The best Puritan Paperback I’ve read to date.
This is #22 of the 63 released (as of today) by the Banner of Truth Puritan Paperback series. If you haven’t read any of these conveniently cheap and easy to carry (I always keep one in my flight suit pocket) gems, you’re missing out.
Reading this book felt like hearing the beauty of Christ and the Gospel for the first time. Some sections literally brought me to tears.
John Owen’s thesis: “That which I intend to show is, that beholding the glory of Christ is one of the greatest privileges that believers are capable of in this world, or even in that which is to come. Indeed, it is by beholding the glory of Christ that believers are first gradually transformed into his image and then brought into the eternal enjoyment of it … on this depend our present comforts and future blessedness. This is the life and reward of our souls (John 14:9; 2 Cor 4:6).”
Put simply, enjoying the glory of Christ is what we were designed to do on earth and what will make earth begin to feel like heaven and ultimately make heaven itself heaven. In fact, Owen argues that those on earth who have no desire to seek Christ’s glory will not only be unfit for heaven, but would hate heaven if they were sent there: “The soul unprepared by grace and faith is not capable of seeing the glory of Christ in heaven … a fish would not thank you for taking it out of the sea and putting it on dry land under the blazing sun! Neither would an unregenerate sinner welcome the thought of living for ever in the blazing glory of Christ.”
Owen argues that by “beholding the glory of Christ,” we will …
1. Be more and more crucified to this world … “it will become to me like something dead and putrid, impossible for me to enjoy.”
2. Be made fit for heaven … “not all who desire to go to heaven are fit and ready for heaven.”
3. Be transformed ‘into the same image’ of His Son (2 Cor 3:18)
4. Find rest to our souls (Rom 8:6)
5. Have the only clear vision of the glory of God in his infinite perfections (2 Cor 4:6)
In the following chapters he answers:
1. What is that glory of Christ which we can behold by faith?
2. How do we behold the glory of Christ by faith?
3. How is our beholding Christ by faith different from our actually seeing his glory in heaven?
Best Quotes by Chapter:
1. Seeing Christ’s Glory
- “No man ought to look for anything in heaven if he has not by faith first had some experience of it in this life.”
2. Christ’s Glory as God’s Representative
- “Without Christ we would have known nothing truly about God.”
3. The Glory of Christ in His Person
- “The glory of Christ is the ‘pearl of great price’ which we should make every effort to find (Matt. 13:45, 46). And the Scripture is the ocean into which we dive to discover this pearl, or the mine in which we dig for its precious treasures (Prov. 2:1-5).
4. The Glory of Christ’s Humbling Himself
- “The mediator could not be God himself as God only, for a mediator does not mediate for only one … Man needs a mediator to represent him just as God needs a mediator to represent him (Gal 3:20). So whatever God might do in the work of reconciliation, yet as God, he could not do it as mediator.”
5. The Glory of Christ’s Love as Mediator
- “The only thing that moved God to choose us was his undeserved love.”
6. The Glory of Christ’s Work as Mediator
- “The wisdom of the world despised the sufferings of Christ. But it is precisely because of his sufferings that he is glorious and precious in the sight of believers (1 Pet 2:6,7).”
7. The Glory of Christ’s Exaltation
- “In Christ, sufferings went before glory. And so it must be with us. Satan and the world both offer immediate glory, but this glory will be followed by eternal suffering … and so he calls his church to follow him, first through sufferings and then into glory.”
8. The Glory of Christ under the Old Testament
- “If we do not see the glory of Christ in the Scriptures it is because a veil of blindness is over our minds. Nor can we read, study or become spiritually strong by meditating on the writings of the Old Testament unless we commit ourselves to considering the glory of Christ displayed in them.”
9. The Glory of Christ’s Union with the Church
- “One view of Christ’s glory by faith will scatter all the fears, answer all the objections and disperse all the depressions of poor, tempted, doubting souls. To all believers it is an anchor which they may cast within the veil, to hold them firm and steadfast in all trials, storms and temptations, both in life and in death.”
10. The Glory of Christ’s Giving Himself to Believers
- “For as in his incarnation he took our nature into personal union with his own, so by the Holy Spirit he takes us into a mystical union with himself.”
11. The Glory of Christ in Restoring All Things
- “The blessedness of all creatures depends on their being centered on him in his glorious office as head of the new family in heaven and earth.”
12. The First Difference between Beholding the Glory of Christ by Faith and by Sight
- “I have no idea what understanding and sight we shall have of the union of Christ’s two natures. But this I do know: in the actual sight of Christ, we shall see a glory in this union of his two natures a thousand times more wonderful than we can conceive.”
13. The Second Difference between Beholding the Glory of Christ by Faith and by Sight
- “We all too easily take Christ for granted and become lazy in seeking fellowship with him … so, by withdrawing himself he aims to awaken his people to search for him, and to mourn over their sin in takinghim for granted.”
14. The Third Difference between Beholding the Glory of Christ by Faith and by Sight (needed to write 2 quotes here…)
- “Scripture is our only blueprint of the glory of Christ. Only in Scripture and only by faith can we behold the glory of Christ while still in this life.”
- “When, at death, the soul departs from the body, it is immediately freed from all weakness, disability, darkness, doubts and fear … the first entry into immortality from mortality is a step towards eternal glory and into eternal rest. The great evil, death, thus becomes the means of freeing us from all the remains of evil in us.”