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John Owen:

First, then, this is a duty wherein it is most evident that Christians are but little exercised—namely, in holding immediate communion with the Father in love.

Unacquaintedness with our mercies, our privileges, is our sin as well as our trouble. We hearken not to the voice of the Spirit which is given unto us, “that we may know the things that are freely bestowed on us of God” (1 Cor. 2:12). This makes us go heavily, when we might rejoice; and to be weak, where we might be strong in the Lord.

How few of the saints are experimentally acquainted with this privilege of holding immediate communion with the Father in love!

With what anxious, doubtful thoughts do they look upon him!

What fears, what questioning are there, of his goodwill and kindness!

At the best, many think there is no sweetness at all in him toward us, but what is purchased at the high price of the blood of Jesus.

It is true: that alone is the way of communication; but the free fountain and spring of all is in the bosom of the Father. “Eternal life was with the Father, and is manifested unto us” (1 John 1:2).

Let us, then—Eye the Father as love; look not on him as an always lowering father, but as one most kind and tender.

Let us look on him by faith, as one that has had thoughts of kindness toward us from everlasting.

It is misapprehension of God that makes any [to] run from him, who have the least breathing wrought in them after him. “They that know you will put their trust in you” [Ps. 9:10].

Men cannot abide with God in spiritual meditations. He loses soul’s company by their want [=lack] of this insight into his love. They fix their thoughts only on his terrible majesty, severity, and greatness; and so their spirits are not endeared.

Would a soul continually eye his everlasting tenderness and compassion, his thoughts of kindness that have been from of old, his present gracious acceptance, [then] it could not bear an hour’s absence from him; whereas now, perhaps, it cannot watch with him one hour.

—John Owen, Communion with the Triune God, ed. Kapic and Taylor (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2007), ch. 4.

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