THE DEATH OF DEATH IN THE DEATH OF CHRIST
JOHN OWEN
A TREATISE OF THE REDEMPTION AND RECONCILIATION THAT IS IN THE BLOOD OF CHRIST, WITH THE MERIT THEREOF, AND SATISFACTION WROUGHT THEREBY.
marked up by Lance George
Marshall
Greek and Hebrew fonts used in this
document can be downloaded at BibleWorks
INTRODUCTION TO THE BOOK by J.I. Packer
BOOK I
- Chapter 1: In general of the end of the death of Christ, as it is in the Scripture proposed.
- Chapter 2: Of the nature of an end in general, and some distinctions about it.
- Chapter 3: Of the agent or chief author of the work of our redemption, and of the first thing distinctly ascribed to the person of the Father.
- Chapter 4: Of those things which in the work of redemption are peculiarly ascribed to the person of the Son.
- Chapter 5: The peculiar actions of the Holy Spirit in this business.
- Chapter 6: The means used by the fore-recounted agents in this work.
- Chapter 7: Containing reasons to prove the oblation and intercession of Christ to be one entire means respecting the accomplishment of the same proposed end, and to have the same personal object.
- Chapter 8: Objections against the former proposal answered
BOOK II
- Chapter 1: Some previous considerations to a more particular inquiry after the proper end and effect of the death of Christ.
- Chapter 2: Containing a removal of some mistakes and false assignations of the end of the death of Christ.
- Chapter 3: More particularly of the immediate end of the death of Christ, with the several ways whereby it is designed.
- Chapter 4: Of the distinction of impetration and application -- The use and abuse thereof; with the opinion of the adversaries upon the whole matter in controversy unfolded; and the question on both sides stated.
- Chapter 5: Of application and impetration.
BOOK III
- Chapter 1: Arguments against the universality of redemption-The two first; from the nature of the new covenant, and the dispensation thereof.
- Chapter 2: Containing three other arguments.
- Chapter 3: Containing, two other arguments from the person Christ sustained in this business.
- Chapter 4: Of sanctification, and of the cause of faith, and the procurement thereof by the death of Christ.
- Chapter 5: Being a continuance of arguments from the nature and description of the thing in hand; and first, of redemption.
- Chapter 6: Of the nature of reconciliation, and the argument taken from thence.
- Chapter 7: Of the nature of the satisfaction of Christ, with arguments from thence.
- Chapter 8: A digression, containing the substance of an occasional conference concerning the satisfaction of Christ.
- Chapter 9: Being a second part of the former digression--Arguments to prove the satisfaction of Christ.
- Chapter 10: Of the merit of Christ, with arguments from thence.
- Chapter 11: The last general argument.
BOOK IV
- Chapter 1: Things previously to be considered, to the solution of objections.
- Chapter 2: An entrance to the answer unto particular arguments.
- Chapter 3: An unfolding of the remaining texts of Scripture produced for the confirmation of the first general argument for universal redemption.
- Chapter 4: Answer to the second general argument for the universality of redemption.
- Chapter 5: The last argument from Scripture answered.
- Chapter 6: An answer to the twentieth chapter of the book entitled, "The Universality of God's Free Grace," etc., being a collection of all the arguments used by the author throughout the whole book to prove the universality of redemption.