GraciousCall.org - A Vindication of some Passages in a Discourse concerning
Communion with God by John Owen
A Vindication of some Passages in a Discourse concerning Communion
with God, from the Exceptions of William Sherlock, rector of St. George, Botolph Lane
By John Owen
Prefatory Note
William Sherlock, father of Dr Thomas Sherlock, an eminent
bishop of London, was himself distinguished as an author, and
mingled deeply in the controversies of his day. His strictures on
Owen's work on Communion with God appeared in 1674, after that work
had been seventeen years before the public. It seems to have been
Sherlock's first appearance in authorship; and some of his
subsequent treatises such as those on Providence and on Death afford
a better specimen of his abilities. They are destitute of
evangelical principle and feeling, and imbued throughout with a
freezing rationalism of tone; but, nevertheless, contain some views
of the Divine administration, acutely conceived and ably stated. He
became rector of St George, Botolph Lane, received a prebend in St
Paul's, and was appointed Master of the Temple about 1684. His
conduct at the Revolution was not straightforward, and laid him open
to the reproaches of the Jacobites, who blamed him for deserting
their party. There was a controversy. of some importance between him
and Dr South. The latter, on the ground of some expressions in the
work by the former on the Trinity (1690), accused him of Tritheism.
Sherlock retorted by accusing his critic of Sabellianism. He died in
1707, at the acre of sixty-six.
Sherlock's work against Owen was entitled, "A Discourse
concerning the Knowledge of Jesus Christ, and on Union and Communion
with Him," etc. Owen confines himself, in his reply, to an exposure
of the misrepresentations in which Sherlock had indulged. The
latter, for example, sought to fix on the Puritan divine the
doctrine, that the knowledge of divine things was to be obtained
from the person of Christ, apart from the truth as revealed in the
Scriptures. Our author successfully vindicates himself from this
charge, and repudiates other sentiments equally mystical, and
ascribed to him with equal injustice. The views of Sherlock, on the
points at issue, have been termed, "a confused mass of Socinianized
Arminianism." Owen evinces a strength of feeling, in some parts of
his "Vindication," which may be accounted for on the ground that he
resented the attack as part of a systematic effort made at this time
to destroy his standing and reputation as an author. In the main,
there is a dignity in his statements which contrasts well with the
wayward petulance of his antagonist; and occasionally the reader
will find a vein of quiet and skilful irony, in the way in which he
disposes of the crude views of Sherlock.
Such was the beginning of the Communion Controversy, which soon
embraced a wider range of topics, and points of more importance,
than the merits of Owen's book. Besides the original disputants,
others entered the field. Robert Ferguson in 1675, wrote against
Sherlock a volume entitled, "The Interest of Reason in Religion,"
etc. Edward Polhill followed, in "An Answer to the Discourse of Mr
William Sherlock," etc. Vincent Alsop first displayed in this
controversy his powers of wit and acumen as an author, in his
"Antisozzo, or Sherlocismus Enervatus." Henry Hickman, a man of
considerable gifts, and pastor of an English congregation at Leaden,
wrote the "Speculum Sherlockianum," etc. Samuel Rolle, a
nonconformist, wrote the "Prodromus, or the Character of Mr
Sherlock's Books" and also, in the same controversy, "Justification
Justified." Thomas Danson, who had been ejected from Sibton, and
author of several works against the Quakers, wrote "The Friendly
Debate between Satan and Sherlock" and afterwards he published again
in defence of it. Sherlock, in 1675, replied to Owen and Ferguson in
his "Defence and Continuation of the Discourse concerning the
Knowledge of Jesus Christ." He was supported by Thomas Hotchkis,
Rector of Staunton, in a "Discourse concerning the Imputation of
Christ's Righteousness," etc. The singular diligence of Mr Orme has
compiled this full list of the works published in this controversy;
but he is not quite correct in affirming that it was closed by the
replies of Sherlock and Hotchkis in 1675. A second part of the work
by Hotchkis appeared in 1678, and Sherlock was the author of two
other works, "An Answer to Thomas Danson's scandalous pamphlet,
entitled 'A Friendly Conference,'" etc., which appeared in 1677, and
was followed by a "Vindication of Mr Sherlock against the Cavils of
Mr Danson." - ED.
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