The following treatise may be
regarded as a series of Discourses on John 17:24. The
subject is the Glory of Christ, as the representative
of God to the church, — in the mystery of his
Person, — in his office as Mediator, — in
his exaltation on high, — in his relation to the
church during every age of its history, — and in
the final consummation of his work, when all things
are to be gathered into a blessed unity, as the result
of his mediation. The treatise is concluded by a
statement of the difference between our views of the
Glory of Christ as beheld by faith in this world, and
as it shall be beheld by sight in heaven.
It is not professedly a sequel to the work of the
author on the Person of Christ; though, from some
expressions in the Preface to these Meditations, they
may be regarded in this light. Several of them are
evidently an expansion of certain thoughts and views,
of which the germ will be found in the preceding work.
The two works are, indeed, so closely connected, that
they have been often published together. It has been
thought proper, therefore, to adhere to this
arrangement in the present republication of Dr
Owen’s Works.
There are some facts which impart peculiar interest
to these Mediations. They were drawn up, according to
the author’s own statement, "for the exercise
of his own mind," in the first instance; and
illustrate, accordingly, the scope and tenor of his
Christian experience. They form, moreover, his dying
testimony to the truth, — and to the truth, with
peculiar emphasis, as it "is in Jesus;" for
they are the substance of the last instructions which
he delivered to his flock; and thee constitute the
last work which he prepared for the press. It is
instructive to peruse the solemn musings of his soul
when "weakness, weariness, and the near
approaches of death," were calling him away from
his earthly labours; and to mark how intently his
thoughts were fixed on the glory of the Saviour, whom
he was soon to behold "face to face." On the day of
his death, Mr Parne, who had the charge of the
original publication of this treatise, on bidding Dr
Owen farewell, said to him, "Doctor, I have just
been putting your book on the Glory of Christ to the
press". "I am glad," was Owen’s
reply, "to hear that that performance is put to the
press; but, O brother Payne, the long looked—for
day is come at last, in which I shall see that glory
in another manner than I have ever done yet, or was
capable of doing in this world."
Mr Hervey thus expresses his admiration of this
work: "To see the Glory of Christ is the grand
blessing which our Lord solicits and demands for his
disciples in his last solemn intercession, John 17:24.
Should the reader desire assistance in this important
work, I would refer him to a little treatise of Dr.
Owen’s, entitled ‘Meditations on the
Glory of Christ;’ it is little in
size, — not so in value. Were I to speak of it in
the classical style, I should call it aureus, gemmeus,
mellitus. But I would rather say, it is richly
replenished with that unction from the Hole One which
tends to enlighten the eyes and cheer the heart; which
sweetens the enjoyments of life, softens the hours of
death, and prepares for the fruitions of eternity."
— Teron and Aspasio, vol. 3 p. 75.
The treatise was published in 1684. It was
reprinted in 1696, with the addition of two chapters
which were found among the papers of Owen, and in his
own handwriting, though too late for insertion in the
first edition of the work. — Ed.