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John Owen and Trinitarian Agency*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 February 2009

Alan Spence
Affiliation:
University of Zimbabwe48 Glengarry Road Highlands Harare

Extract

As a faithful young Puritan minister John Owen used to visit his people in the parish of Fordham teaching both adults and children the basic doctrines of Protestantism from two catechisms which he himself composed. In the larger one it is asked: Do we know God as he is? The answer is: No; his glorious being is not of us, in this life, to be comprehended. The same concern is apparent at the end of the section on the Trinity. Question: Can we conceive these things as they are in themselves? Answer: Neither we nor yet the angels of heaven are able to dive into these secrets, as they are internally in God; but in respect of the outward dispensation of themselves to us by creation, redemption, and sanctification, a knowledge may be obtained of these things, saving and heavenly.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Scottish Journal of Theology Ltd 1990

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References

1 Toon, Peter, God's Statesman: The Life and Work of John Owen. Exeter, The Paternoster Press, 1971, pp. 17ff.Google Scholar

2 Owen, John, The Works of John Owen, DD., Ed. by Goold, William H., 24 vols., London and EdinburghJohnstone & Hunter, 18501855Google Scholar; Edinburgh, T. & T. Clark, 1862; 16 vols., London, The Banner of Truth Trust, 1965–1968; vols. 18–24 have recently been reprinted as An Exposition of the Epistle to the Hebrews, 7 vols., Baker Book House, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1980. I p. 471Google Scholar. (All further references are to The Works unless otherwise indicated.)

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20 The Cappadocians used, but were not confined by, the Aristotelian analysis of substance to describe the relation of person to essence in the Trinity. ‘The distinction between ousia and hypostasis is the same as that between the general and the particular; as, for instance, between the animal and the particular man.’ (Basil ep. 236 6, p. 278, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, second series vol. 8, 1978). However, the fact that the essence was seen as a numerical and not just a generic unity meant that the Aristotelian framework was itself inadequate and needed to be supplemented with other models. One of these was the conception of the divine persons as ‘so many ways in which the one indivisible divine substance distributes and presents itself in various ‘modes of coming to be’ (Kelly, , Early Christian Doctrina, 1977, p. 266Google Scholar). Owen's definition is indebted to the Cappadocians for both of these concepts.

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