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THE WORKS OF JOHN OWEN (16 VOLS.)
JOHN OWEN

CURRENTLY JUST 15 OF THE 16 VOLUMES ARE AVAILABLE TO SHIP! ONLY VOLUME 3 IS MISSING.



This greatest of all British theologians was incredibly prolific as a writer, with John Owen’s books numbering in the dozens. He was a man of great stature with national influence during his lifetime, preaching before Parliament multiple times and serving as chaplain and advisor to Oliver Cromwell. He also enjoyed some influence with King Charles II. He is best known, though, for his writings that cover subjects ranging from doctrinal explorations to ecclesiastical themes to practical advice. No matter the topic, it was thoroughly explored and presented with authority—and, although he often wrote books to help decipher troubling current issues, they are presented in a way that is timeless. The Works of John Owen is available in a 16-volume set, and is also available in single volumes. Books that continue to be of interest include The Mortification of Sin, Duties of Christian Fellowship, and Indwelling Sin in Believers, among others.

CONTENTS OF THESE VOLUMES

VOLUME 1 - THE GLORY OF CHRIST

VOLUME 2 - COMMUNION WITH GOD

VOLUME 3 - THE HOLY SPIRIT (Currently out-of-stock)

VOLUME 4 - THE WORK OF THE HOLY SPIRIT

VOLUME 5 - FAITH AND ITS EVIDENCES

VOLUME 6 - TEMPTATION AND SIN

VOLUME 7 - SIN AND GRACE

VOLUME 8 - SERMONS TO THE NATION

VOLUME 9 - SERMONS TO THE CHURCH

VOLUME 10 - THE DEATH OF CHRIST

VOLUME 11 - CONTINUING IN THE FAITH

VOLUME 12 - THE GOSPEL DEFENDED

VOLUME 13 - MINISTRY IN FELLOWSHIP

VOLUME 14 - TRUE AND FALSE RELIGION

VOLUME 15 - CHURCH PURITY AND UNITY

VOLUME 16 - THE CHURCH AND THE BIBLE

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25% DISCOUNT FOR THIS GRAND AND GLORIOUS SET
SGCB Price: $298.50 (list price $398.00)

Additional Information
Volume Details

Volume Details

Volume 1: The Glory of Christ
In Volume 1, Andrew Thomson's excellent biography sympathetically traces his life and experience from his birth at Stadhampton, though his pastoral ministries in Fordham and Coggeshall, his years of public service as chaplain at Cromwell and vice-chancellor of Oxford University, until his last days as a preacher and pastor in London. Also included in this volume are some of his early works, including two pieces that show his intense pastoral concern: Meditations and Discourses on the Person of Christ and Meditations and Discourses on the Glory of Christ. Also included are Two Short Catechisms.

Volume 2: Communion with God
One of John Owen's greatest experimental works forms the bulk of Volume 2 of his works. On Communion with God is rich with sound Bible expositions and also includes a fresh translation of The Song of Solomon. It is a heartwarming treatise which drives one to seek the face of "God in three Persons" and to enjoy the rich fare of His "banqueting house." For those seeking assurance of their salvation it is a particularly valuable cordial.

Also includes Owen's Vindication of the Doctrine of the Trinity.

Volume 3: The Holy Spirit
Owen on the Holy Spirit, as the work contained in this volume has generally been called, is perhaps one of the best known and most highly esteemed of Owen's treatises -- his masterpiece. The book is divided into five sections. The first deals with the name, nature, personality, and the mission of the Holy Spirit; the second, with the operations of the holy spirit under the Old Testament; the third, with the Spirit's work under the New Testament; the fourth, with the work of the spirit in sanctification; and the fifth, with the necessity of holiness and obedience.

No one has written more fully on the Holy Spirit than Owen... A masterpiece of sound theology and exposition.

Volume 4: The Reason of Faith
This volume contains the second part of Owen's extensive and valuable work on the Holy Spirit. His Discourse on the Holy Spirit, which makes up the whole of volume 3, was published in 1674. Uncertain that he would be able to finish all he planned to do on the subject, Owen was led to publish his work in seperate treatises. The treatises which make up this volume cover in the author's words 'the work of the Holy Spirit as the Spirit of illumination, of supplicaiton, of consolation and as the immediate author of all spiritual offices and gifts, extraordinary and ordinary'.

Of special note is Owen's two treatise's on the work of the Spirit in illuminating the mind, where he counters "mysticism."

Volume 5: Faith and Its Evidences
Owen's masterly account of justification by faith, first printed in 1677, is distinguished from the other two classical 17th-century English treatises on this subject (those of Downame and Davenant) by its non-speculative, non-scholastic character and its dominating pastoral concern. The resurgent Roman challenge, and current Protestant confusion, obliged Owen to write controversially at certain points, but the core of his discourse is straight forward biblical exposition, massive, fresh, compelling and practical.

Also includes Evidences of the Faith of God's Elect.

Volume 6: Temptation and SinJohn Owen was essentially a pastoral theologian, and in his best writings his pastoral concern and acute doctrinal instinct are inseparable. Even at his most polemical his motivation is always the defense of the flock of God from the onslaught of false doctrine. In the four works contained in this volume we have Owen at his very best: On the Mortification of Sin, Temptation, Indwelling Sin, and Exposition of Psalm 130.

Perhaps the finest example of "experimental Calvinism" ever produced. An essential book to master in your lifetime.

Volume 7: Sin & Grace
Owen shines in this second volume dedicated to more "practical" subjects. (Volumes 6 through 9 are dedicated thus.) Includes The Nature and Causes of Apostasy, Spiritual-Mindedness, and The Dominion of Sin and Grace.

Owen's classic work On Spiritual Mindedness should be read often...one of the greatest works of devotional literature ever penned. It is also a great place to start if you are new to reading Owen.

Volume 8: Sermons to the Nations
This volume contains 16 sermons, all published during Owen's lifetime. While they are eminently biblical in character and bristling with scriptural reference, they are at the same time of historical importance.

Volume 9: Sermons to the Church
This volume contains 83 sermons, including 14 which resolve "Practical Cases of Conscience" and 25 intended as preparation for the Lord's Table. The remainder are on such subjects as "Gospel Charity", "Christ's Pastoral Care", "The Duty of a Pastor", and "The Excellancy of Christ."

Volume 10: The Death of Christ
In March 1642 John Owen's first literary production was published; it dealt with the Atonement, a subject to which he was to return in several of his later works. This first treatise, entitled A Display of Arminianism is a simple comparison of the tenets of that system with the teaching of scripture. He later went on to pen what is arguably the definitive work on the extent of the atonement, The Death of Death in the Death of Christ. Both are included here, along with two other related works: The Death of Christ (a reply to Richard Baxter) and A Dissertation on Divine Justice.

Owen's classic work The Death of Death in the Death of Christ has never been refuted, making it a definitive study up to the present day.

Volume 11: Continuing in the Faith
The Doctrine of the Saints' Perseverance Explained and Confirmed
Written to answer "Redemption Redeemed" by the Arminian, John Goodwin, the main treatise of this book contains a minute refutation of Goodwin's views but nevertheless would, in the words of Andrew Thompson "be almost as complete were very part of it that refers Goodwin expunged, and undeniafroms the most masterly vindication of the perseverance of the saints in the English tongue."

Volume 12: The Gospel Defended
In the 1650s historic Christianity in England was challenged by Socinianism. Owen was commissioned to write a refutation of this heretical system. He begins by tracing the history of Socinianism and goes on to deal with all the points of controversy. The Socinians' views on Scripture, the divine nature and character, the person and the work of Christ, the Holy Spirit, the past and present condition of man, election and justification are all thoroughly examined.

Volume 13: Ministry and Fellowship
A perennial concern of John Owen throught his literary career was the subject of the Church. Thus it is not surprising that four of the sixteen volumes of his works are devoted to this field. This volume contains several of such works, and principally deals with the subject of the schism. The charge of schism was repeatedly brought against those who sought to reform the Church according Scripture -- the heart of Puritanism.

Volume 14: True and False Religion
The year following the Restoration of Charles II, a Franciscan Friar, by the name of John Vincent Cane, published Fiat Lux, a plausible attempt to recommend Roman Catholicism as the remedy for the ills of religious and civil discord in Britain. As Owen himself observes, Cane and his co-religionists knew well the importance of striking while the iron was hot, for the times seemed ripe for the re-establishment of Roman Catholicism. This volume contains Owen's response...

Volume 15: Church Purity & Unity
Contains a number of Owen's treatise's on eccesiology:
Discourse Concerning Liturgies
Discourse concerning Evangelical Love, Church Peace, and Unity
Inquiry concerning Evangelical Churches
Instruction in the Worship of God.

Volume 16: The Church & The Bible
Contains Tracts on Excommunication, Chruch Censures, Baptism, On the Divine Original of the Scriptures, Posthumous Sermons, Indices