Deeply are the churches of Christ indebted to the Holy Spirit for having assisted his honoured servant to write this treatise; and we are under great obligation to his friend, Charles Doe, for having handed it down to us, as he found it prepared for the press, with other excellent treatises, among the author’s papers after his decease. It abounds with those striking ideas peculiar to the works of the author of the Pilgrim’s Progress; most faithful home thrusts at conscience, which those who really desire to know themselves will greatly prize. It has been very properly observed that the words used by the author, as descriptive of the text, may, with great propriety, be applied to this treatise—‘It is a sharp and smart description’ of the desires of a righteous man.

The desires of the righteous are very graphically impersonated and described. They reach beyond time and peep into eternity. ‘The righteous have desires that reach further than this world, desires that have so long a neck as to look into the world to come.’ ‘So forcible and mighty are they in operation’; ‘is there not life and mettle in them? They loose the bands of nature—harden the soul against sorrow—they are the fruits of an eagle-eyed confidence.’ They enable the soul ‘to see through the jaws of death—to see Christ preparing mansion-houses for his poor ones that are now kicked to and fro, like footballs in the world!’ ‘A desire will take a man upon its back and carry him away to God, if ten thousand men oppose it.’ ‘It will carry him away after God to do his will, let the work be never so hard.’ The new man is subject to transient sickness, during which desire fails in its power when the inner man has caught a cold.

Bunyan’s views of church fellowship are always lovely; they are delightfully expressed. He also introduces us to the unsearchable riches of Christ. ‘The righteous desire a handful, God gives them a seaful; they desire a country, God prepares for them a city.’ Wonders of grace to God belong.

Bunyan’s pictures of the natural man are equally faithful and striking—when guilt and conviction take hold on him—when pestilence threatens to break up his house-keeping—and death takes him by the throat and hauls him down stairs to the grave; then he, who never prayed, crieth, Pray for me, and the poor soul is as loath to go out of the body for fear the devil should catch it, as the poor bird is to go out of the bush while she sees the hawk waiting to receive her. But I must not detain the reader longer from entering on this solemn and impressive treatise, but commend it to the Divine blessing.

GEO. OFFOR.
THE DESIRE OF THE RIGHTEOUS GRANTED.

‘The desire of the righteous is only good.’—Proverbs 11:23

‘The fear of the wicked, it shall come upon him; but the desire of the righteous shall be granted.’—Proverbs 10:24

This book of the Proverbs is so called because it is such as containeth hard, dark, and pithy sentences of wisdom, by which is taught unto young men knowledge and discretion (1-6). Wherefore this book is not such as discloseth truths by words antecedent or subsequent to the text, so as other scriptures generally do, but has its texts or sentences more independent; for usually each verse standeth upon its own bottom, and presenteth by itself some singular thing to the consideration of the reader; so that I shall not need to bid my reader go back to what went before, nor yet to that which follows, for the better opening of the text; and shall therefore come immediately to the words, and search into them for what hidden treasures are contained therein.

[First.] The words then, in the first place, present us with the general condition of the whole world; for all men are ranked under one of these conditions, the wicked or the righteous; for he that is not wicked is righteous, and he that is not righteous is wicked. So again, ‘Lay not wait, O wicked man, against the dwelling of the righteous, spoil not his resting-place.’ I might give you out of this book many such instances, for it flows with such; but the truth hereof is plain enough.