{"id":5610,"date":"2010-09-25T16:33:30","date_gmt":"2010-09-25T20:33:30","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/september2010.stevekellar.ca\/?p=5"},"modified":"2010-09-25T16:33:30","modified_gmt":"2010-09-25T20:33:30","slug":"funeral-sermon-on-dr-john-owen","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/2010\/09\/25\/funeral-sermon-on-dr-john-owen\/","title":{"rendered":"Funeral Sermon on Dr John Owen"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>__________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>           Title: Funeral Sermon on Dr John Owen<br \/>\n      Creator(s): Clarkson, David (1622-1682)<br \/>\n     Print Basis: The Wycliffe Society, London, 1846<\/p>\n<p>     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                     A FUNERAL SERMON ON DR. JOHN OWEN [1]<\/p>\n<p>   Phil. iii. 21. &#8220;Who shall change our vile body, that it may be<br \/>\n   fashioned like unto his glorious body.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   The occasion why I pitch upon these words at this time, you are not<br \/>\n   unacquainted with. The apostle in the beginning of this chapter, warns<br \/>\n   the Philippians to beware of false teachers; he enforceth this with<br \/>\n   several arguments, the principal of which are drawn from his own<br \/>\n   example, in the body of the chapter; and then he concludes it with an<br \/>\n   elegant antithesis, opposing them to himself, and those that faithfully<br \/>\n   follow Christ with him: he makes use of this to enforce the dissuasive<br \/>\n   [from an evil conversation,] in a subserviency to his main scope, ver.<br \/>\n   19-21, &#8220;Whose end is destruction, whose God is their belly, whose glory<br \/>\n   is their shame, who mind earthly things. But our conversation is in<br \/>\n   heaven, from whence we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ, who<br \/>\n   shall change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto his<br \/>\n   glorious body.&#8221; You may observe an antithesis in all this; they mind<br \/>\n   earthly things, but our conversation is in heaven; their God is their<br \/>\n   belly, but we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ; their end is<br \/>\n   destruction, but our end is glory; their glory is shameful, they glory<br \/>\n   in their shame, but our glory shall be like that of our Lord Jesus<br \/>\n   Christ; that which they count most glorious, is shameful; but that<br \/>\n   which is vilest amongst us, shall be glorious: &#8220;Who shall change our<br \/>\n   vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   The observation from hence is this:<\/p>\n<p>   Observ. The bodies of the saints shall be conformed, and made like unto<br \/>\n   the glorious body of Jesus Christ.<\/p>\n<p>   The bodies of the saints, how vile soever now, shall at the<br \/>\n   resurrection be made and fashioned like unto the glorious body of<br \/>\n   Christ. The apostle gives a particular account of this, 1 Cor. xv.,<br \/>\n   which I may take notice of in some particulars afterward.<\/p>\n<p>   For the present, the great inquiry for the explaining of this truth is:<br \/>\n   How the bodies of deceased saints shall be like to the glorious body of<br \/>\n   Christ?<\/p>\n<p>   1. Negatively.<\/p>\n<p>   (1.) Not by any substantial change.<\/p>\n<p>   The substance of their bodies shall not be changed, as one of the<br \/>\n   ancients thought, by a mistake of the word metaschematisei used here,<br \/>\n   inferring that the bodies of the saints at the resurrection, shall not<br \/>\n   be of the same substance as they are now, but they shall then have<br \/>\n   ethereal bodies: whereas both the words schema and morphe denote<br \/>\n   quality, a change in quality, not such a substantial change as they<br \/>\n   imagined.<\/p>\n<p>   (2.) They shall be like, not equal.<\/p>\n<p>   The words do import a resemblance, not an equality; they shall not be<br \/>\n   equally glorious with the body of Christ. The Lord of glory in all<br \/>\n   things must have the pre-eminence; as he was &#8220;anointed with the oil of<br \/>\n   gladness above his fellows,&#8221; so he shall be exalted with greater glory.<br \/>\n   But then,<\/p>\n<p>   2. Positively: How shall they be fashioned like unto his glorious body?<\/p>\n<p>   You must not expect an exact account of this; it requires the tongue of<br \/>\n   an angel, or of some translated saint, that hath seen, and been<br \/>\n   invested with this glory, or hath had some full view of it. This is of<br \/>\n   the number of those things we must believe though we see not, though we<br \/>\n   know not; it is an object of faith, not of sight, and so is<br \/>\n   incomprehensible to us, who walk by faith, not by sight. &#8220;Eye hath not<br \/>\n   seen, nor ear heard, nor hath it entered into the heart of man, what<br \/>\n   things God hath prepared for those that love him.&#8221; If this be true of<br \/>\n   what is offered us in the Gospel, much more of what is reserved in<br \/>\n   glory. &#8220;Now are we the sons of God,&#8221; saith the apostle, &#8220;and it doth<br \/>\n   not appear what we shall be; but we know that when he shall appear, we<br \/>\n   shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is;&#8221; 1 John iii. 2. And<br \/>\n   who can describe that which doth not appear? Here &#8220;we see but as in a<br \/>\n   glass darkly,&#8221; we have but a dim sight, such a sight of the kingdom of<br \/>\n   glory, as the ancient people of God had of the kingdom of the Messiah:<br \/>\n   &#8220;Abraham saw his day afar off, and rejoiced.&#8221; The wisdom of God hath<br \/>\n   drawn a veil before that glory, and he hath drawn it in great wisdom.<br \/>\n   If so be we had the full discovery of that glory that shall be put upon<br \/>\n   the bodies of the saints (not to speak of that upon the soul,) if we<br \/>\n   had the full discovery of it here upon earth, it would be as hard to<br \/>\n   persuade the saints to be content to live on earth, as it is to<br \/>\n   persuade the men of the world to die. As in judgment to them, so in<br \/>\n   mercy to us, the veil still remaineth upon us; but though the veil be<br \/>\n   not quite withdrawn, yet the Lord is pleased in the Scripture to lift<br \/>\n   up, as it were, a corner of the veil, that we may see some glimmerings<br \/>\n   of that glory which hereafter we shall see face to face, of which I<br \/>\n   shall give an account in some particulars.<\/p>\n<p>   The raised bodies of the saints shall be like the glorious body of<br \/>\n   Christ in these six or seven respects.<\/p>\n<p>   (1.) In respect of perfection, the body of Christ is perfect, so shall<br \/>\n   theirs be perfect, both in respect of parts and degrees.<\/p>\n<p>   Their bodies shall have integrality [2] of parts in exact proportion,<br \/>\n   there shall be no defect of members, no, not of those that are now<br \/>\n   wanting; those that could find no remedy for lameness, or blindness, or<br \/>\n   mutilation on earth, shall find it in heaven: their bodies shall be<br \/>\n   raised in glory. So the apostle tells us, 1 Cor. xv. 43, &#8220;It shall be a<br \/>\n   glorious body:&#8221; but it would not be so glorious if these imperfections<br \/>\n   and defects were not removed: and it shall have exact proportion too,<br \/>\n   there shall be no distinction in heaven between small and great; as<br \/>\n   there shall be no infant of days, so no decrepit old age, but all shall<br \/>\n   be reduced [3] to a perfect stature, either to the stature of the first<br \/>\n   man Adam (for the resurrection shall be as a new creation) or to the<br \/>\n   stature of the Lord from heaven, as the apostle calls our Lord Jesus.<br \/>\n   There shall be a conformation to the image of the heavenly, and so [it]<br \/>\n   shall not want its proportion. The word morphe in the text, signifies<br \/>\n   &#8220;outward form,&#8221; and schema denotes &#8220;external figure.&#8221; Now there could<br \/>\n   be no resemblance of the body of Christ in external form and figure,<br \/>\n   without such proportions.<\/p>\n<p>   (2.) The bodies of the saints shall be like the glorious body of<br \/>\n   Christ, in respect of impassibleness.<\/p>\n<p>   The body of Christ is now impassible; that is, it is not liable to any<br \/>\n   sufferings, and so shall the bodies of the saints be; they shall be<br \/>\n   secured from all hurtful impressions from without, and all distempers<br \/>\n   from within; there shall be no hunger, nor thirst, no pain, no<br \/>\n   sickness, nor suffering whatsoever; the body shall suffer no<br \/>\n   disturbance, no inconvenience from earthly melancholy, or from dull<br \/>\n   phlegm, or fiery choler, or from the levity of a sanguine humour, but<br \/>\n   all shall be brought to such an exact temperament, as shall place them<br \/>\n   above any sufferings imaginable. The body will not be passible, nor<br \/>\n   liable to corruption, or suffering; for that which is liable to<br \/>\n   suffering, is more or less liable to corruption, in whole, or in part;<br \/>\n   but the bodies of the saints will be incorruptible: &#8220;It is sown in<br \/>\n   corruption, but is raised in incorruption:&#8221; 1 Cor. xv. 42; their bodies<br \/>\n   shall be secured from whatever may blemish their glory, or impair their<br \/>\n   perfection, or any way disorder the constitution of it.<\/p>\n<p>   (3.) The bodies of the saints shall be like the glorious body of Christ<br \/>\n   in respect of immortality.<\/p>\n<p>   The body of Christ is immortal; as the apostle expresses it, Rom. vi.<br \/>\n   9, &#8220;Christ dieth no more, death hath no more dominion over him;&#8221; so it<br \/>\n   shall be with the bodies of the saints, &#8220;mortality shall then put on<br \/>\n   immortality,&#8221; as the apostle expresses it, 1 Cor. xv. 53; when the<br \/>\n   bodies of the saints shall be raised, they shall commence, take the<br \/>\n   degree of souls, that is, they shall be immortal; they shall be more<br \/>\n   secured from death in heaven, than our first parents, while innocent,<br \/>\n   were secure from death in paradise; there shall not only be a posse non<br \/>\n   mori, &#8220;a possibility not to die;&#8221; but a non posse mori, &#8220;an<br \/>\n   impossibility of dying;&#8221; and that not arising from the nature of the<br \/>\n   body, but from the decree and purpose of God, from the victory of<br \/>\n   Christ, and from an immunity from sin: &#8220;Death shall then be swallowed<br \/>\n   up of victory;&#8221; death shall then lie under the feet of glorified ones,<br \/>\n   while they sing that song, 1 Cor. xv. 54-57, &#8220;Death is swallowed up in<br \/>\n   victory: O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?<br \/>\n   The sting of death is sin; the strength of sin is the law. But thanks<br \/>\n   be to God which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   (4.) The bodies of the saints shall be like that glorious body of<br \/>\n   Christ, in respect of agility; that quickness, nimbleness, and<br \/>\n   wonderful celerity of glorified bodies, an instance whereof we have in<br \/>\n   the ascent of Christ&#8217;s body from earth to heaven. The distance between<br \/>\n   the highest heaven, and the earth, is computed by astronomers to be<br \/>\n   some hundred millions of miles, so that if he finished that distance in<br \/>\n   a day, and we have no reason to think it so long, his body must move<br \/>\n   some millions of miles in an hour. But not to insist upon that, the<br \/>\n   bodies of the saints shall move when, where, how, and as fast as the<br \/>\n   soul pleases, without any reluctancy, without any toil or trouble to<br \/>\n   the body. The body shall be then immediately subject to the soul, as<br \/>\n   the soul shall be subject to God: nor will this motion be any<br \/>\n   disturbance to them. For what one of the ancients saith of the angels,<br \/>\n   shall be true of the bodies of the saints: &#8220;Wherever they move, they<br \/>\n   move not out of the blessed presence, out of the inhappying [4]<br \/>\n   presence of Christ.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   (5.) The bodies of the saints shall be like the glorious body of Christ<br \/>\n   in respect of spirituality.<\/p>\n<p>   The body of Christ is now a spiritual body: not that it is changed into<br \/>\n   the nature of a spirit; Christ prevents that mistake, Luke xxiv. 39.<br \/>\n   &#8220;Behold my hands and my feet, that it is I myself; handle me, and see,<br \/>\n   for a spirit hath not flesh and bones as you see me have.&#8221; The body is<br \/>\n   not changed into the nature of a spirit, but it is said to be<br \/>\n   spiritual, because it is elevated to the highest degree of perfection<br \/>\n   and excellency that the body is capable of, brought as near to the<br \/>\n   angelical nature, as is consistent with the essence of a body. So the<br \/>\n   bodies of the saints shall be spiritual bodies, not changed into the<br \/>\n   nature of spirits, but they shall be purged, defecated, and cleansed<br \/>\n   from all the dross, and mud, and feculency of an earthly temper, and<br \/>\n   their senses shall be refined to heavenly, all their acts and motions<br \/>\n   shall be advanced to a spiritual perfection: there shall be none of<br \/>\n   those parts, none of those actions from which the body is denominated a<br \/>\n   natural, or an animal body: &#8220;It is sown a natural body, it is raised a<br \/>\n   spiritual body:&#8221; there will be no need of meat, drink, or sleep. Our<br \/>\n   Lord Jesus Christ calls the raised bodies, isangeloi, like to the<br \/>\n   angels in this respect, for in the resurrection, &#8220;they shall neither<br \/>\n   marry, nor are given in marriage, but are like the angels of God in<br \/>\n   heaven,&#8221; Matt. xxii. 30.<\/p>\n<p>   (6.) The bodies of the saints shall be like the glorious body of<br \/>\n   Christ, in respect of splendour and beauty.<\/p>\n<p>   He gave a glimpse of that glory to his disciples in his<br \/>\n   transfiguration; Matt. xvii. 1, 2. &#8220;He took some of his disciples into<br \/>\n   a high mountain apart, and was transfigured before them: his face did<br \/>\n   shine as the sun, and his raiment was white as the light;&#8221; it was<br \/>\n   glistering, saith the other evangelist; so shall the bodies of the<br \/>\n   saints be, they shall shine as the firmament and stars; Dan. xii. 3.<br \/>\n   &#8220;They that are wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament, and<br \/>\n   they that turn many to righteousness, as the stars for ever and ever;&#8221;<br \/>\n   not only as the firmament and stars, but as the sun; Matt. xiii. 43.<br \/>\n   &#8220;Then shall the righteous shine forth as the sun, in the kingdom of<br \/>\n   their Father.&#8221; The purest and most lovely complexion, the most<br \/>\n   exquisite beauty on earth, is but darkness and deformity to that which<br \/>\n   shall shine forth in the glorified bodies of the saints: they shall<br \/>\n   shine as the sun, with a brighter lustre than that of the sun, with<br \/>\n   such a splendour as shall never be clouded, never be eclipsed, never<br \/>\n   obscured. If the glory of Solomon did transport the queen of Sheba,<br \/>\n   when she saw him, so that it is said, &#8220;there was no more spirit left<br \/>\n   within her,&#8221; 1 Kings x. 5, how ravishing will the sight of those<br \/>\n   glorious bodies be, whose splendour, whose glory shall as far exceed<br \/>\n   that of Solomon&#8217;s, as the glory of the sun exceeds that of a lily! If a<br \/>\n   little converse with God put such a glory upon Moses&#8217;s face, that the<br \/>\n   people were not able to behold it, [because] their eyes were too weak;<br \/>\n   what glory will shine forth in the bodies of the saints, of those that<br \/>\n   converse with God for ever, who will see him face to face unto all<br \/>\n   eternity! &#8220;And we all with open face,&#8221; saith the apostle, &#8220;beholding<br \/>\n   the glory of the Lord, as in a glass, are thereby changed from glory to<br \/>\n   glory, as by the Spirit of the Lord.&#8221; By this we may guess, indeed we<br \/>\n   can do little more than guess as to these things, farther than the<br \/>\n   Scripture leads us, but by this we may conjecture, how these bodies<br \/>\n   that are now so vile, should have such a glory derived upon them. The<br \/>\n   moon is of itself a dark, gross, opacous [5] body, much like the earth,<br \/>\n   as it is now generally concluded, and capable of demonstration; but the<br \/>\n   sun darting its beams upon it, makes it a lightsome and glorious<br \/>\n   planet; so the bodies of the saints, though vile in themselves, yet by<br \/>\n   the glory of Christ darting on them, shall be made glorious bodies.<\/p>\n<p>   (7.) They shall be like him in respect of glorious dignities and<br \/>\n   privileges.<\/p>\n<p>   It is the glorious privilege of Christ, that he sits on the right hand<br \/>\n   of God, as Mediator, in respect of his human nature; &#8220;The Lord said<br \/>\n   unto my Lord, Sit thou on my right hand. Him hath God exalted to be a<br \/>\n   prince, King of kings, and Lord of lords;&#8221; and he hath glorious<br \/>\n   regalities, ensigns of royalty; he hath a throne, and a crown, and a<br \/>\n   sceptre: &#8220;Thy throne, O God&#8221; (it is spoken of Christ, as Mediator)<br \/>\n   &#8220;endures for ever; the sceptre of thy kingdom, it is a right sceptre, a<br \/>\n   sceptre of righteousness.&#8221; And he shall exercise his royal power in a<br \/>\n   glorious manner, in a judiciary way, when he shall descend corporally<br \/>\n   to judge both the quick and the dead. Now the saints shall partake of<br \/>\n   these glorious privileges, or of something like them: they shall stand<br \/>\n   at the right hand of Christ: &#8220;Upon thy right hand did stand the queen<br \/>\n   in gold of Ophir,&#8221; Psal. xlv. 9. The bodies of the saints shall have<br \/>\n   possession of a glorious kingdom, a kingdom of glory: &#8220;Fear not, little<br \/>\n   flock, it is your Father&#8217;s good pleasure to give you the kingdom.&#8221; And<br \/>\n   they have glorious ensigns of royalty ascribed to them. They have a<br \/>\n   crown: &#8220;when the chief Shepherd shall appear, we shall receive a crown<br \/>\n   of glory;&#8221; yea, the Lord himself will be their crown, as the expression<br \/>\n   is, Isa. xxviii. 5. &#8220;In that day shall the Lord of hosts be for a crown<br \/>\n   of glory and for a diadem of beauty to the residue of his people.&#8221; How<br \/>\n   glorious will it be for them, not only to be crowned by the Lord, but<br \/>\n   to have the Lord himself to be their crown! And they shall partake with<br \/>\n   him in the glory of judging quick and dead; they shall sit with him in<br \/>\n   his throne: &#8220;To him that overcometh will I give to sit with me on my<br \/>\n   throne, as I also overcame, and am set down with my Father on his<br \/>\n   throne.&#8221; They shall join with Christ as assessors in that glorious act<br \/>\n   of judgment; they shall not only judge the world, but the angels: &#8220;Know<br \/>\n   ye not,&#8221; saith the apostle, &#8220;that we shall judge angels?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   And so much for the explication of this truth.<\/p>\n<p>   I might improve it several ways.<\/p>\n<p>   Use 1. By the way of inference: If the bodies of the saints shall be so<br \/>\n   glorious, what glory then will be put upon their souls! If the body,<br \/>\n   the vile body shall be advanced to such a glory, what glory will be put<br \/>\n   upon the soul, which is the prime receptacle of the image of God! If<br \/>\n   glory be the portion of the body, the soul will much more exceed in<br \/>\n   glory.<\/p>\n<p>   Use 2. Let us here take notice of the love of Christ, the wonderful<br \/>\n   love of Christ, that he will take notice of the bodies of his people,<br \/>\n   of that which is so vile, bodies that are vile in themselves, and much<br \/>\n   more vile as they are instruments of sin; bodies that are vile while<br \/>\n   they live, but much viler when they are dead; noisome by putrefaction,<br \/>\n   or devoured by vermin, or dissolved into dust. Will the King of glory<br \/>\n   take notice of such vile things? Can he think thoughts of love<br \/>\n   concerning objects that are so unlovely? Yes, thoughts of love indeed,<br \/>\n   to make things so vile to be glorious, glorious like himself. Was it<br \/>\n   not enough that he redeemed men from wrath, delivered them from going<br \/>\n   into the pit of destruction? Was it not enough to make their souls<br \/>\n   glorious, but will he make their bodies glorious too? Was it not enough<br \/>\n   to make their bodies like the stars, or the sun, but to make them<br \/>\n   glorious like himself? Must his own glory be the pattern of theirs?<br \/>\n   Will nothing less satisfy the love of Christ, but imparting to these<br \/>\n   vile bodies his own glory? Oh, what manner of love is this! So dear are<br \/>\n   the saints to him, such love he hath for them, as [6] the very vilest<br \/>\n   thing belonging to them shall partake of his own glory, shall be made<br \/>\n   glorious like himself. As Mephibosheth said to David: &#8220;What is thy<br \/>\n   servant that thou shouldest look on such a dead dog as I am?&#8221; With much<br \/>\n   more reason may we say, and that with astonishment, What are we, O<br \/>\n   Lord, that thou shouldst look upon such vile dust, which is even<br \/>\n   trampled under the feet of the beasts, that thou shouldst advance us to<br \/>\n   such a height of honour, that thou shouldst crown us with glory, with<br \/>\n   such a glory, a glory like thine own?<\/p>\n<p>   Use 3. For inquiry: How shall we know whether we are of the number of<br \/>\n   those whose vile bodies shall be fashioned like to the glorious body of<br \/>\n   Christ? There are several characters in this chapter by which it may be<br \/>\n   known: I shall only name them.<\/p>\n<p>   (1.) Those that worship God in the spirit.<\/p>\n<p>   (2.) Those that rejoice in Christ Jesus.<\/p>\n<p>   (3.) Those whose conversation is in heaven. And,<\/p>\n<p>   (4.) Those that look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ; you have<br \/>\n   these two last in the verse before my text, but I must not insist on<br \/>\n   them.<\/p>\n<p>   Use 4. This should teach us to mix our grief for the loss of deceased<br \/>\n   relatives (those that die in the Lord) with joy. Some sorrow is<br \/>\n   allowed. They are reckoned among the worst of sinners, that are<br \/>\n   astorgoi, without natural affection. Stoical senselessness is inhuman,<br \/>\n   it is far from being Christian, or evangelical. We may mourn for<br \/>\n   ourselves in reference to the great advantages that we lose by those we<br \/>\n   are bereaved of, especially if they are spiritual advantages: we may<br \/>\n   mourn in reference to the places where they lived, it portends evil to<br \/>\n   those places: &#8220;For the righteous are taken away from the evil to come.&#8221;<br \/>\n   When those that should stand in the gap are removed, there is wrath<br \/>\n   breaking in upon that people without any remedy: we may mourn in<br \/>\n   reference to ourselves, but in reference to them we have cause to<br \/>\n   rejoice. If we mourn, it should not be as those without hope.<br \/>\n   Immoderate sorrow hath its rise from self-love. Will you count him a<br \/>\n   friend who grieves at your preferment? The death of the saints is the<br \/>\n   highway to glory. The apostle calls death a seed-time, that is, a time<br \/>\n   of hope, not of mourning; and a time in reference to an expected<br \/>\n   harvest, is a time of rejoicing.<\/p>\n<p>   But we may mourn, we of this congregation have a particular cause to do<br \/>\n   it. I shall speak something of that excellent person that we have lost:<br \/>\n   but what I shall say, as the time will permit me, is but little<br \/>\n   concerning that great worthy. It was my unhappiness that I had so<br \/>\n   little and late acquaintance with him, which makes me not competent for<br \/>\n   such an undertaking; the account that is due to the world, requires a<br \/>\n   volume, and a better hand than mine, which I hope it will meet with in<br \/>\n   time: only let me touch some generals, [7] which may help us to a sense<br \/>\n   of our loss, without which we are not like[ly] to make such an<br \/>\n   improvement of it, as the Lord expects from those upon whom his hand is<br \/>\n   fallen so heavy.<\/p>\n<p>   A great light is fallen; one of eminency for holiness, learning, parts,<br \/>\n   and abilities; a pastor, a scholar, a divine of the first magnitude;<br \/>\n   holiness gave a Divine lustre to his other accomplishments, it shined<br \/>\n   in his whole course, and was diffused through his whole conversation. I<br \/>\n   need not tell you of this that knew him, and observed that it was his<br \/>\n   great design to promote holiness in the power, life, and exercise of it<br \/>\n   among you. It was his great complaint that the power of it declined<br \/>\n   among professors. It was his care and endeavour to prevent or cure<br \/>\n   spiritual decays in his own flock. He was a burning and a shining<br \/>\n   light, and you for a while rejoiced in his light: alas! that it was but<br \/>\n   for a while, and that we cannot rejoice in it still!<\/p>\n<p>   Those practical discourses which he published to the world, did give a<br \/>\n   taste that his spirit and temper was under the influence and power of<br \/>\n   holiness. There are some creatures that love to bark at the light,<br \/>\n   instead of making a better use of it: he met with such, I mean some<br \/>\n   that wrote against him, who thought themselves concerned to represent<br \/>\n   him [as] odious to the world, but with great advantage to him, because<br \/>\n   they could not do it but by groundless surmises and false suggestions,<br \/>\n   such as showed the authors of them malicious, and rendered them<br \/>\n   ridiculous.<\/p>\n<p>   He was master of all parts of learning requisite to an accomplished<br \/>\n   divine; those that understood him, and will be just, cannot deny him<br \/>\n   the reputation and honour of a great scholar; and those that detract<br \/>\n   from him in this, seem to be led by a spirit of envy, that would not<br \/>\n   suffer them willingly to see so great an ornament among those that are<br \/>\n   of another persuasion. Indeed he had parts able to master anything he<br \/>\n   applied himself unto, though he restrained himself to those studies<br \/>\n   which might render him most serviceable to Christ, and the souls of<br \/>\n   men. He had extraordinary intellectuals, [8] a vast memory, a quick<br \/>\n   apprehension, a clear and piercing judgment; he was a passionate lover<br \/>\n   of light and truth, of Divine truth especially; he pursued it<br \/>\n   unweariedly, through painful and wasting studies, such as impaired his<br \/>\n   health and strength, such as exposed him to those distempers with which<br \/>\n   he conflicted many years: and some may blame him for this as a sort of<br \/>\n   intemperance, but it is the most excusable of any, and looks like a<br \/>\n   voluntary martyrdom. However it showed he was ready to spend, and be<br \/>\n   spent, for Christ: he did not bury his talent, with which he was richly<br \/>\n   furnished, but still laid it out for the Lord who had intrusted him. He<br \/>\n   preached while his strength and liberty would serve, then by discourse<br \/>\n   and writing.<\/p>\n<p>   That he was an excellent preacher none will deny who knew him, and knew<br \/>\n   what preaching was, and think it not the worse because it is spiritual<br \/>\n   and evangelical. He had an admirable facility in discoursing on any<br \/>\n   subject, pertinently and decently, and could better express himself<br \/>\n   extempore, than others with premeditation. He was never at a loss for<br \/>\n   want of expression; a happiness few can pretend to; and this he could<br \/>\n   show upon all occasions, in the presence of the highest persons in the<br \/>\n   nation, and from the greatest to the meanest. He hereby showed he had<br \/>\n   the command of his learning. His vast reading and experience was hereby<br \/>\n   made useful, in resolving doubts, clearing what was obscure, advising<br \/>\n   in perplexed and intricate cases and breaches, or healing them which<br \/>\n   sometimes seemed incurable. Not only we, but all his brethren will have<br \/>\n   reason to bewail the loss of him. His conversation was not only<br \/>\n   advantageous in respect to his pleasantness and obligingness; but there<br \/>\n   was that in it which made it desirable to great persons, natives and<br \/>\n   foreigners, and that by so many, that few could have what they desired.<\/p>\n<p>   I need speak nothing of his writings, though that is another head that<br \/>\n   I intimated; they commend themselves to the world. If holiness,<br \/>\n   learning, and a masculine unaffected style can commend anything, his<br \/>\n   practical discourses cannot but find much acceptation with those who<br \/>\n   are sensible of their soul concerns, and can relish that which is<br \/>\n   Divine, and value that which is not common or trivial. His excellent<br \/>\n   Comment upon the Hebrews gained him a name and esteem, not only at<br \/>\n   home, but in foreign countries. When he had finished it (and it was a<br \/>\n   merciful providence that he lived to finish it) he said, Now his work<br \/>\n   was done, it was time for him to die. There were several other<br \/>\n   discourses that seem controversial, and are so: our loss of him in this<br \/>\n   respect seems to be irreparable, for anything that is in our present<br \/>\n   prospect. The due management of controversies requires so great<br \/>\n   abilities, that there is not one among a hundred of our divines, are<br \/>\n   competently qualified for that; and the truths of the Gospel, which<br \/>\n   should be dearer to us than our outward concerns, are like to be<br \/>\n   suppressed or adulterated, unless the Spirit of truth stir up and<br \/>\n   empower some to assert and vindicate them. He had a singular dexterity<br \/>\n   this way, for the managing of controversies; and those truths that he<br \/>\n   vindicated, were such as were most in danger by the apostatising spirit<br \/>\n   of this age: some may think his genius led him much to study debates,<br \/>\n   but so far as I have observed, he did not affect to be an aggressor,<br \/>\n   but still was on the defensive, and proceeded with such temper, that he<br \/>\n   would rather oblige his adversary (if a lover of truth) than exasperate<br \/>\n   him. He made it appear [that] he did not write so much against any<br \/>\n   man&#8217;s person, as for the truth: I heard one of them declare, it would<br \/>\n   not trouble a man to be opposed in such a way as this great doctor did<br \/>\n   treat his greatest antagonist. It is usual with persons of<br \/>\n   extraordinary parts, to struggle from the common road, and affect<br \/>\n   novelty, though thereby they lose the best company; as though they<br \/>\n   could not appear eminent, unless they march alone. But this great<br \/>\n   person did not affect singularity; they were old truths that he<br \/>\n   endeavoured to defend, those that were transmitted to us by our first<br \/>\n   reformers, and owned by the best divines of the Church of England. What<br \/>\n   the truth has lost by this, I cannot easily say.<\/p>\n<p>   But it falleth heaviest and most directly upon this congregation; we<br \/>\n   had a light in this candlestick, which did not only enlighten the room,<br \/>\n   but gave light to others far and near: but it is put out; we did not<br \/>\n   sufficiently value it; I wish I might not say, that our sins have put<br \/>\n   it out. We had a special honour and ornament, such as other churches<br \/>\n   would much prize; but the crown is fallen from our heads: yea, may I<br \/>\n   not add, Woe unto us, for we have sinned! We have lost an excellent<br \/>\n   pilot, and lost him when a fierce storm is coming upon us, when we have<br \/>\n   most need of him. I dread the consequences, considering the weakness of<br \/>\n   those that are left at the helm. If we are not sensible of it, it is<br \/>\n   because our blindness is great. Let us beg of God, that he would<br \/>\n   prevent what this threatens us with, and that he would make up this<br \/>\n   loss, or that it may be repaired, or at least that the sad consequences<br \/>\n   of it may be prevented. And let us pray in the last words of this dying<br \/>\n   person to me: &#8220;That the Lord would double his Spirit upon us, that he<br \/>\n   would not remember against us former iniquities; but that his tender<br \/>\n   mercies may speedily prevent us, for we are brought very low.&#8221;<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>   [1] This Sermon was preached the next Lord&#8217;s-day after the Doctor&#8217;s<br \/>\n   interment.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>__________________________________________________________________ Title: Funeral Sermon on Dr John Owen Creator(s): Clarkson, David (1622-1682) Print Basis: The Wycliffe Society, London, 1846 __________________________________________________________________ A FUNERAL SERMON ON DR. JOHN OWEN [1] Phil. iii. 21. &#8220;Who shall change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body.&#8221; The occasion why I pitch upon these words&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":5,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"twitterCardType":"","cardImageID":0,"cardImage":"","cardTitle":"","cardDesc":"","cardImageAlt":"","cardPlayer":"","cardPlayerWidth":0,"cardPlayerHeight":0,"cardPlayerStream":"","cardPlayerCodec":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-5610","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5610","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=5610"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5610\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=5610"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=5610"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=5610"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}