| John Howe |
| "For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus." 1 Timothy 2:5 |
John Howe (1630 - 1705), a nonconformist divine,
was often called the Platonic Puritan due to his gentlemanly manner in assailing
the heresies of his age. In 1654 Cromwell appointed Howe to be his domestic
chaplain. Although Cromwell took offence to one of Howe's sermons, in which Howe
censured certain opinions about divine impulses and special impressions in
answer to prayer, Cromwell nevertheless kept him on until Cromwell's death.
Revealingly, when Howe was chaplain to Cromwell
at Whitehall he became weary of the trumpery and pomp of the palace and wrote to
his dear and honored brother in Christ Jesus, Richard Baxter, telling him how
much he longed to be back again to his beloved work at Torrington, which was his
previous ministry. Thus, it is clear that Howe was a real pastor at heart.
The Act of Uniformity in 1662 forced Howe to
restrict his preaching to private assemblies. Accordingly, about nine years
later, in 1671, he went to Ireland, where he was allowed to preach freely. When
James II published his Declaration For Liberty Of Conscience, Howe returned to
London, where he headed the deputation of dissenting ministers who presented
their petition to the throne.
Among the Puritans, John Howe ranks as one of
eminence, and although he has received many accolades since his death, perhaps
this one by Skeats is the most telling --
"This great man was one of the few who have been
venerated as much by their contemporaries as by their successors. Time, which
commonly adds increased luster to the memory of the good, has not been able to
magnify any of the qualities, for which Howe was so conspicuous. His strong and
capacious intellect, his sublime elevation of thought, his flowing eloquence,
the holiness of his life, the dignity and courtesy of his manners, the humor of,
his conversation, won for him from the men of his own time the title of The
Great Howe."
Howe produced many works,
perhaps his most notable being, The Living Temple, and, The Redeemer's Tears
Over Lost Souls. His works are hard to find today, but they are pearls worth
possessing if you can find them.
"The primary or more principal notion that we are to have
of prayer, is to conceive of it as an act of worship, that is, as a homage due
and claimed to be paid to the great sovereign Lord of all. That is the principal
and prime notion that we are to have of prayer; that is, that it is such an act
of duty as wherein we are to own and acknowledge God: it is due to him, as he is
God, to be supplicated, sought to; that there be a dependence upon him,
professed and avowed by his reasonable creatures." Prayer And The Decrees Of God
"When we do pray, we do also express inclinations and
desires of our own, that we would have this or that brought about, when we
foreknow the event to be determined by the divine will: prayer is so far from
being excluded by that, that we pray with so much the more vigour and
cheerfulness and alacrity; and our hearts and souls are so much the more
enlarged and engaged and drawn forth in prayer, even when we know the things we
pray about are determined by the counsel of the divine will." Prayer And The
Decrees Of God
"It is a mighty damp to all rational desire to have no
hope." Prayer And The Decrees Of God
"When we do not foreknow the event, as not having any
discovery made to us what the counsels of the divine will concerning it are,
yet, even then, the business of prayer is to refer ourselves, with reference to
any such concernments, to the divine disposal. A thing most suitable to him and
to us; to him, as he is the wise and sovereign Lord of all; and to us, as we are
depending creatures, subject to his government, and are disposed of, in
reference to all our concernments, or whatsoever we have any concern about, as
he sees good." Prayer And The Decrees Of God
"Wherein we are ignorant of the event and what God will do,
the proper design of prayer is, to endeavour to obtain at his hands a
disposition of spirit complying with his pleasure, so as there may be no contest
between him and us; that whenever the event falls out, if it do prove agreeable
to our inclinations, we may rejoice in it with so much the more raised and
sincere gratitude; if it do not, that we may submit to him, without engaging in
a contest with one who giveth no account of any of his matters; and with whom,
none can contend and prosper... Therefore, the business we must design in such
prayer, or in prayer about such things, (the issue whereof we do not foreknow,)
is not to bring the divine will to ours, but to bring our will to his." Prayer
And The Decrees Of God
"Suppose one comes down a rapid stream in a boat, and hath
the opportunity to throw an anchor or hook on the shore, there he pulls, as
though he would draw the shore to the boat, and yet, all that he can be
rationally supposed to intend, is to draw the boat to the shore. So are we to
design in prayer, that plucking ourselves unto God, the drawing of our souls to
a compliance with him, that our wills may be brought to unite with his; not that
we can imagine to change his will by any thing we can say, more than in the
narrative of our prayer we do suppose to ourselves the informing him of any
thing whereof we suppose him before ignorant." Prayer And The Decrees Of God
"As if any man on earth is to petition a human judicature,
he must endeavour to know the style and phrase of the court, and that his
petition may be right in point of form; and especially so are we concerned to do
in this case, when we are to address the great God. There must be a becomingness
of God observed, that we address to him, as God is to be addressed to, and one
that is absolutely supreme, and perfectly wise and good." Prayer And The Decrees
Of God
"Such a conception of God, if our prayers do but carry with
them a conformity to that conception, that is, that we have this fixed
confidence concerning him, that he can do what he will, and that he will always
do what is best, we can never think that such prayers can ever be unavailing.
But this doth so highly agree with this apprehension, that he doth all that he
doth do according to the counsel of his own will, that it not only is not
prejudiced thereby, but we are greatly confirmed in it, that if he doth all
things according to the counsel of his own will, he will never do any thing that
is wrong, he will never do any thing that we ought to have so much as a wish
that it be otherwise than as he will do it; for as he can do whatsoever he will,
so he will always do whatsoever is best." Prayer And The Decrees Of God
"We ought to form our addresses and petitions to God,
according as his word hath given us direction... As to all those things that are
of principal concernment and necessity to us, we find directions in his word to
pray for such things, with promises they shall be granted upon serious and
sincere prayer." Prayer And The Decrees Of God
"We know his [God's] will so far about our principal
concernments, as that they who repent shall be forgiven, they who ask his Spirit
shall have it, to them that improve what they have, he will give more, that if
we set ourselves to work out our own salvation with fear and trembling, he will
work in us to will and to do of his own good pleasure." Prayer And The Decrees
Of God
"We have as express promises concerning temporal good
things as the nature of the things will bear, or our circumstances admit, and
therefore, God hath done more suitably to himself and us, in reference to such
things, in telling us all things shall work together for good to them that love
God and that are the called according to his purpose. Indeed, a person that is a
sincere lover of God, cannot but be the better by whatsoever event occurs to him
in external respects; for that love is an active principle in him, that
co-operates to the making good of the promise." Prayer And The Decrees Of God
"The interests of men in this world in reference to their
temporal concernments, do so generally interfere and cross with one another and
oppose one another, that it is impossible all prayers should be granted. For
there are many times prayers against prayers. One man or this sort of men prays
for this event, and another sort, for the quite contrary event. Therefore, it is
most absolutely necessary that the divine counsel should moderate, and have its
agency, not only in bringing about events, but even in forming the spirits of
men." Prayer And The Decrees Of God
"God is not otherwise to be enjoyed than as He is obeyed.
Nor indeed are the notions of Him as a Lord to be obeyed and as a good to be
enjoyed, entirely distinct; but are interwoven and do run into one another. We
obey Him even in enjoying Him; it being part of our enjoined duty to set our
hearts upon Him as our best and highest good; and we enjoy Him in obeying Him;
the advantage and benefit of His government being a real and most momentous part
of that good which we enjoy from Him and in Him." Of Delighting In God