John Owen
(1616-1683)
by Dr. Joel Beeke and Randall J. Pederson
John Owen, called the “prince of the
English divines,” “the leading figure among the Congregationalist
divines,” “a genius with learning second only to Calvin’s,” and
“indisputably the leading proponent of high Calvinism in England in the
late seventeenth century,” was born in Stadham (Stadhampton), near
Oxford. He was the second son of Henry Owen, the local Puritan vicar.
Owen showed godly and scholarly tendencies at an early age. He entered
Queen’s College, Oxford, at the age of twelve and studied the classics,
mathematics, philosophy, theology, Hebrew, and rabbinical writings. He
earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1632 and a Master of Arts degree in
1635. Throughout his teen years, young Owen studied eighteen to twenty
hours per day.
Pressured to accept Archbishop Laud’s new
statutes, Owen left Oxford in 1637. He became a private chaplain and
tutor, first for Sir William Dormer of Ascot, then for John Lord
Lovelace at Hurley, Berkshire. He worked for Lovelace until 1643. Those
years of chaplaincy afforded him much time for study, which God richly
blessed. At the age of twenty-six, Owen began a forty-one year writing
span that produced more than eighty works. Many of those would become
classics and be greatly used by God. Keep Reading...
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