a more sober and vigilant attention to the grand task he's been assigned. This little paperback edition is more than economical for the preacher with little money for books. Put it at the top of your list!
 
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cmsheffield | 16 weitere Rezensionen | Nov 15, 2009 |
The book was actually a delightful surprise while reading. What I mean is I thought it was going to be about reformed theology but it was not nor was it even about theology in any aspect. It was about reforming pastors for the ministry. It is not for those looking for a feel-good or 8 step to book to success and happiness. This book is about being a pastor and having a level of excellence in ministry. The material is very raw, blunt, and straight to the point to get at the heart of a shepherd.



I read this book because so many people have spoken of it as a classic. I heard Voddie Baucham one time quote from the book several times when speaking to pastors. On the same chord I once was listening to John MacArthur speak to pastors at conference and he cited and quoted the book a number of times during his message. Hearing this I like I have to get this book and read it. Now I know why. His single-minded devotion to God and his tender, shepherd’s heart for his flock have inspired pastors for over 300 years.

It is an extended lecture he proposed to give to a local ministerial association in 1656. The book uses as its foundation and framework Acts 20:28: “Therefore take heed to yourselves and to all the flock, among which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers, to shepherd the church of God which He purchased with His own blood.” The book first deals with pastors “taking heed” to their own spiritual state and life, and then turns its attention to taking heed to all the flock. As to the topic of taking heed to their own spiritual lives, Baxter starts at the beginning, with making sure the reader is truly a Christian, and progresses through disciplines, qualifications, and indwelling sin. He next emphasizes the reasons why a pastor must be rigorous in his own spiritual life. He expounds reasons such as how many eyes are on the man of God, how difficult the work is, and how the honor of Christ depends on it. He reminds his reader of many practical insights, such as “all that a minister does is a kind of preaching” and to avoid the error of men who “study hard to preach exactly, and study little or not at all to live exactly.”



After dealing with the pastor’s personal life, he tackles the pastor’s responsibility to shepherd his congregation. His most radical recommendation, radical back then and almost unthinkable to American churches today, is for a pastor to personally visit and catechize people (for those unfamiliar with the term, it means to teach a list of several hundred questions and answers of basic theology). Specifically, he says a pastor should catechize each and every family, in the pastor’s entire town, each and every year. In Baxter’s town that meant 2000 people in 800 families, that he and his associate pastor took two full days every week to go through the whole town every year.

He bluntly states, “If the pastoral office consists of overseeing all the flock, then surely the number of souls under the care of each pastor must not be greater than he is able to take such heed as to here is required.” Yea, and I’m sure the pastoral staff of most churches personally know every member of their flock. And yes, I know that we consider Sunday School teachers or small group leaders to be “overseeing the flock”- but how many of those leaders in our churches see themselves as shepherds, have been theologically trained and commissioned as overseers, one-on-one ask them regularly about their spiritual life, and are seen by the members of their class or group as having spiritual responsibility over them?

After reading The Reformed Pastor, I must state that - this is absolutely essential reading for any man called to the ministry, to pin him against the wall and make him take stock of his ministry, his priorities, and his life before God, and to make him deeply consider about how best to “take heed over” himself and all his flock.



After reading this book the reader will see Baxter’s time was not too unlike our own. Despite there being a large theological agreement that there must be discipline within the Church, very few leaders in the church are willing to carry it out. Baxter reminds us, and convincingly so, that we must do so for not only the good of the soul of the individual, but for the rest of the Church, and even ourselves. Most of the book rotates around the subject of discipline in the pastoral ministry. It also contains many other details concerning the ministry that would be good for any aspiring, or current pastor to read.



Besides the “pastoral epistles” of Paul (1st & 2nd Timothy, and Titus) I know of no other piece of work that will prepare you and teach you the way that those who lead the church ought to be. I would recommend it to anyone who has a heart for the Lords work, not just pastors.

It can be a very painful book in many areas because it will cause you to look at yourself and wonder if you are really walking the life that The Lord wants from those who lead his people. Its very difficult to find the words to describe how incredible this book is. Physically, this book weighs about as much as any other paper back. Spiritually, you wont be able to lift it off the ground, much less turn a page. A great work written by a great Puritan Pastor.
 
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moses917 | 16 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 5, 2009 |
kézikönyv lelkipásztoroknak (must read!!!)
 
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tothmika | 16 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 30, 2009 |
A splendid work with great depth as Baxter seeks to speak to the issues of the Christian life.
 
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BookAlert | 1 weitere Rezension | Sep 28, 2008 |
If you're a pastor, this is a must read. It's overwhelming, and pointed, but it will shape your ministry for the better.
 
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theologicaldan | 16 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 12, 2007 |
Baxter is not easy to read but this book is worth the effort.
 
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TullyFamily | 16 weitere Rezensionen | Oct 20, 2006 |
Great book on the problems in the church. Even though this book was written over 300 hundred years ago a lot of the problems in this book are still around.
 
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JohnnieBurgessJr | 16 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 22, 2006 |
Reprint of the edition publ. by Blackie and Son, 1890
 
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ME_Dictionary | Mar 19, 2020 |