424Prefatory note.
The following
Sermons have never hitherto been published. It was observed that the other
posthumous discourses of our author had been drawn mostly from manuscripts
in the possession of Mrs Cooke of
Stoke Newington, the grand-daughter of Sir
John Hartopp, the friend of Owen,
and member of the small church in which, during the closing years of his
life, he officiated as pastor. On application to the present
representative of Sir John Hartopp’s
family. Sir W. E. C. Hartopp, Four
Oaks, Sutton Coldfield, Warwickshire, it was ascertained that an additional
volume of the same unpublished manuscripts was in his possession; and with
a generosity which merits the warm gratitude of all the admirers of Owen, he placed it immediately at the disposal of
the publishers of the present edition of Owen’s works. On the fly-leaf of the volume, which is
beautifully written and carefully preserved, there appear the following
name and statement: “Eliz. Cooke;
These manuscript sermons were taken in shorthand by her grandfather, Sir John Hartopp, from Dr Owen’s own mouth, and transcribed by him into longhand; —
bound up by her, in order to preserve such valuable discourses. Newington,
1755.” In farther confirmation of their genuineness, it may be added, that
the first sermon in the series is evidently identical with Owen’s posthumous treatise “On the Mortification
of Sin.” A proof of scrupulous adherence to Owen’s statements, and of a desire on the part of the writer
to give as exactly as possible what came from his lips, is found in the
beginning of one of the sermons, where he mentions, that having come late
into the meeting-house, after the service had begun, he had not been able
to give the introductory part of the discourse. With all the disadvantages
under which they are now given to the world, they have still sufficient
merit to justify the character ascribed to them by Mrs Cooke, to whose care we are indebted for their
preservation, when she pronounces them “valuable discourses.” — Ed.