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GraciousCall.org - Introduction to the Worship of God by John Owen
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Introduction to the Worship of God
by John Owen
Preface
The following Catechism explains the constitution and
ordinances of a Christian Church, and the duties incumbent on its
office-bearers and members. When it was first published, in
1667, the names of the author and of the printer were withheld,
and no intimation even was given of the place in which it was
printed, lest danger should be incurred by the publication of a
work advocating a form of polity at variance with the
ecclesiastical system which the Court was at that time striving
to render, as far as possible, universal in England. Dissenting
congregations were, however, springing up in different parts of
the country, and for the guidance of the Independents the
Catechism was particularly useful. It was so much appreciated,
that in the same year in which it first appeared, a second
edition, with some slight differences and emendations, was
published; and hence certain discrepancies between the following
version of it and the one which is given in Russell's edition of
our author's works, printed from the first edition of the
Catechism.
It came to be known as the "Independents' Catechism," and an
angry attack was made upon it, in 1669, by Benjamin Camfield,
rector of Whitby, in Derbyshire, in an octavo volume of 347
pages, entitled "A Serious Examination of the Independents'
Catechism, and therein of the Chief Principles of Nonconformity
to, and Separation from, the Church of England." The Catechism,
in the estimation of the rector, was "the sink of all
nonconforming and separating principles;" and he takes Owen to
task for inconsistency in holding the Scriptures to be a
sufficient rule of faith and duty. An attack conducted in this
spirit only bespeaks the influence which this Catechism was
beginning to exert in diffusing the principles and consolidating
the interests of the denomination to which its author belonged.
It was the occasion of another attack upon Owen, in the shape of
a frivolous and bitter pamphlet with the title, "A Letter to a
Friend concerning some of Dr. Owen's Principles and Practices,"
etc., 1670. A copy of the Catechism had been sent by the
"Friend" to the anonymous author of the pamphlet, who forthwith
assailed Owen in a strain of pointless invective. The first
charge against him is, that when vice-chancellor at Oxford, he
had discountenanced some invidious distinctions in the dress of
the members of the university,--"those habits and formalities by
which persons of distinct qualities and degrees were
distinguished in that school of learning." It was an offence,
too, that "when he was brought into Westminster Hall for his
witness against Mr. Dutton, he refused to kiss the book, and
professed it to be against his conscience to swear with any other
ceremony than with eyes and hands lifted up to heaven." The
pamphlet closes with "An Independent Catechism," in which the
views of our author are caricatured in a style that is intended
to be witty.
Certain principles laid down in Owen's Catechism, in regard to
the ruling elder for example, are thought to bear some traces of
affinity with Presbyterianism. Encouraged especially by the
doctrine taught in it, that the elders, not the body of the
church, are the primary subjects of office-power, Baxter wrote to
Owen a long document of "theses," as the basis of a union between
Independents and Presbyterians. "I am still a well-wisher to
these mathematics," was his remark, when he finally returned the
theses to their author; and "this," says Baxter, "was the issue
of my third attempt for union with the Independents." There
might be ground for supposing that, on terms suggested by the
Catechism, a coalition might be effected between the two
denominations; and Owen himself, in a subsequent work, indicated
circumstances in which they could not have been in separation
from each other without blame. Superior, however, in practical
sagacity to his correspondent, he might see difficulties where
Baxter saw none, or might feel that a formula of abstract theses
was a waste of ingenuity, so long as the mutual confidence was
lacking, which alone could affix upon the union the seal of
permanence. Too often the victim of his own ardour and acumen,
Baxter was prone to believe that the difficulty of adjusting the
wayward eddies of human feeling and opinion into one smooth and
onward current, should yield at once to the same treatment as
would suffice to work a problem or frame a syllogism. The
consummation for which he sincerely panted,--the outward unity of
the church under one polity,--seems as yet reserved in providence
to grace distant and happier times.
William H. Goold
They [believers] will receive nothing, practise nothing, own
nothing in His worship, but what is of His appointment. They
know that from the foundation of the world he never did allow,
nor ever will, that in any thing the will of the creatures should
be the measure of his honour, or the principle of his worship,
either as to matter or manner. It was a witty and true sense
that one gave of the Second Commandment, 'Non imago, non
simulachrum prohibetur, sed, non facies titbi;'--it is a making
to ourselves, an inventing, a finding out ways of worship, or
means of honouring God, not by him appointed, that is so severely
forbidden. Believers know what entertainment all will-worship
finds with God. "Who hath required this at your hand?" and "In
vain do ye worship me, teaching for doctrines the traditions of
men," is the best it meets with. I shall take leave to say what
is upon my heart, and what (the Lord assisting) I shall willingly
endeavour to make good against all the world,--namely, that that
principle, that the church hath power to institute and appoint
any thing or ceremony belonging to the worship of God, either as
to matter or manner, beyond the orderly observance of such
circumstances as necessarily attend such ordinances as Christ
himself hath instituted, lies at the bottom of all the horrible
superstition and idolatry of all the confusion, blood,
persecution, and wars, that have for so long a season spread
themselves over the face of the Christian world; and that it is
the design of a great part of the Book of the Revelation to make
a discovery of the truth.
And I doubt not but that the great controversy which God hath
had with this nation for so many years, and which he hath pursued
with so much anger and indignation, was upon this account, that,
contrary to the glorious light of the Gospel, which shone among
us, the wills and fancies of men, under the name of order,
decency, and authority of the church (a chimera that none knew
what it was, nor wherein the power did consist, nor in whom
reside), were imposed on men in the ways and worship of God.
Neither was all that pretence of glory, beauty, comeliness, and
conformity, that then was pleaded, any thing more or less than
what God doth so describe in the Church of Israel, Ezek. 16:25,
and forwards. Hence was the Spirit of God in prayer derided,--
hence was the powerfull preaching of the Gospel despised,--hence
was the Sabbath-day decried,--hence was holiness stigmatized and
persecuted. To what end? That Jesus Christ might be deposed
from the sole power of law-making in his church,--that the true
husband might be thrust aside, and adulterers of his spouse
embraced,--that taskmasters might be appointed in and over his
house, which he never gave to his church, Eph. 4:11,--that a
ceremonious, pompous, outward show-worship, drawn from Pagan,
Judaical, and Antichristian observances, might be introduced; of
all which there is not one word, tittle, or iota in the whole
book of God. This, then, they who hold communion with Christ are
careful of,--they will admit nothing, practise nothing, in the
worship of God, private or public, but what they have his warrant
for. Unless it comes in his name, with "Thus saith the Lord
Jesus," they will not hear an angel from heaven.
Owen on Communion with God, pp. 309, 310, fol. ed.
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