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When I was asked last year to
speak on these two occasions on the teaching of John Owen,
on the doctrine of the Holy Spirit, I was at first, as you would
anticipate, greatly delighted. And then, as I actually began
the preparation, greatly daunted. Delighted because there is nothing
that delights many of us, I am sure, than the opportunity or
the excuse or the necessity to read or reread some of the volumes
of John Owen's expositions of God's truth. I think I would
have to say to you, to be totally honest, that the works of John
Owen largely constituted my own theological seminary and education. Education that I didn't receive
in the theological college that I attended. I sought from my
teenage years in the works of John Owen. Indeed, I remember
buying them as a student when I was eighteen for what I calculated
at lunchtime today was the princely sum of $15, less than a dollar
a volume in those far-off days, I think, in 1966. Looking back on my own Christian
experience, I believe I owe probably almost more to John Owen and
his writings than I do to any other uninspired writer outside
of the pages of the New Testament. And I do believe that over the
years of reading Owen, I have probably read almost every word
that he ever published. And for that reason, it has been
a delight to go back to read particularly his teaching on
the Holy Spirit But for the same reason, I more and more have
been deeply daunted. Largely because as I have re-read
parts of Owen's work, I have discovered that he knew a great
deal more about the Holy Spirit than I believed he knew the last
time I read him. And also because it is almost
impossible, as you would understand, to expound the thought of John
Owen on the subject of the Holy Spirit. When I calculate, he
devoted something like 1300 pages in different parts of the 24
volumes of his writings to expound his own thought and his own exposition
of biblical teaching on the Holy Spirit. And remarkably, during
the course of those volumes, because his treatment of the
Holy Spirit is largely and unusually systematic. There is relatively
little repetition. And not only so, although we
often think that Owen seems to stretch out truth to as many
pages as it is able to contain, the fact of the matter is that
much of Owen's writing is exceedingly condensed and to have the task
of condensing what is already condensed into the space of two
hours or so is a task that more and more has both frightened
me and daunted me. Owen covers systematically a
variety of dimensions of the Holy Spirit's work and I want
just to mention these in passing in order that you may know particularly
some of the help that you may find in the course of reading
his many volumes. He writes powerfully and originally
on the subject of the ministry of the Holy Spirit in the authorship
of Scripture and in the testimony of the Spirit to Scripture. It's
often said about the 17th century theologians and pastors that
whereas in the pristine Reformed theology much emphasis was laid
upon the testimony of the Spirit, the testimonium internum spiritus
sancti, as Calvin called it, but in the 17th century one finds
little of that. While one only needs to turn
to Owen to see that in fact he gives us probably the profoundest
and most systematic of all expositions at all times in Christian history
of the vital doctrine of the testimony of the Spirit to the
inerrancy and infallibility and authority of Scripture. The bulk
of Owen's teaching on the Holy Spirit is taken up with his exposition
largely in Volume 3 of his works on the relationship between the
Holy Spirit and the salvation of the Church. And there, as
we shall see and deal with largely this evening and tomorrow, he
focuses attention on the ministry of the Spirit in the new creation,
both in the head of the new creation and then in the members of the
new creation. But as he further expands the
ministry of the Holy Spirit, Owen also deals wonderfully with
the ministry of the Holy Spirit in prayer. And then of course
he deals so well with the ministry of the Holy Spirit in relation
to the gifts of the Spirit. And it's a very interesting thing,
I think it's an important thing to notice that Owen wrote on
the subject of the Holy Spirit with great self-consciousness. It was not accidental that he
chose the doctrine of the Holy Spirit as the magnum opus theologically
of his later years. He very deliberately at the age
of somewhere around 57 or 58 set out to publish a complete
exposition of the work of the Spirit. Just as exhaustive in
his intention as he had been when in his mid-twenties He had
set out to expound the particularity of the redemption wrought by
Christ when as a comparative youngster he had written the
death of death in the death of Christ at the age of 27 or 28. He knew precisely what he was
doing and he knew precisely why he was doing it. And that perhaps
is why we still find his teaching on the Holy Spirit so unusually
relevant to the times in which we ourselves live and seek to
minister. I believe that there are really
three reasons why Owen devoted so much time and energy to the
ministry of the Holy Spirit. In moments of fancy, one wonders
just how much Owen might have accomplished if he'd had a computer
instead of a quill pen. and how much more difficult it
might be to expound his teaching on the Holy Spirit, never mind
anything else. But he has, I think, three reasons for focusing attention
on the Holy Spirit. The first of them is this, that
he recognized, theologically, its contemporary relevance in
his own time. Owen, as most of you will know,
lived between the years 1616 and 1683. He lived in days in
England obviously when the impact of the Reformation was coming
in a sense to its fullest flower in the application of the evangel
to every aspect of the believer's life and every aspect of the
Christian Church. But Owen was deeply conscious
at that time that the work of the Holy Spirit had been, perhaps
almost entirely unrecognized, one of the cardinal issues of
the Reformation, and was certainly one of the cardinal issues of
his contemporary ecclesiastical life. You may remember how Warfield
is able to write many years after Calvin. that what Calvin should
chiefly be known for is the fact that he was the theologian of
the Holy Spirit. And many years before B.B. Warfield, Owen also recognized
that one of the great new or rediscoveries of the Reformation
had been the rediscovery of the power and ministry of the Holy
Spirit. It had not simply been a matter
of altering some Catholic doctrine and returning to Catholic truth.
It had been a matter of the rediscovery of the power of God's Spirit
among his people. Indeed it's a very interesting
thing that Edmund Campion, one of the leaders of the counter-reformation
movement in England, had written already in the 16th century that
he had discovered the chief difference between the Protestant and the
Roman Catholic lay in the Protestant's understanding and experience
of the presence of the Holy Spirit. Whereas in the Catholic Church
the Holy Spirit had been replaced by the priesthood and by the
sacraments. One of the things that Campion
recognized and despised was that in the Reformation, men and women
had discovered God's own power and God's own Spirit. And as
one looks back upon the rediscovery of the Holy Spirit, as I say,
he very self-consciously begins to write what he believes is
the first ever systematic theology of the Holy Spirit. Indeed, he
says in his own introductory letter to volume three of his
works on the Holy Spirit, I know not anyone who went before me
in this design of representing the whole economy of the Spirit
with all his adjuncts, operations, and effects. In other words,
what Owen is trying to give to the Christian Church very self-consciously
is all that he himself has sought to glean from the days of the
Reformation onwards and all that he with his fellow Puritan believers
have come to discover of God's grace and anointing power in
their midst. And so he writes as it were to
say here is the message that God has given to us concerning
the power of the Holy Spirit. But there is a second reason
why he writes at such length on the Holy Spirit. And that
is not only because he recognized its contemporary importance theologically,
but because he also recognized its contemporary importance experimentally. As you read through many of Owen's
works, those dealing with the Spirit and many other of his
works, you discover that he is conscious of at least two movements
in his time. He is conscious on the one hand
of an emphasis on Spiritism or an emphasis on the Holy Spirit
that leaves no place for the reasonable and true understanding
and influence of God's Word. And on the other hand, as is
always true of the Christian pastor, he finds himself fighting
behind as well as in front with those who place all their emphasis
on reason and the reasonable understanding of Scripture and
the reasonableness of the Christian faith and give no place to the
necessity of the supernatural work and ministry of the Holy
Spirit in order that any dead sinner may live a life that is
pleasing and honoring to Jesus Christ. It's sometimes said in
our own day that when we face that situation this is what we
find. If we have the Word without the Spirit, we dry up. If we
have the Spirit without the Word, we blow up. And only when we
have the Spirit and the Word do we grow up. And Owen virtually
says the same thing. He says any man who thinks he
can read Scripture without calling upon the help of the Holy Spirit
would be as well to go and burn his Bible. In other words he
wants to hold together the two great emphases of the Reformation
and the two great emphases of the Gospel that he finds being
torn apart in the development of rationalism on the one hand
and the development of a false enthusiasm on the other hand. And so in all his writing on
the Holy Spirit you find these two things always being held
together the necessity of the word and the study of the word
and the truth of the word that is our canon and rule and guide
and the equal necessity of the ministry of the Holy Spirit to
enable us to understand the mind and will of God and to bring
us to a balanced and fruitful Christian experience. But there's
a third reason, I think, that Owen writes so extensively on
the Holy Spirit. not only because of the theological
importance and the contemporary, critical, controversial importance,
but also because of the personal and experimental importance of
the Holy Spirit in his own life. Some of you will know that Owen
was brought up apparently in a Puritan home. His father was
a Puritan preacher. but from what we discover in
the early biographies of his life although he knew the truths
of the Reformed faith and as Calvin said of Timothy had drunk
in godliness with his mother's milk virtually he was very conscious
in his later teenage years and apparently even into his early
twenties that he knew the truth without being inwardly persuaded
of his own interest in the truth His biographers record an occasion
when in London he went to Aldermanbury Chapel in London to hear Edmund
Callamy preach and was disappointed when some stranger came into
the pulpit so disappointed that he wanted to get up and go go
somewhere else where they might hear better preaching and the
man preached on the story of Christ spilling the storm and
Owen from that sermon onward marked his discovery of the power
of the gospel in his own life and experience. And in many ways,
encouragingly for us, he never was able to discover who the
preacher was, what his name was. Some totally unknown stand-in
who was the instrument in God's hands of bringing forth this
jewel. And in a sense, the handmaid
of all of Owen's writings. on the Holy Spirit. When he discusses
that later on in his writings, particularly in Volume 6, he
makes this classical distinction. He says there is all the difference
in the world between knowing the truth and knowing the power
of the truth. And what I am pretty sure was
underlined for him when that anonymous preacher expounded
Matthew 8 with such an anointing of the Spirit upon Owen's hearing
and believing was that he was finally persuaded that without
the ministry of the Holy Spirit all preaching is in vain. And
there is no hope, as Owen would say, for us coming to a settled
assurance of our own salvation. Now it's out of that background
and into that foreground and because of these various contexts
that I think what Owen has to say we so often find meets our
own needs and echoes the desires of our own hearts as we read
through his writings. And when he comes to expound
the doctrine of the Holy Spirit in all these various dimensions
as he does, particularly in volumes 2 and 3 and 4, and then later
on in volume 11, and then especially in portions of his commentary
on the letter to the Hebrews. There are, out of all the mass
of material that he presents to us, two chief themes that
I want us to focus on in these two studies that we are having
together. The first of them that we will deal with this evening
is his emphasis on the ministry of the Spirit in the head of
the new creation, our Lord Jesus Christ. And the second, obviously,
is the ministry of the Spirit in the members of the new creation,
in those who believe in Jesus Christ. And although statistically
Owen gives far more attention to the second of these themes
than to the first. There is no doubt from the way
in which he deals with the first that he recognizes its fundamental,
indeed its prior importance for our understanding of the Holy
Spirit. And so what I want to do this evening is to focus attention
on his teaching of the ministry of the Spirit in the life of
the Lord Jesus and in his work in ministry. And then tomorrow
to think of the ministry of the Spirit in believers, restricting
ourselves particularly to his ministry in indwelling believers
and his ministry in sealing believers. So this evening we think together
as we are able of the ministry of the Spirit in the life of
our Lord Jesus Christ. Scattered throughout Owen's writings
on the ministry of the Spirit he regularly quotes from the
45th Psalm cited you remember in the opening chapter of the
Epistle to the Hebrews of how the bridegroom in the 45th Psalm
is anointed with the oil of gladness beyond his fellows. And how that
is taken up by the writer of the letter to the Hebrews and
focused on the person and ministry of our Lord Jesus Christ. And
in dealing with the doctrine of the Holy Spirit, Owen says
this is the first place that we are to look. The cause of
our experience of the Holy Spirit and the pattern of our experience
of the Holy Spirit are both to be found in the fact that our
Lord Jesus Christ was anointed with the oil of gladness, the
Holy Spirit, without measure. And as we likewise are anointed
with the oil of gladness with the measure which is appropriate
to the Spirit's sovereign working and our response in faith, we
discover that the same pattern and indeed a measure of the same
experience that was true of the Lord Jesus becomes true of all
the members of the body of the Lord Jesus as he pours out his
Spirit also upon them. Fundamental to what Owen has
to say is this, But that outpouring of the Spirit, that descent of
the oil of gladness upon Jesus is something, Owen says, that
is carried out in the life of Jesus by degrees. And as Owen takes us through
the life and ministry of the Spirit, as he takes us through
the pattern of Jesus' experience, He wants to point out to us how
in various dimensions and stages of the life of the Lord, the
Holy Spirit evidenced himself in a way that was appropriate
to the growth of Jesus as a man on the one hand, and to the ministry
of Jesus as the Messiah on the other hand. And Owen is trying
to say to us, Brethren, If you would ever expound the ministry
of the Holy Spirit and understand the ministry of the Holy Spirit,
you ought not to start with the ministry of the Spirit in the
life of the believer. That, as it were, is to remove
the head and look merely at the body. You need to begin with
the ministry of the Spirit in the life of the Lord Jesus. And
he says that really for three reasons. The first is that to
do this is to obey the basic law of the Spirit's ministry.
The Spirit's ministry primarily is to draw attention to the Lord
Jesus Christ. Now Owen would be the last man
in the history of the church surely to say But the Holy Spirit
does not draw attention to the sins of men. He is given for
that reason to convict men of sin and righteousness and judgment.
But Owen recognized what sometimes we ourselves do not recognize
even in those verses in John 16, 8-11. But that testimony
of the Holy Spirit is directly related to his testimony to Jesus. It is because he goes to the
Father. It is because the Prince of this world is judged. It is
because Jesus is exalted. That the Spirit convicts men
of sin and righteousness and judgment. So that even there,
Owen underlines, we need to begin with the testimony of the Spirit
to the Lord Jesus Christ. Because that is the Spirit's
deepest desire. To show us Jesus. But then there is another reason
why he does this. And it is this. There was a book
published earlier on this year, I think, entitled, The Holy Spirit,
The Shy Member of the Trinity. And I suppose many Christian
people think of the Spirit in that way. I think I would go
even further and say that many Christians think of the Spirit
as the anonymous member of the Trinity. He is a faceless, nameless
One. But what Owen is trying to say
is this, that just as you come to know the Father through the
Son, because He is the Father of the Son, so it is as the Spirit
shines on the Son, and you come to know the Son, that you come
also to know the Spirit, because He is the Spirit of the Son. Owen makes a good deal in his
writings of the notion that the Spirit is the paraclete. He is
the one called to our side. But he is not only the one called
to our side to plead our cause, Owen points out, he is the one
called to our side to plead the cause of Jesus. And it's a very
interesting thing in the context in which John is writing of that
and Jesus is speaking of that. that the paraclete or the advocate
is not as in our society the highly trained scientific lawyer. The paraclete or the advocate
of a man or woman in Jesus' time was generally speaking one of
his companions, his best friend. Someone who had observed the
man and been with the man and was able therefore to testify
to the man. And in much that he says this
is the direction in which Owen is tending, he is saying to us,
do you want to know the Holy Spirit? Do you want, as is one
of his chief applications of his exposition, to learn what
it is to worship the Holy Spirit? Then learn his identity as the
eternal companion of the Lord Jesus Christ. Watch the Spirit. and learned therefore to love
the Spirit because as he shines on Jesus Christ he reveals his
own identity as the great lover and companion and comforter and
supporter of the one who has become your Saviour and Lord
and Friend. But then there is another aspect
to this which Owen expounds. And that is that in all he seeks
to do in focusing our attention, relatively briefly though he
does it, upon the Spirit's ministry to Jesus Christ, as well as the
Spirit's testimony to Jesus Christ, he is seeking to do something
that the evangelical tradition following on largely lost sight
of. And that was to teach men and
women that their salvation could never be fetched from within
themselves, but could only be fetched from
Jesus Christ. Constantly, Owen is saying, this
is the witness of the Spirit to look to Jesus Christ And it
seems to me one of the ground-breaking characteristics of his exposition
of the ministry of the Spirit and the life of the Lord Jesus
is that he does this not simply in a general way, look to Jesus
because the Spirit tells you to look to Jesus. But he takes
us, as it were, piece by piece through the biblical revelation
of the relationship between the Spirit and Jesus. not only that
we may see Jesus all the more clearly as our Saviour but that
we may learn in the Gospel to be fully Trinitarian and come
also to worship and to love the One who is the Spirit of Jesus
and all the more as we shall see tomorrow because it is this
same Spirit who dwells in our lives by the gift of the ascended
Jesus Christ. Now what are the stages in which
Owen expounds the Spirit's ministry? There are, I think, four of them.
First of all, he expounds the ministry of the Spirit in the
incarnation of Jesus. That is to say, more precisely,
in the incarnate Logos, as Jesus is born into the world. It is
by the power of the Holy Spirit. It's always struck me as being
very illuminating how Owen not only points back in general terms
to one of the great old tags of Christian theology, but actually
expresses it on more than one occasion in his writings. Opera
ad extra trinitatis in divisa sunt. The work of the Trinity
beyond the Trinity, the saving as well as the creating operations
of the Trinity are indivisible. And Owen picks this up when he
speaks about the incarnation of Jesus. He points to the fact
that the Lord is able to say to the Father, a body of you
prepared for me. And he recognizes the Father's
activity in the enfleshing of the Logos. He points to how Hebrews
tells us that the Son lays hold not of the seed of angels but
of the seed of Abraham and indicates to us how the Son himself is
operated in his own incarnation. But chiefly he points us to the
fact that in the conception of our Lord Jesus Christ it is by
the ministry of the Holy Spirit that Jesus is both conceived
and sanctified. He is conceived, says Owen, following
obviously the Apostles' Creed, in the womb of the Virgin Mary,
by the overshadowing ministry of the Holy Spirit. He tells
us, in a sense, that the very language that is used there is
theologically loaded. Just as the Spirit overshadowed
the deep in the first creation, and just as the Spirit overshadowed
the church on the day of Pentecost, so in the mysterious creative
operation of the Holy Spirit, He overshadowed the Virgin Mary,
hiding both from her sight and from ours the means by which
the Logos would become incarnate. But emphasizing that although
here is a mystery that is simply beyond our understanding and
as a matter of fact lies unrevealed as one of the secret things of
God, Owen wants to emphasize that here, from the very inauguration
of Jesus the Messiah, in the conception of Jesus, in that
moment when the Holy Spirit brought into being the union between
the eternal Son of the eternal God and the seed of the woman,
the seed of Abraham, the seed of David, the seed of Mary. From the very conception in her
womb, before He was brought forth, the Spirit overshadowed Him in
order that He might be, that is, that the Spirit might be.
the efficient cause of the incarnation in which the Virgin Mary served
as the material cause. But not only is Jesus conceived
by the Holy Spirit, He is sanctified at the moment of conception,
says Owen, by the Holy Spirit. And that in two senses. just
because it is precisely our flesh to which the Logos has joined
himself irrevocably and now permanently. Just because it is our flesh,
Mary's flesh. Owen emphasizes the necessity
not only of a conception by the Holy Spirit but a holy conception
through the power of the Spirit so that what would be born in
her would be that holy thing. Owen suggests that the reason
the incarnate Logos is free from sin from the moment of his generation
is because he is brought forth not by natural generation but
by the generation of the Holy Spirit. not by natural conception
but by supernatural conception and then more positively he says
not only is the Messiah preserved from the moment of conception
from sin but the Messiah is also at the
moment of conception sanctified one might say embryonically sanctified
and filled to the measure one might say of embryonic sanctification
with all the graces and gifts required for His babyhood. So that He is not only free from
corruption but He is endowed with grace by the Spirit that
He might be both holy and harmless and undefiled and separated from
sinners. And the consequence of this for
Owen and indeed for Owen's theology and our theology is monumental
in its nature. Why is this so important? It's for this reason, says Owen,
it's in order that the Messiah might be both truly man, fully
human, and yet truly and fully holy. that there might be joined
together in one the last Adam and the second man a true and
genuine humanity sharing his humanity with us and our humanity
with him knowing what it is to be frail and to be weak knowing
what it is to be tempted and afflicted being utterly and fully
man as well as utterly and fully God And yet presenting to us, as
it were, in his life and ministry, a new definition of what man
is and who man is intended to be by the harmlessness and holiness
and separation of the life that he lives. And it's not difficult,
you see, to draw the lines that Owen himself occasionally draws
from this basic principle of the operation of the Spirit in
the life of the Lord Jesus to the operation of the Spirit in
the life of the believer. What is the Spirit planning to
do in our lives? Well, He's obviously planning
to do in our lives what He patterned first of all in the life of the
Lord Jesus. He is seeking to make true men
who are truly holy. so that holiness and humanity,
rather than being contradictions of one another, might meet together
in the lives of God's people. Shortly after Owen himself died,
and I've always found this to be a most moving and glorious
compliment to the work of God's grace in his life, someone said
this of him, that he loved with such seriousness And he was serious
with such love that it almost seemed as though nature and grace
were combined in his life and were one and the same thing. And if Owen consciously learned
that principle at all, then he obviously learned it from this
foundational ministry of the Spirit in the life of the Saviour. Truly man, truly holy. Doing, as we sometimes say, the
spiritual thing naturally and the natural thing spiritually.
Doing what is natural as one who is filled with the Spirit.
Doing what is spiritual as one who expresses the beauty and
the clarity of true humanity. So that from his mother's womb
he was already holy. and human. But then the second stage in
the Spirit's ministry, Owen says, is in more general terms his
ministry throughout Christ's own ministry. It is an axiom
in Owen's teaching at this point that our Lord Jesus acted grace,
as Owen puts it, he acted grace as a man And Owen therefore follows
through the indications in Scripture of the Saviour's humanity and
the way in which that humanity is endowed by the ministry of
the Spirit. And that takes place again, Owen
points, in at least two ways. It takes place first of all in
the Spirit's presence in the personal growth of the man Christ
Jesus and it takes place secondly in the presence of the gifts
of the Spirit in the ministry of the Messiah. One rightly reminds
his readers of the statement of Luke in chapter 2 verse 40
of Jesus growing both in stature and in spirituality as it were. That is to say, growing in wisdom
appropriate to the understanding and growth of, for example, a
12 year old boy. And he explains how this takes
place in terms of the great messianic chapters in the prophecy of Isaiah,
notably from Isaiah 11. How the Spirit that was to rest
on the Messiah promised in Isaiah 11 produces the very fruit that
we see described of Jesus in Luke chapter 2. Here already
is the ministry of the Spirit on the humanity of the Lord as
he grows physically, yes, but also as he grows in wisdom, as
he grows in understanding. As a man, as he learns, as it
were, by experience through the things that he suffered, the
gracious patterns of his heavenly Father for his future life and
ministry. And as a child, he listens apparently
to God's Word. And as Isaiah again expresses
it, you remember in the third servant song is the one who from
his childhood according to Luke is wakened morning by morning
with his ear opened to hear what his father is saying and apparently
to understand what his father is saying in the written word
through the ministry of the Holy Spirit abiding on him. And as it were, developing within
his humanity those peculiar graces which flowered in his thirtieth
year. Each step of the way, Owen indicates,
Jesus has companions. He is the companion of fellowship
with his father. He is the companionship of the
word of his father. And he has the permanent companionship
of the ministry. of the Spirit." Says Owen commenting
on this growth in Jesus' humanity generally. He says, the human
nature of Christ was capable of having new objects proposed
to its mind and understanding, whereof before it had simple
nescience. It had simple human ignorance. In the representation then of
things anew to the human nature of Christ, the wisdom and knowledge
of his human nature was objectively increased and in new trials and
temptations he experimentally learned the new exercise of grace
and this was the constant work of the Holy Spirit in the human
nature of Christ he dwelt in him in fullness for he received
not him by measure from hence was Christ habitually holy, and
from hence did he exercise holiness entirely and universally in all
things." The Spirit is the Savior's companion throughout the whole
course of his ministry. And you notice generally, don't
you, how in the gospels this is the pattern. The apostles
are called together to Jesus that they might be with him and
that he might send them out as his witnesses. But you remember
how Jesus says to them in the upper room that this is not the
chief witness. The chief witness is the Holy
Spirit who has been with all of them. and who has been with
him in a special sense from the beginning whom he will send as
his witness when he is crowned and magnified in his ascension
to the right hand of the Father. The one who is his companion
is uniquely qualified to bear witness to him and to bear witness
in this special sense to the whole course of his life as he
does in different ways in the pages of the New Testament. But
the Spirit is seen in Jesus' ministry not only in the presence
of the Spirit, in the growth of the humanity, the human nature
of Jesus as Owen puts it, but also in the presence of the gifts
of the Spirit in the life and ministry of Jesus. Owen points
out how Luke tells us in chapter 2 that Jesus grew strong in his
own spirit but then as at the age of 30 he is anointed publicly
manifested as the one who will bear the offices of prophet and
priest and king there is a special sense in which there at his baptism
Jesus is filled with the spirit says one now for the peculiar
service and ministry Particularly Owen argues in those three years
for the ministry of the prophetic office and finally on the cross
for the ministry of the priestly office. But he is marked out
as now a mature man having reached the apex of human development. He receives now as it were not
only the presence of the Spirit without measure but the gifts
of the Spirit without measure. And so he goes on his way, conquering
and to conquer. And Owen indicates that through
the presence of those gifts of the Spirit which Jesus received
without measure, we find three particular avenues in which he
exercises them. First of all, he exercises them
in his conflict and victory over Satan. And again, Owen seeks
to draw the parallel between the ministry of Jesus and the
ministry of his people. He draws attention to the fact
that in the Markan account of the Temptation narrative, the
brief account in Mark 1.12, Mark uses the verb ekbalim, Jesus
is thrown out, thrust out by the spirit to be tempted by the
devil. He is thrust out to the place
of conflict in order that he may be aided by the Spirit through
that place of conflict to turn it into a place of victory and
conquest. And Owen picks up the fact how
later on in the gospel narratives, in Luke's gospel, the same verb,
ek valine, is used now of the disciples praying that the Lord
of the harvest would thrust out laborers into the harvest. It's the same picture, Owen says,
the Spirit thrusting Jesus out into the wilderness in order
that He may establish the kingdom of God and overcome the powers
of darkness and the Spirit thrusting out His servants into the world
in all ages of Christian history in order that the evil one may
be overcome and the kingdom of God may be established in every
corner of the earth So that just as Jesus has received
the Spirit without measure for His conflict and conquest, the
people of God receive the ministry of the Spirit according to the
measure of grace and faith in order that they may walk where
Jesus walked and keep in step with His Spirit and share in
His mighty victory. So He receives the gifts of the
Spirit for conflict and victory He received the gifts of the
Spirit, particularly for his works of power. It is by the
finger of God, that is, says Owen, in the power of the Holy
Spirit that he casts out demons. That's why blasphemy against
the Spirit, discussed in that very context in the Gospels,
is such a serious crime. Because it is not only opposition
to the Spirit in some vague sense, It is opposition to the Lord
Jesus as the bearer of the Spirit and in another sense as the instrument
of the Spirit in the establishing of the kingdom of God. And then
of course thirdly, Jesus receives the gift of the Spirit for his
preaching and teaching. Owen reminds us of that wonderful
exposition of our Lord following, he points out, Following the
temptation narrative, following the battle, Jesus returns to
the synagogue. And He begins to expound that
which has already begun to be fulfilled through His ministry.
How the Spirit of the Lord is upon Him. How He has been anointed
to preach the Gospel. How He shows the presence of
the Kingdom of God. by signs of restoration and healing
and grace. So that it is by the Spirit not
only in His work but in His preaching and teaching that the Lord Jesus
manifests that He is the one endued with the Spirit who bears
the Spirit in order that the power of the Spirit may touch
the lives of the broken and the needy. And it's wonderful, isn't it,
in Luke's gospel that has such a glorious emphasis on the humanity
of Jesus and the humility of Jesus. That here comes this conquering
hero, deliberately painted as a conquering hero, come fresh
from his battle in the wilderness. Overwhelming Satan by his use
of the wisdom of God in God's Word. But you remember as Owen
points out what it is that the people in the synagogue were
arrested by in Jesus' preaching. They were arrested by the graciousness
of his words. And that's one of the things
that Owen seeks to capture But the Spirit, as it were, effects
in Jesus, and consequently, as Jesus is the pattern of the Spirit's
ministry, effects in the believer. He effects a conquest over Satan. That rather than stifle our humanity,
is, as it were, simply the prologue to the expression of our humanity
as we scoop down to the poor and the needy and the broken.
You see, the wonderful thing that Owen, I think, has captured
in so much of his teaching about the ministry of the Spirit is
that it's these two concepts that are so often thrushed apart
in our lives and in our ministries. The strong and the bold and the
noble and the victorious. and the gentle and the quiet
and the humble and the meek and the gracious that are brought
together in the ministry of Jesus. And that's why it's all the more
striking that when we look together as Owen Bids us do at the ministry
of Jesus, we find in a glorious and in a convicting way the pattern
of the ministry. that the Spirit seeks to produce
in all those he has gifted for service. The Spirit then in the
life of Christ first of all in his incarnation, secondly throughout
the course of his ministry and thirdly of course in his work
of atonement, in his passion and death and indeed also as
Owen points out rightly in his resurrection and ascension. Central
to Owen's thinking here is the great statement of Hebrews 9,
13 and 14. But by contrast with all that
has gone before under the old covenant, Christ offers himself
sacrificially to the Father by the Eternal Spirit. Now if you
know Owen's writings you will know that Here, as on one or
two other issues of exegesis and application, Owen wavers
from place to place. Is this, he asks, as many people
have suggested, a reference to the Spirit of Jesus? Or is this
more objectively a reference to the presence and ministry
of the Holy Spirit? He sometimes seems to veer towards
one interpretation and other times seems to veer towards another
interpretation. When he focuses, as I think he
eventually does, on the fact that this is the ministry of
the Spirit in the work of Jesus on the cross, he tells us that
in that context Hebrews is saying two things. I'm almost embarrassed
to be telling you that it's two things and three things. Those
of you who know Owen know that it's at least two things or three
things, and I'm trying to do what he failed to do at least
on one occasion, and that is keep my place in his writings. He tells us that there are two
things here. First of all, there is in the
context of the passage, and here you get a great and glorious
sense of Owen's feel for the exegesis of Scripture. He says
there is here an implicit contrast between Jesus' sacrifice and
the sacrifices of the Old Testament. He says, for example, what is
supreme about Jesus' sacrifice is precisely that it is being
offered in the power of the Spirit of God. It is a divinely offered
sacrifice and it is a sacrifice in which the one who offers it
is divinely enabled by the Spirit's power. Not only so, says Owen,
but whereas in the old covenant it was a man-made altar that
sustained the sacrifice, what sustains the final sacrifice,
the once-for-all sacrifice of the new covenant is the person
of the Holy Spirit. It is the third member of the
Trinity who is the supporting agency of the Lord Jesus as he
offers himself to God as a sacrifice without spot or blemish. Thirdly, says Owen, just whereas
the Old Testament sacrifices were offered on coals of fire
on the man-made altar, The sacrifice of the Lord Jesus is made upon
the burning zeal of the Savior, inspired and inflamed by the
presence of the Holy Spirit. Here is the epitome of what he
is able to say, that zeal for his Father's house, his Father's
glory and his Father's people have consumed him. It is the
consuming power of the agency of the Spirit, says Owen, that
enables the Lord Jesus to offer himself as an atoning sacrifice. But there's not only an implicit
contrast with the old covenant sacrifices, there is secondly
an explicit indication here, says Owen, of the Spirit's help
and he takes us at this juncture through the final stages of our
Lord's life and passion and emphasizes to us that in the light of all
that we know of the significance of the ministry of the Spirit
in the life of Jesus we may rightly believe that our Lord Jesus was
supported in his decision to go to the cross by the companionship of the Holy
Spirit. In His fellowship with the Spirit,
His frail humanity was supported to make that final decision under
the final crisis of His trials and temptations that it would
be not His natural, holy, pure human will to shrink back from
death. but that in the power of his
companion he would go to the cross and bear the agony and
shame of the cross. And so, says Owen, he is not
only helped to make the decision, but as he puts it rather picturesquely,
he is upheld as he goes like a lamb to the slaughter and as
a sheep before its shearers is dumb not opening his mouth as
he goes to the very door of the temple to the very priests themselves
to be offered as it were under their judgment as a sacrifice
on the altar of Calvary for the sins of men bound to the altar
by the strong bonds of the Spirit's help so that thirdly Jesus, supported
in the decision-making process, upheld by the Spirit's grace,
is sustained in the course of His obedience, even to the death
of the cross. When, in the last climactic moments
of His sacrifice to the Father, Hebrews says, it was by the Eternal
Spirit, that he offered himself up to atone for the sins of the
elect. And then Owen develops this further
and pursues the logic of the Spirit's ministry in Jesus, as
it were, to its logical conclusion. He says, on the cross, Jesus
commended his Spirit into the hands of his Father. Father,
into your hands I commend my Spirit. But what about his body, says
Owen? Well, he says, it is true that
objectively his body was guarded by angels. Those angels that
are present at the resurrection narrative are the angels, Owen
surmises, sent by God to minister, as it were, as guards over the
tomb of Jesus left Externally, that body that God had promised
would not see corruption, lest it might be molested. But, says Owen, the guardian
of the body of our Lord Jesus, in the silence and darkness of
the tomb, preserving it from corruption, was, yes, his eternal
companion, the Holy Spirit. And that is why, says Owen, we
find not only that the thing that was conceived in the womb
of the Virgin was that holy thing, but the body that was preserved
in the tomb of Joseph of Arimathea remained that holy one because,
as it were, of the dying commitment of the Spirit of God to the Son
of God incarnate in our flesh. And that brings us to the final
element of the ministry of the Spirit in the life of our Lord
Jesus. He is present in His conception. He is present throughout the
whole course of His ministry. He is present in his work upon
the cross and he is present also, Owen again rightly, surely emphasises
in Christ's exaltation. Here too the external works of
the Trinity cannot be divided. He is raised by the Father. But
the Father has given him authority to lay down his life and to take
up his life again himself. He rises again from the dead. But Cezanne, it is also especially
in the resurrection and exaltation of Jesus that we find again the
presence and power of the Spirit's ministry. He is declared to be
the Son of God with power by the resurrection from the dead
through the Spirit of holiness. He cites obviously what Paul
says in 1 Timothy 3, 16. that Jesus in his resurrection
is vindicated or justified by the Spirit. The Spirit continues
to minister in the resurrection of Jesus because the resurrection
of Jesus is part of the mediation of Jesus. He is raised again
for our justification because he was vindicated or justified
by the power of the Spirit in his own resurrection. the Spirit
with the Father in the resurrection of Jesus is saying, this is the
Son of God. And because He points out that
He is the Son of God, men are convicted as they are, you remember,
on the day of Pentecost of their sin, of their need of righteousness,
and of the certainty of judgment. And so you see that rather beautifully
Owen is doing two things here. He is first of all telling us
that the Holy Spirit exalts Christ theologically. He is the one
who exalts Christ in the resurrection literally. And in that sense
physically by the transformation of the body of the Lord Jesus
laid in the tomb. as a body of our flesh raised
from the tomb, not resuscitated in the tomb, but resurrected
in the tomb by the transforming agency of the Holy Spirit. So that what you see in that
spiritual body, that body according to the Spirit in the resurrection
life of Jesus is an expression of the testimony
of the Spirit. to the very being of Jesus as
the God-Man-Mediator. And precisely because he participates
in the exaltation of Jesus in the resurrection, he participates
in the exaltation of Jesus in the preaching of the gospel,
in shining through the preaching of the apostles on the Lord Jesus
that is so evident in the opening chapter of the Acts of the Apostles.
As in chapter 2, Peter seeks in his preaching to exalt the
Lord Jesus as the crucified and risen and ascended and reigning
one. And the Spirit, as it were, shines
mightily upon the testimony of Peter to the exalted Jesus so
that he begins to exalt Jesus in the hearts of sinners so that
he discovers to them their ruin and their rebellion and the certainty
of the judgment of their lives in order that they may seek and
find under the conviction of their sin by the power of the
Holy Spirit that the exalted Christ is the one who has been
exalted to be a Prince and Savior and to give repentance to his
people. The Spirit, therefore, in the
resurrection exalts Christ theologically and literally. And in all ages
following, he exalts Christ evangelistically. But then there is the application. And oh, and there is so much
application of these things that I want, since our time is really
gone, to limit myself to the one It seems to me a striking
and remarkable point that he makes, which is this, that my
right response to the ministry of the Spirit to my Lord Jesus
Christ should not only be that I worship the Lord Jesus Christ,
but precisely because I worship the Lord Jesus Christ as my God,
my Savior and my Lord. I learn likewise to worship the
Holy Spirit, to worship Him because He is the divine witness to Jesus. But to worship Him in that special
way, because as I am drawn to faith in Christ and to love for
my Lord Jesus Christ, It instinctively follows that I not only learn
to love my brethren, but that I learn to love him who of all witnesses to my Lord
Jesus is the witness, the advocate, the companion. And because he
is not only his companion, but shares with Him in His divine
nature. I love Him not merely with the
love that is appropriate to my fellow believers who look with
me to Christ as my elder brother, but that I worship Him because
He is the divine, eternal Spirit of
God. John Owen was nothing if he was
not sanitarian. One of the things it seems to
me he is saying to us in his exposition of the ministry of
the Spirit to the Lord Jesus Christ is brethren we have a
triune God and just as we come to know and to love the Father
only through Jesus Christ as we come to realize the identity
of the Father to us because He is the Father of the Son our
Savior Jesus Christ. So in the same way the only way
in which we come to love and to know and to worship the Holy
Spirit is as we learn of the Holy Spirit through the teaching
of Jesus through the ministry of Jesus and through the companionship
of that Spirit on the life of Him whom we chiefly love. We love Him because He loved
and loves our Lord Jesus Christ and was with Him from beginning
to end of His ministry. and we worship Him with a worship
that is due only to God because He is God the Holy Spirit and
we will therefore, says Owen, unceasingly praise Him. Let us pray. Our Heavenly Father, we come in awe and wonder before
the majesty of your great glory. And we come before you who have
sent your Son to be our Savior. We bless you that we know you
only through Him who is the way and the truth and the life, through
whom alone we discover your fatherly care. how we bless you tonight
that we come in the energy and in the presence of your Holy
Spirit and we are filled with thankfulness to you that you
sent him into the world upon our dear Savior we thank you for His companionship with Jesus Christ that we confess
we do not begin to understand but how we praise you for the
bond of love that bound your Son to your Spirit and your Spirit
to your Son and how awed we are that you should invite us into
that communion the communion of the Father and the Son and
the Holy Spirit. We praise you Lord for all that
the ministry of your servant John Owen may teach us on what
it means to know your Spirit. And chiefly we come to you as
your servants who desire that we may realize afresh in these
days the amazing privilege you have given us of gifting us with
the spirit who dwelt upon our Lord Jesus and we ask that as
in different ways in these days our hearts are uplifted and chastened
our minds are stretched, our emotions are both bruised and
healed we pray that we may be conscious of the spirits of the
Father and the Son assuring us in our terrible weakness and
failure that we are truly your children and thrusting us out
as he thrusts out our Saviour to conquer and establish in the
Kingdom of God. Oh, we are frail vessels, we
pray. We are broken by our own sin,
but we pray as we come to you in our conscious emptiness that
we may more and more know what it is to walk in the Spirit,
to be filled with the Spirit, and to see gracious God we pray
the same pattern of the Spirit's ministry in the life of our Lord
Jesus more and more exemplified in the ministries of those of
us who are gathered here that we may truly become strong men
in the armor of Christ to overcome Satan and to break down his strongholds
and also men of a true humanity whose words are marked by the
graciousness of the Lord Jesus here as we pray for his namesake.
John Owen on the Holy Spirit #1
Series John Owen on the Holy Spirit
| Sermon ID | 12303211825 |
| Duration | 1:15:30 |
| Date | |
| Category | Special Meeting |
| Language | English |
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