Down To Earch

DOWN TO EARTH

Has the Christianity we profess become a practical reality in our lives? This is a question every Christian should ask himself, for entirely too many of us are fooling ourselves.

Attendance at church, activity in church programs, or identification with the church as an organization are to many people synonymous with Christianity. It is that so few Christians exhibit qualities emanating from supernaturally transformed lives that the cause of Christ lags and unbelieving people see little in us to attract them to the altogether lovely One.

Shortly before his crucifixion, our Lord spoke to his disciples on the imperative of living close to him. He likened this truth to something they could see and understand, namely, a vine and its branches.

“I am the vine, ye are the branches: He that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit: for without me ye can do nothing.”

This profound truth, so simply expressed, should arrest and humble every person who names the name of Christ.

Strange to say there are Christians who feel capable of living their own lives when it comes to “minor” matters, and only turn to God when the going gets rough or when a problem of seeming magnitude confronts them.

However, none of us can clearly distinguish between what is truly of minor importance at the moment and what may prove to be a pressing issue of life, for often it is a little thing that blossoms out into a matter of tremendous import.

Unwilling to take our Lord’s words at face value, some persons will insist they are getting along very well. They may look at nominal or non-Christians and point out that they are obviously successful. We see all around us business and professional people who are unquestionably successful and we are foolishly led to think that Christ did not mean what he said.

But what is success? If we are to judge success by worldly standards we must think of it in terms of material and social gain. But how foolish can we be? Christ punctured such a criterion in one sentence: “For what shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?”

It is the confusion of worldly standards with things eternal that leads to folly, for God looks at us with eyes that penetrate the facade of religiosity to the deep recesses of our souls. “For the Lord seeth not as man seeth; for man looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord looketh on the heart,” is a truth that should humble each one of us to the dust.

We fool ourselves with the superficiality of Christian pretense, but we rarely fool anyone else. God knows our hearts and those with whom we come in contact soon sense whether or not our profession is real.

In God’s sight (the only perspective that counts), success is measured in the light of eternity. The apostle Paul’s words express the same truth: “… we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen: for the things which are seen are temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal.”

Therefore, when Christ affirmed that without him we can do nothing, he was telling us that anything done outside his holy purpose will eventually perish, and that it is only by a vital relationship with him that we can accomplish anything which will last for eternity.

The apostle Paul tells of the time of testing, and of the one foundation, and of the superstructures that Christians build thereon:

“For other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ. Now if any man build upon this foundation gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay, stubble: every man’s work shall be made manifest: for the day shall declare it, because it shall be revealed by fire; and the fire shall try every man’s work of what sort it is.”

Will the life each of us is living stand under the fire of God’s testing? This is a solemn question, and the day of inevitable reckoning is involved in it.

For entirely too many of us, Christianity is a nebulous experience having little or no practical value. Actually the very opposite should be the case. Christianity should mean a new way, a transformation from death to life. Our Lord’s affirmation that we must be born again clearly indicates that for the individual a conversion to Jesus Christ should be the greatest and most important event in human experience.

What does Christianity mean for us? Do we sense his holy presence and power in our lives? Have we with Christ a relationship that is as real and life-giving as that of the branch to the vine? Are we not often playing at being Christians?

Christianity is tremendously real and practical. It means having Christ take up his abode in us. It involves our seeing the fruits of his Spirit a natural manifestation in us of his supernatural presence.

Our Christian faith should be evident in every walk of life and in every relationship. We need to recognize that we live in an alien and hostile environment. No Christian wants to appear “peculiar,” but unless there are evidences of Christ’s transforming presence and power in our lives, how real is the faith we profess?

These are days of testing. Matters which endure and point our vision to the ultimate are being crowded into the background while the glitter of immediate things take over our attention. How can we stand firm when tested? How can we honor God in our daily tasks? In short, how can Christianity become a vitally practical matter at the level of everyday living?

First and foremost there must take place in us an experience with Christ that results in conversion. Conversion is not a matter of outward emotion but of inner transformation which is increasingly evidenced to ourselves and to others.

Stemming from the vital and new relationship there must be a constant inflowing of divine grace, and apart from prayer and Bible study no Christian can hope to receive into his own heart and life the blessings essential for daily Christian living.

Just as life flows from the vine to the branch, so divine life flows into the Christian through his living close to the source of life itself.

Prayer is a gift from God whereby he speaks to us and we speak to him. It is as essential to spiritual life as breathing is to the body.

Bible study is another means of divine grace, for in the written Word we meet the living Word. The intense practicality of daily Bible study can never be overstated, for as we read God speaks to our hearts and His Word becomes a means of guidance, wisdom, warning, and hope.

We live in a time when iniquity abounds and when the love of many is growing cold. If we are to bear a consistent witness as Christians, it must be through the Christ who dwells in us.

“For without me ye can do nothing.”

L. NELSON BELL

Eutychus and His Kin: December 5, 1960

THE BELLS

There’s the ringing of the bell,

The doorbell;

I must go to find out

what this fellow has to sell;

Or it is the tot next door,

With her sister and four more,

Ringing, pounding on the door;

No, a van is at the gate—

“Yes, this house is 308,

But my name is not McGuire

And I did not buy a dryer.”

Now again I take my pen,

and blot the puddle where it fell—

There’s the ringing of the bell,

The doorbell,

The pestilential, residential

ringing of the bell.

There’s the ringing of the bell

The phone bell

Dutifully I answer it,

although I know quite well,

Telephone communication

Has its ground for installation

In the endless conversation

Of the younger generation.

All the latest parent polls

Show beyond doubt

Just for whom the Bell tolls

Must be paid out.

“Hello, this is Eutychus

A moment please. O Sue!

Kathy on the telephone;

She would like to speak with you.”

As I close the study door

So that Sue can be alone

I know that for an hour or more

She has quieted the phone,

Stopped the ringing of the bell,

The phone bell,

The electronic, un-Poe-etic

ringing of the bell.

There’s the ringing of the bell,

Alarm clock bell.

What a warm and dreamy haze

it riots to dispel!

And the trauma it inflicts

When I find it’s half past six!

Someone set it, what a crime,

A quarter hour ahead of time.

Now the phone is ringing, too.

“O, yes, pastor, so it’s you.

Yes, I am an early riser,

Though I think it might be wiser

To remain in bed. O, yes.

I can make those calls, I guess;

Phone my friends about the meeting,

Push some doorbells with our greeting.

Yes, the church that rings the bell,

Rings the bells,

Rings doorbells, phone bells,

church bells, bells.”

EUTYCHUS

THE ELECTION

In my opinion the decision just made by the American electorate will be revealed by the long perspective of history, to be as fateful as the Dred Scott Decision. The American people have faced themselves with an unhappy dilemma. Either they will win back lost liberties, which is good, by a strife of brothers, which is bad, or, peace will be preserved, which is good, at the price of liberty, which is sorrowful to contemplate. In either case the question raised by Lincoln in the Gettysburg Address is now before us, whether the lovely thing so sacrificially begun by our founding fathers “can long endure.”

The question is not whether a Catholic should be President or not. It would be a great day for America if a Catholic were to be President, or a Jew, or a Negro. Similarly for a Southerner, or a woman! The question is about the Catholic church in its relation to the state, not about an American citizen who happens as an individual to be a Catholic. That never was in question, though those who feared the right question tried to make it seem as if that was indeed in question.

The Catholic church is a perfect institution for the evasion of responsibility in a matter like this. The few hierarchs would be unimportant without the millions who follow them. Yet the decisions are made not by the millions but by the few hierarchs. The millions are irresponsible. The hierarchs cannot be called to account.

The Catholic church has a position (“thesis”) where it can establish it, and a next best position (“hypothesis”) where the normative position is not immediately attainable. There are theologians and even a few hierarchs who sincerely oppose this. But the classical position has never been set aside. It contemplates a special status for the Catholic church in relation to other churches. It considers it a matter of right to instruct Catholic rulers and citizens when it chooses to do so. The recent instance of the bishops in Puerto Rico is a textbook example. The Vatican—final repository of all decision—explicitly stated that the Puerto Rico hierarchs were within their rights when they forbade the faithful to vote for Muñoz Marín on pain of sin.

Now we come to the question of sanctions, the real weight of the foregoing considerations. The Roman church is not a church as Protestants are likely to understand the term. The being (esse) of the church is the clergy, especially the bishops, more especially the pope. The people do not comprise the church but are in it, as in a building, or around it, as children are around a mother. Nor does religion mean in the Roman church anything resembling what the term connotes to Protestants. To them the religious subject is decisively involved in the central religious matter: “do you acknowledge Jesus Christ to be your Lord and Saviour?” In the Roman system the Sacraments constitute the religious matter (res), and the Sacraments are altogether objective, beyond the subject.

Now then. The hierarchy has unshared control of the Sacraments, the “power of the keys.” The layman has no rights in the matter. None. If the Sacraments are withheld from him his eternal destiny is gone. He may gain the whole world and lose his own soul. He will think long before he defies the hierarchy when they mean business.

They may hold their hand. As long as they do the Catholic politico and we are in luck. Similarly for the Catholic part of the electorate. But meanwhile the decision remains not with the political figure, not with the Catholic electorate, not with America, but with men who in this matter are not Americans but hierarchs of the Catholic church.

As long as the historic position is in effect, supported by such sanctions, no Catholic should be President. Now that one has been elected, a decision as fateful as the Dred Scott Decision has been made.

CLIFFORD L. STANLEY

Department of Theology

The Virginia Seminary (Episcopal)

Alexandria, Va.

When the tumult and the shouting die, we shall slowly realize that God has willed it so.… Perhaps, among other reasons, to make us Protestants re-examine our loyalty to Him, to the mighty acts of His intervention in Christ, to the quickening power of His Word in the hands of the Spirit, to His saving grace as our sole hope of glory.

WILLIAM CHILDS ROBINSON

Columbia Theological Seminary

Decatur, Ga.

ON APOSTOLIC SUCCESSION

The article “Is There an Apostolic Succession?” in your Oct. 24 issue by Dr. Philip Edgcumbe Hughes, an Anglican scholar, is a very stimulating presentation. I admired its forthrightness. However, there is the other side, equally interesting and substantial.

THOMAS THEODORE BUTLER

Diocese of Long Island Lynbrook, N. Y.

The “Lambeth Quadrilateral” sets forth as one of its “principles of unity,” “a ministry acknowledged by every part of the Church as possessing not only the inward call of the Spirit, but also the commission of Christ and the authority of the whole body.” The Bishops meeting in Lambeth in 1930 made it clear that “a ministry acknowledged by every part of the Church” means “the historic episcopate.” This was reiterated again by the Bishops in 1948, and in the Anglican Congress of 1954.

C. OSBORNE MOYER

Christ Church

Holly Springs, Miss.

He speaks for himself, not for the Episcopal Church or the Anglican Communion.

JAMES BRICE CLARK

St. Barnabas Church

Omaha, Neb.

If the doctrine as believed in by the historic Church is false and without reasonable foundation why concern yourself with it? Could it be that this doctrine which is officially held by the three branches of the Holy Catholic Church (Anglican, Roman, Orthodox) … is unsettling the faith of too many thinking Protestants?

RUFUS L. SIMONS

Saint Stephen’s in the Field, Episcopal

Elwood, Ind.

I write this on the eve of the Protestant Reformation celebration. And I grieve to think of all the individualism which will most certainly be preached tomorrow.… I do admit that the events of the 16th century were the result of a tyrannical Church. But that tyranny has been replaced by the much more devastating tyranny of individualism. And look at the littered wreckage which has resulted! I look upon Protestantism as a great, empty, helpless mass of froth and chaff. Stumbling, straining at gnats, incapable to marshall any unity to combat the powerful challenges of the day, or meet the needs of even its own members. If ever the Church needed Apostolic direction and unity, it is today.…

But our differences go much, much deeper than this. All our ecumenical discussions are superficial, if they do not begin at the beginning. We don’t believe in the same God! We disagree on His very Nature, His purpose in Creation, His destiny for Man, to say nothing about the means by which these purposes are to be accomplished.

E. O. WALDRON

St. John’s Episcopal Church

Mt. Vernon, Ind.

I am very happy that Dr. Hughes wrote what he did on the question of an apostolic succession. His thesis that there is an apostolic succession of doctrine rather than one of any ecclesiastical order is the very doctrine which Luther stressed, as did also Calvin of course. And that apostolic doctrine is set forth in the New Testament, though supported also by the Old Testament, for both testify of Christ.

To me it seems almost miraculous that in this time of confusion and dogmatical double talk there should appear so many learned men with divinely guided insight to stress greatly needed basic scriptural truths.

J. THEODORE MUELLER

Concordia Seminary St. Louis, Mo.

EVANGELICAL RESURGENCE

Thank you so much for Dr. Ockenga’s article on “Resurgent Evangelical Leadership” (Oct. 10 issue). I have read nothing that points out more clearly the origins, problems, differences, similarities, and objections of the various theological concepts. This will help a lot of us to redefine and re-evaluate our positions. As for me, I am more proud than ever before to call myself an evangelical!

RANDALL GREEN

Maple Grove Baptist Church

Louisville, Ky.

Dr. Ockenga apparently has not yet realized that many of us have been through the fundamentalist grist mill and have found a more liberal theology far more meaningful. What would Dr. Ockenga suggest? That we become hypocrites and proclaim our belief in the plenary inspiration of scripture, the virgin birth, etc., as “essential beliefs,” when in all honesty we do not?

RALPH SILVIS

Hamersville Larger Parish

Congregational Christian Churches

Hamersville, Ohio

Dr. Ockenga seeks to define evangelicalism as fundamental in creed, liberal in churchmanship.… Can you renounce separatism without thereby becoming an inclusivist?…

There is one flaw in Dr. Ockenga’s proposal that we infiltrate the citadels of liberalism with the fire of a new evangelicalism. The modernists did not hesitate to practice deceit and even bold misrepresentation of their views to infiltrate the major Protestant denominations. We cannot match their dishonesty without losing our integrity.

OLIVER W. PRICE

Bible Lovers League

Oklahoma City, Okla.

On his principles there would have been no Reformation. For when did Rome officially repudiate her historic confessional basis? Does she not confess the Bible to be the word of God and the ancient ecumenical creeds to be her confession of faith? While we’re infiltrating, let us infiltrate Rome as well.

THEODORE J. GEORGIAN

Covenant Orthodox Presbyterian Church

Rochester, N. Y.

SAY, ABOUT THAT BOOK LIST

I studied with considerable interest the “Evangelical Book List” (Sept. 26 issue) …, and was considerably astonished by the absolute omission of any volumes authored by one of Scotland’s most celebrated theological writers, Alexander Balmain Bruce.… Three of his works especially deserve inclusion, The Training of the Twelve, The Humiliation of Christ, and The Parabolic Teaching of Christ.

RAYMOND L. COX

Hillsboro Foursquare Church

Hillsboro, Ore.

On page 18, it is erroneously stated that two books by Muhlenberg Press are “out of print.” They are J. L. Neve, A History of Christian Thought (1943, 1946), and T. G. Tappert, The Book of Concord.

W. D. ALLBECK

Both titles are currently available.

Springfield, Ohio

I would most heartily recommend your Evangelical Book List to serve as a foundation for all church libraries. Our church library, containing 300 volumes, includes 34 books from your list and contemplates adding 25 more in the future.

DAVID A. DENISCH

Towson, Md.

QUERY ON HOG-WASH

Pray tell me why you waste good paper and print on such hog-wash as “The Power Of A Godly Pen” (September 26 issue). The shortage of preachers and teachers in our churches and schools has been worn thin during the past two or three decades in all publications from the daily newspaper to the “once in a lifetime publication.” And now you add the “alarming” shortage of Christian writing. Of course this all makes good reading copy for the uninitiated—but aren’t there more urgent and weightier matters to bring to the attention of readers today than such misleading articles? It doesn’t require a microscope to see that newness, freshness, and creativeness are not welcomed in any of these three fields. The nauseating sounds of “traditionalism” and “conformity” resound throughout! Match up to surface qualifications; show that you have been in step with the past—experience (bah!); and at least have half of the alphabet trailing your name, and then perhaps you’ll make it in. You say, quote: “It is time for publishers to become spiritually literate.” I could make that far stronger, and not only for publishers. New discoveries have never been made in history through rocking chair conformity. And new talent will never show up today as long as those in command fear to launch out and dare to be different from the proud status quo.

I had better quit spouting off before I damage this typewriter.…

VINCE FISHER

San Diego, Calif.

I very much appreciated the article on the Christian novel. What we need is a Protestant counterpart to The Devil’s Advocate. Dorothy Clarke Wilson has turned out some very beautiful material on the lives of Protestants, but as you say, we have nothing that seethes with the stuff of which most people’s lives are made. As a consequence, most people are terribly misinformed, almost completely uninformed, about the work that the Church is doing today.

THEODORE E. KIMMEL

Cherry Grove Church of the Brethren

Lanark, Ill.

TO ERUPT GOOD WILL

In the wake of the exposition of a new concept in education, the Engagement Quotient (E.Q.) in Religious Education (July–August, 1960), I would love to address a request, through church leadership, to parent-teachers associations, how to erupt the good will of the nation for the battle of reversing the now increasing trend of juvenile delinquency into a decreasing one. The main idea is that home and school clubs, etc., should have a committee of education whose chairman could be contacted, on a free and voluntary basis, by school guidance whenever the E.Q. oscillation of a pupil would fall below the threshold level 120. The chairman would alert the religious organization of the child’s affiliation and offer proper inspiration and persuasion.

E. F. MOLNAR

St. Luke’s Presbyterian

Bathurst, New Brunswick

FIDEL UNVISITED

In the September 12 issue in … “Castro Allegiance Divides Cuban Christians” … there are certain references made to me which I would like to clarify.… I have never seen Dr. Fidel Castro personally, not even from a distance, and only on television programs. I have never heard any mention of the possibility of the creation of a National Protestant Church.

Matanzas, Cuba

RAFAEL CEPEDA

Wintertime in European Theology

Second in a Series

We must now indicate why neo-orthodox theology, as we see it, unwittingly prepared the way for the rise of neo-liberalism. Sooner or later declension and reaction threaten every theology not fully governed by biblical presuppositions or not fully conforming to biblical details. Why has the theology shaped by Barth and Brunner not held the field against the speculations of Bultmann?

THE SWING TO EXTREMES

From the standpoint of Bible-controlled theology, the neo-orthodox revolt against liberalism’s theology of immanence (which minimized or virtually eliminated the transcendence of God) must be criticized as a reaction, equally objectionable and unjustifiable, leading to a one-sided stress on divine transcendence. In other words, dialectical theology is a theology of exaggerated transcendence which distorts the immanence of God, even as classic liberalism was a theology of exaggerated immanence which distorted the transcendence of God.

The basic premise of the theology of transcendence—that God is “wholly other”—is made to support a dialectical view of divine revelation that limits God’s communication to personal confrontation. Theological terms are today often lost in a semantic wilderness, so that the bare verbal statement of this position may conceal its real intention. But the speculative character of this doctrine of revelation, and the extent of its departure from the historic faith of the Christian Church, become apparent once its implications are clear. While this dialectical theory asserts God’s personal confrontation of individuals and the necessity of individual illumination by the Spirit, it does so in open hostility to a biblical view of the reality and nature of divine revelation. The dialectical theory holds that God’s revelation is not given in the form of human concepts or words, nor in historical events; revelation assertedly is given only subjectively. The Spirit alone is the locus of revelation, which is communicated only along the moving frontier of man’s obedient response.

What happens, then, to the sacred Scriptures as authoritative revelation? To Jesus of Nazareth as the historical incarnation of Deity? To the Cross and the Resurrection as revealing events? Although the “crisis” theologians contend that dialectical theology rises above the traditional antithesis of subjectivity and objectivity, they have repeatedly had to face the question whether the dialectical view in fact threatens the objective realities essential to the Christian religion.

Here we are dealing obviously with a concern more fundamental than side issues (important as these may be) such as whether post-Reformation theology has adequately depicted the Holy Spirit’s role in illuminating and personalizing Hebrew-Christian revelation to each new generation successively addressed by the Gospel, or whether God is personally active in the disclosure of revelation, or whether truth remains unappropriated apart from personal decision: these issues are not in debate at all.

The decisive issue is between so-called dialectical disclosure and historical and propositional revelation. Is divine revelation (as champions of the Hebrew-Christian religion insisted before the rise of these modern speculative theologies) given once-for-all in historical events, intelligible concepts, and words? The dialectical theology contends that events, ideas, words are never to be identified with revelation itself; at most, they are but “sign-post,” “witness,” “testimony” to divine revelation. Divine revelation, it is contended, is communicated only in the immediacy of a divine-human encounter; it is never given objectively, but only subjectively.

SOME INNER DIFFICULTIES

The revisions and reversals this viewpoint has required of its champions are evidence that it forces the discussion of special revelation into categories alien to biblical theology. Let us note some significant examples.

When he wrote The Mediator (1926), Emil Brunner depicted the atonement not as an historical event accomplished about the year 30 A.D., but as a present reality. By the time Brunner wrote Revelation and Reason (1942), however, he stressed the death of Christ on the cross as a revelation of God’s very nature as agape. But, we then ask, is history at this point—or is it not—a bearer of absolute meaning? Is divine revelation after all (despite the dialectical denial) acknowledged as communicable in historical events (at least in the deed of the Cross)? Can Brunner’s later emphasis on the revelation-value of the historical death of Christ really be reconciled with the dialectical schematization of revelation in terms of subjectivity?

The claim of biblical writers to convey the very thoughts and words of God faced Brunner with a related problem. It was easy enough for Brunner, given his critical view of the Bible, to brush aside the apostolic doctrine of inspiration (2 Tim. 3:16) as a post-apostolic misunderstanding, even if this cavalier dismissal cannot really account for the sense of divine authority that pervades the Epistles. But the Old Testament posed a special dilemma through its explicit and oft-repeated identification of the words of the prophets with the words of the Lord. In Revelation and Reason, Brunner acknowledges the special problem this fact creates for the dialectical theory’s contention that divine revelation is not expressed in concepts and words. Brunner’s “solution” is remarkably evasive. He tells us that in the prophetic literature we are presented with a lower order—in Brunner’s words, “an Old Testament level”—of revelation. But the real issue, we must note, is not whether these concepts are lower or higher, but whether or not this is revelation. Are the thoughts and words of the inspired prophets to be identified with revelation or not? Does the dialectical theory of revelation really allow Brunner (as he would like) to assimilate the words of the prophets to revelation in this way, after the possibility of an identification of concepts and words with divine revelation has been disallowed?

Karl Barth’s dogmatics falls into frustration along similar lines. The provocative nature of his early references to Jesus of Nazareth is all too familiar, specially the statement in Die Kirchliche Dogmatik that alongside other founders of religion Jesus was a quite unimpressive historical figure: “Jesus Christ in fact is also the Rabbi of Nazareth, historically so difficult to get information about, and when it is got, one whose activity is so easily a little commonplace alongside more than one other founder of a religion and even alongside many later representatives of his own ‘religion’ ” (The Doctrine of the Word of God, Vol. I, Part 1, p. 188). This affirmation is the more remarkable because the insistence that Jesus of Nazareth is the Christ is the elemental New Testament affirmation. Barth’s earlier expositions locate the reconciling work of Christ, and particularly his resurrection, in a sphere of time and experience quite distinct from ordinary historical time. The many revisions of his Römerbrief (1919) reflect his movement away from Kierkegaardian existentialist categories. In recent years, in part because of Bultmann’s widening influence, Barth has more and more emphasized the objective historical aspects of Christian redemption, including the bodily resurrection of Christ as belonging to the revelation of God in history.

Despite the existential motifs in his early writings, since renounced, Barth’s theological temperament seems all along to have embraced a certain accommodation of history to the divine (as his standing insistence on the virgin birth) which is lacking in Brunner’s expositions. Yet the emphasis on the historicity of the Resurrection, on the objective factor in God’s revealing activity, is a later development. In respect to the Bible, Barth has all along had, and still has, difficulty speaking of the objectivity of revelation. He stresses the “inspiringness” of the Bible (that is, its ability to inspire us, to become a vehicle of revelation in subjective encounter), not the objective “inspiredness” of Scripture. The Bible, in whole or part, he regards simply as a normative witness or pointer to revelation, despite the Apostle Paul’s readiness to identify the apostolic preaching (1 Thess. 2:13) no less than the sacred writings (2 Tim. 3:16) with revelation itself. This neo-orthodox denial of the objectivity of revelation, moreover, constantly imperiled the universal validity of the Gospel.

Yet in respect to the knowledge of God, Barth stresses more and more that we must know God truly (even if for such knowledge he relies on internal miracle rather than on Scripture as an authoritative source). Faith becomes a call to cognitive understanding in Barth’s Fides quaerens intellectum. Anselms Beweis der Existenz gottes (1931). Barth’s demand for authentic knowledge is to be welcomed, of course, in the aftermath of a century of speculative liberal theology which (influenced by Kantian skepticism toward agnosticism in metaphysics) defined religious experience in terms of trust (fiducia) and downgraded cognition (assensus). Even more is this emphasis on knowing God “truly” to be commended because Brunner, in one passage, suggests that God may even reveal himself through falsehoods: “God can, if He chooses, speak his word to a man even through false doctrine” (Wahrheit als Begegnung, p. 88). But what room remains in Barth’s theology, within the basic dialectical premise that divine revelation is not expressed in concepts and events, for the notion that we must know God truly is wholly unclear. Barth himself takes the heart out of his own plea when, in another mood, he continues to assert that “we have concepts only of objects that are not identical with God” (op. cit., p. 22). It is in fact their insistence on the nonconceptual, nonverbal, nonhistorical character of revelation which has driven contemporary dialectical theologians in the Barth-Brunner-Bultmann traditions to constantly distinguish doctrines (or “truths”) from revelation, the Bible from revelation, and, for that matter, Jesus of Nazareth from “the Christ.”

The fact that Barth and Brunner compromise the basic dialectical premise at strategic points is to be explained only in this way: that the Judeo-Christian view itself makes demands which break through the narrow and artificial limits of the theological dialectical theory. The primary issue—really evaded by Barth and Brunner—is not whether in this point or that (historical event or concept or Bible declaration) we must somehow (even if inconsistently!) acknowledge the reality of divine revelation. The primary consideration rather is that this event, this knowledge, can be confidently identified with revelation only if we first reject the dialectical dogma that revelation is not communicated in concepts, words, or historical acts.

THE ROAD TO BULTMANN

Bultmann enters this controversy over the relation of revelation to history, science, and truth—over the connection of revelation with subjectivity or objectivity—by applying the basic dialectical premise itself in a more consistent and more devastating way.

Barth and Brunner had ambiguously related faith to science and to history no less than to reason. Brunner found it possible to say, on one side, that modern science cannot really touch the essence of Christian revelation, and, on the other, that “Orthodoxy has become impossible for anyone who knows anything of science. This I would call fortunate” (The Word and the World, p. 38). While the crisis-theologians have built a positive theological structure on the foundation of higher criticism, they have asserted that neither science nor history bisects the content of revelation. The implication is that whatever assaults scientific criticism and historical criticism may make on the Bible, they cannot in any manner really impair the content of the Gospel—because revelation assertedly is not communicated in the historico-scientific realm.

As already indicated, Barth and Brunner compromise the consistent application of this principle. In deference to certain strategic elements of the biblical witness, they “protect” the historical nature of the atonement (Brunner) and the resurrection of Christ (Barth); insist on authentic knowledge of the supernatural God (Barth); and even affirm a low-level revelation status for parts of the Bible (Brunner).

Bultmann wants none of this. He will not accommodate the dialectical philosophy to such core elements of Hebrew-Christian theology derived actually from a biblical (and non-dialectical) revelation situation. And Bultmann’s plea for a thorough and uncompromised application of the dialectical view of revelation has caught the fancy and imagination of young intellectuals in many German divinity schools.

Lost Christmas

Somewhere, buried under tissue,

Bent beneath the load

Of our hurried, harried giving,

Christmas lost the road.

Christmas, that was sweet and simple,

With a song, a star,

Christmas that was hushed and holy,

Seems so very far!

Let us stop and look for Christmas:

Maybe, if we tried,

We could find it somewhere under

All the gifts we tied.

Christmas waiting, wistful, weary,

May be very near—

Christmas lost, a little lonely,

Wishing to be here.

HELEN FRAZEE BOWER

Samuel M. Shoemaker is the author of a number of popular books and the gifted Rector of Calvary Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh. He is known for his effective leadership of laymen and his deeply spiritual approach to all vital issues.

Gifts

Every year Christmas finds us bewildered, wondering what to give to that certain someone, and puzzled by the vast array of choices. Often we are unsure of the appropriateness of our selection right up to the moment of presentation. We quiver while the package is being opened, or until we hear that happy exclamation: “Oh, it’s just what I wanted!”

Ralph Waldo Emerson recognized such perplexities and, in 1856, wrote a brief essay titled “Gifts” on the theme. It is a straightforward statement of the problem of choice and its reading should be a requirement of all Christmas shoppers.

Emerson begins his essay by classifying various types of gifts. We might illustrate the classification by a staircase symbol. At the first level, the plane at which we admit that we just do not know what to give, Emerson lists flowers and fruit—“flowers because they are a proud assertion that a ray of beauty outvalues all the utilities of the world.… Fruits … because they are the flower of commodities.” Proof of the former is evident to any husband: his wife is far more delighted by a cluster of carnations than by a new dusting mop, no matter how little or great may be the respective utilitarian value of each. And of the tangible objects or commodities, the decorative basket of highly-polished fruit remains an attractive gift as evidenced by the popularity of this choice among modern business people.

On the first step above flowers and fruit Emerson places the gift of necessity and states that “one is glad when an imperative leaves him no option.” To illustrate his point he draws the picture of a man in need of shoes. Shall we offer him a paintbox? The obvious answer to his purposely ludicrous suggestion is a negative one and reminds us of Christ’s query: “Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone? Or if he ask a fish, will he give him a serpent?” (Matt. 7:9, 10).

The level above the fulfillment of a man’s need is the gift which one associates with the recipient. Here the giver must recognize the hobby, the interest, or the avocation of the one to whom he gives. To the musician he gives a biography of an outstanding composer or performer; upon the connoisseur of fine art he may bestow a token that suits the whim of the collector. Such a presentation assures the receiver that personal consideration has been granted him by the donor.

The highest point in Emerson’s scale of gifts is that which is associated with the giver as a piece of his own craftsmanship or creativity. Emerson states, “The only gift is a portion of thyself. Thou must bleed for me.” He shows the poet bringing his poem; the shepherd, his sheep; the farmer, and painter bringing their goods. These are the worthy gifts, representative to the recipient of the nature of the giver. Emerson decries the purchasing of baubles and trinkets from the mass producer and calls it “a cold, lifeless business when you go to the shops to buy me something which does not represent your life and talent but a goldsmith’s.”

Of the receiver of gifts Emerson has much to say. He warns the idealistic giver that “the hand that feeds us is in some danger of being bitten.” His point appears to be directed mostly toward the relationship between the patronizing benefactor and his unfortunate subject. The fact is true that often men would rather starve than sacrifice their independence by eating from the hand of an unworthy giver.

Emerson next considers the beneficiary of a wealthy, lavish giver. His characteristic predilection for the broad generalization accuses “all beneficiaries” because they “hate all Timons.” His reference, of course, is to Shakespeare’s overly-generous hero in the play Timon of Athens. The reason for his accusation is not the obvious one, namely, the inability of the less-affluent receiver to match the cost or size of that which he has been given. Rather, Emerson looks with a cynical eye at the supposedly greedy receiver whose jaundiced view of life causes him to evaluate the gift he has received only in comparison with the greater wealth that remains in the possession of his particular Timon.

Emerson’s concluding paragraphs are his peroration, given in theological fashion in keeping with his training and experience. His analysis of the problem that confronts the giver and receiver is that “there is no commensurability between a man and any gift.” Therefore our affection for those we love can never be judged by the pricetag on our gift to them, or by the scope of their gift to us. To attempt such an evaluation is to cheapen the relationship we cherish because “no services are of any value, but only likeness.” If then we are to show our appreciation for what we have obtained from others, we can only repay in kind.

Emerson’s point is underscored in our minds when we remember the significance of the event commemorated at the Christmas season. If we are to acknowledge God’s gift to mankind, his Son Jesus Christ, we may only do so by the complete consecration of our lives to Him.

“What shall I give Him, poor as I am?

If I were a shepherd, I would give a lamb,

If I were a wise man, I would do my part—

What shall I give Him? I’ll give my heart.”

Carol in Minor Key

Come ring a round of Merry Mount

And sing for new-born joy;

Wave rainbow banners, faded thin,

Above an infant boy

While angels rant a rondelay—

A rabble, bathrobe choir

With pipe and horn

Proclaiming morn

While stars still snap with fire.

Dance floodlite in a space-born host

With sequined copper haloes,

And pantomime in startled rags

Newly informed hoboes.

Come one and all in day-glo red

To hover by a candle glow

And squint as flights

Of star-shaped lights

Reflect our shallow echo.

Give all your gifts in pseudonym

St. Nick will love the credit;

Those who receive forget the source

Or often will regret it.

Oh “christmas” gold, My Sin, and clove

Are neat to offer others,

And rocket toys

For peaceful boys

And CARE for all our “brothers.”

Today we cannot chant of lambs,

Wool would scratch our memory;

We dare not offer thanks for life,

It also knows our enemy.

Dance while the grace of God is on

In proud and pious dress

Lest others see,

Reality

Denies what we profess.

CHARLES WAUGAMAN

Samuel M. Shoemaker is the author of a number of popular books and the gifted Rector of Calvary Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh. He is known for his effective leadership of laymen and his deeply spiritual approach to all vital issues.

How Great Thou Art

A young minister’s two-mile walk in the rain provided the inspiration for “How Great Thou Art,” most recent addition to the great hymns of our time.

The story of the hymn gains interest through the Soviet origin of the version most commonly sung, and its delayed but amazingly swift rise to popularity.

Though as late as five years ago the hymn was still virtually unknown in North America, its lines date to 1885. The Reverend Carl Boberg of Mönsterås. on the southeast coast of Sweden, was 25 years old when he wrote the lyrics after trekking through a thunderstorm from a church meeting two miles away.

His inspiration yielded a poem of nine verses published in a local newspaper under the title, “O store Gud” (O Great God). Several years later, Boberg heard that the poem was being sung to the tune of an old Swedish folk melody. The tune is essentially the same as is used today, but it never became popular in Sweden; neither did an English translation made in 1925 (“Mighty God”).

Boberg became editor of a Christian weekly and later served 13 years as a member of the upper house of the Swedish parliament. He died in 1940 without having seen his hymn gain any extensive acceptance.

In 1907, Boberg’s poem was translated into German by Manfred von Glehn as “Wie gross bist Du” (“How Great Thou Art”). Von Glehn lived in Estonia, which included a large segment of German-speaking inhabitants. Twenty years later I. S. Prokhanoff published in Moscow a Russian translation of the Estonian-German version.

An English missionary, the Reverend Stuart K. Hine, came across the Russian version in the western Ukraine soon after it was published in 1927, and he and his wife used it as a duet during evangelistic meetings. Later he translated three verses into English and brought them back to London. He sang them regularly throughout the war years. In 1948 he added a fourth verse and a year later the hymn was published. It spread quickly through the British Commonwealth, even to Australia and New Zealand. It was introduced in the United States by James Caldwell at the Stony Brook Bible Conference on Long Island in 1951. The hymn was brought to my own attention at Harringay Arena in London in 1954, but I did not give it a fair trial until our crusade in Toronto, Canada, in 1955. There it made an immediate hit with the choir.

“How Great Thou Art” subsequently became the best-loved hymn of the Billy Graham crusades. We used it over and over again. We have heard it sung in every country we have visited, for the words are now translated into many languages. In New York in 1957 it was used more than 100 times by Bev Shea and the choir in the 119 meetings. Two years ago it became the theme of the “Hour of Decision” weekly radio broadcast.

Aside from the melody, the secret of the hymn’s popularity and effectiveness is its direct and simple manner of worship and praise to God. The attention is immediately focused upon the Lord.

Many polls indicate that “How Great Thou Art” is now one of the most beloved hymns in America and elsewhere. Some surveys rank it even higher than “The Old Rugged Cross” and “Rock of Ages.”

Another factor in its popularity lies in its wide distribution by Manna Music Company, which owns the American and Canadian copyrights to the Hine translation. We have known the Manna president, Tim Spencer, for a good many years and his desire has been to make this hymn one of the best known Gospel hymns in the world. He has allowed us to print the song as extensively as we wished for distribution to audiences and choirs. Moreover, the Manna people have themselves printed thousands of copies for distribution. They have given away as many copies as they have sold. As a result, the hymn has become available to many people who would never have heard of it had it merely been printed in a book. Hymnal inserts, for instance, are available even if they cannot be paid for.

A year ago, meditating on the words of “How? Great Thou Art,” I noted the absence of the wonderful fact of the Incarnation. In a matter of moments two verses came to me that expressed this glorious truth. These Christmas verses are reproduced here for the first time for general use. I hope they add to your enjoyment of this wonderful and blessed hymn.

Samuel M. Shoemaker is the author of a number of popular books and the gifted Rector of Calvary Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh. He is known for his effective leadership of laymen and his deeply spiritual approach to all vital issues.

The Meaning of Christmas

When Matthew quoted the glorious prophecy of Isaiah, “Behold, a virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call his name Immanuel,” he was inspired to add a simple explanation, “which is, being interpreted, God with us”; and I, for one, am very thankful for the interpretation.

Without it there would merely be the prosaic information “They shall call his name Immanuel,” which wouldn’t mean much more to us than “They shall call his name William.”

But the explanation is there, and the page lights up like a dull morning in December when the sun suddenly and unexpectedly explodes in the eastern sky, warm with love and fragrant with hope. “Immanuel.… God with us.” The word comes as a whisper, a still small voice, soft as the glow of altar candles, and too low to awaken the Babe sleeping in the manger.

Bishop Phillips Brooks caught the spirit of it,

How silently, how silently,

The wondrous gift is given.

FOREGLEAMS OF THE DAWN

In a sense, “God with us” is not a new message. What is new is the language in which it is spoken. But it is a mistake to think that the world was without God until Jesus was born.

We understand the doctrine of Providence to mean that God has always been so concerned for his people that he has never left them wholly to their own devices, but has overshadowed them with his presence, even when they knew it not.

The Old Testament says, “He made known his ways unto Moses, his acts unto the children of Israel,” and we accept that statement as true by the evidence of history. The more we know of the other nations of antiquity, the more marvelous does the Jewish nation appear.

We look a little more closely at the Old Testament and find that the basic idea contained in “Immanuel” is not unknown to the other writers of the sacred books. “God with us” is something in which they earnestly believed. Listen to them:

“Certainly I will be with thee.”

“The Lord thy God is with thee withersoever thou goest.”

“My presence shall go with thee.”

“Cast me not away from thy presence.”

“In thy presence is fullness of joy.”

Yet in all these affirmations, there is something insufficient, something lacking. Were God only in creation, only in providence, in history, in conscience, or in the Old Testament, we would be unsatisfied.

Were there nothing more, we would ever cry, “My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God.… O that I knew where I might find him!” And our faith would be like that of the Indiana farmer who, commenting on his poor harvest, said, “My wheat didn’t do as good as I thought it would—but then, I never thought it would!”

The Old Testament closes with the book of Malachi, which means that for the Jew the revelation of God ends there. But the Jew is not content. The Patriarchs and Prophets of Israel confessed longings and hopes too deep to be satisfied with anything they had received. They acknowledged the incompleteness which they sensed; their greatest desire was to be able to say with utter finality and assurance, “God with us.”

THE BIRTH IN A STABLE

And indeed the vital Christian message did not begin until Bethlehem, in “a lowly cattle stall,” and with the chant of adoration:

Glory be to God on high,

And peace on earth descend:

God comes down, He bows the sky,

And shows Himself our Friend!

Charles Wesley

“Immanuel—God with us.”

“God hath spoken unto us—in a Son.”

The stupendous thing to which the Old Testament writers constantly referred was the deliverance of the Children of Israel from the bondage of Egypt—that amazing manifestation of might by which the Children of the Covenant were brought to safety and freedom.

But the great thing to which we look back is the birth of a weak and helpless Baby in all the poverty, filth, and stench of an Eastern stable.

God always surprises us with mysteries. His ways are not our ways. Can you imagine a more unlikely way for the Son of God, the Saviour of the world, to come to earth than the way he came? It shows how little God thinks of our nice distinctions, our ideas of what is becoming, proper, and fitting. We say, “the best for the best, and the poorest for the poorest.” God works in the opposite way: “The things that are despised hath God chosen.”

Christmas, if it means anything at all, means the consecration of the commonplace. For what could be more common than animals in a stall, hay on the ground, a cot or cradle, or more ordinary than a baby? Washing, feeding, crying, laughing, growing, grumbling—these human activities are so common that we live through them and with them without thinking. Christmas is a continual reminder that God in Christ has consecrated the commonplace things of life to confound those that are mighty.

There is no human standard by which the importance of Bethlehem can be reckoned. Bethlehem is itself the standard by which the importance of all human activity must be judged; but, like the Cross, Bethlehem is “unto them that are perishing, foolishness.”

Bethlehem is a parable of the whole life of Jesus. He was born an outcast, in a rough stable, with the winds of God beating upon him. For years he earned a livelihood for himself and the rest of the humble family to which he belonged: with taut muscles and calloused hands he did the work of a manual worker.

The day came when he, whose dwelling had been heaven, had nowhere to lay his head. A certain village once refused him a night’s lodging. “He came unto his own, and his own received him not.”

He was despised and rejected of men, a Man of sorrows and acquainted with grief. Then he died an outcast, crucified on a hill outside the city wall, with the winds of God beating upon him.

Everything in the life of Jesus fits into one great design—the Cradle and the Cross, the Manger and the Ministry. All the parts of his life tell us that he came for one purpose, and that in everything his purpose was one. He was rich, yet for our sakes he became poor, that we, through his poverty, might become rich.

From the Manger to the Cross, through all the tortuous wanderings and fluctuating fortunes of that unique life—in all that he ever was, more than in all he ever said, there is one amazing message.

We see the message of his life as he stands before his frenzied parents in the Temple at the age of 12.

Toward the end of his earthly life, we see it as he weeps over Jerusalem, and as he rides a borrowed donkey for his triumphal entry. We witness it as He calmly tells a perplexed Roman governor that the power which he thinks comes from Caesar actually comes from God.

And in the agony of his death we behold it as he cries, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” The message is there from the poor manger of Bethlehem to the bitter Cross of Calvary.

Yet having eyes we see not: having ears we hear not.

We come, year after year, to Bethlehem, and whether we are Wise Men, which is very unlikely, or just simple shepherds, which is far more likely, we kneel by the manger. But what have we learned from our annual pilgrimages?

We come, year after year, to Calvary. Through 40 days of Lent we follow the wandering steps of the Master as they lead to Bethany, to Jerusalem, to the Garden of Gethsemane, to Pilate’s judgment hall, to Golgotha. We see him condemned, scourged, and crucified. But what have we learned from our annual vigils?

Have we ever tried to relate Christmas to Good Friday? Do we not realize that they have the same common denominator?

Too many of us have minds like concrete—made up of innumerable fragments, all mixed up, and permanently set. We sentimentally sing,

Away in a manger, no crib for a bed,

The little Lord Jesus laid down His sweet head.

The stars in the bright sky

looked down where He lay,

The little Lord Jesus asleep on the hay.

Martin Luther

But what does it mean?

The way he entered the world which he had made, and the way he left the world which had no room for him, and the whole pattern of his life reveal glory in humiliation, sovereignty through suffering, perfection through limitation, victory through defeat, Godhead inherent in manhood, “Immanuel—God with us.”

“All praise to Thee, Eternal Lord,

Clothed in a garb of flesh and blood;

Choosing a manger for Thy throne,

While world on worlds are Thine alone.”

Martin Luther

We may well ask ourselves, “Why should this incredible thing happen?” The most important part of the answer was given by St. Augustine: “The chief cause of Christ’s coming was that men might know how much God loves them.”

In the presence of the Babe, argument ends in admiration, the rich fall down in homage, and the poor stand up in hope.

The second and subsidiary part of the answer has already been given, namely, to consecrate the commonplace. The consecration of the commonplace is the dynamic nerve-center of the Christian faith. For it was by his incarnate human life that the Lord Jesus made common things important and glorious.

That is why the Gospels are central to the Christian way of life, for they tell us all that we know of God’s gracious acts in a human context.

Christmas is a reminder to us that when we take the mystery out of Christianity we are left with a moralistic sect, of no relevance to life save only to the eccentric.

In choosing a manger for his throne, God was giving his love to us. “God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son.” It is the way of love to give, and the measure of the love is the measure of the sacrifice involved in the gift.

God’s gift is him whom we call “Immanuel,” and we rejoice that it means “God with us.” As we look again at that stable and view glory in humiliation, we know he is with us. We may receive him and rejoice in

God’s presence and His very self,

An essence all-divine.

John Henry Newman

Samuel M. Shoemaker is the author of a number of popular books and the gifted Rector of Calvary Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh. He is known for his effective leadership of laymen and his deeply spiritual approach to all vital issues.

Stars on a Silent Night: I Saw the Red Horse at Christmas

The city of Nijmegen in the Netherlands lay still in the sleep of morning. The noisy burr of motorbikes and the gentle whirr of bicycles were distinctly absent. All was still and dark on the Saturday morning before Christmas, 1959. All was still, that is, except for four people, four Americans awake and stirring in the Netherlands—Bob and I, and our two young sons.

This was no ordinary Saturday morning for us. Christmas vacation had begun for the boys and we were planning a one-day trip into Germany. Nijmegen is close to the German border, and one may see a great deal on a one-day excursion into it.

But today, the Saturday before Christmas, was to be different. We were not going into Germany to see the Cologne Cathedral with its two graceful spires pointing to the sky. Nor were we going to Düsseldorf, shiny and bright as a new penny. We were going to see three tiny villages in the Ruhr Valley—three drab villages which I’m quite sure many Germans have never heard of, let alone Americans. Who knows or cares about Puffendorf, Ederen, or Linnich when Europe is packed full of magnificent things to see? And why visit unknown villages when you have only 10 months to spend in Europe?

The answer was that these were Bob’s 10 months. He had come to the Netherlands as a Fulbright Research Scholar. Naturally we would be seeing the famous sights of Europe, but these three villages in the Ruhr Valley meant something to him, for he had lived in them in 1944—he and the big Army howitzers. Now, after 15 years, he wanted to retrace his war steps; he wanted to see the three villages again.

Furthermore, there was another thing he wanted to see—Margraten. Margraten was the huge American War Cemetery near Maastricht in the Netherlands where one of Bob’s friends lay buried. Surely this was destined to be a somber sort of day, this Saturday before Christmas, at least for us.

We finished breakfast quickly, and the four of us took off in our little “foreign” car down the road into the dark December morning.

As we drove along, I looked up at the many stars which were still shining. How close they seemed to be, closer than ever before. Of course we were farther north than ever before. We were in the Netherlands, not Michigan, and these plump stars were Dutch stars in a Dutch sky.

CHRISTMAS IN A CEMETERY

I wished secretly that we were not going to visit war villages and a war cemetery. Why did we have to see such reminders of tragedy? How much more appropriate would it be to go to fine art galleries and look at the famous paintings of the birth of the Prince of Peace. War at Christmas time? No!—Why not think of peace?

Somehow I had remained a stranger to war. True, Bob had spent over three years in the American Army, and 18 months in Europe. But God had blessed our family. We had come out of it all unscathed, and I preferred to forget that the Red Horse of War had ever ridden.

I had had premonitions of what we might see this day. The people in Nijmegen had seen the Red Horse, had heard him tramping through their city night after night, day after day, and they had often told us of the days of terror and depression. We had heard them tell of hunger and cruelty and death; and they always spoke as though it had happened yesterday. One friend told of the following incident. Nijmegen had been liberated by the Americans one day in 1944, and the next day there was a celebration in the bombed-out town square. Her husband had been on his way to the square when suddenly a remaining enemy stepped out from behind a building and threw a large grenade. What was left of her husband was put in a cigar box. And that was the day after Liberation! And so we had heard account after account of the riding of the Red Horse of War.

I knew one thing: I did not want to see the Red Horse of War on the Saturday before Christmas. He would surely destroy the joy and peace of Christmas.

Quietly we rode on toward Puffendorf, Ederen, and Linnich. Gradually the stars disappeared and the dawn came, and by the time it was light we had reached the war area. Burned-out tanks graced the landscape. This was farming and orchard area, but nature had not obliterated the marks of war.

Then we saw the villages. Here stood a handful of houses, ugly and scarred. Each one had its deep artillery wounds. The Red Horse had been here all right. Over there stood a house, or half a house, I should say, with a family living in the front of it and damaged bricks piled high behind it. A lonely pig could be seen scrounging for food in the debris. All around was evidence of destruction. We thought of the age-old phrase, “They make a desolation and they call it peace.” Peace was here, silent and joyless. But this was not the peace of Christmas, the joyful peace of the shepherds who welcomed the Christ-Child.

We rode on. In Ederen we saw the Purple Heart Corner. This corner had been ceaselessly shelled, and countless American boys had been wounded. Now there was no sound of artillery to shake the countryside. No guns boomed or whistled; no soldier dashed for cover. And yet, although 15 years had elapsed, it seemed as though the Red Horse had just ridden through. We could see men rebuilding one of the houses and using the old wounded bricks.

On we rode in silence. Our thoughts lay too deep for tears. Later we stopped for lunch and then continued our drive along the countryside. But never were we able to forget the three war-scarred villages of the Ruhr—“the Villages of the Red Horse,” I called them.

Now we had one more thing to see: Margraten. We crossed the border back into the Netherlands. Our young boys were the first to spot the sign for Margraten, and we turned in.

Until the Saturday before Christmas, 1959, Margraten had meant nothing to me. Now, as we stepped out to look over the grounds, the place overwhelmed me. It was all so green, and so still.

Against the rich green of the grass gleamed the tremendous white stone monument with the names of at least 500 American men engraved upon it, and standing for at least 500 separate sorrows. Their bodies were lying here at Margraten, unidentified, and occupying unknown graves. And around about we saw the white crosses, almost 9000 of them—9000 white crosses on a carpet of green. So intensely white were they and so thick that everything seemed blurred to my eyes. Infantry men were here from the Battle of the Bulge who died that Christmas in 1944, and here were pilots and artillery men. Nine thousand American boys lay in the white and green of Margraten, and yet it all seemed bloody red with the hoofmarks of the Red Horse.

We stood a long time, then climbed into our car and headed toward Nijmegen. Darkness came quickly now; it comes early in December in the Netherlands. And gradually the stars reappeared. Bright and large and seemingly very near, they shone down upon us. Suddenly the meaning of this day, this Saturday before Christmas, came to us. We understood it anew. The birth of the Prince of Peace had a fresh and poignantly beautiful meaning.

As suddenly and unexpectedly as the stars reminded us of the Star of Bethlehem, so suddenly and unexpectedly the darkness, sadness, and desolation slipped out of our hearts. The Star of Bethlehem was truly shining on us and speaking to us. And—strangest of all—the Red Horse was leading us straight to the Prince of Peace.

We began to realize how appropriate the day had been. It was in the world of war that the Prince of Peace was born. We knew that although the Red Horse could ride through the world and trample it under his hoofs, he could never triumph over it. The Prince of Peace had come and would come again, riding on a pure white horse with a Cross in his hand, and he would vanquish the Red Horse forever.

We had seen the Red Horse. But we had also seen in a new and striking way the Prince of Peace. That Saturday before Christmas, 1959, the mild Babe of Bethlehem was transformed into the triumphant Prince of Peace. And we heard great voices saying: “The Kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign forever and ever.”

Unto Us … Is Born

Unto us?

Lord, unto whom?

The fair-skinned, favored,

genteel few?

Just to them?

Or unto Jew,

Oriental, Negro,

Sioux?

Unto these?

Yes, unto all

the human family,

great and small.

Christ Child,

with your arms stretched wide,

forgive our prejudice

and pride!

HELEN EARLE SIMCOX

Samuel M. Shoemaker is the author of a number of popular books and the gifted Rector of Calvary Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh. He is known for his effective leadership of laymen and his deeply spiritual approach to all vital issues.

Review of Current Religious Thought: November 21, 1960

Some months ago I made reference to a book by F. W. Bridgeman, physicist-laureate of Harvard University, titled The Way Things Are. The book made a great impression on me at the time, but I had no notion that Bridgeman’s thesis would continue to chew away at me even until today. What Bridgeman was saying among many other things was that even in physics, the most objective of all the sciences, we really know only when we remember that objective truth is always related to the subject, that is, to the person who is observing the facts. One gathers from this that relativity, which we try to throw out the window in ethics, comes in the front door to surprise us in a subject like physics.

The reason this sort of thing “gets me” is that I am beginning to suspect that the whole realm of knowledge in 1960 exists in the climate and atmosphere of a way of thinking, an epistemology, if you like, which continually weakens any attempt to say anything for sure about anything. A college sophomore’s “that’s what you think” seems to serve as sufficient answer to any discussion in which several views of right and wrong, truth and falsehood, are being set forth.

We recognize this climate of opinion in the whole realm of theology. Barthianism has made wonderful contributions to our day, but it worries us with its denials of general revelation, an objective word, words which are true whether they are true for me or not, a rational approach to the Christian faith which can be tightened up beyond my subjective say-so into some kind of a reasonable system, and so forth. On the other side, there is the constant affirmation that truth is known existentially, particularly the truth in revelation. I am not concerned to tangle with Dr. Barth on these matters; I wish only to note that we have here in the most dominant theology of our day an acceptance of objective truth as primarily subservient to the subject. The Bible, for example, is true only when it is true for me in my present situation.

Let your mind now roam across other fields of knowledge and other disciplines. In philosophy we have logical positivism and left-bank existentialism. In ethics we are under the impact of a Niebuhr whose Moral Man In Immoral Society set the direction for much of his thinking and much of our own thinking by showing that our ethical choices are never made between right and wrong but rather in the area relatively where, not being able to choose the best, we can choose only the better, the better known primarily by the existential situation in which one finds oneself when one is trying to make an ethical decision. Between the high road and the low, we choose in the misty flats between.

Chief Justice Holmes popularized this kind of thinking in law, and (if I understand the workings of the Supreme Court) one of the fundamental difficulties which the judges have had in making up their collective minds lies in the relativity directly related to the day in history when the decision has had to be made. Split decisions and the opinions expressed by the judges illustrate how it is well nigh impossible to tie the case before the court with anything of which it can be said “this is the law.” There are always so many other factors “relevant” to the situation.

Try Einstein’s relativity in astronomy or Dewey’s skirting of absolutes in education, and the general looseness regarding light and darkness in psychiatry and sociology and international affairs and national politics—and we have some pretty good reasons for believing that we live in the climate and atmosphere of almost endless relativisms. “This is the way, walk ye in it” sounds like a good idea if someone could only assure us that it is true.

There stood One long ago who claimed for himself “I am the way, the truth and the life.” Desperate tides in church and state flooded over him in a day when the question “what is truth” was more germaine to the way most people were looking at things. If we had only been there we should have done differently, but how do we know we would have? But what shall we say of our own day? The tides of relativism and existentialism, subjectivity and irrationalism, are sweeping everything before them. Is there some one thing of which it can be clearly said “this is the truth” whether you ever hear it, whether it appeals to you, whether you plan to do anything about it—there is truth regardless of my attitude toward it which I may or may not accept, but that’s all the worse for me, not for the truth. I like the rise of the expression “the scandal of particularity” as I hear it in theological conversations. Particularity is a stumbling block but it may be the kind of rock which can change the current’s direction. And where the rocks are, there will the water be rough.

Book Briefs: November 21, 1960

An Adventure In Speculative Biology

The Phenomenon of Man, by Pierre Teilhard de Chardin (Harper, 1959, 311 pp., $5), is reviewed by Bernard Ramm, Professor of Systematic Theology, California Theological Seminary.

Père Teilhard was a Jesuit priest who gave his entire life to the study of human evolution and was an internationally recognized expert on the subject. The Roman Catholic church considered some of his views extreme and did not permit him to publish his works while alive. His friends, therefore, undertook the publishing of his major writings after his death.

According to Teilhard the picture painted by modern scientists of the total universe is just a hodgepodge. It has no pattern, scheme, or reason but is a sort of Fibber McGee’s closet. Teilhard attempts to bring pattern, meaning, and sense into modern science by showing that the entire universe had one grand purpose, namely, to produce man. Therefore, this purpose can be used to harmonize the sciences. In a brief review, I cannot do justice to the elaborate schemes which Teilhard employs, nor can I discuss his invention of unique terms to suit his synthesis.

I think it was the Cambridge philosopher of religion and science, F. R. Tennant, who said that the universe was pregnant with man. Teilhard is the cosmic embryologist who attempts to trace the developmental growth from the original “cosmic atom” to the birth of man. In so doing he gives us an intriguing, brilliant, and novel interpretation of the sciences in general, and man in particular.

Of course, the interpretation is not entirely new. There is a trace of Leibniz here, for Leibniz like Teilhard finds the psychic deep down in the so-called unconscious layers of the universe. The notion of evolution being likened to a wave of life ever radiating outward dynamically and into seemingly endless proliferation of forms is a page out of Bergson. The great Catholic biologist of the nineteenth century, St. Mivart, saw evolution as the evolution to species, and this is very similar to what Teilhard calls “hominisation.” The attempt of Teilhard to create a new battery of categories and terms to treat biological thought was pioneered by Alfred N. Whitehead in his great work, Process and Reality.

Teilhard’s book confirms what another philosopher has said, namely, that the picture of the universe painted by scientists which is completely devoid of value and purpose is the height of insanity. My own opinion is that such value and purpose which must be introduced into the universe to rescue its sanity comes better from special revelation than from Teilhard’s speculative biology.

BERNARD RAMM

Effective Communication

Message and Mission, by Eugene Nida (Harper, 1960, 253 pp., $5), is reviewed by Francis Steele, Home Secretary, North Africa Mission.

If preaching the Gospel effectively to people of strange language and culture seems a simple thing to you, wait until you have read this book; it will seem well-nigh impossible! One wonders how ever Paul made out in his day before the development of semantics and cybernetics.

The sciences of linguistics and anthropology, however, have made much-needed contributions to a better understanding of the process of effective communication of the Gospel; and Dr. Nida is an acknowledged expert in both fields. There is an amazing, if not staggering, amount of eye-opening information in this volume concerning the practical problems confronting the missionary translator and preacher; information every missionary or prospective missionary should study thoroughly and consider carefully.

In what appears to me, here and there, as an overemphasis on technical problems, there is a tendency to obscure the fact that the Bible contains basic absolutes with reference to human behavior as well as in the terms in which God has chosen to reveal the Gospel. Nida eschews synchretism forthrightly, to be sure, but occasionally verges on the brink of relativism when describing the “content” of the Message (cf. p. 179 ff.).

We must never forget that both language and culture, where they depart from explicit biblical principles of truth and life, may well exhibit the influences of sin and human depravity. Where this is true, the missionary is obliged to superimpose or substitute new patterns of thought and behavior even at the expense of painful adjustment.

Sound theological training makes for proper employment of linguistics and anthropology in missions today. The latter two disciplines have greatly advanced the work of getting the Gospel out more effectively and expeditiously. Nida’s book combines all three and deserves a wide reading.

FRANCIS RUE STEELE

Propaganda For Caesar

Communism and the Churches, by Ralph Lord Roy (Harcourt, Brace & Co., 1960, 495 pp., $7.50), is reviewed by E. Merrill Root, Former Professor of English, Earlham College.

Ralph Lord Roy is the Little Lord Fauntleroy of the “liberals.” Earlier, in Apostles of Discord, he was assigned the task of assassinating conservatives. His thesis was that “liberal” collectivism is orthodoxy, and conservatives who question it are “apostles of discord” and heresymongers.

In this book he is partially grown up, almost sophisticated, plausibly clever, ostensibly anti-Communist. He no longer wields a hatchet; he is Chaucer’s “smiler with the knife.” He skates bithely over the thin ice of “liberalism,” perhaps ignorant that under it lie the deep waters of 1984.

His thesis is that (save for a naughty few like Harry F. Ward, to whom he is always gentle—whereas he pours acid over the late Senator McCarthy) no one connected with the Protestant churches has been socialist—but only “social.” He never shows such gentility toward any conservative: the noble John Flynn (who wrecked his career to uphold his principles) he calls one motivated by vanity and pique. This is the double standard with a vengeance!

His history is bad. He says (p. 11), “The Bolsheviks, led by Lenin, rose swiftly to power and claimed all Russia.” But he entirely ignores the true Russian Revolution which overthrew the Czar and which the Bolsheviks trampled under their hoofs.

Roy always loads his dice in favor of pro-collectivists. Two ex-Communists had just, under oath before senatorial committees, “identified” Harry F. Ward as a party member; Roy evidently accepts Ward’s denial and ignores the evidence, for he says (Mr.) “Kunzig preferred (sic)” to take their testimony rather than Ward’s “denial.” He says that Bishop Oxnam’s appearance before a committee was a triumphant “offensive” by the churches while the hearing as a whole reveals that in it Oxnam was a little more than a confused, flustered, pathetic apologist.

Roy supposes that Khrushchev is better than Stalin, that the Soviets have improved, that the cold war has “thawed” (p. 297). He insinuates that “the profit system” is a sin (p. 323). As in Apostles of Discord, he speaks (p. 269) of “professional (sic!) antagonists of the World Council of Churches” who “love to vent their hate (sic).” He whitewashes Hromadka and other Soviet partisans, because they are “churchmen.” But he smears every conservative from McCarthy to Flynn.

This book is so bad that it would require pages to document its inaccuracies, innuendos, and slanted thesis. It is against “communism” (in the card-carrying sense), but it is for the Fabian, “liberal,” collectivist dogma that sets mass above man and sees the State (Caesar) as the agent to bring about Christ’s “social” gospel. True Christianity—metaphysical, evangelical, and eternal—is drowned in seas of “social” syrup. The book is, like all contemporary “liberalism,” propaganda for Caesar.

E. MERRILL ROOT

Melancholy Dane

The Life and Thought of Kierkegaard for Everyman, by John A. Gates (Westminster, 1960, 172 pp., $3), is reviewed by John H. Gerstner, Professor of Church History and Government, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary.

The title of this book, The Life and Thought of Kierkegaard for Everyman, itself seems lake a paradox. If Kierkegaard is comprehensible by Everyman, how can it be Kierkegaard? If it is Kierkegaard how can he be comprehensible by Everyman? But, in the main, Dr. Gates makes good his thesis (and that of Kierkegaard himself) that the melancholy Dane can be understood by Everyman, for whom indeed he wrote. By a splendid weaving together of the events of life and of thought light is thrown on each. We comprehend the eccentric-appearing behavior of Kierkegaard by his thought and his paradoxical thought by his life.

If Dr. Gates has somewhat oversimplified the thinking of Kierkegaard, many scholars of our day over-complicate the Danish master. When most of us approach Kierkegaard in theological classrooms, we encounter an obscure thinker difficult to grasp at best and seemingly irrelevant at worst. This valuable little work, unique in its field, will serve as a corrective to any one-sidedness of the technical philosopher’s approach as well as a delightful introduction for Everyman.

JOHN H. GERSTNER

Cult Study

The Theology of the Major Sects, by John Gerstner (Baker, 1960, 188 pp., $3.95), is reviewed by Walter Martin, Director, Christian Research Institute, Inc.

With the evident acceleration of the missionary activities of non-Christian cults, many persons are now showing an interest in this needy field. The latest to procure literature on the subject is Professor of Church History and Government at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, John Gerstner.

In 120 pages, Dr. Gerstner condenses the opinions, observations, and research of almost everyone who has written in the field for the last 50 years. The book contains a glossary of some of the terms utilized by the major cults, an appendix showing some of the doctrines of the cults compared with historic Christianity, and a chart of the doctrines of the sects similar to the old “Spirit of Truth and Spirit of Error” publication still in circulation. Dr. Gerstner has appended to this a selected bibliography.

According to the author, the volume was designed as a “handbook to provide ready reference material—a quick guide to the wealth of literature which expounds this subject.” The reviewer believes that he should have substituted the word “confuses” for “expounds,” for he would have been closer to the truth of the matter.

The fact is that about 80 per cent of the literature in this field is either outdated, inaccurate, or so lacking in trained research as to render it confusing and largely worthless as a means either of evangelizing cultists or refuting them. Dr. Gerstner has indeed compiled a great deal of information, but one wonders whether he has done actual field work of any scope among the cults and the cultists. The book does not convey that impression, and unfortunately it misrepresents the views of some of the people it purports to understand.

In his chapter on Seventh-day Adventism, for example, Dr. Gerstner accuses them of holding views they have publicly rejected concerning the “sinful nature” of Christ. He quotes a book from which the very statement he uses was expunged 15 years ago, and also quotes the 1957 yearbook as “their latest official statement.” He totally ignores Questions on Doctrine, the authorized expansion of the statement which repeatedly affirms the sinlessness of Christ’s nature (appendix, p. 127). Apparently, in this instance, as in others where he misrepresents the Adventists, he has not read carefully what they have claimed.

On the whole Dr. Gerstner’s book betrays the same weakness as Van Baalen’s (to which he frequently refers) and a majority of others (excepting Bach and Braden). He relies chiefly upon reading sources and apparently neglects fundamental research, methodology, and field works. The missionary infiltration of the cults on foreign fields is not covered nor are the methods of the cults.

It is the reviewer’s opinion that Dr. Gerstner’s abstract of the research of others, garnished by a glossary and an all-too-brief textual refutation, complemented by an appendix given to repetition, reveals unfamiliarity with the basic issues of cult activities, methods and theological intricacies.

The book indeed joins “a wealth of literature,” but it contributes little that is new in approach or content, and the author has sometimes relied upon sources which are, to say the least, questionable.

As a recommended text, it ranks with Van Baalen’s Chaos of Cults. To those unitiated in the field, it will prove useful on an introductory level, but as a serious study or analysis it is limited in its scope and understanding of a complex and growing field.

WALTER MARTIN

Reference Work

Atlas of the Classical World, edited by A. A. M. Van der Heyden and H. H. Scullard (Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1960, 221 pp., $15), is reviewed by Carl F. H. Henry.

Alongside the Atlas of the Bible (1956) and the Atlas of the Early Christian World (1958), the publishers have now issued the Atlas of the Classical World dealing with pagan antiquity. This is a prime reference work—73 maps in color, 475 photographs (many of them new), a concise text, and 24 pages of index.

CARL F. H. HENRY

Bible Book of the Month: Judges

This book is the second in the group of historical books (Joshua—II Kings) which are called by the Jews the Former Prophets and which cover the period from the death of Moses to the Babylonian Captivity. Of these books, Joshua, Judges, and I Samuel differ from the others in one important respect, namely, that they are, except for Ruth, the only books which cover the period of their allotment. The historical narrative in I Chronicles begins abruptly with the death of Saul at the hands of the Philistines (10:1).

Judges covers the period from the death of Joshua to the birth of Samuel. The name “Judges,” given it in the Septuagint version, is appropriate because the book deals mainly with the activities of certain “judges” (2:16), nine of whom are stated to have “judged” Israel. Since the book is largely biographical, analysis of it is fairly simple.

CONTENT OF THE BOOK

I. General Situation (1–2:6). The opening chapter plus the first six verses of the next are to be studied in the light of Joshua 13:1–6, 13; 15:63; 16:10; 17:12 f., which state that the conquest was not completed by Joshua.

II. Viewpoint and Aim (2:7–3:4). In these verses the writer tells us that the history he describes runs in cycles: obedience, apostasy, punishment, repentance, forgiveness, deliverance, rest. This sequence of events occurs again and again. The writer proceeds to illustrate it in detail in the record of the 12 judgeships, 12 because Barak is only mentioned with Deborah while Abimelech is not called a judge and his brief career is merely a sequel to that of his father Gideon.

III. The Judges (3:5–16:31). In the main section of the book, we read of the judges, six (Shamgar, Tola, Jair, Ibzan, Elon, and Abdon) of which are called “minor” because so little is told about them although they are assigned a total of 62 years.

The other six are called major judges. Othniel, Caleb’s younger brother, delivered Israel from the most distant of her oppressors, Chushan-rishathaim of Mesopotamia (Aram Naharaim), who may have been an Amorite or an Aramaean. Ebud acquired his fame by assassinating Eglon and delivering Israel from servitude to Moab. Deborah, the prophetess, summoned Barak to battle against Sisera, and their mighty paean of victory is recorded. But the three of whom we read most are Gideon, Jephthah, and Samson, three heroic and tragic figures, very human, very different, yet all three called and used of God to “judge” Israel.

Gideon, the son of a well-to-do Baal-worshiping Israelite, earned the name Jerubbaal (let Baal defend himself) because his father refused to punish him for destroying the Baal altar. (His victory over the Midianites with 300 men who had “pitchers and torches and trumpets to blow” has thrilled the hearts of multitudes of children.) The men of Ephraim quarreled with Gideon and the princes of Succoth refused their aid which were incidents suggesting the antagonisms and jealousies of the tribes of Israel in those days. Gideon’s success led to a lapse into idolatry which was contagious; however, he refused the offer of kingship with the noble words, “I will not rule over you, neither shall my son rule over you: the Lord shall rule over you.” His words were falsified in part by his son’s ambition, for Abimelech, son of a concubine of Shechem, cut a bloody path to the throne of Shechem by slaying his 70 brethren. After a brief reign Abimelech perished at the hand of a woman.

Jephthah was a “self-made” man, a kind of Robin Hood. Called to deliver Israel from the Ammonites, he triumphed as Gideon had done. But as in the case of Gideon, his victory brought him into conflict with the Ephraimites who lost 42,000 men in a struggle that gave the word shibboleth historic significance (12:6). The tragedy of his life rested in his rash vow. Whether he actually sacrificed his daughter has been questioned, but the rather cryptic language of the narrative seems to imply that he did.

Samson, the only judge whose birth (as later that of Samuel) was heralded by an angelic messenger, was a Nazirite who loved and married a Philistine woman. We are told that the marriage “was of the Lord,” who makes even the wrath of men to praise him, and in this case the purpose was to make Samson the inveterate foe of the Philistines. Samson used his great strength to perform mighty exploits, but he was not truly a heroic figure. He allowed himself to be ensnared by a woman’s wiles, learned a bitter lesson, but in his death he destroyed more of his enemies than he did in his lifetime.

IV. Two Appendices (17:1–21:25). The first appendix concerns the story of Micah and the Danites which describes and brings together two incidents which we may regard as typical of an age when “there was no king in Israel.” Micah, an Ephraimite, made a graven image and secured the services of an adventure-seeking Levite to act as his priest. A band of Danite spies, in search of a home, discovered Micah’s shrine, and, when re-enforced by a larger body which they passed by on their way to seize Laish, they offered to make the “hedge priest” the priest of “a tribe and a family in Israel.” They took him and his idolatrous paraphernalia with them, smote Laish with the edge of the sword, and dwelt there (cf. Josh. 19:47). According to 18:30 this event took place in the days of a grandson of Moses (Manasseh stands for Moses). The phrase “until the day of the captivity of the land” is not clear; some believe it refers to the destruction of Shiloh by the Philistines while others connect it to the invasion of Tiglath-Pileser III in the eighth century B.C.

The second appendix concerns the Levite’s concubine and the near annihilation of Benjamin. This appendix is even more damning than the first. A Levite in search of his run-away concubine returned with her by way of Gibeah of Benjamin. There the sin of Sodom was re-enacted. The Benjamites refused to punish the offenders and even rallied to their defense. As a result the tribe was all but exterminated. We are told also that the tragedy occurred because there was no king in Israel. This story explains why Saul could say to Samuel, “Am I not a Benjamite, of the smallest of the tribes of Israel?” (1 Sam. 9:21). For through this deed of infamy, Benjamin was reduced from 45,600 men at the time of the Conquest to 600 for whom wives had to be provided from the other tribes. No wonder the story and the book end not merely with the words “there was no king in Israel” but with a final word, “every man did that which was right in his own eyes.” The statement is a fitting ending for a tragic book.

CHRONOLOGY OF THE BOOK

The chronology of Judges presents many problems. According to 1 Kings 6:1, the interval between the Exodus (Exod. 12:41) and the fourth year of Solomon’s reign was 480 years. If we add up the figures for judgeships, oppressions, and rests as they are given from time to time, the total is 410 years. Since the total does not include the years of Wandering, the judgeships of Eli and Samuel, or the reigns of Saul and David (which would require considerably more than a century), it is clear that the 410 years must include some overlappings. This solution is favored by the fact that the activities of these leaders, as described in Judges, concerned different parts of the land. Ehud battled with Moab, Gideon with Midian, Jephthah with Ammon, and Samson with the Philistines. We note also that these judges came from different tribes and localities—Othniel from Judah, Tola from Issachar, Ibzan from Bethlehem, Elon from Zebulon, and Samson from Dan. The facts seem to indicate that some of the judgeships were contemporaneous, which would reduce the 410 years considerably. Keil, for example, reduces it to 339 years. John Bright reduces it to about 180 years. If the late date of the Exodus is accepted, the extent of the period of the Judges must be correspondingly curtailed.

Archaeology has thrown light upon the book of Judges. Hazor (4:2), which was discovered by Garstang in 1926, has been recently excavated and proved to have been a great Canaanite city which was apparently made by the Hyksos as a fortress and an armed camp. Its excavator, Yigael Yadin of the Hebrew University, calls it “the city that Joshua sacked and Solomon rebuilt.” It is particularly noted that Joshua burned Hazor with fire (Josh. 11:11). Its importance is indicated by the fact that it is called “the head of all those kingdoms” (v. 10). Its king must be a different Jabin from the Jabin slain by Joshua. Especially interesting and significant is the statement in 8:14 that a young man of Succoth “wrote” (not “described,” AV) for Gideon the name of the 77 princes and elders of Succoth. The statement illustrates what is now known to be a fact that alphabetic writing was widely used in this period.

SIGNIFICANCE OF THE BOOK

In some respects Judges is a pivotal book in the Old Testament. We have seen that the main section of the book is preceded by a brief summary of the condition of Israel in the period to be described, a condition that was due to the passing away of the generation which had “seen all the great works of the Lord that he did for Israel” and the arising of another generation “which knew not the Lord, nor yet the works which he had done for Israel.” It is pointed out that the younger generation was forsaking the Lord God of their fathers, and going to polytheism, idolatry, and lawlessness. The departure is referred to repeatedly, and the reader is expected to judge the record which the writer proceeds to give. The entire story is one of repeated departures from a higher standard of morality and religion. The words “the great works” which the Lord did for Israel clearly mean the deliverance from Egypt, the covenant and the giving of the law at Sinai, and the conquest of the land as set forth in the Pentateuch and Joshua. In Judges we have the candid recital of repeated apostasies from a former higher standard, the terrible consequences which followed, and the steps by which the people were delivered.

For a century and a half a radically different view of Israel’s history has been gaining popularity. First proposed by De Wette in 1805, the view is that Deuteronomy is not Mosaic but belongs to the time of Josiah (c. 622 B.C.), that it, or part of it, was “the book of the law” discovered by Hilkiah (2 Kings 22:8) and made the basis for a reform which required the centralization of worship at the temple of Jerusalem (cf. “Deuteronomy” in Bible Book of the Month, CHRISTIANITY TODAY, July 7, 1958, p. 37).

Support for the late dating is found in the obviously close resemblance between the teaching of Deuteronomy and that of the great prophets of the eighth and seventh centuries B.C. A major objection to the view, in addition to the plain affirmation in Deuteronomy of its Mosaic character, is that the historical books (Joshua—Kings) describe the history of the period they cover in the very terms which Deuteronomy predicts, namely, in terms of frequent departure from the law of Sinai. Consequently it became necessary for those who regard Deuteronomy as late to insist that the historical books were compiled and edited in “Deuteronomistic” circles. So critical scholars are accustomed to speak of Joshua-Kings as the “Deuteronomistic history,” which means that this great group of history books estimates the history which it records in terms of the ideas and standards of a far later period. To illustrate the point, I refer to a higher critical handling of Joshua 22, the story of the witness altar which the leaders of two and a half tribes declared emphatically was not intended to be a place of sacrifice. Critics themselves admitted that the altar would have been a “rebellion” or “transgression”: the law of the “central sanctuary” was instituted by Moses. So the advocates of the theory are obliged to treat Joshua 22 as “Deuteronomistic,” or even as “priestly” which places it still later in time. The stories, therefore, which describe actual conditions in the time of the Judges are, according to these scholars, set in a Deuteronomic framework which mistakenly represents them as apostasy from a standard introduced centuries later.

A prominent advocate of the above theory, Johannes Pedersen, said: “The strange thing, then, is that Israel in an essential degree came to deny her real history.” To us the even stranger thing is that for a century and a half critics of the Bible have been insistent in forcing on the Old Testament a theory which is so opposed to its own statements and viewpoint.

The book of Judges has a lesson which the present generation of Christians greatly needs. We are learning today at heavy cost that the failure of even a single generation to pass on to its successor its own precious heritage of faith and morals will have tragic results. The godlessness and delinquency in present day America is largely the result of the breakdown of Christian nurture in our homes, schools, and churches. It does not take long to train up a generation of whom it can be said, “and there arose another generation after them which knew not the Lord, nor yet the works which he had done for Israel.” The Communists in Russia and in China are strenuously engaged in the task of bringing into being a new generation which knows nothing of its past, which is a stranger to the culture which went before it. In other places, no such special training of the young people is needed. Let the children alone, leave them without discipline, allow them to “develop naturally,” we say, which is the basic idea in “progressive education”; and when they grow up it will be said of them, “every man did that which was right in his own eyes.” Christian example, Christian education, Christian nurture, are the supreme need today if Christianity is to meet triumphantly the forces of evil which challenge its very existence.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

The recently published Keil and Delitzsch Commentary is still one of the best expositions of the biblical text. The results of archaeological research are given in Garstang’s The Foundations of Bible History (1931) and more recently in Unger’s Archaeology of the Old Testament, and Free’s Archaeology and Bible History. Other sources are The Biblical Archaeologist and the Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. The critical interpretation of Judges is given in G. F. Moore’s treatise in The International Critical Commentary, by C. F. Burney in The Book of Judges, and also in the Introductions of S. R. Driver and of R. H. Pfeiffer. Other books which might be mentioned are H. H. Rowley From Joseph to Joshua, G. E. Wright Archaeology of the Bible, and the Rand-McNally Bible Atlas by Emil G. Kraeling.

OSWALD T. ALLIS

Wayne, Pennsylvania

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