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
By John Owen
It is now near twenty years since I wrote and published a
Discourse concerning Communion with God. Of what use and advantage
it has been to any, as to their furtherance in the design aimed at
therein, is left unto them to judge by whom it has been perused with
any candid diligence; and I do know that multitudes of persons
fearing God, and desiring to walk before him in sincerity, are
ready, if occasion require, to give testimony unto the benefit which
they have received thereby; - as I can also at any time produce the
testimonies of [as] learned and holy persons, it may be, as any I
know living, both in England and out of it, who, owning the truth
contained in it, have highly avowed its usefulness, and are ready
yet so to do. With all other persons, so far as ever I heard, it
passed at the rate of a tolerable acceptation with discourses of the
same kind and nature. And however any thing or passage in it might
not, possibly, suit the apprehensions of some, yet, being wholly
practical, designed for popular edification, without any direct
engagement into things controversial, I looked for no opposition
unto it or exception against it; but that it would at least be
suffered to pass at that rate of allowance which is universally
granted unto that sort of writings, both of ancient and modern
authors. Accordingly it so fell out, and continued for many years;
until some persons began to judge it their interest, and to make it
their business, to cavil at my writings, and to load my person with
reproaches. With what little success, as to their avowed designs,
they have laboured therein, - how openly their endeavours are sunk
into contempt with all sorts of persons pretending unto the least
sobriety or modesty, - I suppose they are not themselves altogether
insensible. Among the things which this sort of men sought to make
an advantage of against me, I found that two or three of them began
to reflect on that discourse; though it appeared they had not
satisfied themselves what as yet to fix upon, their nibbling cavils
being exceedingly ridiculous.
But yet, from those intimations of some men's good-will towards
it, - sufficient to provoke the industry of such as either needed
their assistance or valued their favour, - I was in expectation that
one or other would possess that province, and attempt the whole
discourse or some parts of it. Nor was I dissatisfied in my
apprehensions of that design; for, being earnestly solicited to
suffer it to be reprinted, I was very willing to see what either
could or would be objected against it before it received another
impression. For whereas it was written now near twenty years ago,
when there was the deepest peace in the minds of all men about the
things treated of therein, and when I had no apprehension of any
dissent from the principal design, scope, and parts of it by any
called Christians in the world, the Socinians only excepted (whom I
had therein no regard unto), I thought it highly probable that some
things might have been so expressed as to render a review and
amendment to them more than ordinarily necessary. And I reckoned it
not improbable, but that from one malevolent adversary I might
receive a more instructive information of such escapes of diligence
than I could do in so long a time from all the more impartial
readers of it; for as unto the substance of the doctrine declared in
it, I was sufficiently secure, not only of its truth, but that it
would immovably endure the rudest assaults of such oppositions as I
did expect. I was therefore very well satisfied when I heard of the
publishing of this treatise of Mr Sherlock's, - which, as I was
informed, and since have found true, was principally intended
against myself, and that discourse (that is, that book), because I
was the author of it, which will at last prove it to be its only
guilt and crime; - for I thought I should be at once now satisfied,
both what it was which was so long contriving against it (whereof I
could give no conjecture), as also be directed unto any such
mistakes as might have befallen me in matter or manner of
expression, which I would or might rectify before the book received
another edition. But, upon a view and perusal of this discourse, I
found myself under a double surprisal. For, first, in reference to
my own, I could not find any thing, any doctrine, any expressions,
any words reflected on, which the exceptions of this man do give me
the least occasion to alter, or to desire that they had been
otherwise either expressed or delivered; - not any thing which now,
after near twenty years, I do not still equally approve of, and
which I am not yet ready to justify. The other part of my surprisal
was somewhat particular, though, in truth, it ought to have been
none at all; and this was with respect unto those doctrinal
principles which he manageth his oppositions upon. A surprisal they
were unto me, because wild, uncouth, extravagant, and contrary to
the common faith of Christians, - being all of them traduced, and
some of them transcribed, from the writings of the Socinians;
[while] yet [they] ought not to have been so, because I was assured
that an opposition unto that discourse could be managed on no other
[ground]. But, however, the doctrine maintained by this man, and
those opposed or scorned by him, are not my special concernment; for
what is it to me what the Rector of etc., preacheth or publisheth,
beyond my common interest in the truths of the gospel, with other
men as great strangers unto him as myself, who to my knowledge never
saw him, nor heard of his name till infamed by his book? Only, I
shall take leave to say, that the doctrine here published, and
licensed so to be, is either the doctrine of the present church of
England, or it is not. If it be so, I shall be forced to declare
that I neither have, nor will have, any communion therein; and that,
as for other reasons, so in particular, because I will not renounce
or depart from that which I know to be the true, ancient, and
catholic doctrine of this church. If it be not so, - as I am
assured, with respect unto many bishops and other learned men, that
it is not, - it is certainly the concernment of them who preside
therein to take care that such kind of discourses be not
countenanced with the stamp of their public authority, lest they and
the church be represented unto a great disadvantage with many.
It was some months after the publishing of this discourse,
before I entertained any thoughts of taking the least notice of it,
- yea, I was resolved to the contrary, and declared those
resolutions as I had occasion; neither was it until very lately that
my second thoughts came to a compliance with the desires of some
others, to consider my own peculiar concernment therein. And this is
all which I now design; for the examination of the opinions which
this author has vented under the countenance of public license,
whatever they may think, I know to be more the concernment of other
men than mine. Nor yet do I enter into the consideration of what is
written by this author with the least respect unto myself, or my own
reputation, which I have the satisfaction to conceive not to be
prejudiced by such pitiful attempts; nor have I the least desire to
preserve it in the minds of such persons as wherein it can suffer on
this occasion. But the vindication of some sacred truths, petulantly
traduced by this author, seems to be cast on me in an especial
manner; because he has opposed them, and endeavoured to expose them
to scorn, as declared in my book; whence others, more meet for this
work, might think themselves discharged from taking notice of them.
Setting aside this consideration, I can freely give this sort of men
leave to go on with their revilings and scoffings until they are
weary or ashamed; which, as far as I can discern, upon consideration
of their ability for such a work, and their confidence therein, is
not like to be in haste; - at least, they can change their course,
and when they are out of breath in pursuit of one sort of calumnies,
retake themselves unto another. Witness the late malicious, and yet
withal ridiculous, reports that they have divulged concerning me,
even with respect unto civil affairs, and their industry therein;
for although they were such as had not any thing of the least
probability or likelihood to give them countenance, yet were they so
impetuously divulged, and so readily entertained by many, as made me
think there was more than the common artifices of calumny employed
in their raising and improvement, especially considering what
persons I can justly charge those reports upon. But in this course
they may proceed whilst they please and think convenient: I find
myself no more concerned in what they write or say of this nature
than if it were no more but, -
epei ete kakoi out' afroni foti eoikas. Oule te, kai mega chaire, Theoi de toi oltia doien.
It is the doctrine traduced only that I am concerned about, and
that as it has been the doctrine of the church of England.
It may be it will be said (for there is no security against
confidence and immodesty, backed with secular advantages), that the
doctrinal principles asserted in this book are agreeable with the
doctrine of the church in former times; and therefore those opposed
in it, such as are condemned thereby. Hereabout I shall make no long
contest with them who once discover that their minds are by any
means emboldened to undertake the defence of such shameless
untruths; nor shall I multiply testimonies to prove the contrary,
which others are more concerned to do, if they intend not to betray
the religion of that church with whose preservation and defence they
are intrusted. Only, because there are ancient divines of this
church, who, I am persuaded, will be allowed with the most to have
known as well the doctrine of it, and as firmly to have adhered
thereunto, as this author, who have particularly spoken unto most of
the things which he has opposed, or rather reproached, I shall
transcribe the words of one of them, whereby he, and those who
employ him, may be minded with whom they have to do in those things.
For, as to the writers of the ancient church, there is herein no
regard had unto them. He whom I shall name is Mr. Hooker, and that
in his famous book of "Ecclesiastical Polity;" who, in the fifth
book thereof, and 56th paragraph, thus discourseth: -
"We have hitherto spoken of the person and of the presence of
Christ. Participation is that mutual inward hold which Christ has of
us, and we of him, in such sort that each possesses other by way of
special interest, property, and inherent copulation." And after the
interposition of some things conceding the mutual in-being and love
of the Father and the Son, he thus proceedeth: - "We are by nature
the sons of Adam. When God created Adam, he created us; and as many
as are descended from Adam have in themselves the root out of which
they spring. The sons of God we neither are all nor any one of us,
otherwise than only by grace and favour. The sons of God have God's
own natural Son as a second Adam from heaven; whose race and progeny
they are by spiritual and heavenly birth. God therefore loving
eternally his Son, he must needs eternally in him have loved, and
preferred before all others, them which are spiritually since
descended and sprung out of him. These were in God as in their
Saviour, and not as in their Creator only. It was the purpose of his
saving goodness, his saving wisdom, and his saving power, which
inclined itself towards them. They which thus were in God eternally
by their intended admission to life, have, by vocation or adoption,
God actually now in them, as the artifices is in the work which his
hand does presently frame. Life, as all other gifts and benefits,
grows originally from the Father, and comes not to us but by the
Son, nor by the Son to any of us in particular, but through the
Spirit. For this cause the apostle wisheth to the church of Corinth,
'the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the
fellowship of the holy Ghost;' which three St Peter comprehendeth in
one, - the participation of the divine nature. We are, therefore, in
God through Christ eternally, according to that intent and purpose
whereby we are chosen to be made his in this present world before
the world itself was made. We are in God through the knowledge which
is had of us, and the love which is borne towards us from
everlasting; but in God we actually are no longer than only from the
time of our actual adoption into the body of his true church, into
the fellowship of his children. For his church he knoweth and
loveth; so that they which are in the church are thereby known to be
in him. Our being in Christ by eternal foreknowledge saveth us not,
without our actual and real adoption into the fellowship of his
saints in this present world. For in him we actually are by our
actual incorporation into that society which has him for their head,
and does make together with him one body (he and they in that
respect having one name); for which cause, by virtue of this
mystical conjunction, we are of him, and in him, even as though our
very flesh and bones should be made continuate with his. We are in
Christ, because he knoweth and loveth us, even as parts of himself.
No man is actually in him but they in whom he actually is; for he
which has not the Son of God has not life. 'I am the vine, ye are
the branches: he that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth
forth much fruit;' but the branch severed from the vine withereth.
We are, therefore, adopted sons of God to eternal life by
participation of the only begotten Son of God, whose life is the
well-spring and cause of ours. It is too cold an interpretation,
whereby some men expound our being in Christ to import nothing else
but only that the self-same nature which maketh us to be men is in
him, and maketh him man as we are. For what man in the world is
there which has not so far forth communion with Jesus Christ? It is
not this that can sustain the weight of such sentences as speak of
the mystery of our coherence with Jesus Christ. The church is in
Christ, as Eve was in Adam. Yea, by grace we are every [one] of us
in Christ and in his church, as by nature we were in those, our
first parents. God made Eve of the rib of Adam; and his church he
frameth out of the very flesh, the very wounded and bleeding side,
of the Son of man. His body crucified, and his blood shed for the
life of the world, are the true elements of that heavenly being
which maketh us such as himself is of whom we come. For which cause
the words of Adam may be fitly the words of Christ concerning his
church, 'Flesh of my flesh, and bone of my bones;' - 'A true nature,
extract out of mine own body.' So that in him, even according to his
manhood, we, according to our heavenly being, are as branches in
that root out of which they grow. To all things he is life, and to
men light, as the Son of God; to the church, both life and light
eternal, by being made the Son of man for us, and by being in us a
Saviour, whether we respect him as God or as man. Adam is in us as
an original cause of our nature, and of that corruption of nature
which causeth death; Christ as the cause original of restoration to
life. The person of Adam is not in us, but his nature, and the
corruption of his nature, derived into all men by propagation.
Christ having Adam's nature, as we have, but incorrupt, deriveth not
nature but incorruption, and that immediately from his own person,
into all that belong unto him. As, therefore, we are really
partakers of the body of sin and death received from Adam; so,
except we be truly partakers of Christ, and as really possessed of
his Spirit, all we speak of eternal life is but a dream. That which
quickeneth us is the Spirit of the second Adam, and his flesh that
wherewith he quickeneth. That which in him made our nature incorrupt
was the union of his Deity with our nature. And in that respect the
sentence of death and condemnation, which only taketh hold upon
sinful flesh, could no way possibly extend unto him. This caused his
voluntary death for others to prevail with God, and to have the
force of an expiatory sacrifice. The blood of Christ, as the apostle
witnesseth, does, therefore, take away sin; because, 'Through the
eternal Spirit he offered himself unto God without spot.' That which
sanctified our nature in Christ, - that which made it a sacrifice
available to take away sin, is the same which quickened it, raised
it out of the grave after death, and exalted it unto glory. Seeing,
therefore, that Christ is in us a quickening Spirit, the first
degree of communion with Christ must needs consist in the
participation of his Spirit, which Cyprian in that respect terms
'germanissimam societatem,' - the highest and truest society that
can be between man and him, which is both God and man in one. These
things St Cyril duly considering, reproveth their speeches which
taught that only the Deity of Christ is the vine whereupon we by
faith do depend as branches, and that neither his flesh nor our
bodies are comprised in this resemblance. For does any man doubt but
that even from the flesh of Christ our very bodies do receive that
life which shall make them glorious at the latter day; and for which
they are already accounted parts of his blessed body? Our
corruptible bodies could never live the life they shall live, were
it not that here they are joined with his body, which is
incorruptible; and that his is in ours as a cause of immortality, -
a cause, by removing, through the death and merit of his own flesh,
that which hindered the life of ours. Christ is, therefore, both as
God and as man, that true vine whereof we both spiritually and
corporally are branches. The mixture of his bodily substance with
ours is a thing which the ancient fathers disclaim. Yet the mixture
of his flesh with ours they speak of, to signify what our very
bodies, through mystical conjunction, receive from that vital
efficacy which we know to be in his; and from bodily mixtures they
borrow divers similitudes, rather to declare the truth than the
manner of coherence between his sacred [body] and the sanctified
bodies of saints. Thus much no Christian man will deny, that when
Christ sanctified his own flesh, giving as God, and taking as man,
the Holy Ghost, he did not this for himself only, but for our sakes,
that the grace of sanctification and life, which was first received
in him, might pass from him to his whole race, as malediction came
from Adam into all mankind. Howbeit, because the work of his Spirit
to those effects is in us prevented by sin and death possessing us
before, it is of necessity that as well our present sanctification
into newness of life, as the future restoration of our bodies,
should presuppose a participation of the grace, efficacy, merit, or
virtue of his body and blood; - without which foundation first laid,
there is no place for those other operations of the Spirit of Christ
to ensue. So that Christ imparteth plainly himself by degrees. It
pleaseth him, in mercy, to account himself incomplete and maimed
without us. But most assured we are, that we all receive of his
fulness, because he is in us as a moving and working cause; from
which many blessed effects are really found to ensue, and that in
sundry both kinds and degrees, all tending to eternal happiness. It
must be confessed, that of Christ working as a creator and a
governor of the world, by providence all are partakers; - not all
partakers of that grace whereby he inhabiteth whom he saveth. Again:
as he dwelleth not by grace in all, so neither does he equally work
in all them in whom he dwelleth. 'Whence is it,' saith St Augustine,
'that some be holier than others are, but because God does dwell in
some more plentifully than in others?' And because the divine
substance of Christ is equally in all, his human substance equally
distant from all, it appeareth that the participation of Christ,
wherein there are many degrees and differences, must needs consist
in such effects as, being derived from both natures of Christ really
into us, are made our own: and we, by having them in us, are truly
said to have him from whom they come; Christ also, more or less, to
inhabit and impart himself, as the graces are fewer or more, greater
or smaller, which really flow into us from Christ. Christ is whole
with the whole church, and whole with every part of the church, as
touching his person, which can no way divide itself, or be possessed
by degrees and portions. But the participation of Christ importeth,
besides the presence of Christ's person, and besides the mystical
copulation thereof with the parts and members of his whole church, a
true actual influence of grace, whereby the life which we live
according to godliness is his; and from him we receive those
perfections wherein our eternal happiness consisteth. Thus we
participate Christ: - partly by imputation; as when those things
which he did and suffered for us are imputed unto us for
righteousness; partly by habitual and real infusion; as when grace
is inwardly bestowed while we are on earth; - and afterward more
fully, both our souls and bodies made like unto his in glory. The
first thing of his so infused into our hearts in this life is the
Spirit of Christ; whereupon, because the rest, of what kind soever,
do all both necessarily depend and infallibly also ensue, therefore
the apostles term it sometimes the seed of God, sometimes the pledge
of our heavenly inheritance, sometimes the hansel or earnest of that
which is to come. From whence it is that they which belong to the
mystical body of our Saviour Christ, and be in number as the stars
of heaven, - divided successively, by reason of their mortal
condition, into many generations, - are, notwithstanding, coupled
every one to Christ their head, and all unto every particular person
amongst themselves; inasmuch as the same Spirit which anointed the
blessed soul of our Saviour Christ does so formalise, unite, and
actuate his whole race, as if both he and they were so many limbs
compacted into one body, by being quickened all with one and the
same soul. That wherein we are partakers of Jesus Christ by
imputation, agreeth aqua]ly unto all what have it; for it consisteth
in such acts and deeds of his as could not have longer continuance
than while they were in doings nor at that very time belong unto any
other but to him from whom they come: and therefore, how men, either
then, or before, or since, should be made partakers of them, there
can be no way imagined but only by imputation. Again: a deed must
either not be imputed to any, but rest altogether in him whose it
is; or, if at all it be imputed, they which have it by imputation
must have it such as it is, - whole. So that degrees being neither
in the personal presence of Christ, nor in the participation of
those effects which are ours by imputation only, it resteth that we
wholly apply them to the participation of Christ's infused grace;
although, even in this kind also, the first beginning of life, the
seed of God, the first-fruits of Christ's Spirit, be without
latitude. For we have hereby only the being of the sons of God: in
which number, how far soever one may seem to excel another, yet
touching this, that all are sons, they are all equals; some,
happily, better sons than the rest are, but none any more a son than
another. Thus, therefore, we see how the Father is in the Son, and
the Son in the Father; how they both are in all things, and all
things in them: what communion Christ has with his church; how his
church, and every member thereof, is in him by original derivation,
and he personal]y in them, by way of mystical association, wrought
through the gift of the holy Ghost; which they that are his receive
from him, and, together with the same, what benefit soever the vital
force of his body and blood may yield; - yea, by steps and degrees
they receive the complete measure of all such divine grace as does
sanctify and save throughout, till the day of their final exaltation
to a state of fellowship in glory with him, whose partakers they are
now in those things that tend to glory."
This one testimony ought to be enough unto this sort of men,
whilst they are at any consistency with their own reputation: for it
is evident that there is nothing concerning personal election,
effectual vocation, justification by the imputation of the
righteousness of Christ, participation of him, union of believers
unto and with his person, derivation of grace from him, etc., which
are so reproached by our present author, but they are asserted by
this great champion of the church of England, who undoubtedly knew
the doctrine which it owned, and in his days approved, and that in
such words and expressions, as remote from the sentiments, or at
least as unsavoury to the palates, of these men, as any they except
against in others.
And what themselves so severely charge on us in point of
discipline, that nothing be spoken about it until all is answered
that is written by Mr Hooker in its defence, may, I hope, not
immodestly be so far returned, as to desire them that in point of
doctrine they will grant us truce, until they have moved out of the
way what is written to the same purpose by Mr Hooker. Why do not
they speak to him to leave fooling, and to speak sense, as they do
to others? But let these things be as they are; I have no especial
concernment in them, nor shall take any farther notice of them, but
only as they influence the exceptions which this author makes unto
some passages in that book of mine. And in what I shall do herein, I
shall take as little notice as may be of those scurrilous and
reproachful expressions, which either his inclination or his
circumstances induced him to make use of. If he be pleased with such
a course of procedure, I can only assure him, that as to my
concernment, I am not displeased; and so he is left unto his full
liberty for the future.
The first thing he quarrels about, is my asserting the
necessity of acquaintance with the person of Christ; which
expression he frequently makes use of afterward in a way of
reproach. The use of the word "acquaintance," in this matter, is
warranted by our translation of the Scripture, and that properly,
where it is required of us to acquaint ourselves with God. And that
I intended nothing thereby but the knowledge of Jesus Christ, is
evident beyond any pretence to the contrary to be suggested by the
most subtle or inventive malice. The crime, therefore, wherewith I
am here charged, is my assertion that it is necessary that
Christians should know Jesus Christ; which I have afterward
increased, by affirming also that they ought to love him: for by
Jesus Christ all the world of Christians intend the person of
Christ; and the most of them, all of them, - the Socinians only
excepted, - by his person, "the Word made flesh," or the Son of God
incarnate, the mediator between God and man. For because the name
Christ is sometimes used metonymically, to conclude thence that
Jesus Christ is not Jesus Christ, or that it is not the person of
Christ that is firstly and properly intended by that name in the
gospel, is a lewd and impious imagination; and we may as well make
Christ to be only a light within us, as to be the doctrine of the
gospel without us. This knowledge of Jesus Christ I aver to be the
only fountain of all saving knowledge: which is farther reflected on
by this author; and he adds (no doubt out of respect unto me), "that
he will not envy the glory of this discovery unto its author;" and
therefore honestly confesseth that he met with it in my book. But
what does he intend? Whither will prejudice and corrupt designs
carry and transport the minds of men? Is it possible that he should
be ignorant that it is the duty of all Christians to know Jesus
Christ, to be acquainted with the person of Christ, and that this is
the fountain of all saving knowledge, until he met with it in my
book about communion with God; which I dare say he looked not into,
but only to find what he might except against? It is the Holy Ghost
himself that is the author of this discovery; and it is the great
fundamental principle of the gospel. Wherefore, surely, this cannot
be the man's intention; and therefore we must look a little farther,
to see what it is that he aimeth at. After, then, the repetition of
some words of mine, he adds, as his sense upon them, p. 39, "So that
it seems the gospel of Christ makes a very imperfect and obscure
discovery of the nature, attributes, and the will of God, and the
methods of our recovery. We may thoroughly understand whatever is
revealed in the gospel, and yet not have a clear and saving
knowledge of these things, until we get a more intimate acquaintance
with the person of Christ." And again, p. 40: "I shall show you what
additions these men make to the gospel of Christ by an acquaintance
with his person; and I confess I am very much beholden to this
author, for acknowledging whence they fetch all their orthodox and
gospel mysteries, for I had almost pored my eyes out with seeking
for them in the gospel, but could never find them; but I learn now,
that indeed they are not to be found there, unless we be first
acquainted with the person of Christ." So far as I can gather up the
sense of these loose expressions, it is, that I assert a knowledge
of the person of Jesus Christ which is not revealed in the gospel,
which is not taught us in the writings of Moses, the prophets, or
apostles, but must be had some other way. He tells me afterward, p.
41, that I put in a word fallaciously, which expresseth the
contrary; as though I intended another knowledge of Christ than what
is declared in the gospel. Now, he either thought that this was not
my design or intention, but would make use of a pretence of it for
his advantage unto an end aimed at (which what it was I know well
enough); or he thought, indeed, that I did assert and maintain such
a knowledge of the person of Christ as was not received by Scripture
revelation. If it was the first, we have an instance of that new
morality which these new doctrines are accompanied withal; if the
latter, he discovers how meet a person he is to treat of things of
this nature. Wherefore, to prevent such scandalous miscarriages, or
futilous imaginations for the future, I here tell him, that if he
can find in that book, or any other of my writings, any expression,
or word, or syllable, intimating any knowledge of Christ, or any
acquaintance with the person of Christ, but what is revealed and
declared in the gospel, in the writings of Moses, the prophets, and
apostles, and as it is so revealed and declared, and learned from
thence, I will publicly burn that book with my own hands, to give
him and all the world satisfaction. Nay, I say more: if an angel
from heaven pretend to give any other knowledge of the person of
Christ, but what is revealed in the gospel, let him be accursed. And
here I leave this author to consider with himself, what was the true
occasion why he should first thus represent himself unto the world
in print, by the avowing of so unworthy and notorious a calumny.
Whereas, therefore, by an acquaintance with the person of
Christ, it is undeniably evident that I intended nothing but that
knowledge of Christ which it is the duty of every Christian to
labour after, - no other but what is revealed, declared, and
delivered in the Scripture, as almost every page of my book does
manifest where I treat of these things; I do here again, with the
good leave of this author, assert, that this knowledge of Christ is
very necessary unto Christians, and the fountain of all saving
knowledge whatever. And as he may, if he please, review the honesty
and truth of that passage, p. 38, "So that our acquaintance with
Christ's person, in this man's divinity, signifies such a knowledge
of what Christ is, has done, and suffered for us, from whence we may
learn those greater, deeper, and more saving mysteries of the
gospel, which Christ has not expressly revealed to us;" so I will
not so far suspect the Christianity of them with whom we have to do,
as to think it necessary to confirm by texts of Scripture either of
these assertions; which whoever denies is an open apostate from the
gospel.
Having laid this foundation in an equal mixture of that truth
and sobriety wherewith sundry late writings of this nature and to
the same purpose have been stuffed, he proceeds to declare what
desperate consequences ensue upon the necessity of that knowledge of
Jesus Christ which I have asserted, addressing himself thereunto, p.
40.
Many instances of such dealings will make me apt to think that
some men, whatever they pretend to the contrary, have but little
knowledge of Jesus Christ indeed. But whatever this man thinks of
him, an account must one day be given before and unto him of such
false calumnies as his lines are stuffed withal. Those who will
believe him, that he has almost "pored out his eyes" in reading the
gospel, with a design to find out mysteries that are not in it, are
left by me to their liberty; only I cannot but say, that his way of
expressing the study of the Scripture, is [not?] such as becometh a
man of his wisdom, gravity, and principles. He will, I hope, one day
be better acquainted with what belongs unto the due investigation of
sacred truth in the Scripture, than to suppose it represented by
such childish expressions. What he has learned from me I know not;
but that I have anywhere taught that there are mysteries of religion
that are not to be found in the gospel, unless we are first
acquainted with the person of Christ, is a frontless and impudent
falsehood. I own no other, never taught other knowledge of Christ,
or acquaintance with his person, but what is revealed and declared
in the gospel; and therefore, no mysteries of religion can be thence
known and received, before we are acquainted with the gospel itself.
Yet I will mind this author of that, whereof if he be ignorant, he
is unfit to be a teacher of others, and which if he deny, he is
unworthy the name of a Christian, - namely, that by the knowledge of
the person of Christ, the great mystery of God manifest in the
flesh, as revealed and declared in the gospel, we are led into a
clear and full understanding of many other mysteries of grace and
truth; which are all centred in his person, and without which we can
have no true nor sound understanding of them. I shall speak it yet
again, that this author, if it be possible, may understand it; or,
however, that he and his co-partners in design may know that I
neither am nor ever will be ashamed of it: - that without the
knowledge of the person of Christ, which is our acquaintance with
him (as we are commanded to acquaint ourselves with God) as he is
the eternal Son of God incarnate, the mediator between God and man,
with the mystery of the love, grace, and truth of God therein, as
revealed and declared in the Scripture, there is no true, useful,
saving knowledge of any other mysteries or truths of the gospel to
be attained. This being the substance of what is asserted in my
discourse, I challenge this man, or any to whose pleasure and favour
his endeavours in this kind are sacrificed, to assert and maintain
the contrary, if so be they are indeed armed with such a confidence
as to impugn the foundations of Christianity.
But to evince his intention, he transcribeth the ensuing
passages out of my discourse: - P. 41, "The sum of all true wisdom
and knowledge may be reduced to these three heads: - 1. The
knowledge of God; his nature and properties. 2. The knowledge of
ourselves with reference to the will of God concerning us. 3. Skill
to walk in communion with God. In these three is summed up all true
wisdom and knowledge, and not any of them is to any purpose to be
obtained, or is manifested, but only in and by the Lord Christ."
This whole passage I am far from disliking, upon this
representation of it, or any expression in it. Those who are not
pleased with this distribution of spiritual wisdom, may make use of
any such of their own wherewith they are better satisfied. This of
mine was sufficient unto my purpose. Hereon this censure is passed
by him: - "Where by is fallaciously added to include the revelations
Christ has made; whereas his first undertaking was, to show how
impossible it is to understand these things savingly and clearly,
notwithstanding all those revelations God has made of himself and
his will by Moses and the prophets, and by Christ himself, without
an acquaintance with his person." The fallacy pretended is merely of
his own coining; my words are plain, and suited unto my own purpose,
and to declare my mind in what I intend; which he openly corrupting,
or not at all understanding, frames an end never thought of by me,
and then feigns fallacious means of attaining it. The knowledge I
mean is to be learned by Christ; neither is any thing to be learned
in him but what is learned by him. I do say, indeed, now, whatever I
have said before, that it is impossible to understand any sacred
truth savingly and clearly, without the knowledge of the person of
Christ; and shall say so still, let this man and his companions say
what they will to the contrary: but that in my so saying I exclude
the consideration of the revelations which Christ has made, or that
God has made of himself by Moses and the prophets, and Christ
himself, the principal whereof concern his person, and whence alone
we come to know him, is an assertion becoming the modesty and
ingenuity of this author. But hereon he proceeds, and says, that as
to the first head he will take notice of those peculiar discoveries
of the nature of God of which the world was ignorant before, and of
which revelation is wholly silent, but are now clearly and savingly
learned from an acquaintance with Christ's person. But what, in the
meantime, is become of modesty, truth, and honesty? Do men reckon
that there is no account to be given of such falsifications? Is
there any one word or little in my discourse of any such knowledge
of the nature or properties of God as whereof revelation is wholly
silent? What does this man intend? Does he either not at all
understand what I say; or does he not care what he says himself?
What have I done to him? wherein have I injured him? how have I
provoked him, that he should sacrifice his conscience and reputation
unto such a revenge? Must he yet hear it again? I never thought, I
never owned, I never wrote, that there was any acquaintance to be
obtained with any property of the nature of God by the knowledge of
the person of Christ, but what is taught and revealed in the gospel;
from whence alone all knowledge of Christ, his person, and his
doctrine, is to be learned. And yet I will say again, if we learn
not thence to know the Lord Christ, - that is, his person, - we
shall never know any thing of God, ourselves, or our duty, clearly
and savingly (I use the words again, notwithstanding the reflections
on them, as more proper in this matter than any used by our author
in his eloquent discourse), and as we ought to do. From hence he
proceeds unto weak and confused discourses about the knowledge of
God and his properties without any knowledge of Christ; for he not
only tells us "what reason we had to believe such and such things of
God, if Christ had never appeared in the world," (take care, I pray,
that we be thought as little beholden to him as may be), "but that
God's readiness to pardon, and the like, are plainly revealed in the
Scripture, without any farther acquaintance with the person of
Christ," p. 43. What this farther acquaintance with the person of
Christ should mean, I do not well understand: it may be, any more
acquaintance with respect unto some that is necessary; - it may be,
without any more ado as to an acquaintance with him. And if this be
his intention, - as it must be, if there be sense in his words, -
that God's readiness to pardon sinners is revealed in the Scripture
without respect unto the person of Jesus Christ, it is a piece of
dull Socinianism; which, because I have sufficiently confuted else
where, I shall not here farther discover the folly of. [As] for a
knowledge of God's essential properties by the light of nature, it
was never denied by me; yea, I have written and contended for it in
another way than can be impeached by such trifling declamations. But
yet, with his good leave, I do believe that there is no saving
knowledge of, or acquaintance with God or his properties, to be
attained, but in and through Jesus Christ, as revealed unto us in
the gospel. And this I can confirm with testimonies of the
Scripture, fathers, schoolmen, and divines of all sorts, with
reasons and arguments, such as I know this author cannot answer. And
whatever great apprehensions he may have of his skill and abilities
to know God and his properties by the light of nature, now that he
neither knows nor is able to distinguish what he learns from thence,
and what he has imbibed in his education from an emanation of divine
revelation; yet I believe there were as wise men as himself amongst
those ancient philosophers, concerning whom and their inquiries into
the nature of God our apostle pronounces those censures, Rom. 1; 1
Cor. 1.
But on this goodly foundation he proceeds unto a particular
inference, p. 44, saying, "And is not this a confident man, to tell
us that the love of God to sinners, and his pardoning mercy, could
never have entered into the heart of man but by Christ, when the
experience of the whole world confutes him? For, whatever becomes of
his new theories, both Jews and heathens, who understood nothing at
all of what Christ was to do in order to our recovery, did believe
God to be gracious and merciful to sinners, and had reason to do so;
because God himself had assured the Jews that he was a gracious and
merciful God, pardoning iniquity, transgressions, and sins. And
those natural notions heathens had of God, and all those discoveries
God had made of himself in the works of creation and providence, did
assure them that God is very good: and it is not possible to
understand what goodness is, without pardoning grace."
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