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  • Submitted: Jan 22 2013 01:16 AM
  • Last Updated: Jan 22 2013 10:51 AM
  • File Size: 724K
  • Views: 4292
  • Downloads: 685
  • Author: John Owen
  • theWord Version: 3.x - 4.x
  • Tab Name: Communion

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theWord Module Download:
Download Owen, John - Communion with God

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Puritan Prayer Theology Proper (NatureOfGod)
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Author:
John Owen

theWord Version:
3.x - 4.x

Tab Name:
Communion

Communion with God
One sign of a great book is if publishers are still reprinting it. In recent years, this is one of those books where aspiring authors write a forward, make a few small edits, and publish it with their byline near John Owen's. More than one publisher has done this and that's a sign that Owen's core content is unparalleled. More than one modern Bible scholar believes this work about the relationship within the Trinity is the best ever written on the subject.

John Owen believed that communion with God lies at the heart of the Christian life. With Paul, he recognized that through the Son we have access by the Spirit to the Father. He never lost the sense of amazement expressed by John: "Our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son, Jesus Christ." In this outstanding book he explains the nature of this communion and describes the many privileges it brings.

Communion with God was written in a day, like our own, when the doctrine of the Trinity was under attack and the Christian faith was being reduced either to rationalism on the one hand or mysticism on the other. His exposition shows that nothing is more vital to spiritual well-being than a practical knowledge of what this doctrine means.

Owen shows us that God loves us and offers us communion with each member of the Trinity: Father, Son and Holy Spirit and yet that our communion is always with the entire triune God. Rich and deep in his use of scripture from Genesis to Revelation, Owen brings biblical language to every discussion.

He works logically from specific passages and then correlates them with similar texts all over the Bible focusing on how God communes with us and we with him so that we can experience a passionate union with us and we with him so that we can experience a passionate union with almighty God that motivates us to think rightly and act holy so we can enjoy that communion.

About John Owen
Born at Stadhampton, Oxfordshire, Owen was educated at Queen's College, Oxford, where he studied classics and theology and was ordained. Because of the "high-church" innovations introduced by Archbishop William Laud, he left the university to be a chaplain to the family of a noble lord. His first parish was at Fordham in Essex, to which he went while the nation was involved in civil war. Here he became convinced that the Congregational way was the scriptural form of church government. In his next charge, the parish of Coggeshall. in Essex, he acted both as the pastor of a gathered church and as the minister of the parish. This was possible because the parliament, at war with the king, had removed bishops. In practice, this meant that the parishes could go their own way in worship and organization.

Oliver Cromwell liked Owen and took him as his chaplain on his expeditions both to Ireland and Scotland (1649-1651). Owen's fame was at its height from 1651 to 1660 when he played a prominent part in the religious, political, and academic life of the nation. Appointed dean of Christ Church, Oxford, in 1651, he became also vice-chancellor of the university in 1652, a post he held for five years with great distinction and with a marked impartiality not often found in Puritan divines. This led him also to disagreement, even with Cromwell, over the latter's assumption of the protectorship. Owen retained his deanery until 1659. Shortly after the Restoration of the monarchy in 1660, he moved to London, where he was active in preaching and writing until his death. He declined invitations to the ministry in Boston (1663) and the presidency of Harvard (1670) and chided New England Congregationalists for intolerance. He turned aside also from high preferment when his influence was acknowledged by governmental attempts to persuade him to relinquish Nonconformity in favor of the established church.

His numerous works include The Display of Arminianism (1642); Eshcol, or Rules of Direction for the Walking of the Saints in Fellowship (1648), an exposition of Congregational principles; Saius Electorum, Sanguis Jesu (1648), another anti-Arminian polemic; Diatriba de Divina Justitia (1658), an attack on Socinianism; Of the Divine Original Authority of the Scriptures (1659); Theologoumena Pantodapa (1661), a history from creation to Reformation; Animadversions to Fiat Lux(1662), replying to a Roman Catholic treatise; Doctrine of Justification by Faith (1677); and Exercitationes on the Epistle to the Hebrews (1668-1684).



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