As a friend of mine said in her review of this book, the title Precious Remedies Against Satan's Devices doesn't quite give you a great impression. It sounds either overly charismatic, or way, WAY too “lovey-dovey”, and thus not truly biblical. Yet she read the book and spoke quite convincingly of the edifying, Scriptural tone of the work. So I decided to look into the book myself.
Precious Remedies was published in 1652 by Puritan author Thomas Brooks. Those who have read the book Amazing Grace (Eric Metaxas' biography of William Wilberforce), or else another good book on the history of Great Britain, may have some idea of what was and had been going on for a while. War, disillusionment with religion, and so on. It was in this very difficult time that Brooks wrote his work.
Of note is that Brooks was possessed of a very powerful intellect, and a sense of propriety and love that would have served others at times. Though not afraid to challenge the prevailing attitudes of his day, he did so in a way that seemed designed to balance standing up for the truth with avoiding unnecessarily antagonizing those who were outside of Christ, and thus to whom he was supposed to be witnessing. I bring this up just to contrast Brooks with John Bunyan, author of The Pilgrim's Progress, who seemed to positively revel in being as offensive as possible to those with whom he disagreed. About anything. This showed itself in how Brooks wrote of never allowing theological debates to sidetrack the love that those who were true Christians (or as some would later term it, those who had accepted the “fundamentals of the faith”) were supposed to have for each other, or allowing such debates to cause discord and friction in the Body of Christ. Not that such debates were not important. They are, but they aren't important enough to justify dislike and genuine discord among believers. This is in sharp contrast to Bunyan who seemed to paint every group with whom he disagreed in even the smallest way as full of anti-Christs.
The above is important for me to mention not because I want to trash Bunyan or caricature him, but because it gives the difference between this religious treatise and that of Bunyan and many others of the era. Brooks didn't even try to vent any frustrations, or try to single-handedly “fix” anything in society or the church at the time. He simply put forth his viewpoints and allowed his readers to be guided by God's Holy Spirit to the betterment of themselves, the Church, and society. Not that Brooks didn't care, so much as he seemed (my opinion alone) to have decided to focus on perennial problems the Church may have and not to allow any sarcasm to enter his work. Precious Remedies was about exhorting, converting, so on. This is why I believe he was so much more effective than Bunyan and others of their day.
The basic format of the work is that Brooks would name and discuss various devices (or “tactics”) that the Devil uses on the spiritual battlefield to trip up souls with one of two goals. Satan wants to keep souls that are unregenerate on the road to Hell, and he wants to keep souls that have been saved by Christ's blood from having joy and victory over sin. Brooks makes no bones about how much more intelligent, powerful, “wise” (in an evil, witty, but blasphemous sort of perversion of wisdom), and experienced the Devil is than we are. The only way to escape the Enemy is to turn to Scripture and the Author of Scripture, Father God. We are weaker than the Devil, but God is stronger, infinitely stronger, than Satan, us, or any other created being. With His help, we can have triumph in spiritual warfare.
The writing was a bit archaic for modern audiences, with many of the “thees”, “thous”, and so on that we read in the KJV version of the Holy Bible, yet once you get used to the language style, the book is just practically bursting at the seams with edifying information. There were times when I would actually marvel that some of the struggles in the faith that have robbed me of joy in my life, and some of the excuses for sin I have personally used, were right there written nearly four and a half centuries ago.
The thing is, none of this came from Brooks head originally. Oh, he identified common issues he noticed in Christians, but he quoted the Holy Scriptures extensively. ALL of these problems and the solutions to them (including those I have struggled with) are dealt with right there in the Scriptures. God's Word is timeless, and the connections between the original documents written over thousands of years ending around 70 AD, to Thomas Brooks in 1652, to me today in 2012, is just amazing! Absolutely AMAZING.
I can not praise this book enough.
Highly Recommended.