Pentecostals Refurbish the Upper Room

A quartet of young Pentecostal students, articulate spokesmen for anti-religious-establishment forces at Yale University, promise to be the talk of the campus next week as classes resume after spring vacation. The four tongues-speaking bachelors have been waging a verbal war against what they feel are efforts to stifle their freedom to evangelize privately (see story following).

The four also represent an emerging new Pentecostalism that has little in common with the Holy Roller image. Today, gymnastics in the pews and lusty gospel music are confined largely to rural congregations and tent revivals. And a new generation of Pentecostals wants to keep them there, if they have to be kept at all.

A recent article in the official journal of the largest Pentecostal denomination urges that leaders today “remain ever alert to the dangers of such worked-up excitement. The spurious conversions and fevered exhibitionism resulting from cheap psychological methods have no place in a genuinely spiritual movement.” Pentecostal historian Carl Brumback admits there is “a general lessening of fervor” now within the ranks, and some sense spiritual retreat.

In a nutshell, there is evidence of considerable change in Christendom’s “upper room,” that is, the Pentecostal movement, which has traditionally emphasized the infilling of the Holy Spirit as recorded in Acts 2. Many old fixtures are being discarded as new ones take their places. Further restructuring of the Pentecostal chamber is also being contemplated in the wake of the charismatic revival of recent years.

Extremely narrow legalism is on the way out. For years tongues-groups believed the observance of certain prohibitions to be a sign of holiness. “A few years ago you could tell a Pentecostal person anywhere, anytime,” says Wade H. Horton, general superintendent of the Church of God, “and they did not hesitate when they said that movies, carnivals, circuses, sports, entertainment and other things were worldly.”

New “styles and times have changed somewhat the position on dress in the Assemblies of God as well as in other Pentecostal organizations,” states Carl G. Conner, until recently the unofficial chief of public relations for the Assemblies of God.

Times have also changed the proscriptions on sports and entertainments. The Tremont Avenue Church of God in Greenville, South Carolina, for example, has built a church gymnasium valued at $100, 000—a thing unknown before in the movement.

In addition to these discarded fixtures, there are some notable additions in Pentecostal circles. Specifically, the appearance of new physical plants is attracting attention. The Assemblies of God General Council is now well settled in its contemporary $3,000,000 building at Springfield, Missouri. The Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada has also dedicated a new $500,000 headquarters structure in metropolitan Toronto. And just recently the Church of God began a $1,500,000 addition to its international center in Cleveland, Tennessee, which will sport multi-color fountains.

Ministerial candidates are now facing tougher educational requirements. In both the Pentecostal Holiness and Assemblies of God churches, ordination now requires a bachelor’s degree or an equivalent study program by correspondence. The International Church of the Foursquare Gospel demands two years’ college training.

Furthermore, an “ecumenical” spirit has introduced itself within Pentecostalism’s ninety groups, all of which maintain separate headquarters in the United States. No Pentecostal has yet expressed a desire to participate in unions with historical churches. But clergy of the movement are becoming more involved in interdenominational efforts.

At this time, older Pentecostals are finding themselves forced into a broader religious context as tongues-speaking spreads through older denominations. Donald Gee, Assemblies of God editor for the World Pentecostal Conference quarterly Pentecost, candidly admits, “The gale that produced the earliest phases of the movement has, in many places, almost blown itself out. Pentecostal churches all over the world are tending to become spiritually static.”

Pentecostals seem to be re-evaluating their doctrine of the Holy Spirit. In the past, many taught that the Spirit did not come to dwell within a person until a post-conversion Pentecost. Tongues-speaking thus tended to become, in the eyes of observers, an overly exalted manifestation. Making the situation acute was the fact that literature has been very meager on the subject, and has lacked authentication.

Today the Pentecostal experience is being stated officially and clearly for the first time. This is resulting in a restructuring of the doctrine of the Spirit, at least as it has been promoted and understood previously. “It is true,” comments one key observer, “that a great deal of emphasis in the past has been placed on the two words, ‘with’ and ‘in.’ ” More recently, though, “it has not been the testimony of Pentecostal bodies, officials that only those have the Holy Spirit in them who were baptized with the Holy Ghost. It is recognized that all born-again believers have the Spirit.” A new Pentecostal manual, The Holy Spirit, clearly states, “The Holy Spirit dwells within every true believer in Christ.”

Consequently, there is less emphasis on tongues as the touchstone of all blessing and more emphasis on power for evangelism. “The Pentecostal experience, contrary to much of the publicity, does not center around ‘speaking in tongues,’ more formally identified as glossolalia, but in the belief that the infilling of the Holy Ghost should follow conversion,” says Thomas F. Zimmerman, general superintendent of the Assemblies of God.

All of this causes others to wonder whether tongues-speaking is losing out as “the” distinctive of the movement. Donald Gee asks whether there is a chance the new emphasis may “obscure the distinctive testimony for which we believe God raised up the Pentecostal revival.” He warns, “Evangelism must be a result of spiritual gifts properly exercised, but not a substitute for them.”

Being reconsidered also are other doctrinal issues. Denominational officials are not now so sympathetic to massive healing revivals as formerly. “Mass healing campaigns have lost their novelty,” Gee asserts. Two groups have in their most recent conventions passed resolutions outlawing independent evangelistic associations among their ministry. And, to the surprise of most, the Pentecostals opened their first approved hospital June 28, 1965, in Canada.

What are the reasons for this refurbishing of the upper room? There are at least four:

1. The changes are partly the result of a more educated clergy. Trained men want to clarify and adjust those points where confusion and misunderstanding have occurred.

2. Some adjustments are also being made in an effort to continue the popular growth of this “third force.” Pentecostals are concerned because their once rapid growth, in their U. S. churches at least, has slackened. The Assemblies of God General Council in the fall of 1965 reported “a drop in membership in nineteen districts.” Only thirty-nine new licensed ministers were gained in the same two-year period.

3. The tongues revival continuing in historic churches where the gift is not tied to traditional Pentecostalist disciplines has further caused leaders to take a good look at their whole schema. In fact, Lewis J. Willis, editor of the Church of God Evangel, refers to a “slow but relentless deterioration of strict fundamentalism among some of our people.”

4. Refurbishing is also the result of the improved economic status of members and churches. Elmer T. Clark, in his book The Small Sects of America, outlines in detail the changes that take place in the evolution of a sect into an established church—the very transition now present in this movement.

The Addicts

Canadian immigration officials took a long hard look at a group of New York gospel singers before allowing them to cross the border for a series of March engagements in British Columbia. Six out of the eight members of the group, former drug users who call themselves “The Addicts,” were barred temporarily because they had criminal records. The ban was lifted following appeals from Pentecostal churches where the group had scheduled engagements.

Addicts leader John Gimenez, 34, said they present an act aimed at showing the horrors of drug addiction. In addition to church appearances, the Addicts were scheduled to present a four-act singing drama at the University of British Columbia.

God And Man At Yale—1966

When in 1795 the Rev. Timothy Dwight became president of Yale, he undertook a campaign to lead students into a biblical faith. His scholarly rebuttals to naturalistic philosophy eventually paid off in a revival that swept the college during the spring of 1802. This spring, Dwight’s academic crusade in behalf of orthodox Christianity was being recalled in the midst of a controversy over students’ rights to evangelize. The liberally oriented religious establishment at Yale is saying that other groups “must not contravene in their activities on campus the developing discipline and consensus of the unified group ministry.”

Thus far, no evangelistic efforts have been restricted, but four tongues-speaking Pentecostal students suggest that the machinery has been set up for severe curtailments. In the pages of the university newspaper, the four warn fellow Yale men that establishment forces “could seize from every student his right to follow the dictates of conscience as to faith and practice.”

The controversy recalls a furor on the same campus more than fifteen years ago after the now-noted political conservative William F. Buckley came out with God and Man at Yale. The book charged that some Yale professors were undermining the religious faith of students.

The latest dispute apparently was triggered by efforts to evangelize Jewish students. This drew fire from the establishment, the “Yale Religious Ministry,” composed of chaplains and other religious workers officially accredited by the university. As the controversy developed, the four Pentecostals took sharp issue with a 780-word definitive statement drawn up for the YRM by a Roman Catholic priest and a Jewish rabbi and signed by twenty YRM members. It warns against emotionalism and says unified group ministry members should share their own religious convictions with a “seriously troubled person” only if “he has no spiritual home in his community—that is, no living contact with its teaching, worship, or members.”

Calvin B. Burrows, a senior in English literature and spokesman for the Pentecostals, asserts the declaration “strikes at the very heart of what Yale stands for.” “Religion,” he contends, “is supremely that most sensitive and intuitive pursuit of man, especially unimpressed by restrictive rules, numbers, accounting procedures, inter-faith trade agreements, and the consensus of religious bureaucrats.” Burrows grew up an Episcopalian. He says he was converted while a student at Groton.

Yale Chaplain William Sloane Coffin contends that the YRM document is an internal paper for the exclusive guidance of agencies that subscribe. Coffin concedes, however, that he looks with disfavor on evangelistic efforts such as those carried on by the Pentecostals. He has also accused Campus Crusade for Christ, another evangelical group, of using “devious methods” in the past.

Boyd Meets Byrd

Washington’s National Cathedral, as crowded as on Christmas Eve, had a brush with profanity last month as pop prayer writer Malcolm Boyd teamed with eminent jazz guitarist Charlie Byrd.

The listeners, an unchurchly-looking throng of young people, sat solemnly as Boyd read from his new book of modern-language prayers, Are You Running With Me, Jesus? His choppy, flat, nasal readings echoed through the high arches with eerie effect.

Much more promising were the imaginative improvisations of Byrd, acknowledged master in his field. He is a Unitarian.

Boyd, an ad man turned Episcopal priest, is an innovator and gadfly within his denomination. Some of his published chats with Jesus are vigorous, meaningful, and theologically apt. Sample: “It takes away my guilt when I blame your murder on the Jews, Jesus. Why should I feel guilty about it? I wasn’t there.…”

Others, sprinkled with “damns” and “hells,” are strange examples for a clergyman to offer for youth. One social protest prayer begins, “Blacks and whites make me angry, Lord. Why does it make any difference to some of us? For Christ’s sake, why does it, Lord?” The motif was picked up a few minutes later by a listener in the pews: “Jesus! These seats are hard!”

Clubs Succeed Classroom Devotions

A group known as Youth Club Program, Inc., is promoting church support of weekday religious instruction for public school students. The Supreme Court ban on classroom prayer and Bible reading has served as stimulus for the program, now in twenty-one states.

Activities vary from club to club, but most put priority on Bible study and discussion of Christian mission and stewardship. Clubs have sprung up in crime-ridden inner-city areas as well as in affluent suburbs. Training centers for club leaders are being established and special textbooks printed. A twelve-grade Bible-study curriculum has been developed.

The Youth Club Program had its start in the Pittsburgh area under the leadership of Dr. Dale K. Milligan, pastor of Beulah Presbyterian Church in suburban Churchill Borough.

ROBERT SCHWARTZ

One Slant On Peace

Peace is one of those things everybody is for. The trouble comes when you try to decide the who, how, and where of it. A set of answers came last month from a National Inter-Religious Conference on Peace, convened in Washington.

Whether by fate or masterful design, the conference mobilized religious voices opposed to current American foreign policy, while adding just enough ecclesiastical window dressing to make the conference seem authoritative.

After three days of parliamentary niceties, hard work, and some excellent scholarship, the 400 participants agreed that peace could be promoted if America recognized Red China as the government of the mainland, agreed to admit her to the United Nations, urge Nationalist Chinese withdrawal from Quemoy and Matsu, end all trade on non-strategic items with Red China, stop immediately all bombing in North and South Viet Nam, call a Viet Nam ceasefire (beginning on Good Friday), and recognize the National Liberation Front as a party to Viet Nam negotiations.

The list was similar to that in recent statements from the National and World Councils of Churches; but the conference was, in a sense, broader, since it included Roman Catholics, Jews, Ethical Culturists, Mormons, and Unitarians.

But those who came expecting a representative discussion of American foreign policy were disappointed. The persons invited to participate represented a particular peace line, with few voices in tune with the current Lyndon Johnson consensus and none to the right of that. Even so, Vice President Humphrey showed up late one night to say hello, and President Johnson sent over a note that said we must “isolate and control the deadliest of microbes—man’s capacity for hatred, his penchant for violence.”

The conference statements included no such dark note. Thoughtful assessments of international problems seemed blunted by the use of such euphemisms as Red China’s “involvement” with India on their border and her “reordering” of Tibetan society (the latter was changed to “communization”), and avoidance of nettlesome facts on Asia.

The co-chairmen of the event were Bishop John J. Wright (Pittsburgh Roman Catholic), the Rev. Dana McLean Greely (president, Unitarian Universalist Association), Bishop John Wesley Lord (Washington, D. C., Methodist), Archbishop Iakovos (Greek Orthodox primate), and Presiding Bishop John E. Hines (Episcopal). The latter two men issued general statements on peace but did not participate in the conference.

With this first conference as background, the next step is a global conference, with leaders from all the great world religions, to meet next year. The conference also urged the National Council of Churches, National Catholic Welfare Conference, and Synagogue Council of America, plus “other national religious bodies” (National Association of Evangelicals was mentioned by name) to set up a more official conference on “Religion and Peace.”

The Pope On Mixed Marriages

Pope Paul’s long-awaited Matrimoni Sacramentum, which affects the faith of an untold number of children to be born of mixed religious marriages, reopens a major ecumenical controversy. The 1500-word document was released March 18, days before the Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury was to discuss marriage and other issues with the pope in Rome.

The key section apparently does not change the requirement that children of mixed marriages be baptized and educated as Catholics, but it removes responsibility from the non-Catholic for such training. If the non-Catholic is unable to promise before marriage he won’t interfere with Catholic upbringing, the case is referred to the Vatican.

Catholics who marry non-Catholics before non-Catholic clergymen will no longer be excommunicated (this is retroactive), and non-Catholic clergymen can now participate in mixed marriage ceremonies after the priest conducts the vows.

Birth Control Panel

It became official March 7: The Pope has himself a new blue-ribbon advisory commission on birth control headed by strongly conservative Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviani (see Mar. 18 issue, page 44). The commission, as initially drawn up, was composed of sixteen high-ranking prelates, mostly cardinals.

According to well-informed sources, the commission is said to be fairly well balanced with, as one spokesman put it, “a preponderance of moderates.”

Contrary to earlier reports, however, the commission membership does not yet include the liberal Paul-Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal. Vatican sources indicated at first that Leger would be Ottaviani’s deputy.

The commission is expected to process the findings of a previous papal commission set up in 1964 to study the Roman Catholic Church’s traditional teaching on artificial birth control.

Ghana: Coincidental Coup

Baptists in Ghana climaxed an evangelistic crusade only a few hours before a coup overthrew Prime Minister Kwame Nkrumah on February 24. Two weeks of meetings in Accra, Kumasi, and Tamale resulted in 2,631 decisions for Christ. The evangelists included four Americans: Howard Jones and Ralph Bell of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, Dr. Conrad Willard of Miami’s Central Baptist Church, and the Rev. Joseph Underwood of the Southern Baptist Foreign Mission Board.

Breach In Process

The Church of South India, long hailed as the most successful product of Christian ecumenism, is undergoing its first major schism. Some 269 churches embracing more than 80,000 members are reported to have severed their official ties with the church in a protest over theological liberalism, ritual, ecumenism, and caste discrimination. A new denomination is being formed that will seek affiliation with the International Council of Christian Churches.

Dr. Carl McIntire, ICCC president who visited the dissident Indian churchmen in January, said that the CSI’s Travancore and Cochin Diocese, which has Anglican roots, withdrew from all affiliation with the Church of South India on February 6 and voted to affiliate with the ICCC. He said that the new church will be inaugurated at a convocation on May 5, at which time also a bishop will be consecrated and deacons ordained.

Meanwhile, CSI leaders are trying to patch things up, and the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Arthur Michael Ramsay has sent an emissary from London to hear grievances and to try to negotiate a settlement. Ramsay has also written the leader of the dissidents, the Rev. V. J. Stephen, promising that complaints which Stephen voiced a year ago will be seriously considered by a special CSI synod commission.

McIntire is planning to attend the May 5 convocation along with James Parker Dees, a former priest of the U. S. Episcopal Church who claims apostolic succession. Dees, of Statesville, North Carolina, resigned the Episcopal priesthood more than two years ago in protest of trends in the denomination (he holds theological and social views similar to those of McIntire). He was subsequently consecrated bishop of a newly organized Anglican Orthodox Church by prelates from two small sects—one Ukrainian Orthodox and the other Old Catholic.

The Indian dissidents are in a famine-stricken area, and the ICCC is appealing for funds in their behalf (see story, page 52).

The total Christian population in India is about twelve million. The Church of South India claims a community of more than a million, about a third of whom are full members.

The Church of South India was formed in 1947 of churches founded by the Church Missionary Society (Anglican) as well as those of Congregational, Presbyterian, and Methodist missionary efforts in South India.

The dissidents who charge CSI leaders with theological and ecclesiastical deviations are primarily converts from the outcasts and untouchable classes of Hinduism.

The Power of the Cross

“The death of Christ has not the place assigned to it, either in preaching or in theology, which it has in the New Testament.” That was written by James Denney more than half a century ago in the Preface to The Death of Christ. It may well be that the position has changed, at any rate with regard to theology, since then. The work of Barth and Brunner, the studies of Vincent Taylor and Alan Richardson’s Introduction to the Theology of the New Testament combine to modify Denney’s statement. In addition to this there is the resurgence of conservative evangelicalism as an academic force as well as a religious vitality, with such books as Leon Morris’s Apostolic Preaching of the Cross.

About preaching I am not so sure. With some shining exceptions preachers do not seem to assign to the death of Christ the place which it has in the New Testament. It is not unmentioned, of course; and many refer to it as more than an example of faithfulness or as the final exhibition of the love of God. But it does not fill the horizon.

There are a number of reasons for this. It is partly, I believe, because men have frankly abandoned the characteristic New Testament attitude, a belief in the theological and the evangelistic efficacy of the Cross. We have indeed a not infrequent reference to the life, death and resurrection of our Lord, but this “one event,” as it has been called, has strangely lost its cutting edge. I have been told, for example, by distinguished leaders in the church that it is no good going to Japan and preaching St. John 3:16. “They simply would not understand.” Even if we make allowance for the fact that in the Japanese language there is no word for “sin,” the remark, coming from the source that it did, is serious enough to be disturbing. And similarly, it has been asserted, it is no good going to India to proclaim the evangelical message of the Cross, which is old-fashioned and does not meet the needs of the present day. Such hesitation betrays the melancholy fact that the religious salesmen have little confidence in the goods which they are supposed to offer.

Both views neglect the doctrine of the Holy Spirit. “… there is no ‘problem of communication’ that the Spirit cannot solve” (Alan Richardson, Introduction to the Theology of the New Testament, p. 119). And neither view seems to ask whether the New Testament doctrine of the Cross is true. Did our Lord do something there which we could not do for ourselves? Did He do something which no other could do? Did he do some mighty work without which we should still be in our sins, lost? Did He do that unique work which we have been commissioned to preach? If the answer is an emphatic affirmative, then we have no option: we must faithfully discharge the divine commission, even if no man in the world believe us. If, however, our answer is negative, then we can pick and choose those aspects of the New Testament which appeal to us, but it does not matter very much. Nothing particular hangs on it, and it may be doubted whether our proclamation can be introduced without a burning “Thus saith the Lord.”

There are others whose views are determined by what we might call “the novelist’s puzzle.” How often do the characters of fiction or the mythical “man in the street” or those who take their ideas from the popular untheological atmosphere long to return to the “simple teaching of Jesus,” leaving behind the dogmas of the church and all that is bound up with doctrines of atonement and the unhappy influence of St. Paul!

And it is not only the popular novelist. Sir Harold Nicolson, Honorary Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford, biographer of His late Majesty Ring George V, who held office during the war, represents a more academic and perhaps a more sophisticated approach. He does not believe in God or in survival after death. He dislikes St. Paul for depriving Christ’s message of its original sweetness and distorting it into a doctrine which was pragmatic, intolerant and hard (My Philosophy of Life: A Symposium, ed. by the Rt. Hon. Lord Inman, London, 1958, pp. 120, 121). This is a strange view of the man who wrote First Corinthians 13; and it may seem stranger still when the teaching of our Lord is closely examined.

There is another factor, which has been called “the reproach of the cross.” To preach the Christ who died for me, and why He died for me, and what He did for me, places the preacher in a position where he may be criticised for giving prominence to himself; for lack of depth in his thought; and for oversimplifying the message.

But this is the price we have to pay if we are really going to preach Christ. Spurgeon, one of the humblest of men, could admire the abstinence of great preachers like Robert Hall and Chalmers who did not mention themselves at all, but he believed that “if some of us were to follow their example, we should be throwing away one of the most powerful weapons of our warfare.” We may therefor ask the preacher: What has Christ really done for you? Tell it out!—DR. RONALD A. WARD, rector of Kirby Cane and Ellingham in the Diocese of Norwich, England, in the introduction to his book Royal Theology: Our Lord’s Teaching About God (London: Marshall, Morgan and Scott, 1964).

Results of a Half-Truth

The woman who telephoned me long distance was in great distress. She had stumbled for the first time on the “death of God” controversy, didn’t know what to do with it, and thought maybe I did. “Well, what’s wrong,” I said. “This man says that God is dead so I’ll just answer him and tell you that God is alive. Now where are we?”

“But the trouble is,” she said, “the man who said it is a professor.” “Well,” I replied, “I’m a professor too, and I say God is alive. People have been saying that God is dead for a long time, and the only reason everybody is so excited this time is because the matter is getting a lot of space in the newspapers and magazines and on television. If a professor stands up on a street corner and says God is dead, that is news. If another professor says God is alive, that is not news.” And so we went on. But I am sure that nothing was settled in her mind, and that she went away still a little panicky and unsure about a lot of things.

One thing is perfectly evident. The “death of God” controversy is not going to be settled by a shouting match. One person says God is dead and the other one says he is not dead, and the first man says he is so dead, and the conversation has degenerated into the kind of argument children have in a sandbox. Just what can be said?

First of all, we should note that the argument is a very old one. This fact might give us some perspective. The battle of the Israelites was to push into the general thinking of the ancient world the fact of God, and they had plenty of opposition. The psalmist must have been facing some kind of an argument when he wrote, “The fool has said in his heart, there is no God.” Paul was on the subject when he said, “Spiritual things are spiritually discerned.” The world of the early Church was full of unbelief. And in the last century Robert Ingersoll practically made a living by going up and down the country lecturing in support of atheism. I had a very rough experience myself when I was a high school student and read Tom Paine before I was “ready” for him. Practically every book on philosophy and theology since Anselm has brought forward arguments or “proofs” for the existence of God. It is likely that we shall not settle the question Q.E.D. in 1966.

There are several turns in the argument right now, however, that I think were not common in times past. The new atheism is being pushed by professors involved in religion or the history of religion, and colleges and universities related to Christian foundations do not seem to be willing or able to dismiss them or hush them up. Meanwhile, all kinds of religious organizations are making the atheistic views more current by inviting the “God is dead” theologians to speak on the subject. Somehow the enemy is within. This, perhaps, is what was most distressing to the woman who called me to inquire about it all.

There is some alleviation of the problem, at least in some minds, when the whole matter is reduced to one of vocabulary or semantics. What some of the proponents of the “God is dead” viewpoint are saying, apparently, is that our old theology has more or less worn out and that what have really died are the words we use or the concepts they seem to convey. We get a touch of this in Kierkegaard’s Attack on Christendom, where he says it is evident to him that “Christendom” as an organized religion did not very well portray the living Christ. We catch it again in a very sensitive spirit such as Bonhoeffer, who, under the pressure of the concentration camp experience, found most of what we call “religion” or “Christianity” insufficient to sustain him in the pressure and suffering of personal despair. We catch it again in Robinson in Honest to God, and among his disciples. And we pick it up surely in Tillich, who changes the vocabulary in order to discuss God philosophically as “ground of being” or “ultimate concern.”

In some ways the “God is dead” controversy, insofar as it is a problem in semantics, can be a very healthy though very radical criticism of Christianity in our day. Just exactly what are we talking about when we talk about God? And, if we talk about God in the usual ways, to what extent is he relevant to the strange and awful and complex days in which we live? It seems evident that this part of the “God is dead” controversy is wide open for conversation.

Professor Altizer of Emory University and some like him, however, consider the semantics controversy superficial. If I understand Altizer rightly, he wants to say very plainly and bluntly that God is really dead, and that he died at a definite moment in history.

In the National Observer (January 31, 1966), we have a clear statement of Altizer’s position: “I really want to insist on the word ‘atheism.’ Any word less than that will miss the fundamental point. I want to insist that the original sovereign transcendent God truly and actually died in Christ, and that His death in Christ has only slowly and progressively become manifest for what it was—the movement of God to man, the movement of Word to flesh.” To continue with the comment of Lee Dirks, who wrote the article in the Observer, “God literally lived in history … but then He literally died on the cross.”

Theologically the question rests on what happened in the incarnation and what happened on the cross. No one can deny the mystery and wonder of the incarnation, “God in the flesh,” and no one can ignore the puzzling question of what we mean when we say Christ died on the cross. Did Christ on the cross die only “according to the flesh,” or are we trying to say that God qua God really died? The whole question drives us to the mystery of the Trinity. One does not move with great confidence in solving the mystery when one remembers what Christ himself said to the Father, “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?,” or “Into thy hands I commend my spirit.”

Altizer insists that at this point God qua God literally died, and that he is now alive only as Christ is alive or the spirit of Christ is incarnate in humanity. When God “took on humanity” at the time of the incarnation, he began a different kind of being, engaged now in a different kind of task. We do not now find God in the heavens above (transcendent) but only in the incarnation (God immanent).

Altizer puts it this way: “Wherever there is a moment that is alive, real, and compassionate, that’s Christ.”

The theological debate finally settles on the interpretation of the kenosis, and we do well to keep it there.

At the same time, we need to remember that all religions, including the Christian religion, have had to deal with God as being transcendent and immanent at the same time. Altizer is merely dismissing the problem of transcendency in order to underline immanency. It is not a bad emphasis, but it is a half truth, and a frightful conclusion.

Famine Stalks India

India may be facing the greatest famine the world has ever known. Tens of millions are facing possible starvation this year, according to some food distribution experts. Many more millions may suffer permanent mental and physical retardation from malnutrition. Experts warn that the toll could top that of India’s 1943 famine, when more than three million deaths were reported in Bengal alone. Burgeoning population multiplies the problem: there are one million more mouths to feed each month.

For Christians around the world the specter of famine in India, where one-sixth of the world’s population lives, poses a major moral issue. If the prospects are as grim as predicted, do they not place upon churchgoers, especially those in affluent countries, an unparalleled responsibility for compassionate action?

Thus far, churches have largely taken the threat in stride. The annual Protestant “One Great Hour of Sharing” last month was little more than business-as-usual. Some of the indifference can be blamed on the reluctance of those on the scene in India to paint lurid pictures of the seriousness of the food shortage because of the fear of panic and skyrocketing prices.

India is just now beginning to feel the pinch of famine. It is largely the result of last year’s drought, the nation’s worst in seventy years. No new crops will be available until at least October. Prospects of relief in the meantime are fraught with incredible complications ranging from cow worship to enormous waste and the Oriental tradition of face-saving.

Bloody riots that began in mid-March in Calcutta served notice on the world that the crisis was brewing. Billy Graham, who rarely gets involved in social issues during evangelistic rallies, cited the riots during his Greenville, South Carolina, crusade (see story, page 44). He said, “We in America cannot go on driving Cadillacs and getting richer, while the rest of the world drives oxcarts and gets poorer. There is going to be a crash and an explosion some day between the ‘haves’ and the ‘have-nots’ unless we are willing to share our wealth with the poorer and undeveloped countries of the world.… The hungry and the diseased are on the mind and heart of Christ.… There is a social aspect of the Gospel that many people ignore.”

Religious relief organizations are virtually exhausting resources on behalf of India, but effects are limited by such problems as woefully inadequate budgets and lack of sufficient transportation and distribution facilities.

Church World Service, relief arm of the National Council of Churches, reports it has rushed $100,000 to the Indian churches to help expand a mass feeding program for as many as a million persons. The Lutheran World Federation has approved an emergency grant of $75,000 for milk powder. Australian churches have sent $10,000 from an emergency fund. Danish Inter-Church Aid has shipped three tons of powdered milk and 11 million vitamin pills. German church agencies have promised $125,000 in cash, and the Finnish Evangelical Lutheran Church intends to send $3,000 worth of dried milk. The Swiss Protestant Federation has allocated $23,000.

Perhaps the most heartening response to the challenge came from the Netherlands, where most churches joined secular organizations and five major radio and television networks in a dramatic one-day appeal for India. The doors of nearly every church in the country were thrown open for two hours on Saturday. February 19, to receive contributions, and $4,998,600 was collected.

The relief arm of the National Association of Evangelicals has no program in India; a spokesman explained that the NAE refuses to accept the Indian government’s stipulation that half of incoming relief be turned over to the government for distribution. The American Council of Christian Churches, which also has a relief arm, cabled $7,000 to India in March and is conducting a drive for more funds, perhaps as much as $50,000. World Vision is planning to start a major relief program in India soon.

Some groups have already resigned themselves to mass starvation this year and are concentrating on long-range relief through agricultural aid, development of irrigation facilities, and birth-control programs. Christian clergymen and missionaries in India, sensing the emergency, are increasingly encouraging family planning, even in unlikely situations. Not long ago a Canadian nurse married to a missionary to India took advantage of a rural evangelists’ retreat to promote inter-uterine contraceptive devices.

An emergency three-day consultation on food production was held in New Delhi in March, sponsored by the National Christian Council of India and the India Social Institute. A number of church relief groups were represented. The aim was to formulate basic strategy and co-ordination. Experts see the problem as worldwide, since there is already a widening global gap between population and food production.

The food crisis also promised to be a prime topic when India’s prime minister, Mrs. Indira Gandhi, headed for the United States in late March to confer with President Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk. The U. S. government is willing to help India in the current crisis but wants future aid projects tied to assurance that India gives high priority to her own agricultural development. Previously, India had pinned hopes of progress to industrialization, but in her fourth five-year plan (1966–71) agriculture is second in priority only to defense.

Indian officials still insist there is no critical food shortage. They say reports of famine are exaggerated, that no starvation deaths are confirmed anywhere, and that the riots are politically motivated. Food experts tend to dismiss the official statements by saying simply that no government likes to admit it cannot feed its people.

Agricultural development faces major obstacles. India’s peasants use ancient farming methods and virtually no fertilizer, and they harvest one of the lowest yields per acre in the world. With little irrigation, farmlands are dependent on monsoon rains. But the monsoon failed in a number of areas last year, and there was crop damage of 75 per cent or more in six states, Andra Pradesh, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Mysore, and Rajasthan.

The government hopes to close the gap with imports and strict rationing, but few are envious of the task facing officials of the world’s second-largest country. A number of foreign governments are providing aid. But mass shipments of food hit critical snags before they reach hungry stomachs. Indian ports, operating on a crash basis, cannot handle all the imports that will be necessary. Inland distribution problems are even more serious.

The nutrition problem, some say, overshadows the threat of outright starvation. Lack of vitamin A commonly causes infant blindness. Protein deficiencies victimize pregnant women, nursing mothers, and children under six.

Raw stomachs reject unfamiliar food, and rice-hungry Indians find it difficult to like wheat. Some mix bread and rice together or grind wheat to make the pancake-like chapattis. Many Keralans eat rice exclusively, although tapioca (an African staple) is grown there. Waters off the coast swarm with sardines, shrimp, lobster, and mackerel. Mangoes, pineapples, sugar cane, peppers, cashews, coconuts, and other foods grow in the hills. Much of these are exported for needed foreign exchange.

Rats and India’s sacred cows are additional difficulties. From 25 to 50 per cent of India’s grain is destroyed by pests and sloppy storage. About half of the estimated 226 million cattle are useless and malnourished, and are eating food human beings could consume. A team of Swedish experts has recommended sterilization of bulls.

For all the problems, India, now a nation of 490 million, is making some steps forward. The government is pushing its own program of distributing inter-uterine devices, hoping for one million insertions in the next twelve months. It is also encouraging voluntary sterilization in families that have two or three children.

India is also making good use of some brilliant and dedicated technical personnel. Model farm projects have shown yields per acre double the U. S. average. If India can somehow learn to farm as intensively as Japan, she can feed all her people.

Says an Indian embassy official in the United States, “God has different destinies for different men. We have survived, thank God.”

Personalia

Dr. Edward Gardiner Latch, pastor of Metropolitan Methodist Church in Washington, was chosen chaplain of the House of Representatives to succeed the late Dr. Bernard Braskamp.

Dr. Harold C. Howard was appointed executive vice-president and dean of Eastern Baptist College.

Dr. Walter H. Judd, former medical missionary to China who later served ten terms in Congress, will receive the 1966 “Layman of the Year Award” from Religious Heritage of America. Francis Cardinal Spellman was chosen “Churchman of the Year.”

Dr. Alexander C. De Jong was named first president of Trinity Christian College, Palos Heights, Illinois.

Dr. Elwin L. Skiles was named president of Hardin-Simmons University (Baptist). Skiles has been pastor of the 4,500-member First Baptist Church of Abilene, Texas.

Deaths

DR. RALPH COOPER HUTCHISON, 68, noted Presbyterian clergyman and former president of Lafayette College and Washington and Jefferson College: in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.

BISHOP ALEXANDER P. SHAW, 86, who led Methodist Central Jurisdiction conferences in Louisiana, Maryland, and Texas; in Los Angeles.

REV. THEODORE C. PETERSON, 83, the nation’s oldest Paulist father, noted Semitic scholar, and son of Lutheran missionary parents to India; of a heart attack, in Washington, D. C.

Editor’s Note from April 01, 1966

The Friday before Easter, Britain’s century-old evangelical weekly The Christian will add and Christianity Today to its title. The new, merged periodical will be edited by CHRISTIANITY TODAY’S British Editorial Director, Dr. J. D. Douglas.

The Christian and Christianity Today will be, not a satellite of our American magazine, but an independent newsmagazine edited by and for Britons. Its weekly publication and London locale will make possible a wider range of national news and editorial content than our American-based fortnightly can provide its British subscribers. These will now join The Christian’s readership, although Britons will be able to receive the American edition on request.

Under terms of the merger, the British and the American magazines will have access to each other’s editorial content. Dr. Douglas will continue to be our editorial and news representative in Britain. Our four-year-old Fleet Street office will be closed as operations consolidate at The Christian’s Bush House offices.

The editor of this new weekly of evangelical information, interpretation, and inspiration has not only an excellent academic background but also a facile, whimsical pen and sharp insights into religious trends of our day. We consider this new venture internationally significant in evangelical journalism and congratulate our colleague Dr. Douglas on the exceptional opportunity for journalistic leadership that lies before him.

Graham in Greenville

City’s biggest event dramatizes irony of Billy’s outspoken, Bible-believing opponents

The great irony of Billy Graham’s career is that his most vehement opponents are fellow Bible-believers. The rift was dramatized last month when Graham conducted a ten-day evangelistic crusade in Greenville, South Carolina, home of hard-shell Bob Jones University.

Although the Graham team has grown from BJU origins like honeysuckle along a Carolina fence, school President Bob Jones, Jr., 54, blackballed Graham the night before the crusade opened. He charged on local TV that the evangelist “is doing more harm to the cause of Jesus Christ than any living man.” Jones Jr. then left for a month in the Holy Land but left behind longtime Graham foe G. Archer Weniger as campus chapel speaker. Graham was also boycotted locally by a dozen fundamentalist ministers and statewide by fifty-seven independents in the South Carolina Baptist Fellowship.1Other non-sponsors: Roman Catholics, Greek Orthodox, Seventh-day Adventists, Unitarians, Christian Scientists, Mormons, and Jehovah’s Witnesses.

The evangelist expressed bewilderment at this opposition, but Jones Jr. had made his reasons clear in a famous chapel speech a year earlier. Nothing personal, he said, but Graham sups not only with publicans and sinners but also with Roman Catholics and leaders of the National and World Council of Churches; co-operates with churches that do not believe in biblical inerrancy and other basic doctrines; and refers converts to these “modernist” churches.

Another worry, specified by the clergymen but not by Jones Jr., was that Graham’s crusade was the first important racially integrated meeting in the city’s history. It also proved to be the biggest public event the city had ever seen. Down the road a piece from Bob Jones University, the overflow crowds at vast, warehouse-like Textile Hall forced Graham to expand to two services a night, the first time this has happened in America. The ten-day attendance was 278,700. The 7,311 who made decisions for Christ included five among pre-release prisoners who sat in a special section at several meetings.

Graham stressed repeatedly that in the South, churchgoing is as automatic as eating a meal, and that often people get “inoculated with just enough religion to keep them from getting a good dose of Jesus Christ.”

No BJU partisan could have criticized Graham’s preaching of the old-fashioned Gospel. He waved his Bible aloft repeatedly and called the Book an “instrument panel” necessary to prevent “spiritual vertigo.”

This doctrinal accord was one reason Graham turned the other cheek and avoided answering BJU criticisms. Other factors were the support he gets from the school’s alumni in many cities, and his acknowledged spiritual debt to Bob Jones, Sr., now 82, who founded the college in the midst of a long, illustrious career as an evangelist.

Graham went to Bob Jones College in 1936, when it was in Cleveland, Tennessee, but left after three months because of the restrictive atmosphere. In 1948, Jones Sr. invited Graham down to Greenville to get an honorary doctorate and take up his evangelistic banner. Several years later the Joneses broke with Graham over what they call “ecumenical evangelism,” and the war reached its height during the 1957 crusade in New York City.

Graham’s team includes two BJU alumni, Cliff Barrows and T. W. Wilson. Barrows was so “separated” when he went to BJU he wouldn’t darken the door of a Southern Baptist church, Jones Jr. recalls, but “now he goes anywhere to any kind of church—orthodox or heretic.” Barrows, crusade song-leader and broadcast-film director, lives in Greenville. Wilson was BJU student president and almost got shipped home. Years later his brother Grady was expelled a few months before graduation. Graham’s crusade arrangements are handled by Willis Haymaker, a veteran who did the same for Jones Sr. during his evangelistic career.

Jones Jr. charges that the only reason Graham chose such a small city (66,100) for his sole U. S. crusade this year was to attack and embarrass BJU. Graham says Greenville has the biggest indoor arena in the Deep South, and Barrows was anxious to bring a crusade to his home town. It was Graham’s first Carolina crusade since Charlotte (1958), and things had a homey atmosphere, with his family getting a rare chance to watch the breadwinner at work.

BJU students were told they would be expelled if they attended the crusade, and Jones Jr. also warned in his basic sermon against Graham a year ago, “I say to anybody who attends a church in Greenville that supports this crusade that he ought to get out of that church.”

Although most of the students agreed with the school’s anti-Graham stance, there was some unrest on campus. Fearing reprisal, the minority expressed their feelings in knowing glances, quiet conversations with trusted friends, and letters to the outside world.

Jones Jr. created quite a stir locally by suggesting that a Graham supporter recite the following mock prayer:

“Dear Lord: Bless the man who leads Christian people into disobeying the Word of God, who prepares the way for Anti-Christ by building the apostate church and turning his so-called ‘converts’ over to infidels and unbelieving preachers.… Bless this man who has the heretic Bishop Kennedy as the Chairman of his crusade in Los Angeles, who shares his platform with men like Martin Luther King and World Council church leaders.

“Anoint him with the Holy Spirit to disobey the Holy Spirit’s clear instructions in the Word of God. Increase his power to deceive good people and deliver them to the Apostasy and the Church of Anti-Christ under the pretext of winning souls.

“Bless the man who flatters the Pope and defers to the purple-and-scarlet-clothed Anti-Christ who heads the church that the Word of God describes as the ‘Old Whore of Babylon’.…”

Jones Jr. won’t forgive Billy for having Bishop Pike on his platform once in San Francisco, even though this was before Pike’s wholesale denial of Christian doctrines. Gerald Kennedy is labeled “a rank, unbelieving, agnostic, Christ-denying Methodist bishop”; but the official dossier against him has only one religious point, a twelve-year-old quote playing down the Second Coming. The other data concern such political issues as Kennedy’s opposition to the House Committee on Un-American Activities.

Graham’s camp claims he is like Jones Sr. and other great evangelists of the past in seeking wide support. Although the city-wide scope is similar, Graham has gone much further in cooperating with those who do not share his conservative beliefs, so long as they give him complete freedom to preach the Bible. But critics are wrong in charging that he refers Jewish converts to rabbis and fails to attack Protestant liberalism.

Graham has two other distinctions: his strict financial and auditing system, and an elaborate follow-up and counseling system that Haymaker considers a major improvement over the good old days.

The fundamentalists in Greenville who oppose Billy felt left out because they were not invited to the breakfast meeting a year ago where the crusade was set up, although they would not have supported the crusade anyway. The Rev. Harold B. Sightler, whose robust independent Baptist church is one of Greenville’s biggest, said “the fundamentalists were just as carefully segregated as the colored were integrated.”

Sightler, who has been in town twenty-six years, said many churches backing Graham never cared about revival and would never again support an evangelist. Asked what churches he could not work with in the crusade, Sightler ruled out all Pentecostalists, Lutherans, Episcopalians, and Churches of Christ. He admits many Methodists preach the Gospel, but they are in the National Council of Churches and “I can’t mess with that crowd.” Sightler also charged that the city’s racial “peace and harmony” were endangered by Graham’s integration, and said “many colored pastors sitting on the platform are civil rights agitators.”

The experiment in interracial Christianity was harmonious as far as it went. Harrison Rearden, Negro life insurance man and crusade secretary, said Negro participation was slight because of apathy, lack of spiritual dedication, and “suspicion, which is understandable due to one hundred years of repression.”

At the final committee meeting, Rearden said that after Graham left town “I would like to see God enacted in practicality. We have a racial problem in this community. If the crusade does not change this community, it can’t be changed.… We must take that bold step before men.…”

In one sermon Graham came close to mentioning the BJU issue by saying, “the consuming passion of a true believer is love. The Bible says the sign of believers is that they love one another, which includes a willingness to believe the best about the other Christian.”

‘Drive Unto Others …’

“Highway safety is a spiritual problem,” says evangelist Billy Graham. “Most people do not associate careful and safe driving with spiritual living, but there is a definite connection.”

In a forceful radio address coinciding with the opening of his Greenville crusade, Graham called attention to the staggering automobile accident toll: nearly a thousand people killed and more than 75,000 injured each week in the United States alone.

“An automobile is one of the most deadly machines of destruction ever invented by man,” he said.

The evangelist told his “Hour of Decision” audience that the underlying cause of highway accidents is the breaking of the Golden Rule. He recalled that a few years ago a new highway slogan was coined, “Drive unto others as you would have them drive unto you.” As specific causes of accidents he cited selfishness, the urge to show off, anger, carelessness, neglect, and drunkenness, which he called “a national disgrace.”

Graham prescribed the new birth as the cure for slaughter on the highways: “Then and only then will the old things become new. Then, because we have the mind of Christ, love will replace selfishness, humility will replace pride, peace will replace anger, and we will live and drive as Christians should.”

The ‘Most Unusual University’

Bob Jones University has long called itself the “world’s most unusual university,” and few would dispute the claim. That’s not “world” in the Pauline sense, though, since BJU stands for strict separation from the secular world and from a large chunk of Christendom.

But fine arts are not included in this separatism. BJU has an exquisite museum of religious art, perhaps the finest in America,2Included are some very unbaptistic church icons and vestments, and paintings by such masters as Rembrandt, Van Dyck, and Titian. puts on lavish operas and Shakespearean plays, runs one of South Carolina’s better radio stations, and offers good instruction in cinema.

Other elements of the Greenville campus chemistry are tight control of students, racial segregation and right-wing politics generally, and an evangelistic, Bible-based Protestantism.

“The Founder” is Bob Jones, Sr., one of the century’s great evangelists, but Bob Jr. became acting president (with an honorary doctorate) in his early twenties and formulated academic policy and artistic awareness (he is an accomplished actor). Now he is away from campus a lot, leaving day-to-day operations to son Bob III, 26, who also holds an honorary doctorate.

In the official school history Fortress of Faith (Eerdmans), loyal alumnus Melton Wright pours praise on BJU like honey over biscuits. He says the school would be accredited but the Joneses fear outside controls. Others reading the catalogue might wonder whether BJU would make it, since intellectual ingrowth runs high (nearly one-third of the faculty members have studied only at BJU) and only 16 of 158 teachers hold earned doctorates. But BJU products have proved successful at many graduate schools.

Like Fortress, the catalogue has a few omissions, such as the fact that Negroes need not apply for admission (some Orientals are accepted), the strict rules, the demerit system, reporting on classmates, and the possibility of dismissal at any time without specific infractions for harming campus “spirit.”

Tales of turnover abound in circles where BJU lore is perpetuated. Recent graduates estimate that 5 to 10 per cent of the student body leaves during each year. Of an entering freshman class of about 1,200, one-third remain four years later, although many students are encouraged to transfer for specialized training.

Physical contact between the sexes is forbidden, and the always-chaperoned dating is mostly restricted to a block-long room that looks like a department-store furniture display. Bob Jones, Jr., believes he has “the most contented group of students on the American continent.”

Faculty pay is low and is based on need rather than ability, a curiously communistic tenet for a school that holds “Americanism” conferences where speakers urge income-tax repeal and impeachment of Earl Warren.

BJU is now on its third campus, a modern, $26 million plant that draws aid from many loyal supporters, reportedly including the late Sophie Tucker. BJU people are quite courageous in criticizing whatever and whomever they please. Over the years, shafts have been aimed at the press; most denominations, including the Southern Baptist Convention; most of the better-known evangelical organizations; and Greenville (during a zoning fight in recent years). The status of BJU board member and U. S. Senator J. Strom Thurmond is in doubt, since he appeared on Billy Graham’s platform and even praised the evangelist.

Arresting The Restless Ones

Promoters of the most recent Billy Graham film, The Restless Ones, say it is attracting much larger audiences than any of the previous evangelistic pictures. The film was first shown last October and by the end of March had been viewed by nearly 1,000,000 persons. More than 70,000 decisions for Christ have been counted.

In a marked departure from previous practice, The Restless Ones is being shown in theaters and public auditoriums rather than in churches, and a one-dollar admission fee is being charged. Spokesmen say it is drawing many from the black-jacket and beatnik crowds and confronting them with the claims of Christ. In San Marcos, Texas, some 2,500 Job Corps trainees saw the film.

Trained counselors follow up all inquirers, who are also given the opportunity to take elementary Bible study courses.

Toronto Fish Net

The church coffeehouse movement seems to have become less evangelism than a means for church people to get together without a high cover charge.

But Toronto’s latest, The Fish Net, is a $500-a-month evangelistic project of a youth group from Avenue Road Church (Christian and Missionary Alliance). Each night, from its basement location, the Net belts out the Gospel, mostly in music, to high schoolers and the college crowd, together with some academic dropouts.

The locale is Yorkville Street, known for other coffeehouses, art galleries, boutiques, beatniks, groups of roving teen-agers, and liquor and sex mingled with reefers and drugs.

Space in The Fish Net is tight. It holds forty comfortably, but people often jam in seventy strong, from 8 P.M. to long after midnight, and a doorman has to turn people away. The main room, in Palestinian decor with a palm tree and (of course) fish nets, holds a dozen tables, a piano, and an organ. Christian films are used occasionally, along with the staple diet of professional-quality, Christian musicians.

The music is the show, but the main attraction is conversation over a (free) cup of coffee. Young people talk to young people, not simply to indulge in some subjective dialogue, but to win souls for Christ. The church young people who run the place consider it a training ground in learning to communicate with the world.

Plans for The Fish Net began twenty months ago with the church’s slightly controversial pastor, Kenn Opperman, successor to the late Dr. A. W. Tozer. “The young people in the area are curiosity seekers—not nearly as rough and tough as we anticipated,” Opperman said. “The outstanding lesson we’ve learned is this: When you get people together who are not religious, and people who are religious, around a common table and a cup of coffee, they find they have more to communicate than they ever realized.”

Opperman explained one of the main problems was selling “some of our own people on the idea that this was an important outreach for our young people.” Another was getting a lease in Yorkville, since landlords feared the Christians might scare away trade.

The skepticism of a few “isolationists” has been matched with high praise, the minister said. “I’d rather be criticized for doing something good than for doing nothing.” When someone charged that the management encourages smoking by providing ash trays, Opperman ridiculed the criticism. “It just keeps them from burning holes in our tablecloths,” he laughed.

KENNETH G. WARES

Book Briefs: April 1, 1966

Sparks From A Genius

Old Testament Theology, Volume II: The Theology of Israel’s Prophetic Traditions, by Gerhard von Rad, translated by D. M. G. Stalker (Harper and Row, 1965, 470 pp., $6.50), is reviewed by William Sanford LaSor, professor of Old Testament, Fuller Theological Seminary, Pasadena, California.

On the dust jacket of this book, G. Ernest Wright calls it “the most original and one of the two most important treatises in the field of Old Testament theology to appear since the First World War,” and H. H. Rowley says, “It will stand alone among the spate of books on Old Testament theology.” Personally, I dislike book reviews based on dust jackets, and this review will not be such; but these two statements, made by cautious and well-read scholars, deserve to be quoted. This is indeed a great book. We are still too near to it to make such statements, but it may well be epoch-making in the field of Old Testament studies.

This is not to suggest that I agree with all the author says. But that is beside the point. Only a very few times in my life have I had the privilege of sitting under a true genius. (A genius, I would remind you, is one who strikes the sparks from which other men light their fires.) Professor von Rad’s work is the product of sheer genius. Whether other men will light many fires from it remains to be seen, but it is a pyrotecnic display of sparks.

Professor von Rad starts with the fundamental assumption that the prophets of the Old Testament were preeminently preachers of the “law.” This is a direct break with the critical position that the prophets were originators who were responsible for the creation of ethical monotheism. Professor von Rad also blazes a new trail in his concept of Old Testament theology, rejecting the approach through religious ideas and modifying the approach through “saving history.” In a postscript, which is additional to the German edition, he discusses these points at some length (pp. 410–29). It becomes clear that he is in effect following a living approach, which is basically drawn from the saving acts in Israel’s history, but which seeks at the same time to view them as they might have been viewed at any given moment in Israel’s history. This position is obvious in his outline.

In Part One of this volume the author takes up “General Considerations in Prophecy,” discussing such matters as “prophecy before the classical period (Elijah, Elisha),” “the oral tradition,” “the prophet’s freedom,” “the prophets’ conception of the word of God, and Israel’s ideas about time and history,” and “the prophetic eschatology.” This part is basic and should not be skipped over carelessly.

Professor von Rad has a habit of starting a chapter by stating the current view—unchallenged. The reader becomes aware that the author is attacking that position only as he reads the subsequent pages. For example, von Rad rejects the idea that the classical prophets were cult officials (p. 55), and stresses a call “through God’s direct and very personal address to them” (p. 57).

Part Two (pp. 129–315) deals with “Classical Prophecy” and takes up the prophets and their messages individually and chronologically. After each period there is a summary. For example, after considering Amos, Hosea, Isaiah, and Micah, Professor von Rad discusses “the new element in eighth-century prophecy”; similarly, after Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Deutero-Isaiah, he takes up the new elements in the Babylonian and early Persian period. Readers who may be disturbed by the author’s assumption of a Second Isaiah should be prepared to meet also Trito-Isaiah, not to mention Trito-Zechariah (p. 297). However, it should be strongly emphasized that in general Professor von Rad has rejected much of the older critical position. For example, he has no sympathy for the “gloom-and-doom” school that removed any glimmer of hope from the pre-exilic prophets.

Part Three deals with “The Old Testament and the New.” It is in many ways the most exciting part of the book and offers the most striking of the author’s many brilliant insights. Professor von Rad pleads with the reader not to read this until he has first read what goes before, since these words “stand or fall according as what preceded them is valid” (p. vii). It is obvious that the author considers Jesus Christ to be the fulfillment of the Old Testament, and believes that this new event in saving history must influence our understanding of the Old Testament. The discussion of the use of the Old Testament by New Testament authors is important (pp. 330 f.).

Within the space limits of this review it is not possible to enter into a critical evaluation of this great book. I have already indicated my frequent dissent, but to attempt to point out what I find objectionable—and why—would run on for pages. Nevertheless, for what they are worth, let me make a few blanket statements. I feel that Professor von Rad has continued to hold some critical positions that have no firm support; for example, anonymous prophets (such as Deutero- and Trito-Isaiah) violate the author’s own statement against anonymity (p. 77). I feel moreover, that Professor von Rad has not sufficiently divorced his thinking from Greek thought (e.g., pp. 101 ff.), even though his basic premise is not to impose other thought-forms on the Old Testament. Then, too, I feel that the author has gotten himself into difficulties through his confusion of “eschatological” and post-exilic (cf. pp. 280–88). If the prophets, when speaking of the saving acts yet to take place, were thinking only of the return from exile—or better, if God’s revelation to them concerned only that return—we are indeed faced with many difficulties. The eschaton, even in the prophetic message, was a very complex idea that, it becomes apparent, had to extend far beyond the events of the return and the Second Temple.

This book deserves wide and careful reading. Scholars and teachers who are committed to positions based on older critical views should work over it and re-evaluate their position. Conservatives should use it for a similar purpose and. in addition, to add vitality and stimulation to a position that is too often lifeless and boring.

WILLIAM SANFORD LASOR*****************************

Moral Atheists

The Meaning of Modern Atheism, by Jean Lacroix (Macmillan, 1965, 115 pp., $2.95), is reviewed by Carl F. H. Henry, editor,CHRISTIANITY TODAY.

The French philosopher Lacroix of Lyons aims to understand rather than to disprove atheism, of which there is no scarcity in French life and literature. “For millions today atheism is a way of life” (p. 18).

The newest schools do not reject theism in order to pursue immorality but supposedly in the interest of ethics and responsibility. Just as belief in God is viewed as destructive of responsibility, so too is original sin.

When faith and prayer do not spur the Christian to action but survive as a mystique, this atheistic misunderstanding may be encouraged.

Yet the “moral atheist” has utopian expectations of the elimination of poverty, war, injustice. And Marxists champion the dogma that “all social action is ineffective in so far as it is spiritual” (p. 37). Besides political atheism, however, there are scientific humanism and ethical humanism. “The atheists of today are no longer libertines … and their ethical behaviour is hardly to be distinguished from that of Christians—a fact which poses some delicate questions for the latter!” (p. 41).

A partial reply is, of course, that modern atheists borrow more from the Christian outlook than their views consistently permit—including the vision of social justice and the sense of personal responsibility.

In the closing half of his book Lacroix seems to accept the naturalistic notion that all knowledge of God is permeated by inadequate representations (p. 55), and he praises negative theology. But he does not conclude his book without upholding the ontological capacity of reason and saluting the Vatican Council’s declaration that human intelligence can reach God by natural means.

CARL F. H. HENRY

Ecumenical Buildings?

Christ and Architecture: Building Presbyterian/Reformed Churches, by Donald J. Bruggink and Carl H. Droppers (Eerdmans, 965, 708 pp., $20), is reviewed by Scott Turner Ritenour, director, Division of Christian Life and Mission, National Council of Churches, New York, New York.

This compendium of data for “Building Presbyterian/Reformed Churches” seeks to interrelate theology and architecture through a scholarly text enhanced by photographs and charts. The illustrations, coming largely from the Continent—Holland, Switzerland, and Germany primarily—are well selected and help to unify a cumbersome (and physically heavy) volume.

The authors are well qualified. Dr. Bruggink, professor of historical theology at Western Theological Seminary, probes deeply into questions of history and theology in the first seven chapters of the book. Mr. Droppers, a practicing architect and assistant professor of architecture at Western Reserve University, puts those ideas into pictures and diagrams, and also expresses his views in words in the last six chapters. The resulting volume is one of the handsomest books on church design published in this nation.

In evaluating so rich a source book I have very mixed feelings. It is comprehensive within the limited circle of church groups rooted in the Reformed tradition. The essential basis for the whole is in Part I, where the theological and historical point of view is presented. On this are built the practical and technical issues. Although church leaders and architects may be greatly helped by knowing the background, I suspect that even very interested members of building committees would be receiving information that is beyond their ken, thus making a little knowledge more confusing than helpful. To put it another way, the first part is basic to all readers—clergy, students, builders, and architects—because theology determines liturgy, which in turn defines function and space needs for architecture. The second part deals primarily with technical matters, which are essentially the concern of the architect and builder. Such quickly gotten knowledge may cause committees to be more troublesome than helpful in the building process.

Although theology is of great importance in church architecture, I am not convinced that an approved formula—a series of well-stated criteria—ensures a successful building program. Theology can become sterile when it is not related to life, and I did not find any relevance of the theological position presented to the dynamic forces that are molding the life of churchmen today. (Incidentally, I was a little surprised that despite exhaustive research, the authors failed to cite such sources as “Towards a Theology for Church Architecture,” by Paul Chapman, which appeared in the May, 1959, issue of motive magazine, and an important essay by James Whyte, professor at the University of Edinburgh, entitled “The Theological Basis of Church Architecture,” in Towards a Church Achitecture, edited by Peter Hammond and published in 1962.)

Part I by Dr. Bruggink is based on the conviction that since the preached word conveys a message, the architecture of the church should proclaim in a sympathetic way the same living Word. Dr. Bruggink develops criteria in relation to space so that there will be a visual experience of both Word and sacraments. In describing the people of God, he differentiates the functions of the ministry, the elders, and the deacons, and sees the whole congregation as participants in the liturgy. In speaking about the choir, he defines its true function as communicating the people’s gratitude rather than showing God’s grace.

In “Heresy in the Sanctuary” Dr. Bruggink sharply criticizes the fact that often too many materials are used, too many things are assembled, too many flags are shown, too many decorations are employed beyond their symbolical significance, too many windows are used, too many memorial gifts are accepted, too many lecterns clutter up the worship area, and too many interruptions are permitted that have no relevance to Reformed worship according to the Word of God.

Part II is developed from the theological basis that has been laid, and Mr. Droppers seeks to encourage a fruitful relation between the client church and the architect. Therefore there are chapters on “Teamwork in the Church Building,” on “Economy …,” on “Expression …,” on “Structure …,” on “Shape of the Church Building,” and finally on “Programming.…” In these six chapters, twenty-one charts deal with such aspects as various “principles” for site selection, water supply, window operation, heating, lighting, and space and volume selection.

In general, I feel that Christ and Architecture does present the Reformed position, but that if it were more apologetic and showed an irenic spirit, then the true purpose of the Church would be better fulfilled. To be polemical at a time when the liturgical movement is expanding and deepening is most unfortunate. The churches that are built now and in the future should reflect their tradition, to be sure, but they not be so tightly authenticated that those of other backgrounds would be ill at ease in them. If the basis of the Presbyterian/Reformed position is to be encouraged and the truest in the liturgical movement is to be provided, then we should also seek an ecumenical emphasis rather than allowing our zeal to protect our rationale.

SCOTT TURNER RITENOUR

Ezekiel For Today

Ezekiel: Prophecy of Hope, by Andrew W. Blackwood, Jr. (Baker, 1965, 274 pp., $4.50), is reviewed by David W. Kerr, professor of Old Testament interpretation and dean, Gordon Divinity School, Wenham, Massachusetts.

Many epithets have been applied to Ezekiel: apocalyptist, which he surely was: genius, which he may very well have been; cataleptic or pervert, which he surely was not. Dr. Blackwood sees him as an existentialist—not, of course, the agnostic who sees in life neither purpose nor hope, but the theist who knows God and lives his truth in the heartaches of existence.

Every interpreter of Ezekiel, because he is dealing with apocalyptic literature, has to decide over and over again how particular symbols are to be understood, where the line is to be drawn between the parabolic and the narrative, as in Ezekiel 4 and 5, between the figurative and the literal, as in chapters 37–39. The lines of distinction are well drawn in this book, and most of the author’s decisions are reasonably supported.

In adopting a “spiritual” interpretation of the difficult Gog and Magog passage in Ezekiel 38 and 39, and more particularly of the temple vision in chapters 40–48, Dr. Blackwood parts company with many conservative expositors. By so doing, however, he not only avoids the problems raised by literalism, such as the renewal of Levitical offerings in the millennial era, but also focuses attention upon the abiding lessons of the Spirit that the literalists so often miss. As the author says in connection with Ezekiel 3:22, Christians sometimes display a curious inconsistency when they act as if the spiritual were less “real” than the material. The “cords” were “real” enough, but Ezekiel could not have tied a package with them.

In the exposition of chapters 16 and 34 there is a fine recognition of the covenant idea, which appears as a thread of thought in several chapters. It would seem, however, that the same thread could have been detected more readily than it has been in chapters 36 and 37, where the covenant formula, “I will be your God, and you shall be my people,” is an emphatic promise.

I cannot help having some regret over two features of the introductory chapter of the book. One is that the reader is promised a message of hope in the prophecy if he is willing to endure the repetition, to face what is ugly, obscure, and disgusting. From one point of view, perhaps all these adjectives apply to Ezekiel. Nevertheless, one gets the feeling that he should hope for the best but expect the worst, even if this is God’s Word. The other disappointing feature is that the analytical school of such critics as Hölscher and Irwin is treated more kindly than scientific criticism demands. (Admittedly, this last comment reveals as much about the reviewer as it does about the author.)

Ezekiel’s essential message of hope in its Babylonian setting of the sixth century B.C. does sound forth clearly in this book, which is characterized by sound interpretation throughout. The language and style are attractive. Anyone who reads the prophecy of Ezekiel with this volume as a companion will have a better grasp of the entire biblical message and will see how the Spirit of God works through all kinds of people in all kinds of situations. I highly recommend the book.

DAVID W. KERR

Two Good Ones

Dialogue at Calvary, by John A. Holt (Baker, 1965, 79 pp., $1.95) and Listening to God on Calvary, by George Gritter (Baker, 1965, 143 pp., $2.50), are reviewed by Robert G. Rayburn, president and professor of practical theology and homiletics, Covenant Theological Seminary, St. Louis, Missouri.

Here are two small books that will certainly be a blessing to any who read them, no matter how many volumes they have read on the seven words of Christ from the cross. The work of John A. Holt is especially interesting, for it is a treatment of seven words addressed to the cross by those who stood on Calvary. In spite of a few unfortunate grammatical errors (e.g., “how could anyone put their faith in a man who was unable to preserve his own life”), the author has very definite literary gifts, and his work is also thoroughly biblical and intensely practical. The capable and conscientious minister will not copy the general plan of the discourses in this volume, but the work should be a good seed-plot for those who want suggestions they can develop in their own way. Holt has a stimulating and original approach to thinking about the cross.

One wishes that in considering the first word of defiance, “Ah, thou that destroyest the temple …,” the author had pointed out that it shows the complete lack of spiritual discernment typical of the man who refuses to believe God’s Word. Although Holt makes it clear that the answer to the defiance was the resurrection, the non-believer would be no more persuaded by the resurrection than by the other miracles.

Listening to God on Calvary concerns the seven words that Jesus spoke from the cross. Because these have received very extensive treatment by many preachers and scholars, I was tempted to give this book only a casual reading. I soon discovered, however, that this was no ordinary book of sermons. George Gritter’s deep spiritual insights are unquestionable. He writes with beautiful style. He is a master of unaffected alliteration that gives force to his treatment.

The flyleaf indicates that these were sermons. The one thing I find lacking in them is a direct, personal application of the striking truths so clearly presented. The preacher can never assume that those in his congregation will apply God’s truth to their own needs.

Both these books are heartily recommended, especially for the Lenten season.

ROBERT G. RAYBURN

The Ministry’S Many Faces

Ministry, by Robert S. Paul (Eerdmans, 1965, 252 pp., $5), is reviewed by Herbert Giesbrecht, librarian, Mennonite Brethren Bible College, Winnipeg, Manitoba.

“The Protestant Ministry is perplexed, and it does not quite know why.” These are the opening words of Robert S. Paul’s new book, and they express succinctly what many Christians (ministers and laymen alike) feel.

This rather pessimistic mood has been expressed in recent studies of the shortcomings of seminary training, as well as in recent pleas for greater participation of the laity in the essential “ministry” of the Church. The disquietude of sensitive Christians and their earnest questioning of the very nature and purpose of the Christian ministry compels us to examine the matter once again.

This author’s full and forthright work is probably the only contemporary study in America that seriously grapples with the basic issues from the standpoint of biblical theology and exegesis. Paul is acquainted with the views of M. Luther and J. Calvin, Richard Baxter and Cardinal Newman, T. S. Manson and A. M. Ramsay, W. D. Davies and John Baillie, P. S. Minear and D. T. Jenkins, D. Bonhoeffer and Hans-Ruedi Weber, and he draws effectively upon their thought. Yet he is fundamentally concerned with the scriptural evidence.

The author’s theological discernment impresses one immediately and repeatedly. It is revealed in his observation that all questions “concerning the Church are at root theological” (p. 181). It is also revealed in his reiteration of the truth that all questions about the Christian ministry must ultimately be referred back to “the source of the Church’s own ministry and of all ministry in the Church, and to the place where the only valid theology of ministry can begin, to the redemptive ministry of Jesus Christ himself” (p. 100).

But his discernment is most evident in his discussion of what seems to be his central thesis, that the ministry of the Church finds its continuing justification and its continuing pattern in the ministry of Christ himself, and not anywhere else. Paul’s clear and convincing exposition of this thesis and of its connections with specific aspects of the doctrine of the Church and its ministry makes his work intriguing and a genuine “theology of Christian Ministry.”

Among the many aspects and issues discussed are: the call to the ministry; the ordination of ministers; popular conceptions of the ministry; church structure and government; church worship and church sacraments; church work and its problems and perils; church unity (ecumenicity); the minister’s responsibilities and relations to family, church, and the secular world.

Besides theological discernment, the second main quality of Paul’s work is its spirit of Christian charity and tolerance. While he often expresses deeply held convictions in emphatic language, his discussions of divergent views are never marred by ill-humored argument or sarcastic wit. This irenic quality is especially apparent in his comparison of high-Anglican and free-church conceptions of the ministry (pp. 114 f.), in his discussion of the various forms of church government and church worship (pp. 216 f.) and of the various attitudes of divergent views about the final source of spiritual authority in the Church (pp. 166 f.), and in his sane comments on whether the minister ought to be a “scholar-preacher,” an administrator and counselor, or something of both.

I might speak of other merits of this author, such as his shrewd and practical understanding of human nature, and his sense of balance. But I must conclude my comments with a reference to the book’s literary style, which is refreshingly plain and colloquial and often suggests the simple and fluctuating movements of excited speech among “student-friends.” Often the discussion is imaginatively colored by anecdotes and images culled from history, literature, and legend.

HERBERT GIESBRECHT

It’S In The Title

Jesus and the Son of Man, by A. J. B. Higgins (Fortress, 1965, 224 pp., $4.25), is reviewed by Andrew J. Bandstra, dean of students and assistant professor of New Testament, Calvin Theological Seminary, Grand Rapids, Michigan.

The conjunction is important in the title of this book. The author, professor of New Testament at the University of Leeds, attempts to show that although Jesus did use the phrase “Son of Man,” he did not think of himself as the Son of Man nor as one destined to become the Son of Man. Thus it is not correct to say that Jesus is the Son of Man or that he thought he was the Son of Man: rather, one should speak of the correlativity of Jesus and the Son of Man.

A crucial passage is Luke 12:8, 9: “Everyone who acknowledges me before men, the Son of Man also will acknowledge before the angels of God; but he who denies me before men will be denied before the angels of God.” This passage is crucial, according to Higgins, because, first, it reveals that Jesus made a clear distinction between himself as he spoke and the future Son of Man, and secondly, it illustrates the only way in which Jesus himself ever spoke of the Son of Man, namely, in terms of his future glory.

Through his form-critical study of the Son of Man passages, Higgins is constrained to hold that all references to the Son of Man that speak either of his earthly activity or of his sufferings are, in that form, not authentic sayings of Jesus but are rather expressions of the faith of the early Church. The author’s position on Mark 10:45 is instructive. Jesus said: “I shall give my life as a ransom for many.” The earliest stage of the church tradition put it: “The Son of man came to give his life a ransom for many.” The present form with the insertion on serving is the third and final stage of this tradition. Thus, for Higgins, Jesus knew himself to be the Son of God in a unique way; he also considered himself to be fulfilling the role of the Suffering Servant on earth (of which he spoke in the first person); but he never designated himself the Son of Man.

How does Higgins give meaning to the conjunction in the expression, Jesus and the Son of Man? Basic to his understanding is the position that “the Son of Man” was never an objective reality but an idea in the mind of certain Jews. Jesus took this idea and adapted it to denote himself as the Son of God he already believed himself to be, reinstalled in his heavenly seat. The concept Son of Man is used to describe the Son of God exercising his intercessory or judicial functions. This is the connection—and the only connection—that Jesus himself made between himself and the Son of Man. It is from this authentic base that, according to Higgins, the Son of Man Christology of the early Church was developed in the post-resurrection period, as reflected in the Son of Man passages in John, in most of those in the Synoptic Gospels, and in those in the rest of the New Testament.

To someone, such as this reviewer, who holds that Jesus himself made the synthesis of the Suffering Servant and the Son of Man concepts, Higgins’s argument will not be persuasive. What seem to the author to be assured results of critical studies are often simply the collective judgments of subjective opinion. On the other hand, the “obvious” fact—to Higgins—that Jesus knew himself to be the Son of God is really an expression of faith on the part of the author that will not be shared by all. Jesus, as portrayed in this book, is made a bit more “understandable,” but somehow in the process something of the mystery of the Incarnation is obscured and the reality of the serving, suffering, and glorified Son of Man is replaced, in part, by the early Church’s proclamation of and justification for her faith.

This does not mean that the book has no value for the scholar not holding the author’s view of the New Testament and its Christology. On the contrary, the book can serve many purposes. In the first place, it is a good exhibit of a competent scholar “doing form criticism” on one specific subject. Again, it is a good exhibit of one line of the “new quest of the historical Jesus.” Higgins is convinced that the Jesus who proclaimed the good news of the Kingdom and the Jesus who became the subject of the post-resurrection Church’s own proclamation are identical. Finally, this book will serve to illumine certain problems and facets of the Son of Man passages with which the New Testament scholar, irrespective of his position, must deal responsibly.

ANDREW J. BANDSTRA

How To Help

Help Your Minister to Do His Best, by Owen M. Weatherly (Judson, 1965, 156 pp., $3.95), is reviewed by Paul R. Gilchrist, pastor, Evangelical Presbyterian Church, Levittown, Pennsylvania.

This is a fascinating and thought-provoking book written in an easy-going style, by a man who “as pastor and educator … has experienced both sides of the relationship he sensitively describes in this book.” He puts the point of his title across. From the first chapter, where he introduces the pastor as the one who is often responsible for finding extra ping-pong balls, to the last chapter, which closes on a very serious note of advice to the congregation that is about to call a new pastor, Weatherly’s book is exceedingly well written. Those who sincerely want to help their pastor do his best will find a treasury of helpful information.

The author shows his practical wisdom in such passages as these:

But, if he devotes all of his time to pastoral care and church administration and gives no thought to sermon preparation, he will necessarily come to the pulpit on Sunday morning with nothing to offer you but a full heart and an empty head. And I don’t have to tell you that a combination like that is poor fare for a hungry soul [p. 30].

People aren’t defeated because their problems are too big or too complicated to be solved; they are defeated because they won’t seek and accept the help that is available to them until their lives have already been ruined. Take your problems to your minister no matter how far advanced they are; but, if you want to get the maximum in help, take them to him as early as possible [p. 111].

You can keep your minister busy swatting flies all week if you want to. But it would make more sense to let him help you clean up the garbage pile of ethical ignorance and moral ineptness where the flies are breeding. Systematic group instruction in the principles and practice of Christian ethics is the “preventive medicine” of the pastoral ministry [p. 115].

Weatherly offers much helpful advice on marriage, evangelism, pastoral counseling, church administration, and community leadership, and his book has tremendous value.

There are, however, elements to which I take exception. The liberal theology underlying the book is seen in such a statement as: “Worship is man accepting all men as his brothers because God is the Father of all men” (p. 40). To say this is to fail to recognize the clear teaching in John 8:42 and 44, where Jesus says: “If God were your Father, ye would love me,” and adds, “Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do.”

Furthermore, there is an evident lack of biblical orientation. The de-emphasis on Scripture is expressed, for example, when, speaking of the pastor’s visiting the sick, Weatherly says, “He will certainly want to pray with you and possibly read some Scripture …” (p. 53, italics mine). The Scriptures ought to be the primary source of comfort and blessing to the sick. Again, this lack of a biblical foundation is shown when the author tells of a girl who sought the advice of her minister because the young man whom she wished to marry “happened to have a religious and cultural background completely different from her own”: this fact, says Weatherly, “posed no problem which could not be overcome if the parties to the potential marriage had the love and determination and strength and temperament and personal resourcefulness to seek a solution” (pp. 74 f.). This runs counter to the Apostle Paul’s warning about the unequal yoke with unbelievers (2 Cor. 6:14), which is especially important in such a bond as that of marriage.

The book is weak in that it lacks a solid biblical foundation. Yet, with this caution clearly stated, I would nevertheless recommend it to the Christian public, and to seminary students as parallel reading in pastoral theology courses.

PAUL R. GILCHRIST

Book Briefs

Teaching the Troubled Child, by George T. Donahue and Sol Nichtern (Macmillan, 1965, 202 pp., $5.95). A radically new approach—tested in experience—to the education of hundreds of thousands of emotionally troubled children through existing community facilities.

Helping Youth Avoid Four Great Dangers: Smoking, Drinking, VD, Narcotics Addiction, by Hal and Jean Vermes (Association, 1965, 157 pp., $3.95).

Song of Songs, by Watchman Nee, translated by Elizabeth K. Mei and Daniel Smith (Christian Literature Crusade, 1965, 155 pp., $3). An interpretation that sees Song of Songs as a portrayal of the union between Christ and (not the church but) the believer.

The Feminine Crisis in Christian Faith: The Bible’s Challenge to Today’s Woman, by Elizabeth Achtemeier (Abingdon, 1965, 160 pp., $2.75).

Protestantism in Transition, by Charles W. Kegley (Harper and Row, 1965, 282 pp., $5.75). This well-written book makes the author appear a dilettante rather than a scholar. Book and author are theologically liberal, naïve, unscholarly, glib. The book touches many things but really grasps nothing. Kegley’s disregard of books, magazines, and men commonly called evangelical these days does little to commend his understanding of Protestantism. Until he recognizes it, there is little chance he will see it move.

Ten Fingers for God, by Dorothy Clarke Wilson (McGraw-Hill, 1965, 247 pp., $5.50). The true story of a surgeon’s quest for an end to the ravages of leprosy.

Farrar’s Life of Christ, by Frederic William Farrar (World, 1965, 427 pp., $6.50). A new edition of Canon Farrar’s classic work on the life of Jesus, illustrated with full-color reproductions of famous paintings.

Record of Revelation: The Bible, by Wilfrid Harrington, O. P., (Priory Press, 1965, 143 pp., $3.95). A very lucid discussion by a Roman Catholic of the text, canonicity, and inspiration of the Bible, and of textual, literary, and historical criticism. The validity of the latter is not excluded, and the inerrancy of Scripture is affirmed but in such a way as not to exclude biblical scientific and historical inaccuracies.

The Study of the Synoptic Gospels: New Approaches and Outlooks, by Augustin Cardinal Bea (Harper and Row, 1965, 95 pp., $3.50).

Guidance from Men of God: Fifteen Inspiring Messages about People You Know in the Bible, by John A. Redhead (Abingdon, 1965, 144 pp., $2.50).

An Introduction to the History of the Christian Church, by Wilfred W. Biggs (St. Martin’s Press, 1965, 238 pp., $4.95). A lucid and compact history of the Church.

Join Your Right Hands: Addresses and Worship Aids for Weddings, edited by Arthur M. Vincent (Concordia, 1965, 143 pp. $3). A general discussion of what makes a biblical wedding address, followed by twenty-four such addresses.

Handbook of Denominations in the United States (Fourth Edition), by Frank S. Mead (Abingdon, 1965, 272 pp., $2.95).

Dictionary of the Bible, by John L. McKenzie, S.J. (Bruce, 1965, 976 pp., $17.95). The kind of book that gives a cross section of Roman Catholic views.

Horace Bushnell, edited by H. Shelton Smith (Oxford, 1965, 407 pp., $7). The writings of Bushnell that show his theological method and his theological reconstruction. With extensive introductions by the editor.

Concilium, Volume 8: Pastoral Reform in Church Government, edited by Teodoro Jimenez-Urresti and Neophytos Edelby (Paulist Press, 1965, 184 pp., $4.50). A presentation of Roman Catholic “church polity.”

The Mystery of Death, by Ladislaus Boros, S. J. (Herder and Herder, 1965, 201 pp., $4.50). A searching analysis of what death is and what it means. For the serious reader with a very lively mind.

Telling a Child about Death, by Edgar N. Jackson (Channel, 1965, 91 pp., $2.95). A good book on a difficult, rarely written-about subject.

The Epistle of Paul to the Galatians, by Alan Cole (Eerdmans, 1965, 188 pp., $3.25). Volume 9 in the New Testament series of the “Tyndale Bible Commentaries.” A sturdy little commentary, both reliable and brief.

The Anchor Bible, Volume 14: Ezra and Nehemiah, translated with introduction and notes by Jacob M. Myers (Doubleday, 1965, 267 pp., $6). The author says that Nehemiah, “the master international politician,” “tended to the body of Judaism,” and Ezra “ministered to its soul.”

The Continuing Search for the Historical Jesus, by Jacob Jervell, translated by Harris E. Kaasa (Augsburg, 1965, 106 pp., $3). A good popular introduction to the old and “continuing” quest for the Jesus of history.

Twentieth Century Catholicism, No. 2, edited by Lancelot Sheppard (Hawthorn, 1965, 251 pp., $6). All about the liturgical changes which are occurring in Roman Catholic worship because of the Second Vatican Council’s Constitution on the Liturgy.

The Faith of JFK, edited by T. S. Settel (Dutton, 1965, 127 pp., $3.50). Reflections, mostly oblique, of the faith of John F. Kennedy.

This We Believe: The Background and Exposition of the Doctrinal Statement of The Evangelical Free Church of America (revised and enlarged), by Arnold Theodore Olson (Free Church Publications, 1965, 376 pp., $4.95). A churchman in a church that allows no official creed writes a book about the credo of his church.

Paperbacks

Miracles: Yesterday and Today, True and False, by Benjamin B. Warfield (Eerdmans, 1965, 327 pp., $2.25). Originally published under the title Counterfeit Miracles in 1918.

Church Library Manual, prepared by Charlotte Newton (self-published [892 Prince Avenue, Athens, Georgia], 1965, 22 pp., $1).

Questioning Christian Faith, by F. R. Barry (Seabury, 1965, 192 pp., $1.65). Stimulating writing that informs the mind and makes it think about the deep problems of the heart.

Life in Christ Jesus: Reflections on Romans 5–8, by John Knox (Seabury, 1966, 128 pp., $1.25). A very thoughtful and provocative discussion.

Christians and Jews: Encounter and Mission, by Jakob Jocz (S.P.C.K., 1966, 55 pp., 6s. 6d.). Short essays by a competent theologian.

Speaking with Tongues, by Stuart Bergsma (Baker, 1965, 26 pp., $.85). Some physiological and psychological implications of modern glossalalia.

The Mark of Cain: Studies in Literature and Theology, by Stuart Barton Babbage (Eerdmans, 1966, 157 pp., $1.95). Delightful reading.

Sermon Suggestions in Outline, Series I, by R. E. O. White (Eerdmans, 1965, 78 pp., $1.45). Sermonic material rather than sermon outlines, and sometimes more moralistic than theological.

The Epistles of John and Jude, by Ronald A. Ward (Baker, 1965, 102 pp., $1.50). A study manual.

Toynbee, by C. Gregg Singer (Presbyterian and Reformed, 1965, 76 pp., $1.25). An evangelical evaluates Toynbee.

His Only Son Our Lord, by Kent S. Knutson (Augsburg, 1966, 113 pp., $1.50). A luminous discussion in down-to-earth language. Many a lay reader will be surprised at how much theology he can understand.

The Life of John Birch, by Robert H. W. Welch, Jr. (Western Islands, 1965, 128 pp., $1). Only about half the book is about Birch, and the few pages on Birch as a preacher reflects a total misunderstanding of Christianity.

O Sing Unto the Lord: Music in the Lutheran Church, by Henry E. Horn (Fortress, 1966, 156 pp., $2).

Studies in Philosophy and the History of Philosophy, Volume III: John Duns Scotus, 1265–1965, edited by John K. Ryan and Bernardine M. Bonansea (Catholic University of America, 1965, 384 pp., $6.95). A major tome on the life, works, and influence of a too much neglected medieval thinker whose emphases on voluntarism contrasts with Aristotelean-Thomistic intellectualism.

Christ Encountered: A Short Life of Jesus, by Roger Tennant (Seabury, 1966, 135 pp., $1.45). The author writes as one who has taken a deep draught of the new wine of the Gospel.

The Christian Case Against Poverty, by Henry Clark (Association, 1965, 128 pp., $.50).

Marriage Customs Through the Ages, by E. O. James (Macmillan, 1965, 254 pp., $1.50). By an author who believes that the family unit has always been the basic unit of human society. First published as Marriage and Society.

The German Church Conflict, by Karl Barth (John Knox, 1965, 77 pp., $1.75). Republished for the light it throws on the ecumenical situation today in Britain and the United States. First published in German in 1956.

The Future of John Wesley’s Methodism, by Henry D. Rack (John Knox, 1965, 80 pp., $1.75). An attempt to show the original nature of Methodism and why and how it should merge with Anglicanism.

Youth Considers Parents as People, by Randolph C. Miller (Nelson, 1965, 93 pp., $1.50). A view from the other end.

The Light of the World: A Reconstruction and Interpretation of the Life of Christ, by Greville Cooke (Icon Books, 1965, 352 pp., 5s.). A well-written but often highly imaginative account. First published in 1949.

The Minister’s Workshop: Preach Biblical Themes

One sure way to escape the temptation to be a sounding board for the babel of modern voices

One of the most difficult homiletic questions a preacher faces is, “What is the message the Lord wants me to deliver to his people at this time?” Dozens of issues are dinned into our minds by way of the air-waves and the papers every day. National and international crises so capture our attention in this exciting era of world history that it is hard at times to hear “the still small voice.” It is even harder to know what words to use in the pulpit to get people to listen to that “still small voice.”

One of the great temptations of the day is to degrade the pulpit by making it a sounding board for every brand of political, economic, and social philosophy, from the extreme right to the extreme left. When ministers yield to this temptation and set themselves up as self-appointed purveyors of omniscience, they insult the intelligence of the better-informed members of their congregations. Worse, they send their people out to face the spiritual battles of the week completely undernourished, having been fed stones instead of the Bread of Life.

God’s Word has been given by the Holy Spirit to the Church, and the Church and society made their greatest advances when the Bible was taken seriously as “the only infallible rule of faith and practice.” The Church recognized that it was to bring society into conformity with the Word of God rather than to accommodate God’s Word to society.

Consequently I preach only on biblical themes and depend upon prayer, the Scriptures, and the Holy Spirit to lead me to what the Lord would have me declare in any particular sermon.

It is remarkable how the Holy Spirit directs. Sometimes his guidance does not come as promptly as I might like, but he never fails. Sometimes he leads to an isolated text that demands attention because of a spiritual problem in the church or community, sometimes to a theme related to a special day on the church calendar (though heaven forbid that we respond to every suggested special day we asked to observe), sometimes to a whole book that must be expounded over a period of many weeks or months. I discuss the major doctrines of the faith periodically, and every sermon points to Christ and calls for a choice.

After the all-important selection of a subject comes the sermonic preparation. From the moment the theme has been determined, it becomes one of the primary thoughts occupying my mind during the day and often in the night. While driving from home to home, while engaged in some manual occupation or recreation, as well as in special preparatory reading, I keep the theme in mind and pray for illumination and guidance.

A day or so before the sermon is to be preached I sit down with a large pad of paper and write on it every thought on the subject that comes to mind. A concordance, a Bible dictionary, a few reliable commentaries, a half dozen or so Bible translations, Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations, Roget’s Thesaurus, and a file of illustrations I have built up over the years offer their assistance. The Thesaurus provides synonyms and expressions that not only aid in conveying shades of meaning but also enable one to avoid wearisome repetition. Of course, when the subject is one that requires technical analysis, historical data, or scientific research, the proper source books must be consulted.

The sheets of paper multiply. Then the next step is to assemble out of this mass of disjointed ideas a progression of thought and an outline. This often requires re-reading the sheets a number of times, but eventually the form takes shape and an outline emerges. Then, with the outline in mind, I go over the mass of material and beside the various thoughts jot “Int” for introduction, a “1,” or “2,” or “3” for points of discussion, or “C” for concluding thought. I also cross out much that is extraneous. Then, after I have put the various thoughts in proper sequence, putting flesh on the skeleton and dressing it up with illustrations is comparatively simple.

My favorite source of illustrative material is the Bible itself. Not only does reference to biblical incidents familiarize the people with the contents of the Bible, but the use of one part of the Scriptures to throw light on another part also points out the unity of the Bible and the consistency of its message. It has been said that the Bible is its own best interpreter. I believe that it is likewise its own best illustrator.

In delivery, I believe that one should endeavor to speak as plainly and naturally as possible. I abhor the affected “holy sabbath day voice,” and the meaningless rhythmic inflections that ignore thoughts needing emphasis and emphasize words of no special significance. How terribly unreal and unconvincing a vital message can become if given in an affected or sing-song voice. I shall always be grateful to Dr. Wheeler at Princeton Seminary, who drummed into the heads of us students his admonition, “Let’s not have any el-o-cu-tion! You are supposed to voice ideas.” I try both to speak in a natural voice and to project my voice so that the person on the back row can hear. If the message cannot be heard, why bother to deliver it? And I also try to remember that articulation is as important as volume.

For many years I boasted of “preaching without notes,” but there came a time when I realized I was using more mental energy trying to remember what came next than in giving convincing voice to the thoughts I wanted to communicate. Indeed, there were times when, weary of mind, I found that I was preaching not only without notes but also without ideas. With notes that can be used inconspicuously, I am more relaxed and maintain better contact with the congregation. After all, according to the Chinese proverb, “The weakest ink is stronger than the strongest memory.”—THE REV. IRVIN SHORTESS YEAWORTH, pastor, Covenant-First Presbyterian Church, Cincinnati, Ohio.

Thy Word Is Truth

The foundation of the Christian faith is the Lord Jesus Christ, and the foundation of our knowledge about him is the Written Word of God, the Bible. This is true of the Old Testament as well as of the New; the Apostle Paul reminded Timothy: “From childhood you have been acquainted with the sacred writings which are able to instruct you for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus” (2 Tim. 3:15, RSV).

The persistent, all-out attacks on the integrity of the Bible are to be expected. Yet Christians must also guard against subtle insinuations, often seemingly plausible, that if permitted to take root will inevitably bring disaster.

Whether man admits it or not, the Holy Scriptures are the only infallible rule of faith and practice. They are what they claim to be, a divinely inspired revelation of truth that man could never discover for himself.

To accept and defend the complete integrity and authority of the Bible is no longer popular. Yet I am convinced that the faith of individual Christians and the future of the Church depends on whether we accept the Scriptures as the unique revelation of divine truth, in which are to be found the answers to man’s problems in this life and the knowledge of his ultimate destiny.

The Bible is above all our source of knowledge of Jesus Christ. This is interwoven throughout the Old Testament and is in full fruition in the New.

Without the Bible we would have no more than a speculative knowledge of God, based on his works of creation and providence. But through the Bible we know that he is the Creator and Sustainer of the universe and the Redeemer of those who believe.

With the Bible we can know God, his will and laws, his love, mercy, and grace offered in the person of his Son. As we read the Bible we become aware of his presence and help, his guidance and strength, his sufficiency for every situation.

The Holy Spirit uses the Bible to look into our souls and spirits and show us ourselves as God sees us. Who, while reading the Scriptures, has not experienced the searching of the Holy Spirit?

The writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews expresses this function of the Bible perfectly: “The word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and spirit, of joints and marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart. And before him no creature is hidden, but all are open and laid bare to the eyes of him with whom we have to do (Heb. 4:12, 13).

It is the Holy Spirit, the divine author, who makes the Bible distinct from all other literature. In its pages there exists a power stronger than any X ray devised by man, a power that reaches down into those areas of life hidden from man-devised equipment or methods.

Hardly a day passes that newspapers, magazines, and news commentators do not refer to the plight of a world steeped in lawlessness and tragedy that defies human solution. The Bible gives both the diagnosis and the cure.

Ignoring the Word of God, politicians, sociologists, and economists fight a hopeless battle. The world’s tragedies, ailments, bitterness, conflicts, and crime are all symptoms, not the disease itself. The Bible makes it plain what the disease is—sin in the human heart—and offers the cure in the person and work of Jesus Christ, the Son of God.

We are confronted by a brazen attempt to reject God’s revelation of man’s nature, need, and only hope. Going hand in hand with this is man’s ignorance of the nature, love, and perfect provision of God, who alone has in his hands the solution to it all.

The substitution of human opinion for the divine revelation to be found solely in the Word of God is sinful presumption and arrant foolishness, and it leads to certain disaster.

Human opinions are fallible; God’s truth is infallible. Men’s opinions change, but God’s truth does not. The devices of men are unreliable; God’s word remains sure. Men’s opinions are shot through with their own inherent weaknesses; but the Scriptures are strong and eternal in truth. And the wisdom of men is foolishness in God’s sight—that is, in the sight of the One with whom all men must ultimately have to do.

Let us never forget: wherever human opinion runs counter to the divine revelation, it will some day be dashed to pieces on the reality that God is true and cannot change.

Within the last few years, even months, denials of God’s Word have increased. Non-Christians, already confused, find themselves even more so because of these denials, some of which originate within the Church. Christians are also being confused and discouraged, for they feel the foundations being shaken.

Stand firm, like the pastor of a large city church who was chided for preaching a sermon on Jonah and the whale. His reply was, “I had rather be found on the side of faith than of denial.”

Don’t make the first compromise! When informed that new textual discoveries and the advance of science make it impossible to accept the Bible at face value, take comfort in this fact: not one new manuscript and not one discovery of science has discredited or altered any doctrine of the Christian faith.

On the contrary, new manuscripts and new archaeological findings are confirming the truth of the Scriptures. Furthermore, science, busy discovering the things God created and placed in his universe, is only confirming the divine revelation. We think of our age as the “space age,” and it is. Nevertheless, the Bible is filled with allusions to space, and nothing has been discovered that is contrary to the truth therein revealed.

Not for one moment would I imply that the Bible is primarily a book of science. But when the curtain of time comes down and we see God’s creation in the light of eternity, some will be amazed to see how accurate the Bible is. Even today scientists cannot go behind Genesis 1:1, and few go that far.

As for the “errors,” “contradictions,” and “discrepancies” in the Bible, many of these variations can be accounted for in the line of transmission of the text. There are places where we are undoubtedly left to accept by faith what we cannot understand. Yet in almost every instance the difficulty is more apparent than real.

The safest rule is to believe that no man knows enough to challenge God’s Word successfully. The Word is its own best defense. A difficulty at one place is cleared up at another, leaving unimpaired the conviction that we have in the Bible a marvelous book that speaks to the hearts of those who hear and obey.

Despite the attacks of unbelievers outside and sophisticates inside the Church, the Bible stands sure and tried by all who have put their trust in it. Christians who “defend” the Bible should take comfort in the knowledge that the Bible is its own best defense.

Read it. Study it. Believe it. Obey it. In it is the Way of Life.

Ideas

The Death of Death

“Let the pulpit proclaim the good news that God is alive, and has nowhere more clearly proved it than at Calvary, where Jesus Christ brought death to death.”

At least one good word can be said for modern existentialism. It is the only philosophy that has seriously grappled with death. Traditional philosophies, materialistic and idealistic, probed the secrets of heaven and earth, but the fact that a man must die never engaged their serious interest. For all its epistemological interest in the question of how man can have knowledge, modern philosophy never showed any real interest in knowing what it means that even a modern man must die.

Death, of course, is universal. The ultimate statistic, as G. B. Shaw said, is the same: one out of one dies. Death is every man’s problem.

There is a lot of death-talk in modern conversation. It is a difficult subject to avoid. There is war in Viet Nam. We live in the nuclear age with its frightening possibility of large-scale death through nuclear warfare. At least two hundred thousand people died recently in the violent revolution in Indonesia. Millions are threatened by death through starvation in the Far East. It is difficult not to talk about this. It is even harder not to think about it. And to all this grist for death-talk is now added the thought of the death of God.

At the same time, we try to cover up the idea of death and ignore it as truly as the traditional philosophers did. The subject is excluded from “polite conversation.” Funerals are conducted as privately and unobtrusively as possible, as if not to disturb the public peace. We conceal the prospect of death from the person who does not know he is on his deathbed. Before we bury the dead, we make them look as alive as possible. And only the gravediggers actually see the dust return to the dust.

Is death a part of life? Sartre says death is absurd, an irrational something that renders life itself irrational. Therefore, he says, we ought not to think about it. Heidegger gives the opposite answer: Death is an essential strand in the fabric of life. To think about death, he says, is part of living.

This ambiguity characterizes every man’s thought about death, and particularly about his own death. He tries constantly not to think about death; yet it pervades and haunts his every conscious and unconscious experience. So we engage in a lot of death-talk, and yet seek to banish the thought of death by a sheer act of will.

Death is a part of life as we know life. It is folly to ignore it—or rather, to try to ignore it. Must we then live under its gloomy and inescapable shadow?

The Christian knows better. He knows that God has entered our human life and existence in Jesus Christ, and that there is the possibility of a kind of life in which death is not ignored but defeated. The Christian therefore sings, not as one who is “singing in the rain,” but as one who, though he knows he must die, knows of “death’s destruction,” of the “death of death.” It is not God but death that has died. Of this he sings. The Christian disowns the gloomy belief that death is an essential strand in the pattern of life, as if there could not be one without the other. In the name of his biblical faith he joyfully rejects the existentialists’ idea that death is a part of existence. The Christian regards death as an alien element in life, an outside intrusion brought into human life through sin. He gains this idea about death, not from a reading of human existence and experience, but from revelation. As an outside intrusion into human life, the mystery of death, he realizes, must also be disclosed from the outside, from a divine revelation.

The existentialist, the professional, or the amateur who simply thinks about his own death can never decipher the mystery of death or indeed the mystery of life; for he runs the two together, and interprets one in terms of the other. He therefore inevitably ends with the death of life, and finally with the death of God himself. (Is it not the existential theologian who started our current death-of-God talk?)

The Christian speaks not of the death of life but of the death of death. He sees, through the existence of Jesus Christ, that death is foreign to life and can be eliminated from life. Death can be evacuated from the premises of human existence, since it has no natural right to be.

The death of death! For what more could men hope? What higher or greater joy could be brought into human existence? What greater thing could the scientist hope to achieve? He now strives to produce life. But that is not a real problem for any living man. His problem is how to retain life. Nor is it a real problem for a society seeking ways and means to halt a population explosion. The death of death—this is mankind’s greatest need, and greatest hope.

If, as the existentialist says, death is part of life, something with which we have to live (!), then both life and death are an absurd irrationality out of which none of us can make any sense.

But the Christian believes in the death of death. Is not this also incomprehensible? If death is the end—and in the profound biblical (not superficial) sense, it is—does it make any sense to believe in the end of the end? Is not this Christian belief as incomprehensible as the existentialist’s “life which is death” or as Kant’s antinomies of reason?

Indeed, it is incomprehensible. Yet it is not absurd; rather, it is something devoutly to be desired. The death of death is indeed incomprehensible. Its truth therefore cannot be discovered by man within the limits of his own existence. The knowledge that death itself has died can be gained only through divine revelation. That death cannot ultimately destroy life but is defeated through death itself is a truth that can be made known to us only by God himself. That the ultimate statistic is not the equation of life and death so that one out of one dies is not given us to discover. The death of death is incomprehensible, for it is accomplished through death itself, the death of the Son of God.

It is not God who has died. Just how indeed could our existentialist theologians have lifted themselves out of their skins and leaped out of and above their existence to discover the death of God? Would to God they had remained within existence, for it is within our human existence that the Son of God died, and only in this sense is it permissible to speak of the death of God. By this death of the Son of God for the sins of mankind, death was defeated, death as the end result of sin was ended. By this death, he who had the power of death, even the devil, was destroyed, and Christ now delivers those who all their lifetime lived in the bondage of the fear of death.

This is the message of Good Friday: Through the death of the Son of God, death has itself met death. Death, which is ultimately hell, has been conquered by him who on Calvary experienced the whole of hell and of death in his human existence, crying out, “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?” Why? Death has questions but—as the existentialist also knows—death gives no answers. No answer came to the dying Christ. But because he died, we know the answer to his “Why,” the meaning of his death. His death on the cross was the death of death. Incomprehensible, yes. Absurd? No—unless life itself is absurd.

The declaration that death is not the final answer, that it does not stand in an equation with life, that it is not of the fabric of human existence but a foreign element, defeated, itself put to death, does not await the resurrection, which bespeaks the dimensions of an eternal life in which there is no death. The sign that death is defeated and has met its own end in death, is given within our death-ridden existence. While Christ yet hangs on the instrument of his death, from the cross itself comes the sign of death’s defeat. While still on the cross, the dying Son of God declares his victory. Death does not take him, but he in death cries out with the loud voice of strength, “It is finished.” Death is finished. Death cannot take him, for it is the dying Christ himself who gives up his spirit, and by his own act bows his head, and by his own decision commends his spirit to God. “Father, into thy hands, I commend my spirit.” His life is not taken from him; rather, he himself on a note of triumph gives up his spirit to God.

This the Christian can understand. Even the godly Old Testament saint could understand this. The old patriarch Jacob did not capitulate to death. Only after he had finished blessing his sons did he himself gather his feet into his bed and give up his spirit to God. And David, even while he walked through the valley of the shadow of death, knew that ahead was a future in which he would dwell in the house of the Lord forever—and behind him a goodness and mercy that followed him.

And this the New Testament saints also knew and understood. Simeon needed but one look at his infant Lord to be able to pray, “Now let thy servant depart in peace … for mine eyes have seen thy salvation.” Paul could wish to die since that would be far better, for he would then be with Christ; but even if death had to wait he could live happily, because his life was hid with God in Christ. To mention but one more, Stephen, while the stones of death destroyed him, was touched by that death of death which is the glory of the Resurrection; he prayed for those who destroyed him and commended his spirit into the hands of God. The Christian can say, “Death, be not proud.” Who can be proud in defeat? Death—not God—has died!

With all our death-talk, let the Church also talk about death; but let it say the right thing. What the world, and the Church itself, needs to hear is not the theologian who mumbles in his teacups or shouts from the headlines that God is dead. The world has enough gloom, enough stupidity, enough bad news. On Good Friday of 1966, let the Good News be sounded and proclaimed in every Christian pulpit, the Good News—without which all other good news is ultimately meaningless—that God is alive and has nowhere more clearly proved it than at Calvary, where he brought death to death.

The ultimate statistic, the ultimate truth and meaning about our life and our human existence, is not that one out of one dies. If it were, then life and death would indeed be an equation. But life and death are not equal. And the ultimate statistic that discloses the ultimate truth about our existence is that “one died for all,” that they who live should so truly live that even though they die, through the death of the Son of God “yet shall they live.”

Watts Again

“It sure was crazy.” With these words Maurice Michels, a Pasadena truck driver with seven stitches in his head, described his experience when forty to fifty young Negroes pulled him out of his truck in Watts and worked him over.

And crazy it was, crazy all around. Seventeen-year-old Sam Henry Fullerton, the confessed murderer of another truck driver, Larry Gomez, said he killed him because “I wanted to be the big man.” He now is the big man. He got his man, and he got his name in the newspapers. But he is sorry for what he is, “sorry I shot that white dude.”

And who was “white dude” Larry Gomez? A man who delivered bottled drinking water to the people of Watts, had once studied for the priesthood, was the father of five, and was an ardent civil rights advocate. After he was shot he begged for help in four doorways, received none, and died in the street.

It sure was crazy. And the violent and hateful irrationality for which Watts has become a worldwide symbol will only be heightened if Fullerton’s act of murder is clouded over by an appeal to the unfavorable environment in which he lived. No amount of environmental provocation can obscure the fact that murder is immoral as well as irrational. The deed by which Fullerton became a “big man”—destroying another man—is a moral offense. The economic and sociological climate that is Watts does not make it anything less. A white man’s life is as valuable as a Negro’s, and murder is murder regardless of color. If public reaction in either the white or the Negro community obscures this, then it will be time to say again, “It sure was crazy.”

On the other hand, it will be no mark of intelligence for the white community and the City Council of Los Angeles to pretend that Watts is not there. To think of the area again only when it commands attention by violence will be folly. The guns of last August have been heard again. And one need not be a prophet, or even the son of a prophet, to realize that they may be heard still another time, unless both the white and the Negro communities are willing to act.

A Regrettable Spectacle

In recent years much has been said in these pages about the improved climate of evangelical understanding and cooperation. But some deep and disturbing divisions remain. Sometimes the ugliness that survives in certain fundamentalist circles gains notice even in the secular press, as when Time magazine recently reported attitudes at Bob Jones University toward Billy Graham’s crusade in Greenville.

We have no desire to embarrass Bob Jones University; its spokesmen are able to do that for themselves. Nor are we minded to read the Bob Joneses—Bob Sr., Bob Jr., and Bob III—out of the kingdom of grace. In years past this writer handled promotion for a city-wide Life Begins campaign in Chicago at which Bob Sr. was a featured speaker, and from classroom days he remembers several transfer students from Bob Jones University as gifted scholars who were too discerning to believe everything that passes for truth even on a Christian college campus. But we think the most lamentable thing about the Greenville situation was the spectacle of an evangelical spokesman leading with his chin. It revives all the odium that has been attached to fundamentalism by those who dismiss it as an emotional mentality. The suggested mock prayer against Graham (see page 45) proves nothing so much as the need of real prayer—of continuing prayer—that the unity of evangelical Christians may be apparent.

We rejoice in the 7,300 who made decisions for Christ in the Greenville crusade, and we trust that the stronger grip on spiritual realities will bring a new day of Christian devotion to the Piedmont area.

Auca Spears Flash Again

Ten years ago five young men were speared to death by Auca Indians in Ecuador. These martyrs died as they sought vainly to reach a savage tribe with the saving Gospel of Jesus Christ. Since then four of the five surviving members of that band that killed these missionaries have become Christians. A small community of about eighty Aucas has been established, a majority of whom are following Jesus Christ.

Rachel Saint, sister of one of the dead missionaries, has continued working with these Indians and as a member of the Wycliffe Bible Translators has translated portions of the Scriptures into the Auca tongue. Yet even now, the spears of unredeemed and savage Aucas flash again. A little group of Auca believers who went out to take the Gospel to relatives found the bodies of loved ones, speared and decaying. The message never got through.

At a time when young people are looking for causes with which to identify themselves, they should not overlook those other sheep for whom Christ also died or the opportunity to hazard their lives in taking his message to the dark places of the earth.

The Anne Sullivan Centennial

One of the greatest of all teaching achievements was the work of Anne Sullivan, the 100th anniversary of whose birth on April 14, 1866, will be recognized by the Anne Sullivan Centennial Commemoration, sponsored by the Perkins School for the Blind in Water-town, Massachusetts, and the Industrial Home for the Blind in Brooklyn, New York. Few teachers have more faithfully exemplified the selflessness at the heart of their noble profession than did Anne Sullivan. Perhaps the greatest tribute ever paid her was that of her world-famous pupil, Helen Keller, who said she “gave me my soul.”

Deaf-blind persons (and there are more than 5,000 in this country alone) are shut off from meaningful communication with the world around them. Nothing about God and the great truths of Scripture, nothing of human thought and learning or of the beauties of nature can be known by them unless the gate to their minds and hearts is unlocked. Anne Sullivan devoted her life to unlocking that gate for Helen Keller and for many others similarly afflicted.

Though America is beset by moral and social problems, it has its brighter aspects, such as the growing concern for the mentally retarded, for the victims of incurable diseases, and also for the deal-blind, who, because of Anne Sullivan’s devoted labors, may be delivered from their terrible isolation.

New Way To Religious Unity

Out of New York last week came the proposal by Dr. Ernest R. Palen of the Middle Collegiate Church that Protestants and Roman Catholics join Jews in observing Saturday instead of Sunday as the day of worship. Dr. Palen, who for twenty-live years was a member of the board of education of the Reformed Church in America and has also been a director of the Protestant Council of the City of New York, hailed his own proposal as promising “the longest stride toward religious unity that our civilization has yet known.”

The basic question remains, however, not which day but which Lord. If the theology behind the day is insignificant, then the day is inconsequential—and so is worship; so that a shift from Sunday to Saturday simply to appease the idol of “religious unity” must be offensive to devout Jews and Christians alike. If Christ is risen, he is Lord of all the days. Worship on both Saturdays and Sundays on that premise, by both Christians and Jews, would be a step in the right direction.

A Grim Fairy Tale

We rubbed our eyes in incredulity when we read the text of Robert Theobald’s address, “New Technologies and Institutional Changes,” delivered at the February meeting of the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of Churches in Louisville, Kentucky. It contained this statement: “… everybody is entitled as an absolute constitutional right to a guaranteed income, sufficient to live with dignity. At a time when the machines can turn out enough production for everybody it is no longer necessary to force people into factories, or into offices, or into jobs unless they want to carry out this type of activity. I am not arguing that they should receive as much as somebody who does a job but I do believe everybody is entitled to enough money to live with dignity. This is the way to abolish poverty, and it seems to me that this step is long overdue.”

Doubtless all men want to live with dignity, and more and more of them hope to find it without work. Will dignity include a compact or a Cadillac? A black and white or a color TV? An efficiency apartment or a three-bedroom detached house in suburbia? Will it be found in the wintry wind of the Dakotas or the balmy breezes of Florida?

We note with relief that the NCC General Board in adopting its statement on “Christian Concern and Responsibility for Economic Life in a Rapidly Changing Technological Society” said: “Work, understood as creative and responsible participation in useful, meaningful and compensated activity, is both a right and a need of all men.… Talk of the abolition of human work is presently a pure fantasy.”

We took our feet off: the desk, stopped sipping coffee, and returned to our toil. The framers of the Constitution of the United States somehow neglected to mention our “absolute right to a guaranteed income.” As a matter of fact, there is good reason to be highly suspicious of absolute rights claimed in ecclesiastical gatherings. Talk of the abolition of human work is presently—and we think permanently—“a pure fantasy.”

Where Faith Must Stand

At the heart of the Christian faith is the person and work of the Lord Jesus Christ. And because we learn about Christ in the Scriptures, we must always be acutely sensitive to anything that downgrades the biblical record.

The Bible gives us God’s direct and explicit revelation, which speaks to each generation. By his Spirit, God put into the mouths of his prophets words that are ageless in truth and changeless in their message of redemption in Christ. “Because no prophecy ever came by the impulse of man, but men moved by the Holy Spirit spoke from God” (2 Pet. 1:21, RSV), the Scriptures speak with an incomparable power and authority.

To his detractors, Christ said, “If you believed Moses, you would believe me, for he wrote of me. But if you do not believe his writings, how will you believe my words?” (John 5:46, 47). Moreover, all through the Old Testament there is the note of authority in “The Lord spoke unto me …,” “Thus saith the Lord …,” and similar affirmations that bring faith and confidence to us today. Our Lord’s assertion about the law and the prophets—“I have come not to abolish them but to fulfill them” (Matt. 5:17)—is not debatable. Nor are the prophecies of the men of God debatable. Some have been fulfilled; others yet remain to be fulfilled.

As the Old Testament writers spoke as they were “moved by the Holy Spirit,” so did those of the New. Paul’s claim of divine inspiration is clear: “I would have you know, brethren, that the gospel which was preached by me is not man’s gospel. For I did not receive it from man, nor was I taught it, but it came through a revelation of Jesus Christ” (Gal. 1:11, 12).

The further men get away from the Holy Scriptures, the further they get from the Christ of those Scriptures. And the more they insist that only scholars can understand the Bible, the further they get from the Holy Spirit who inspired the Bible.

The Church And The Totalitarian State

Recently the Reverend Gordon K. Chapman retired after forty-four years as a Presbyterian missionary in Japan. A staunch evangelical and a distinguished missionary, he was also editor-in-chief of The Japan Christian Yearbook. In retirement this indefatigable worker remains in Japan on what hardly seems to be a retirement schedule. Along with our congratulations goes appreciation for his penetrating analysis of the relation of the Japanese churches to a totalitarian regime.

Before and during World War II the performance of Shinto rites was required of Christians in Japan, and some argued that it was only a patriotic exercise that did not compromise Christian conscience. As late as 1963 Mr. Chapman reviewed that episode in Japanese church life. He wrote: Early Christians when faced with a totalitarian regime asked a simple question, “Is anything being offered to Caesar—divine names, redemptive acts, offerings, prayers, obeisance—which is due to God alone?” Surely every Christian knows that “the State is not absolute or final, but ordained of God as his servant for certain temporal purposes.… The Christian is not to render unto Caesar what belongs to God alone.… When the State demands what is due to God alone, it has transgressed its limits, … it becomes the tangible embodiment of Satanic power.” In Japan some Christians “saw the issue in the above light and were not deceived by the specious arguments of the State, even though their refusal to comply involved them in imprisonment.”

The best insurance against totalitarianism of any kind—be it that of Hitler, Mao, or Castro—is separation of church and state, plus a Church willing to speak up when Caesar’s law conflicts with God’s law, saying, “we must obey God rather than men”; a Church willing to pay whatever price is demanded for this obedience—persecution, imprisonment, or death.

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