A lecture in the course I just
attended on Oxford’s Christian history was on John Owen,
the Puritan divine who was Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University. Read John
Piper’s eloquent tribute to him here.
Owen, despite ill health and
personal tragedy (all his 11 children died before him, and only one survived
childhood) was unbelievably disciplined and driven. Whether the drive came from
the love of God or personal ambition or, most likely, a combination of the two
is not clear.
From the age of 12, he
disciplined himself to sleep for just 4 hours a night, staying up and studying
and later writing late into the night. His health was affected, and later in
life, when he was often sick, he regretted the hours of rest he had missed as a
youth.
He wrote 22 books. The most
famous are The
Death of Death in the Death of Christ and The
Mortification of Sin in all Believers.
Few read him today. His prose has
become impenetrable to the modern ear, unlike his friend and contemporary, John
Bunyan’s!
* *
*
Was
it worth it? All the late nights, the ruined health, the long labours for
books which are barely read today.
I personally don’t believe that
Christian writing written solely to edify, preach to, or enlighten others is
worth it.
Writing should be undertaken
first and foremost for the joy of it. Writers should write as
birds sing, for joy, and because that is how they were shaped and put
together. We write as we work out our thoughts, we write to create shapely and
beautiful things, and yes, if others are blessed by it, we rejoice!!
Our writing should edify--build us up--as well
as our readers. I suspect Owen was developing and working out his own theology
as he wrote, and his writing probably brought peace and light to his own soul,
as well as influencing many theologians, such as Jonathan Edwards, John Piper,
Sinclair Fergusson, J I Packer, and Simon Vibert. He is predominantly a theologian’s theologian!!
* * *
I felt a bit melancholy listening
to the lecture on John Owen, all that labour, the 22 books researched and
written over 65 years of just 4 hours sleep a night, and few of them read any
more.
And I just hoped he enjoyed the
writing of them. Because if he did, then the labour was not entirely wasted—if
he found joy in it.
Solomon, reputed to be the wisest man who ever lived, condenses wisdom partly into finding joy in one’s work. A man can do nothing
better than to eat and drink and find satisfaction in his work. Ecc 2:12
So I saw that there is nothing better for a
man than to enjoy his work, because that is his lot. Ecc 3:22.
If, or
how long, we will be read, we cannot control. So, let’s work for the joy of it,
let’s work because we are followers of Christ, and because, gloriously,
mysteriously, he has called us to write, and, in peace and serenity, let’s
leave the results of our work in his hands!
* * *
And here is a wonderful story,
taken from John
Piper’s essay on Owen.
King Charles II asked Owen one
time why he bothered going to hear an uneducated Tinker like Bunyan preach.
Owen replied, "Could I posses the
tinker's abilities for preaching, please your majesty, I would gladly
relinquish all my learning."
“Repeatedly when Bunyan was in
prison Owen worked for his release with all the strings he could pull. But to
no avail. But when John Bunyan came out in 1676 he brought with him a
manuscript "the worth and importance of which can scarcely be
comprehended" (see note 33). In fact Owen met with Bunyan and recommended
his own publisher, Nathaniel Ponder. The partnership succeeded, and the book
that has probably done more good, after the Bible, was released to the
world—all because Owen failed in his good attempts to get Bunyan released, and
because he succeeded in finding him a publisher. The lesson: "Judge not the Lord by feeble
sense,/but trust him for his grace;/behind a frowning providence/he hides a
smiling face."
Writing for (and with) joy--Aye!
ReplyDeleteThanks much, Dan (Toucanic!)
ReplyDelete