JOHN OWEN, PREACHER
John Owen spent a good deal of his writing and preaching in
Restoration England as the pastor of….. .He laboured to write on the Holy
Spirit, in several books, the chief which
was A Discourse Concerning the Holy
Spirit (1674) . In 1673, 47 years old, he was working his mammoth works
on the Holy Spirit which are gathered in chapter 3 of the Goold edition
of his works. He died in 1683. For him
the role of the Spirit is basically the renewal and regeneration of unregenerate, fallen, people,
including the preaching of the Gospel as
the means Christ has made redemption for
the elect.
THE FIRST PASSAGE
In the page 295 (he had said) ,
Preachers
of the gospel and others have sufficient warrant to press upon all men the
duties of faith, repentance and obedience, although they know that in themselves they
have not a sufficiency of ability for their due performance, for______(1) It
is the will and command of God that
so they should do, and that is the rule all our duties. They are not to
consider what men can do or will do, what God
requires. To make a judgment of man’s ability, and to accommodate the commands
of God unto them accordingly, is not committed unto any of the sons of men. (2)
They have a double end in pressing on men the observance of duties, with a supposition of
the state of impotency described : -----
[1]
to prevent them from such courses of sin as would harden them, and so render their conversion more difficult,
if not desperate. [2] To exercise a means appointed
of God for their conversion, or the communication of saving grace unto them. Such are
God’s commands, and such are the duties required of them. In and by them God
doth use to communicate of his grace unto the souls of men; not with respect
them as their duties, but as they are ways appointed and sanctified by him unto
such ends.
And
hence it follows that even such duties as are vitiated in their performance,
yet are of advantage unto them by whom that are performed; for -- 1st By attendance unto them they are preserved from many sins. 2d. In an
especial manner from the great sin of despising God, which ends commonly in
that which is unpardonable. 3d. They are hereby made useful unto others, and many ends of God’s glory
in the world. 4th They are kept in God’s way,
wherein they may gradually be brought over unto a real conversion unto him. (Owen Works III,
295)
THE SECOND PASSAGE
which occurs in the book before the one just referred to, is an account of the temperament of an unregenerate
person. As follows:
As is usual it is necessary to take a deep breath before the reading and the thinking of Owen. But one is repaid by a richness, or condensation. So reading these passages should be undertaken more than once. His passage was based on I Corinthians 2.Here Paul expounds what he calls 'the natural man'. He starts by his policy as a preacher, 'For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ and him crucified....and my speech and my message were. not in plausible words of wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power, that your faith might not rest in the wisdom of men but in the power of God' I Cor 2.4, 'we impart a secret and and hidden wisdom of God (1 Cor. 2. 7)...we have received not the spirit of the world but the Spirit who is from God...we impart this in words not taught by human wisdom but taught by the Spirit. And the apex of Paul's argument: 'The natural does not accept the things of the Spirit of God he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned......(I Cor 2.14, ) Owen had absorbed this and it warranted him saying in his earlier passage that the unregenerate possess 'a moral impotency which is reflected on them greatly from the will and affections, whence the mind (of the unregenerate) never will receive spiritual things...(III 267)
The unregenerate suffer from a moral impotency, yet later Owen advocates that preachers of the gospel must press upon all men, the duties of faith, repentance and obedience.
Next time I hope to take the answer of what otherwise is a conjundrum. How can the blind see? How can a person be born again?