Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
Dan Peters explores John Owen's Communion with God, and examines what it means to relate specifically to each Person of the Trinity.
What is distinct communion? It is communing with each Person of the Godhead in a way that is distinct. It is experiencing a relationship with each that is distinguishable from one's relationships with the others.
John Owen was a great advocate of this theme,
especially in his work entitled Communion with God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, Each Person Distinctly, in Love,
Grace and Consolation. He was convinced that this is the pattern to which healthy Christian devotion should conform. He and other bright stars in the Puritan galaxy were able to marry the devotional vitality of the day with the best Trinitarian theology of the past - and the result was distinct communion.
In more recent days the church has slipped away from this focus, but Dan Peters, interacting with Owen's work, argues that the Christian can find a greater love for, and joy in, each Person of the Godhead through a greater understanding of this.
Beginning with an analysis of relevant Scripture texts, before moving to some theological principles, Peters rounds off with some practical details:
Introduction
Part 1: Distinct Communion: Biblical Foundations
The Language and Imagery of Communion
Communion and the Divine Persons
Relating to the Three as Both They and He
Part 2: Distinct Communion: Theological Foundations
The Search for Three Distinct Persons
Gazing Through Salvation's Window
Part 3: Distinct Communion: Practical Outworkings
The Joy of Tri-Personal Devotion
Praying to the Holy Spirit
May our churches be filled with men and women whose love extends to the three Persons of the Trinity equally, and who have a relationship with each that is distinct, and that this might increasingly be reflected in the way that we pray and sing together.
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
Dan Peters explores John Owen's Communion with God, and examines what it means to relate specifically to each Person of the Trinity.
What is distinct communion? It is communing with each Person of the Godhead in a way that is distinct. It is experiencing a relationship with each that is distinguishable from one's relationships with the others.
John Owen was a great advocate of this theme,
especially in his work entitled Communion with God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, Each Person Distinctly, in Love,
Grace and Consolation. He was convinced that this is the pattern to which healthy Christian devotion should conform. He and other bright stars in the Puritan galaxy were able to marry the devotional vitality of the day with the best Trinitarian theology of the past - and the result was distinct communion.
In more recent days the church has slipped away from this focus, but Dan Peters, interacting with Owen's work, argues that the Christian can find a greater love for, and joy in, each Person of the Godhead through a greater understanding of this.
Beginning with an analysis of relevant Scripture texts, before moving to some theological principles, Peters rounds off with some practical details:
Introduction
Part 1: Distinct Communion: Biblical Foundations
The Language and Imagery of Communion
Communion and the Divine Persons
Relating to the Three as Both They and He
Part 2: Distinct Communion: Theological Foundations
The Search for Three Distinct Persons
Gazing Through Salvation's Window
Part 3: Distinct Communion: Practical Outworkings
The Joy of Tri-Personal Devotion
Praying to the Holy Spirit
May our churches be filled with men and women whose love extends to the three Persons of the Trinity equally, and who have a relationship with each that is distinct, and that this might increasingly be reflected in the way that we pray and sing together.