Technology, Modern Man, and the Gospel

One feature of this year’s American Baptist Convention, in Boston’s War Memorial Auditorium, was a spirited panel discussion on “Technology, Modern Man, and the Gospel” that brought together Dr. Harvey G. Cox, associate professor of church and society at Harvard Divinity School, and Dr. Carl F. H. Henry, editor of CHRISTIANITY TODAY. Their exchange was moderated by Dr. George D. Younger, program associate of the Division of Evangelism, American Baptist Home Mission Society.

Younger: Our problem this morning is a very real one, for we live in and are shaped by and must witness in the middle of a technological society. We cannot talk about modern man as if he were someone apart from us, for each of us is a modern man or a modern woman. And when we talk about the Gospel and the Church, we again are talking about ourselves. This morning we are gathered here as American Baptists with two churchmen who are part of our fellowship. On your right is Harvey Cox, on your left Carl Henry. I’m going to ask each of them in his own way to say what he feels is the heart of the problem as we in the Church seek to address the Gospel to modern man in a technological society—perhaps a better way to put it might be: to understand what the Gospel is, as we ourselves are part of a technological society. Now, we haven’t even agreed which one is to go first. Who’d like to start out?

Cox: Well, thank you George. First of all I’d like to welcome all of you to Boston, which is the home of Harvard University, the place where in the middle of the seventeeenth century President Dunster was fired as the president of Harvard for becoming a Baptist. They’re nicer to us now. I want to say also that this is a very auspicious and interesting way for Dr. Henry and me to have a conversation about theology. Very frequently, theological dialogues in the past have been phrased in categories about which people understood beforehand where the differences were. Today we’re going to talk about the problem for which no theological position has finished answers, the problem of modern man and technology, and I for one look forward to a very profitable exchange. Let me say at the very outset that by technology today I will mean the tools and processes by which we reduce the relative costs of the enterprises that man is engaged in—the application of scientific know-how to the reduction of the relative costs of the various enterprises that man engages in. This means that we have to make choices that we have not been called upon to make before. Many of the things which took care of themselves in previous centuries now are on the agenda of choice for human beings. For theology, for the Gospel, I think this means two things.

First of all, we have to ask the question asked by the Psalmist in a new way: What is man that Thou art mindful of him? What is the place of man in history and the cosmos? What is his appropriate task and mission? Here I think the answer has to come for me from Christology, recognizing that in Jesus Christ we have a disclosure not only of who God is for man but, from my point of view, also a disclosure of who man is for man—an image, a metaphor, a normative instance of who man is and who he is called to be.

I think, secondly, the challenge to theology is the translation of the vision of the Kingdom of God into a vision of what we should strive and work and pray for on this earth, in this world. We’re talking about the transformation of the kingdoms of the world into the kingdom of our God and of his Christ, and I take this very literally: the transformation of the earth into the Kingdom of God. But the Kingdom of God as we know it and confess it in the Bible is phrased in metaphors—the lion lying down with the lamb—which have to be given a certain political and social cogency for our time. So I think this is the theological task: asking “who is man?” and dealing once again with the Kingdom of God.

Younger: Dr. Henry, let’s hear your definition of the heart of the problem.

Henry: By technology I mean applied science devoted to the systematic manipulation of the material aspects of civilization. And as such it today holds, of course, not only vast creative potential but also frightening destructive potential. Perhaps it is the secret carrier of a nuclear spasm that will explode all human achievement, or the carrier of the automation of production that will consign mankind to a global breadline, or the carrier of a new mythology of the secular city, with a materialistic determinism of modern life. I agree that we must ask earnestly whether sooner or later it may not encompass all human endeavor and radically alter every man’s way of living.

Modern man I find somewhat more difficult to define, since man is always fundamentally the same and human history shows less change than constancy. Modern man can be projected two ways. First, anybody so fascinated by material techniques and things that he disregards and demeans the supernatural: for example, in Boston, a Harvard graduate who is a disciple of my colleague Harvey Cox rather than Nathan Pusey. Or secondly, and I think this is the preferable definition, anybody who is earnestly involved in the modern conflict of ideas and ideals.

Now by the Gospel I mean God’s message of Christ’s death and resurrection for sinners that offers the secular city forgiveness of sins, spiritual life, and enduring hope. And I would just comment that the very arrangement of our topic is curiously modern: the Gospel stands last, as an appendage of tertiary concern, and technology has the priority as the real issue of the day. Modern man stands between these as the great arbiter of human destiny. Whereas the fact is that the Gospel is the decisive issue, and man—whether he’s pre-modern, modern, or post-modern—will be judged by what he does with God. Technology is simply the latest human colossus, and its moral tone turns ultimately on man’s response to the God of justice and the God of justification.

Younger: Now, Dr. Henry, I think you’ve already joined one issue that we had better get out of the way immediately, since Dr. Cox is the author of a book, The Secular City, and you mentioned the mythology of the secular city. I wish you’d explain that a little bit further.

Henry: Well, as I see it, the secular city (at least as Dr. Cox espoused it in his earlier volume) seeks to detach modern man and all of his responsibilities from any answerability to the supernatural, and from the idea that there are created orders, structures in society by which society is permanently bound; it tends to prefer a wholly open and fluid society, open to the future in the sense that the past is in no way binding and decisive for us. I regard this as a secular alternative to the biblical conception of the Kingdom of God. I share the vision, certainly, of the transformation of the earth into the Kingdom of God. What I dispute is the idea that modern socio-political ideals are to be assimilated directly to the New Covenant, and that we are, like the theocracy of the Old Testament, to have a priestly class that somehow makes direct political inroads and determines the structures of society for the generation in which we live.

Younger: It sounds to me right now as if you’re going on from where you tried to draw the issue to add a couple more. Let’s stick with where you drew it. And that was on the detaching of man from answerability to the supernatural and this fluid situation it assumes. Would you like to speak to that?

Cox: I think it’s very good that we have joined the issue early, because I would like to point out where I do differ quite basically from my colleague at this point. I do not think that man is bound to the past. And I think that the Christian announcement that God forgives us of our sins, that he promises a new kingdom of love and justice, is the power which releases us from the grip of the past, both individually and socially. I think the past is there for us to learn from, to celebrate, to remember; but we are not prisoners of the past, and this is exactly the way I understand St. Paul’s interpretation of our forgiveness that God makes possible. He does open the future for us. This is the meaning of the resurrection. We do not have to live bound with patterns that have been established in the past. We do have the responsibility to make changes if we feel these are more appropriate to our response to what God requires. I’m not nearly as suspicious of the material, I think, as Dr. Henry is. And I start here from the incarnation—that God shares and becomes a part of the material universe. William Temple once said that Christianity is of all the religions the one that is most materialistic. And I give thanks for such materialistic things as penicillin and X-ray and other gifts of modern technology.

Finally, on this business of the supernatural, I don’t see how anyone could read The Secular City without recognizing that I am suggesting that man is answerable in a colossal way to the God who created the world and places man in that world and makes him responsible. I even have a book called God’s Revolution and Man’s Responsibility. Now, as far as the supernatural is concerned, I’d simply like to say that I think that a division between the natural and the supernatural is not something we have to get hung up on. I think our problem as Christians is that we have accepted a scientific, rationalist description of what is natural, and therefore we’ve had to say God is supernatural. I would say that God is preeminently and ultimately natural, that he works in, with, and under the natural processes of history, of nature, and that we don’t have to dichotomize his world into natural and supernatural anymore. That’s a nineteenth-century debate that I don’t even want to enter into.

Younger: Would you like to say something more from the nineteenth-century before we move on?

Henry: I’d like to go back, sir, to the first century. Just a passing comment on natural-supernatural. I share the protest against the modern, restricted, arbitrary definition of the natural. The natural is what God wills habitually, and I want to insist on that. But the only alternative to supernaturalism that I know is naturalism, and I don’t want to be stuck with it.

Now, the real issue that I want to get back to is this one about not being tied to the past and the resurrection having opened a path to the future, because I think that this is strategically important for us in the panel. It is true, of course, that the resurrection opens for man trapped in sin a wholly new option for the future. But it is wholly new only in the sense that it is possible for him in terms of redemption to recover God’s purpose for man on the basis of creation. It’s a cheap victory, I think, to debunk the emphasis on orders of creation and orders of preservation that are divinely willed in history as sort of a deification of the status quo, because the orders of creation are only as static as the Creator and Preserver of the universe wills them to be. I grant that these orders are often violated by secular forces in power, but there is no merit in an anarchic reaction to injustice.

Younger: Excuse me, could you give those who are here a little more specific example of what you mean by orders? I’m not sure we know what you mean.

Henry: I’ll give you a good example, in that monogamous marriage is divinely willed for man on the basis of creation. This is fixed and given. It is not something wholly fluid, and the resurrection of Christ doesn’t open a new way for man in history on the basis of it. Man is born into a life that’s already structured, not simply by a moral consensus in society, but by God’s plotting of nature and man and history—his purpose.

Younger: But does the resurrection have anything to say to monogamous marriage? You’ve said it recovers God’s intention for the orders. Now, in what way does it recover it in marriage, the example you’ve used?

Henry: It publishes the fact that injustice and immorality cannot prevail and that human nature as it is lived in obedience to Christ, and in obedience to his word, is the only type of human nature that can look hopefully into an eternal future.

Younger: Harvey, using the same example—monogamous marriage—how would you see the future being opened by the resurrection?

Cox: Well, I’m not against monogamous marriage. I think it’s a fine institution. It’s not perhaps the one that is most directly relevant to the question of technology and technological change as others might be. I do think that one would be hard put to show that there is a clear certification of monogamous marriage for all people in the New Testament. As I recall my New Testament, it’s for bishops but not for everyone. However, I happen to be in favor of it for everyone. I think the real question here.…

Henry: Sir, Jesus was talking to the Pharisees when he reiterated what was so from the beginning, not to bishops.

Cox: Well, I really don’t think I want to talk about monogamous marriage. I would like to talk, however, about the restoration of the purpose of God in creating man. And I think that’s a phrase that I would latch on to, this phrase that Dr. Henry just used, and then ask the question, What is God’s purpose in creating man? To what are we restored and called in God’s act of redemption? Here I would say that clearly, for me, it’s to have dominion over the earth, to tend the garden, to be the one who has dominion over the creatures, to give them their names—in other words, to exercise the kind of stewardship and power which man frequently refuses to exercise over the creation for God as an agent who is responsible to God. I just wonder whether we agree on that.

Henry: Yes. I would say that Christianity alone makes technology possible, in the long run, in terms of its view of an ordered universe and all that is implied in this, and that only Christianity can protect technology from arbitrary exploitation of man and the universe. But having said that, and agreeing with your emphasis here, Professor Cox, I am still troubled about this revolutionary approach, which, if it looks upon the action, the breakthrough wherever it occurs, as a manifestation of the will of God, seems to me to sacrifice necessarily the ability to judge adversely even the relatively better, from the standpoint of something superior to it. That is, if the divine orders of creation and preservation need to be replaced, then we’re in worse difficulty with the problem of evil than we think. Actually, instead of narrowing the problem of evil, we’ve widened the problem of evil, as I see it, and I don’t think even the most aggressive and dedicated representatives of the new theology can possibly rescue us from our predicament.

Cox: Well, can I just say that I’ve never been very happy with theologies based on the orders of creation. I don’t think that one necessarily … I think you can have a biblical theology—and I’m sure you’d agree, Dr. Henry—without building it on orders of creation. This is a datable, locatable Lutheran understanding of theology. I would much rather start with the fact of redemption and look at creation from the point of view of redemption and from the point of view of God. That is, my theology, in this sense, is radically Christological; I start with the action of God which then indicates to us the purpose of creation, both as we look back to the original creation of man and as we look forward to the kingdom that breaks in here on our present and to which we are responsible. I suppose my emphasis here would be that as Christians we are more responsible to look forward to the kingdom which God is making possible for man, which began with Jesus Christ, than we are to look back to try to preserve orders of creation. Insofar as man always lives in a political order, always lives in an economic order, in a familial order—to that extent and to that extent only I would accept an orders-of-creation approach. I would say, however, that these are institutions which are malleable and changeable; they have been changed and they will change in the future.

Younger: How do you respond to this business of looking back to orders and looking forward?

Henry: I, of course, consider my theology a theology of redemption, and not onesidedly a theology of creation. It is the redefinition of redemption as mere “demption” that bothers me. Because the biblical view is redemption, regeneration, and God’s recovery of his purpose for man on the basis of the original creation. I would hold the two together. But I think we’ve exploited these differences, and explored them as fully as possible. Let’s get on.

Younger: I’ve got one that I’m afraid, at least the way I’ve heard it, would strike both of your positions. There are those who are pointing out: quite true, Harvey, that Christianity is materialistic, and quite true, Carl, it alone has made technology possible. Historically it’s made technology possible. There are those who are now saying back to us that some of the worst things that we see in technology—the going ahead and raping nature for the use of man—are precisely an outgrowth of a Christian outlook that sees only man as important and doesn’t honor the creation. Now, I wonder how to respond to this line of criticism that’s being made by a great many people today, that Christians are people who only worry about man and what they can get out of the universe.

Henry: I would say that this perversion of the Christian ideal actually has its possibility in the Christian interpretation which made technology possible, but that it is a perversion and that it comes under the judgment of the same God of creation and redemption. But I’d emphasize that, while I stress the incarnation, certainly, it was the incarnate Christ who warned us most against materialism and cautioned us to seek first the kingdom of God and not things. Man’s basic problem, it seems to me, is not his environment nor the tools of technology, but man himself. Peter Drucker of New York University, who was onetime president of the Society for the History of Technology, and who writes in the two-volume work on Technology in Western Civilization that was published last year by Oxford University Press, has this to say: “It was naive of the nineteenth-century optimist to expect paradise from tools. And it is equally naïve of the twentieth-century pessimist to make the new tools the scapegoat for such old shortcomings as man’s blindness, cruelty, immaturity, greed, and sinful pride.” I would say that it’s the human mind and will that needs spiritual and moral correction, and that apart from this man’s creative genius and his human dignity and his human worth are going to degenerate. The basic human problem will not be met by adding to or subtracting from technology.

Younger: What’s your opinion on that?

Cox: I couldn’t agree with that more. It’s entirely my position. I don’t think tools are either the answer or the problem. The problem is man himself. I think we might disagree on exactly what that problem is. I think it’s the problem that man is encapsulated in sin and death, what the Bible calls sin and death, and that the Gospel liberates him, announces his liberation from sin and death, so that he can take responsibility for tools, for his ideas, for his society, for himself, that he doesn’t have to be the victim of the way things have gone in the past. But with reference to your early question, George, which I think is a very good one—that is, the accusation that Christianity in its historical development has laid the groundwork for an overly technologized society—I think there’s truth in that. And I think we gain nothing from denying that the historical development of Christianity has resulted in certain unfortunate phenomena. Here especially as Protestant Christians, I think we can learn from, let’s say, the spirit of the Franciscan, St. Francis, whose first impulse with relation to nature was not how to dominate it, necessarily, but loving nature, celebrating it. He talked about his friends the birds and his brother the fire and his brother the sun. I think we can learn something from that as Protestants. And as Christians I think there are even things we can learn from the non-Christian religious traditions of the world. One doesn’t have to stop being a Christian and a dedicated Christian to recognize that there are insights in these great Oriental traditions of Hinduism and Buddhism from which we can profit immensely. One of them is a kind of respect for nature, a capacity to contemplate nature and not simply always to be manipulating it. I think that in the next century we can learn a good deal from these people which we can integrate with our own Christian starting point.

Younger: Is this respect for and contemplation of nature a part of your outlook, Dr. Henry?

Henry: Oh, yes, by all means. Of course, it’s in the Psalms. The modern scientific approach tends to be largely a technique for mastery and manipulation rather than for contemplation. And the scientist, qua scientist. in his professional capacity, doesn’t know what it is to see the glory of God in nature anymore; as a man, he is of course confronted, as every man is, by the revelation of God in nature. But I want to pick up this other point that Professor Cox has suggested. I think it’s a good one in its own way. This point is that the Oriental religions are saying something to the West at this stage and will be saying something increasingly. And I suspect from what Professor Cox has said that he considers this perhaps to be a larger threat to the Western outlook than that posed by technology. Would you say that?

Cox: I wouldn’t say just a threat. Not just a threat. I think it also has elements of real promise.

Henry: But do you think its significance might overshadow that of …

Cox: Yes, its significance could well overshadow the technological development.

Henry: I think this is so. And I’d like to comment on it for just a moment but from another point of view. It seems to me that all the values of the last 2,000 years—indeed, of the past 4,000 years—now hang in the balances. Almost all problems of modern civilization have now reached the supremely critical stage of a final choice, a final decision. And modern science and modern philosophy and modern theology in the West all seem to be failing to kindle authentic hope. They evade the great issues, they evade the ultimate concerns that have engaged human life and thought in its loftiest creative hours, the realm of spirit, the realm of mind, the realm of conscience, the eternal world, particularly the reality of God and the will of God for man. I think that this attempt to make a basically materialistic response or a merely materialistic response to the real and massive problems that are posed by modern life is inadequate and self-defeating, and that the Oriental religions are speaking to us today. The United States has been involved in military commitments abroad (and I tend to take a positive view of that vis-à-vis Communism, in contrast to some of my colleagues), but despite this commitment, and despite extensive foreign aid, nonetheless we are being criticized today even by the pagan nations of the Orient—so called traditionally—because of our materialistic aspirations and our disinterest in the spiritual and eternal world. I think that this materialistic response in Western society is inadequate and self-defeating. It adds illusion to the misery of the masses and it compounds that illusion.

Younger: I think we’re beginning to get to paydirt here. I’m personally very much aware of the many ways in which that which the Christian vision seems to speak of is already happening. The time when all the nations will flow unto Jerusalem—nowadays they flow to whoever controls the communications satellites, or we remember they all flowed unto Washington at the time of Kennedy’s funeral. In our time we are extremely aware that within every one of our metropolitan areas in this country and within the nation as a whole we are bound up together with each other—everyone, every man. We are bound up in such a way by our past choices that we have every possibility of destroying each other rather than of realizing that sort of fruitful life that we also can see. I’m glad you moved us into this area, Carl, and I’d like to ask Harvey about this final decision. It’s certainly final for our generation, although the thing we’re aware of is that it may be final for the human race.

Cox: I think Dr. Henry’s right about that. We’ve come to a certain crucial crossroads in two ways. One, that we now have in our hands the capacity for self-destruction, not only nuclear self-destruction but psychological self-destruction, and that we therefore have to make choices and enter into a plane of responsibility that is higher and more demanding than our forefathers had. I think that is being made possible for us—and from my own theological point of view, it is God that makes this kind of human responsibility possible. I would want to say in that regard that there are a lot of false hopes in the world, based on science, based on politics, and this is why I emphasized in my opening remarks the job we have to do as Christians in stating the hope of the Kingdom of God in a way that will engage the imagination of modern man. Now the reason why people are hoping in science or in politics is that we have not so persuasively stated and demonstrated the hope of the Kingdom of God that they’re hoping in the Gospel. This is part of our responsibility, and that is why I emphasize it so strongly. It’s a judgment on us as Christians that people do not entertain that hope as seriously as they entertain some of their false hopes. I do think that I would put a slightly different emphasis on the materialism in science—this has come up a couple of times before—than Dr. Henry does. I’m impressed with the spiritual aspects of science. This is not simply a materialistic quest. When one thinks of the mystery of the atom, the mystery of the human body, and the mind, the mystery that reveals itself to advanced scientific investigation and exploration, one finds some of the most spiritually sensitive people in the world now working in scientific laboratories, because they’ve touched the inner mysteries. And I believe that there is something happening there that can’t simply be put down as materialism at all. Because it’s the material universe that God has given us and within which he allows himself to be known, at least in part. The hope that we have to state for the men of our time is one that articulates that promise of the Kingdom of God in a way which engages the imagination of man with all its scientific and political configurations.

Henry: I think that technology can and ought to be used to confront the vacuums that technology itself creates—that is, to confront modern man with the divinely published standards by which men and nations will ultimately be judged, and with the good news of the offer of forgiveness of sins and of new life in Christ and of God’s claim upon life. The crucial issue for modern man, I think, is whether he will recognize that his creatureliness and his sinfulness place limits on the fulfillment of human aspirations, and that the abundant life simply can’t be found in an abundance of material things and in an abundance of sex, or in an abundance of status, or in an abundance of leisure, if we come to the leisure era. Christ’s word is, I think, still the most relevant counsel to the current age: “Seek first the Kingdom of God, and all desirable things will come as by-products.” Improved material conditions don’t overcome man’s softness or his moral delusion or corruption. I think there are more wonderful possibilities that can be held out for modern man even than creating parts for wornout bodies, magnificent as that is, or regulating human fertility, or communicating by satellite, or living on artificial food. God can turn sinners into new creatures. And he will raise the dead. And we can enter into our closet and talk to the eternal Spirit. And we can enjoy meat to eat that others cannot see. There’s a city more durable than the secular city—the New Jerusalem—and in it death will be abolished. I think that if modern man devoted half as much interest to the spiritual and moral world as he does to technological efficiency, there would be a staggering religious awakening and a regaining of eternal truth that would make contemporary technology rather than theology seem to rest on a plateau.

Younger: I’d like to put to both of you a situation …

Cox: I’d like to respond, if I could, before you go on. I never quite know whether Dr. Henry is saying something that he has thought about beforehand or responding to the discussion as it’s gone along, because so much of what he says I agree with. I think there’s one point, however, in his last statement which I again would want to at least put a different emphasis on. If I understood him correctly, he said the crucial issue today in the preaching of the Gospel is that man shall recognize his sin and creatureliness. I do not think that is the crucial issue. I think the crucial issue is that man should recognize that he is a forgiven and restored child of God whose powers and responsibilities given to him in the creation are now available to him. That he is also a sinful creature, but that the first thing to say about him is that he is forgiven. The first news of the Gospel is not that you’re a sinner but that God has acted and forgiven you. The Gospel is good news, not bad news. And I want that good news to be the emphasis, and the business about sin and creatureliness which is there to remain as a kind of minor motif, not as the major motif of Christian preaching. I think we’ve emphasized that long enough.

Henry: I would simply say, on this, that I think the first thing to be said to modern man is that his destiny in eternity is unsure and that he is locked up to decision for or against Jesus Christ.

Younger: That could be taken out of context [applause] … his destiny is unsure.

Henry: Perhaps Professor Cox would like to clarify what he said, and I give him opportunity.

Cox: I agree with that. His destiny is unsure.

Henry: That’s quite different from telling him his sins are forgiven and everything is all right.

Cox: I didn’t say everything is all right. His sins have been forgiven. Isn’t that the Gospel, that in Jesus Christ our sins have been forgiven? Believe the Gospel and receive? [Applause.] … I didn’t say everything is all right.

Henry: The New Testament, it seems to me, proclaims, number one, the forgiveness of sins …

Cox: Number one, that’s all we have to … We agree.

Henry: No. Secondly, that he who does not believe is condemned already. [Applause.]

Younger: If we’re going to start clapping up on the basis of who’s for condemnation and who’s for forgiveness, we’re going to be in a terrible state here. [Laughter.] We’ve got to start coming to a close, but I was going to put a problem to both of you. I think it would be one of the best ways to sum up. If you were sitting next to an R & D man from Route 128 who is a member of an American Baptist Church (I was in this situation a day or so ago), and you had to tell him what is the nature of the good news for him, and he is a scientist, how would you say it? I’d like you to use this as your summation; if you want to repeat what you’ve said, do that. But if when you were talking to him personally there’s another way you’d say it, please say it that way.

Henry: I’d say that what God expects of us is that we should love him with our whole being and our neighbors as ourselves. And we are all miserable sinners. And if we face the future trusting in ourselves, the God of the universe is more righteous than that, and we will simply inherit condemnation that we have brought upon ourselves. And Christ died for our sins and rose again the third day. And he is the author of hope, in the forgiveness of sins that he provides. And we can know him. And what God has in view for me on the basis of redemption is my restoration to fellowship with the living God, and to holiness, and to the exhibition, in relation to my neighbor, of what it means to be in the service of my holy Father.

Younger: Harvey, what would you point to?

Cox: I think I would try to say very much the same thing but try to explain what I mean by the language that Dr. Henry has just used. What does it really mean today to say that we are miserable sinners? That we’re headed for condemnation? That we’re trapped in sin? That we have hope again? Just repeating these phrases to an R & D man or to anyone else today doesn’t fulfill our responsibilities. I think that as a Christian I have to know him personally. First of all, I don’t like these kinds of theoretical situations, desert island or otherwise. I’d like to know who he is, what’s worrying him, where his hang-ups and fears are. In telling him that he is a miserable sinner (which he is and which I am) or that we’re all headed for condemnation (which we are if we don’t change), how do you put content in these words for a person for whom this kind of language has a hollow ring? That’s my problem. And I don’t think you can simply repeat the phrases. I think you’ve got to know him and to know what you mean and to put it in a kind of language that will cause something to happen in this man so that he really does have hope, so that he really is dedicated to working for a future and a hope which God has made possible, instead of a kind of phraseological solution.

Henry: I would share that.

Younger: I want to point out to all of you that although we have had differences and you’ve noted them, there has been in the discussion also some very important agreement. One, that man is the one who controls technology for good or for ill. Another is agreement on the vision of the Kingdom of God, although described differently. And finally, an agreement that the Gospel, the good news which is announced, must make contact with the man now, but that it relates to his situation and our whole situation—to eternity.

Editor’s Note …

My time has come to say farewell to 160,000 fortnightly readers and to go into journalistic exile. This issue officially terminates my twelve-year editorship, in line with executive-committee action a year ago. Beginning in September I’ll devote an academic year at Cambridge University, England, to theological research and writing. I look for fresh perspective on the estrangement of the Church and the world and on the sense of alienation that pervades modern life, and expect to carry forward a still uneasy conscience about modern fundamentalism.

The new editor, Dr. Harold Lindsell, assumes duties in September, and thereafter will determine all content. I shall go off the Board and have no voice in future policy formulation. In mid-March I begin a flexible relationship as editor-at-large. In view of summer staff shortages, however, I am staying through August to coordinate editorial energies.

Our best wishes go to a highly valued member of the staff, assistant editor Dr. Robert Cleath, who has decided to return this fall to the faculty of California State Polytechnic College.

Temporary help on editorial side this summer brings to our ranks the Rev. Edward Plowman of San Francisco; Dr. H. Dermot McDonald of London Bible College, England; and the Rev. Lon Woodrum, Methodist evangelist. Dr. J. D. Douglas of London, esteemed editor of The Christian and Christianity Today, comes for the month of August.

I voice gratitude once again to a gifted staff of co-workers, and to loyal subscribers who consider CHRISTIANITY TODAY a worthy witness to evangelical realities.

Give the Winds a Voice

Canadian evangelicals have not yet got the message of Pierre Berton’s book, The Comfortable Pew, even though most would consider the book and its challenge old hat by now. Berton, himself a communicator, faulted the Church for failure to take seriously the mass media, especially radio and TV. This criticism was repeated in the sequel, The Restless Church, in an essay by the well-known television personality Patrick Watson. Marshall McLuhan, Malcolm Boyd, and a host of others have repeatedly sounded a similar theme. Yet little or nothing is happening as a result.

At the time of the Reformation, a man with a Bible in his hands was a supremely modern man—a man with the product of the latest technology (the printing press) at his service. Today evangelicals in Canada act, for the most part, as if radio and TV had not yet been invented. Unlike the Apostle Paul, who was fully committed to flexibility in his evangelistic endeavors—“I have become all things to all men, that I might by all means save some” (1 Cor. 9:22)—we still persist largely in a blind devotion to yesterday’s methods. This is a real hang-up, to use the current phrase.

Since we are stewards of the Gospel, two factors underscore the urgency of this issue:

1. One cynic has said, There is no god but the electronic tube and McLuhan is its prophet.” The reader may feel that if McLuhan is a prophet, he is a false one; but one idea he has hammered home cannot be ignored. When he says that the medium is the message, we need to listen. The way in which a message is presented is important, sometimes even more important than the message itself. If we continue to rely on antique methods for presenting the Gospel, we are saying loudly and clearly to the world that we have not yet joined the twentieth century. Once this sinks in, the corollary that our message must therefore be irrelevant is adopted almost unwittingly. Yet when Canadian evangelicals talk about mass evangelism, they inevitably have in mind some form of preaching—a monologue or lecture method.

2. The point, nevertheless, is not simply that the mass media are the contemporary way to communicate the Gospel; it is that, in many siuations, they are increasingly becoming the only way. As Harvey Cox has pointed out, the “secular city” today crosses all geographical and cultural boundaries. In the “global village,” men live more and more in remarkably similar urban communities characterized by the ubiquitous high-rise apartment buildings.

These “filing cases for people” that are swiftly dominating the skyline of today’s city are its most symbolic structure. How do we reach apartment dwellers for Christ? The old technique of lay visitation can no longer be relied on, for often even the minister himself cannot gain admission. He is told over the intercom that Mr. and Mrs. Jones are “busy”—and that’s that.

We know, however, that in the evening, after Mr. and Mrs. Jones have come home from the office and had dinner, they draw the curtains, pour themselves a drink, and turn on the radio or television set. Hidden away in an anonymous retreat, they put out their antennas and tune in to the communicating world outside. What do they hear from us? Hardly anything.

This is not to say that there is no religious radio and TV programming in Canada; obviously there is. But candor demands the admission that most of what is being done falls very wide of the mark.

Evangelical churches often take the matter seriously enough to get involved; and yet they persist, in the main, in a “hard sell” gospel-music-plus-sermon approach that turns off all but the already converted. Thousands of dollars are spent in an effort that purports to be outreach but actually turns out to be a conversation among Christians. These programs have a pastoral value, no doubt; but they are not reaching the world to which we have been sent.

The churches bring to the modern media their own prepackaged programs, taken more or less straight out of a church-service setting, and insist that they be sent out as they are. Not only is that strategy bad; it is based on a failure to appreciate the real theological basis for Christian communications.

At the risk of over-simplification, this theological basis can be summed up under two points: (1) Our God is a communicating God who has revealed himself in Jesus Christ and has called us who worship him to be communicators also. (2) As One who communicates himself, God takes this world as it is seriously—so seriously, in fact, that the Word became flesh for all. It is this incarnational aspect—this taking the world seriously—that has been neglected. We cannot pretend to take the media seriously so long as we dictate the terms on which we will condescend to use them. They have their own “flesh” that can become the medium for the Gospel only as we face the cost of emptying or humbling ourselves for the task.

Our shortsightedness becomes very apparent if we ask: How many churches consult their laymen who are involved in broadcasting before they decide on the content and style of religious broadcasts? A Christian radio-station manager said to me the other day, “In all my years of radio I have never once been asked for my opinion on how to communicate the Gospel by an official of my church.”

This failure is reflected in the larger stations’ gradual elimination of all religious programs. One large Toronto station can show a significant listening increase (and consequent financial profit) since it discontinued its religious broadcasting.

On the other hand, those in the big denominations who do take advantage of the media so often end up with a watered-down version of the faith that once again any evangelistic thrust is nullified. Indeed, some of the ablest communicators seem to go out of their way to disparage the beliefs they are supposed to represent.

All of this might lead us to despair, were it not that we serve the Lord of all hope and have been promised his Holy Spirit, the Chief Communicator, as our guide.

Evangelicals must wrestle with this problem until some answers appear. It is not necessary to accept an either-or; we can use the media effectively and yet present the eternal Gospel. If current experience shows that the “Hot Line” format and the paid religious commercial are the forms most acceptable to radio and TV at present, then we must concentrate more effort there. And conferences for laymen with communication skills are a must if we mean to tackle the job seriously. It is still not too late to hear and obey the challenge:

Give the winds a mighty voice—

Jesus saves!

—T. W. HARPUR, professor of New Testament, Wycliffe College, Toronto, Canada.

Churches Confront Urban Crises

At 3:13 A.M. (EDT) today the summer of 1968 begins. Longstanding predictions say it will be “long, hot”—euphemisms for riotous, bloody.

Racial discussion in the American and Southern Baptist Conventions took the spotlight the first week of June (see page 39), but the same topic was prominent in the councils of most Protestant groups. Black caucuses formed within many.

The National Council of Churches had already urged its churches to replace regular Sunday-school classes with study of the urban crisis. Some 200 black militants and community organizers joined churchmen at a closed meeting in Washington, D. C., to set up a “communications network” for the summer.

In New York, church and community agencies quietly formed an Urban Crisis Task Force to help Mayor Lindsay in case of riots. In riot-scarred Detroit, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese began a $1.5 million fund-raising drive, with most of it to go to urban ills. The church council in Portland, Oregon, decided to find at least 1,000 jobs for Negroes.

Here is a sampling of what the denominations are doing:

United Methodist Church—Last month the national division of the mission board allocated $680,000 for ecumenical, UMC, and community groups dealing with racial and poverty problems. $400,000 of the total wiped out a fund that had been put aside for such an “emergency.” The mission board has also set aside a $3 million fund for loans to ghetto enterprises, with the first $100,000 loan going to a Pittsburgh housing project.

Information packets keyed to the NCC’s urban-crisis program went out last month, but the Methodists have developed a more distinct educational effort. They are producing a nightly telephone talk show on racial issues over a network of two dozen radio stations. Host of “Night Call” is Del Shields, head of the Negro announcers’ association. The guest on the first program June 3 was Poor People’s campaigner Ralph Abernathy.

Episcopal Church—Twenty-seven grants to community organizations May 21 raised the total of gifts this year above $500,000. Projects must be efforts to develop power for the poor, rather than just services, and the money is given with no strings attached. In addition, the denomination has given $200,000 to a national community-organization group, with $500,000 more on its way. Earlier this year, $50,000 was set aside for emergency grants to local Episcopal efforts.

United Presbyterian—A new Council on Church and Race led by the Rev. Edler Hawkins will preside over race and poverty efforts, which got major attention at last month’s national assembly (see previous issue, page 39).

Presbyterian Church, U. S.—The Southern denomination’s education board, following the NCC suggestion, is urging all churches to replace regular Sunday-school curricula with an eight-week course whose materials include the Kerner Commission report.

American Lutheran Church—The educational drive led by new urban-crisis executive H. ManfordKnudsvig to “rout out racism” among church members was to climax with congregational meetings and sermons this month.

Christian Churches (Disciples)—The denomination is seeking to raise $2 million in the next two years to meet urban problems; the project will be directed by a new five-member steering committee. At its August convention, the Negro convention within the Disciples is expected to plead that most of this money be channeled through black congregations.

Seventh-day Adventists—A spring council meeting voted a $100,000 emergency fund for the denomination’s educational, welfare, and evangelistic efforts in the inner city this summer. Funds will go on a matching basis to local conferences.

MISCELLANY

The government of Israel has agreed to pay for damage to all Greek Orthodox, Armenian, and Roman Catholic church property in the 1948 and 1967 wars—whether Israel or Jordan did the damage. The amount of compensation will be fixed later by a panel of experts, Religious News Service reported. The representative of Vatican property rights in the Holy Land, the Franciscan Custody, will give the government two acres of land along the old city wall as part of a parks and beautification program.

Five American missionaries taken by the Viet Cong are reliably reported to be alive and in reasonably good health. Three of them have been in Viet Cong hands for six years. The other two were seized early this year.

The Church of God with headquarters in Cleveland, Tennessee, dedicated a new office building last month. The lobby of the four-story structure features a mural of Venetian mosaic tile portraying the descent of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost.

A new association of evangelical nationals and missionaries was formed in Japan at a meeting April 29 in Tokyo. Known as the Japan Evangelical Association, the group is said to embrace about 1,000 churches and pastors and more than 800 missionaries. Leaders hope for stepped-up cooperation aimed at church growth.

The largest “faith promise offering” in the history of Toronto’s Peoples Church, $341,504.84, climaxed the church’s fortieth annual world-missions conference. Park Street Church, Boston, which conducts a similar conference, reported $293,531.04 this year.

Seven hundred persons professed faith in Christ in three stadium rallies that concluded American evangelist John Haggai’s campaign in Djakarta, Indonesia. Final night attendance was 8,000.

A Franciscan custodian complained that an improvised service held by some 300 Pentecostal pilgrims in the Cenacle or Upper Room on Mount Zion “did not seem to be quite kosher.” The service, held on Pentecost Sunday, included songs and prayers in a number of languages. A protest was expected to be lodged with the government.

Two groups that have been seeking to influence the American ecclesiastical scene announced their dissolution last month. One was the Fellowship of Concern, an organization of liberal Southern Presbyterians begun in 1963. The other was the six-year-old National Committee of Christian Laymen, a conservative, interdenominational group with offices in Phoenix, Arizona.

The National Council of Churches is temporarily suspending several of its publications and replacing them with a weekly newspaper called Approach, which is to be devoted exclusively to information about the urban crisis. The consolidated publication will be put out jointly with the United Presbyterian Church in the U. S. A.

New York Mayor John Lindsay came under fire for recommending elimination of 47 of the 129 chaplains employed by the city. New York is the only major American city with paid fire, police, and sanitation chaplains. Their average salary is $5,000 a year.

The Upland School of Social Change at Crozer Theological Seminary is being renamed after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. King is a graduate of the seminary, an American Baptist institution in Chester, Pennsylvania.

A campaign is under way to raise $800,000 to endow a program in black-church studies at Colgate Rochester Divinity School.

Funeral services were held at Washington Cathedral for Helen Keller on June Miss Keller, 87, one of the world’s most admired women because of the way she overcame both blindness and deafness, was a Swedenborgian. Her ashes were interred in the columbarium of the Cathedral beside her friend and teacher, Mrs. Anne Sullivan Macy.

William H. Crook, 44, an ordained Southern Baptist minister, was named U. S. ambassador to Australia. He is a graduate of Baylor University and Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and also took graduate work in Edinburgh. He has been working in antipoverty and VISTA programs.

Deaths

DANIEL L. MARSH, 88, Methodist churchman who was a former president and chancelor of Boston University; in St. Petersburg, Florida.

WARNER SALLMAN, 76, artist whose Head of Christ painting was reproduced more than 100 million times; in Chicago.

VICTOR E. CORY, 74, who founded Scripture Press, independent evangelical publisher of church educational materials; in Wheaton, Illinois.

PERSONALIA

Dr. John C. Bennett says he will retire in 1970 from the presidency of Union Theological Seminary, New York. Bennett, who has headed the school since 1964, will be 68 in July of 1970.

Dr. Thomas J. J. Altizer, around whose death-of-God theology a storm raged, is leaving Emory University (Methodist) to become a professor of English literature at the University of New York at Stony Brook.

Actor-clergyman R. Gary Heikkila was elected president of the Finnish Congregational Mission Conference of America.

G. M. Kuitert is succeeding the noted European evangelical theologian G. C. Berkouwer at the Free University of Amsterdam. Berkouwer is going into semi-retirement.

Dr. Bernhard W. Anderson, former dean of the School of Theology at Drew University, will become professor of Old Testament theology at Princeton Theological Seminary. He is a Methodist clergyman. Princeton is also adding a Lutheran to its faculty: Dr. Karlfried Froehlich, a layman who has also taught at Drew.

Dr. Wendell G. Johnston has been named president of Detroit Bible College.

The Rev. Frederik Herman Kaan was appointed chief executive officer of the International Congregational Council.

Government officials in the nation’s capital called upon a member of the Roman Catholic hierarchy to mediate a labor dispute. He is the Very Rev. Msgr. George G. Higgins. The dispute centers on the refusal of Washington bus drivers to carry change money at night because of numerous holdups. One driver was recently shot to death.

Evangelist Jack Wyrtzen attracted a total attendance of more than 30,000 for six rallies in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Crusade sponsors reported 794 recorded decisions for Christ.

HenrykCiszek, 51, a Pennsylvania-born evangelist of the Churches of Christ, was indicted in a Warsaw court last month on charges of illegally organizing churches and spreading slander against the government. The slander accusations grew out of a tape recording about alleged discrimination against Christians. Ciszek was said to be planning to take the tape to North America.

Franklin Clark Fry Dead at 67

The Rev. Franklin Clark Fry had a busy June and July ahead of him. Early this month he was to receive his thirty-third and thirty-fourth honorary doctorates. Then on to Atlanta June 19–27 for the biennial meeting of the Lutheran Church in America, of which he was president. He would then spend most of next month as outgoing chairman of the Central Committee at the key assembly of the World Council of Churches.

On May 20, the 67-year-old churchman abruptly ended his speech to the Michigan Synod meeting, returned to New Rochelle, New York, and entered the hospital, where he was reported to be “gravely ill” of an unspecified ailment. A week and a half later, the LCA issued a statement in which Fry resigned as president of the denomination because “my own prospects are not sanguine.” He died June 6—of cancer.

Fry was America’s best-known Lutheran churchman. The church he headed is North America’s largest Lutheran body, with some 3,288,000 members.

He was born in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, the son and grandson of prominent Lutherans. He himself left a son who is a clergyman, the Rev. Franklin Drewes Fry, pastor of Christ Lutheran Church in York, Pennsylvania. Another son, Robert C., is a business developer in Pleasantville, New York.

By coincidence, Fry’s speech at the Michigan Synod was delivered in Trinity Lutheran Church in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where the Rev. Richard I. Preis, the husband of Fry’s daughter, Connie, is pastor.

Fry graduated from Hamilton College and the Lutheran seminary in Philadelphia. He was a pastor in Akron in 1944 when he was elected president of the United Lutheran Church. Fry continued as president when the ULC merged with three other bodies into the Lutheran Church in America in 1962. In his last major public appearance, Fry did one of the Scripture readings at the nationally televised Morehouse College service for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., as the representative of the WCC.

A lifelong Democrat, Fry had been a political liberal. He was known, however, to have been deeply disturbed over the revolutionary drift of both the World Council and the National Council of Churches. He skipped meetings of the NCC General Board in protest of leftist trends and wrote letters to NCC officials questioning their granting of free office space to Clergy and Laymen Concerned About Viet Nam.

Fry specified that a successor be chosen at this month’s convention to fill out the unexpired two years of his final term as president. The number-two man at LCA headquarters is Secretary Malvin Lundeen, who was president of the Swedish-background Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church, the second largest body to become part of the LCA. But Lundeen is now 66, and the convention might prefer a younger man. Since Fry was from the ULC, the convention might favor another former Augustana figure. A possible choice from the former ULC ranks is the Rev. Robert J. Marshall, president of the Illinois Synod and former Old Testament professor at the Lutheran seminary in Maywood, Illinois.

THE CHURCH FOR GUERRILLAS?

Missionaries must be free to support guerrilla movements because they are often “the only humanizing force in developing countries,” according to a United Presbyterian official.

The Rev. Ralph Chandler, secretary of international affairs for the denomination, was quoted by Religious News Service as saying that “naturally, as Christians we prefer non-violence, but violence is already part of the established order in these countries. It is the institutionalized violence of starvation and illiteracy inflicted on most of the population.”

Chandler, 34, formerly with Naval Intelligence and a foreign-service officer with the State Department, recently spent several days with guerrilla forces in Guatemala.

“We need a new kind of missionary, one who is enough aware of the institutionalized violence in these countries to want to become active in changing existing structures—by whatever means necessary. In some countries that means guerrilla uprisings,” he said.

SOLIDARITY DAY

Church people, answering a nationwide call, added their support to the Poor People’s Solidarity Day march scheduled for this week. The National Council of Churches urged representatives of religious groups to “illustrate by their physical presence in Washington support for the goals of the Poor People’s Campaign.” The plea came in response to march coordinator Bayard Rustin’s “Call to Americans of Good Will.”

Within a few days of the NCC call, church people around the country indicated their interest in participating. Mass mailings to church councils, denominations, and individuals elicited further response. The death of Senator Robert F. Kennedy added a new dimension to the concern, but legislation pending in Congress threatened to evict Resurrection City residents.

Participants were “limited to those who support the concepts of integration, democracy, and non-violence,” said Dr. Charles S. Spivey, director of the NCC’s social-justice department. Marchers were asked to supply their own transportation, food, and bedrolls. Church groups were to be permitted to carry identifying banners, though political groups were barred from displaying slogans.

NCC officials hoped for greater response than that for Selma or the 1963 March that brought 250,000 supporters to Washington. But Mr. Rustin, who also organized that march, predicted, “If we get 100,000 on June 19, it will be a howling success.” The civil-rights worker cited a potential drawback in addition to the short planning time: “In 1963 we were asking people to march for dignity. Now we are asking them to march for jobs that will cost the nation billions of dollars.”

This march is more serious than the one in 1963, said an NCC official who came to Washington for the campaign. He felt it might be the nation’s last chance for a creative, nonviolent solution to its problems.

Throughout the campaign the NCC maintained direct contact with Resurrection City. A shelter there housed an office and its staff members, volunteers from the Church of the Brethren who had committed themselves to go to jail if necessary.

EVANGELICAL ‘EXPOSURE’ ON RACE

True or false: the black race has had to serve the white race because of the Lord’s curse on Ham. White and black evangelicals met at the University of Chicago with black militants the last week in May to confront this question (answer: false) and others more immediate.

Roosevelt University political scientist Charles Hamilton, co-author with Stokely Carmichael of Black Power, said, “A society which has been color-conscious all its life to the detriment of blacks cannot simply become colorblind and expect the blacks to compete with an equal chance for success.” One black discussion leader said whites have to forget “the myth that Jesus Christ was white.”

The white participants—professors, students, businessmen, professionals, housewives—were cautioned not to “run out and do something.” Racial attitudes are more deeply rooted than even “aware” evangelicals realize; some were more interested in “the Negro problem” than in the problems of Negroes.

White participants suggested two action steps: admit that racism in America is a moral issue, and use white churches as places for the races to get together.

The conference of 134 Chicago area participants, called “Double Exposure on Race,” used effective audio-visual and group-involvement techniques. It was produced by an informal group called “Conversations on the City,” a dozen Christians, black and white, who are seeking ways to fulfill their urban responsibilities.

FRED PEARSON

COFFIN’S COUNSEL

Yale Chaplain William Sloane Coffin, Jr., sandwiched two baccalaureate sermons into his busy and well-publicized draft-subversion trial in Boston. One was an impromptu speech to thirty Wellesley College seniors in the courtroom corridor. Unable to travel to Wellesley, Coffin made use of a recess to speak to the girls, who traipsed in dressed in cap and gown.

For the other, Coffin travelled south to address Princeton Theological Seminary graduates on a Sunday afternoon. Coffin—accused of preaching moving sermons to induce young men to turn in or burn their draft cards—counseled the ministers-to-be non-controversially: “Be aflame with faith and free.”

Coffin, baby doctor Benjamin Spock, and three others are charged with conspiracy to counsel, aid, and abet young men to avoid military service. Coffin admitted goading the government into prosecuting him but denied any conspiracy. The landmark case is considered a test of the outer limits of anti-war protest.

A four-page publicity release on Coffin and Presiding Episcopal Bishop John E. Hines, Princeton Seminary’s commencement speaker, gave extensive background on Pilgrim descendent Coffin, once an agent for the Central Intelligence Agency, but nary a word about the trial. Seminary President James I. McCord introduced Coffin as the “voice of conscience” on race and Viet Nam, mentioned the trial, but said it would be “inappropriate” to comment while it’s in progress.

Coffin, handy with witticisms, evoked laughter when he quipped: “What do you do when the world, instead of being civilized, is being Los Angelized?1Coffin delivered his speech three days before Senator Robert F. Kennedy was shot in Los Angels. One answer is to become a Presbyterian minister.” He charged the class to “act as men of God” and said that the Church today is less pressed on the intellectual than on the ethical front. “People don’t find fault with Christ, but with Christians.” In his opinion, only a “small but passionate remnant” is able to “translate personal problems into social action.”

The war critic closed with a quotation from Spanish philosopher Miguel de Unamuno: “May God deny you peace but give you glory,” the same benediction he pronounced at the abbreviated courthouse baccalaureate.

RUSSELL CHANDLER

PRIEST GETS 6 YEARS

Josephite Father Philip Berrigan was sentenced to six years in federal prison last month for pouring blood on Baltimore draft files. Fellow defendant James L. Mengel, a United Church of Christ clergyman, was given a “technical term” pending a three-month study of the case.

A week before the sentence, Berrigan was arrested after he and eight companions seized more than 600 files at a suburban Baltimore draft office and burned them in a nearby parking lot with “homemade napalm.”

Baltimore’s Lawrence Cardinal She-han, who said he had kept silence to avoid prejudicing the ruling, said, “I cannot condone and do not condone the damaging of property or the intimidation of government employees.” He favored free speech and protest by clergymen short of property damage.

Adopting Babies: An Evangelical Medium

The two-year-old son of a New York family sang his favorite chorus for a visitor and quoted a verse he had learned in Sunday school. The scene would not be unusual except that this child was the first placed for adoption by Evangelical Family Service, Inc.

His story recurs throughout the files of the agency, itself little more than two years old. Evangelical Family Service was the dream of a group of Christian lay people who saw the need for a professional social-service agency with statewide operation and an evangelical commitment. Last year, New York State approved the agency for permanent status. Similar evangelical agencies operate in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Illinois, and California as arms of city rescue missions and other local evangelistic works.

EFS places children only in homes where both husband and wife indicate their personal Christian commitment. So far, the agency has been able to place all the children available to it and to find children for all the couples who qualify.

One couple, a little older than most adoptive parents, received a four-year-old girl who had never been to church. Before adoption proceedings were completed, the child was saying grace at family meals and had become an enthusiastic member of a Sunday-school class.

“The most satisfying experience of this pioneer venture,” says Miss Rachel Braker, who heads the agency’s social work, “has been to go into homes where little children freely sing and talk about their love for Jesus. We know they probably would never have learned about him if they had not been placed into Christian homes.”

Most of the babies placed by EFS are born to unwed mothers, many of whom came to EFS for aid. Often the girls are from evangelical environments and while they live in foster homes renew their Christian commitment. Others have made first-time decisions. Those who release their babies for adoption often are pleased to know that the child will have a Christian family.

In addition to serving unwed mothers and adoptive parents, EFS counsels couples, families, and individuals who wish professional help. Miss Braker does much of the counseling herself, though at times the volume of requests or type of need requires reinforcements.

She and the agency’s director, the Rev. L. J. Isch, Jr., look forward to establishing branches of the Syracuse office in New York City, Albany, and Buffalo and to setting up similar state-approved agencies across the country.

THE DURABLE MR. MANNING

Ernest C. Manning last month celebrated his twenty-fifth anniversary as Premier of Alberta, Canada. On week days, the 59-year-old politician governs his province and leads the Social Credit Party. On Sundays he dons the hat of evangelist for Canada’s “Back to the Bible Hour” radio broadcast.

Manning’s government career began when at age 26 he became the youngest cabinet minister in British parliamentary history. In 1935, with William (“Bible Bill”) Aberhart, his mentor from Calgary Prophetic Bible Institute and “Back to the Bible Hour” director, he founded the Social Credit Party. In its thirty-three-year history the party has never lost an election, though its national significance is limited.

CHANGE AT ‘CHRISTIAN CENTURY’

When the Rev. Dr. Alan Geyer’s first book came out five years ago, the Christian Century didn’t even review it. Now the 37-year-old social scientist has been named editor of the magazine.

Geyer’s book criticized such major Century crusades as its support of the Kellogg-Briand pact of 1929, which “outlawed” warfare, and its hands-off attitude toward the European war in the late 1930s. Geyer rejects the ecumenical weekly’s historic pacifism, favoring the “political realism” of Reinhold Niebuhr, who started his own magazine in 1941 to counteract the Century.

Geyer, currently the international-relations director for the United Church of Christ’s Council for Christian Social Action, takes his new post September 1. The title will be shared with the Rev. Kyle Haselden, Century editor since 1964, who spent four months in the hospital after a December brain operation and faces a long recuperation.

When he was in high school, Geyer worked part-time for the Newton, New Jersey, weekly Herald. He was a Phi Beta Kappa graduate in sociology at Ohio Wesleyan, then earned an S.T.B. and a Ph.D. in Christian ethics at Boston University. He has been pastor of inner-city Methodist parishes in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Newark, New Jersey, and spent five years as political-science chairman at Virginia’s Mary Baldwin College, affiliated with the Presbyterian Church in the U. S. He is married and has four children.

Geyer will serve as an international-relations advisor at next month’s assembly of the World Council of Churches. He read the manuscript of Paul Ramsey’s Who Speaks for the Church? before publication and shares Ramsey’s criticism that WCC social pronouncements are often “rather heedless of considerations of competence and technical issues.” But he thinks that things are improving and that Ramsey’s plea for more general ethical statements would make them “too irrelevant and abstract.”

In fact, Geyer’s book Piety and Politics urges establishment of a cadre of church experts in Washington to advise the government on foreign policy, and advocates more attention to the field in church and seminary curricula.

As an international expert in an era of domestic turmoil, Geyer is “disturbed” at the “neo-isolationism” of activists who forget that poverty exists outside the boundaries of the United States. He favors a “reordering of priorities to satisfy the minimum demands of black justice” through politics and economics. He had “no comment” on whether the Century would endorse a presidential candidate this year. Previous involvement in politics threatened the journal’s tax exemption in 1964.

Unlike Wayne Morse and others, Geyer was not against U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia at first, but he has come to oppose the war policy during the last three years. If the Paris talks break down, he said, “further initiative rests with the United States,” such as more cuts or an end to bombing.

In theology, Geyer said he has been influenced both by the liberalism of his Ph.D. mentor, Dr. Walter Muelder, and by the “Christian realism” of Niebuhr and John C. Bennett. He offered no opinion on the new morality, saying he has been immersed in foreign-policy discussion in recent years and is not up on ethical literature and discussion.

In a January Century article, Geyer spoke of “a dying Christianity.” What he meant, he explained last month, was the decline of churchianity, in which Protestantism was a majority religion. Thus he hopes for “a kind of death that precedes the resurrection of a new Church.”

Geyer thinks CHRISTIANITY TODAY “has helped to relieve the parochialism” of conservative Protestants and is “a welcome participant in the dialogue.” But he doesn’t like the “cult of personality” around Billy Graham and thinks he draws energies away from “the issues which matter the most to me—domestic justice and international order.” In a sociological word, he calls Graham’s evangelism “disfunctional.”

FIGHTING FUNDAMENTALISTS

Things are cooking again at Pillsbury College. When President B. Myron Ce-darholm recently demanded more power, trustees of the fundamentalist Minnesota school not only refused but also reversed his decisions in some student discipline cases referred to them by irate parents. Cedarholm quit, pleaded his case in a chapel and a faculty meeting, and fired off a letter to the constituency. Eight of the twenty-seven teachers resigned. Others asked the board for reconciliation, but it refused to listen. More resignations are expected.

“This is a board-controlled school,” insists board Chairman Richard Clear-waters, pastor of, Minneapolis Fourth Baptist Church and key figure in the 100-church independent Minnesota Baptist Convention, which operates Pillsbury.

During the school’s eleven-year history, the board has ridden out such storms as resignation of the entire faculty when President Monroe Parker was forced out three years ago. Some observers fear a split in ranks will affect payment of the school’s $1,500,000 debt. Cedarholm is trying to raise money to start a new college on the campus of a former Roman Catholic academy in Watertown, Wisconsin.

One thing is clear: The 700 troubled students do not run Pillsbury. Student government is banned, as is dissent. “If a student expresses himself contrary to administration opinion,” says Cedarholm, “we expel him. This way we have no demonstrations or riots.” Students inclined to question policy are told “to go off somewhere and pray.” Despite such strict rules, enrollment has doubled under Cedarholm.

“Maybe,” reflected one student, “the administration and board ought to go off somewhere and pray.”

EDWARD E. PLOWMAN

SANCTIFIED OR SALACIOUS?

Two prominent Protestant clergymen testified on opposite sides in a legal case involving the Swedish film I Am Curious—Yellow. A federal jury ruled it obscene after it was seized by U. S. customs.

The Rev. Howard Moody of the avant-garde Judson Memorial Church in Greenwich Village appeared as a witness for Grove Press, which had acquired the film for distribution in the United States. Dr. Dan Potter, executive director of the Protestant Council of the City of New York, appeared as a rebuttal witness for the prosecution.

Potter was asked if he found the movie “sanctified” in a religious perspective. “The most ridiculous thing I ever heard,” he replied.

Lawrence W. Schilling, an assistant U. S. attorney who was prosecutor, said the film was “a series of bizarre sexual episodes, designed to shock, and linked together by what can charitably be described as a soap opera.”

A GESTURE FOR UNITY

The Rev. Dr. William Fitch of Toronto, under “great pressure,” reversed his earlier decision not to accept the presidency of the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada.

Fitch had been elected to the post after delegates rejected a nominating-committee choice at the recent national meeting, which Fitch did not attend (see April 26 issue, page 44). In the ensuing ill will, Fitch, pastor of Knox Presbyterian Church, declined the office.

But he has changed his mind, he told the Toronto Star, because Canadian evangelicals need a strong, united voice which he hopes the EFC can provide. Fitch has one of the keenest minds among Canadian evangelicals and doesn’t hesitate to speak his mind on controversial issues.

The Kennedy Assassination: Religious Overtones

Ancient animosity with religious roots flared anew this month in the brutal assassination of one of America’s most admired citizens, Robert F. Kennedy. Aside from the sheer horror of the deed, there was particular significance in the identity of the assailant, the motive, and the timing.

It happened in the city named for the angels, and it vividly recalled the eleventh-century secret order of Muslims known as the Assassins (from hashishin, a taker of hashish). The Assassins terrorized eleventh-century Christian Crusaders and other enemies while under the influence of hashish, a narcotic derived from hemp.

The history is relevant because a suspect in Kennedy’s killing was identified as a pro-Communist Arab, Sirhan Bishara Sirhan, born in Jerusalem and apparently bent on revenge for the war in which his native Holy City passed from Jordanian to Jewish hands. The assassination occurred on the first anniversary of the 1967 Arab-Israeli war. Notes said to be Sirhan’s reportedly spoke of the “necessity” of slaying Kennedy by June 5, 1968. Kennedy, the junior U. S. Senator from New York, where most American Jews live, had expressed support of Israel, most recently in a nationally-televised debate with Senator Eugene J. McCarthy three days before the shooting.

Sirhan was brought up in a Greek Orthodox family and attended a Lutheran grade school in Jerusalem. He was brought to the United States shortly after the Suez crisis of 1956.

Kennedy died in a Los Angeles hospital named for the Good Samaritan, the rescuer described by Christ who took pity upon a victim of thieves on the road between Jerusalem and Jericho. Kennedy had aspired to be an American president—the second Roman Catholic to hold that office and at 42 the nation’s youngest chief executive. Instead, he suffered with his late brother, the first Roman Catholic president, the fate of an assassin’s bullet.

Like the accused assassin of President Kennedy, Sirhan, now 24, comes from a broken home. He lived in Pasadena with his mother, Mrs. Mary Sirhan, who has been employed as housekeeper in a nursery of Westminster Presbyterian Church. Mrs. Sirhan also attended the church a few times and lately had also visited a Seventh-day Adventist church. The Rev. Warren C. McClain of Westminster described her as “a deeply religious woman,” quiet and unobtrusive. He knew she and the family had been devotees of the Greek Orthodox faith when they lived in Jordan.

The First Baptist Church of Pasadena sponsored two of the Sirhan boys’ immigration to the United States. They joined the church and for a time attended with their mother and sister. During that time, the Rev. Charles R. Bell, Jr., was “closely identified” with the family, counseling them and helping one of the boys find a job. Bell was not well acquainted with Sirhan and knew of no religious affiliation for him.

Arab-Israeli tensions stem from the time of Abraham, whom both nationalities claim as a patriarch. Mohammed taught that Ishmael, the child born to Abraham and Hagar, was heir to God’s promise to make of Abraham “a great nation” (Gen. 12:2) with descendants “as the stars of heaven and the sand which is on the seashore” (Gen. 22:7), The Israelites, Mohammed claimed, had stolen the promise for their ancestor Isaac. The Koran records the Old Testament story of Isaac’s mother, Sarah, sending Hagar and her child into a desert. But it does not add that God had specifically promised the blessing to the son of Abraham and Sarah (Gen. 17:15, 16). Israel has been claiming the heritage as Jews move into Palestine, but in the process millions of Arabs have been left homeless.

News of the Kennedy shooting broke in on a number of important religious meetings. In Houston, 14,000 messengers to the Southern Baptist Convention stood in prayer for the stricken Senator. While he was still alive they sent a telegram to Mrs. Kennedy, expressing sympathy and hope for recovery.

In New York, a meeting of the National Council of Churches General Board opened on the morning Kennedy died. Baptist executive Edwin H. Tuller read from Exodus 20; Matthew 5, and Psalm 103, then prayed, “We lift unto thee the family of this man who has been a leader among us and has devoted himself to what he has felt best for our country.”

Churchmen from all over the world issued statements of compassion for the bereaved family and expression of concern for law and order. Evangelist Billy Graham said he learned of the tragedy when a friend called him at four in the morning. Graham said he then spent several hours in meditation and prayer.

“I don’t weep often,” the evangelist declared, “but today in this beautiful sunshine I wept … for the country that has declined so much in its morality and spirituality.” Graham said the Kennedy shooting “is symbolic of what is happening throughout the country and much of the world.” He voiced reluctance toward gun-control laws, however, despite many threats he has faced to his own life.

General Secretary Eugene Carson Blake of the World Council of Churches said the recurring assassinations demand “a new beginning of and a new commitment to civil justice and civil order.”

In Washington, President Johnson set aside Sunday, June 9, as a special day of prayer and national mourning. In Los Angeles, police who at first said the shooting appeared to be the work of a single individual subsequently announced they were looking for a possible woman accomplice.

CLEAVAGES IN A.B.C.

Race, the hydra-headed dominant theme of church agendas this year, unexpectedly posed a major crisis for the racially liberal American Baptist Convention at its annual meeting in Boston.

The “Black American Baptist Churchmen,” a newly formed group led by Seattle pastor Samuel McKinney and sparked by Virgil Woods, a radical firebrand from Boston, delivered a list of twelve “demands” to a preconvention session of the policy-pacing ABC General Council. Demands included: BABC clearance of ABC appointments and staff hiring; more scholarships for black students; 10 per cent of ABC investments for underwriting black business development; “complete overhaul” of the ABC monthly newspaper Crusader (editor Paul Allen was denounced for alleged anti-black “antagonism”); and a black ABC president. The BABC threatened to disrupt the convention by unleashing Boston militants “on standby alert” if the council did not “immediately affirm” the demands.

The council was granted twenty-four hours to hammer out a “response” of accessions, compromises, and referrals, which were termed “satisfactory” next day by the BABC. Major agreements: BABC “observer consultants” will assist nominating committees; a new post of associate general secretary will be created and will be filled by a black; ABC communications media will be reviewed “with a view to eradicating any lingering vestiges of racism in any of its forms”; ABC boards and agencies will be “urged” to hire blacks and to provide more funds for black self-help use. In addition, Mrs. A. A. Banks, Detroit teacher-author and ABC first vice-president, a Negro, will be in line for the presidency of the 1.5-million-member denomination next year.

Some delegates, uninformed except by newspaper accounts, charged the council with a “sell-out to power-bloc scare tactics.” The Rev. John Paul Pro, speaking for the ad hoc “American Baptists Concerned for Democratic Processes,” rebuked the council’s bypass of delegate approval. But ABC General Secretary Edwin H. Tuller insisted the council “had a right to do what it did; there were risks in acting but greater risks in not acting.”

(Tuller told CHRISTIANITY TODAY that most of the council’s moves were previously “in the works” and that the BABC pressure only helped speed their implementation, a promptness that saved the ABC from “serious disturbances.”

Southern Christian Leadership Conference chief Ralph D. Abernathy flew in from Resurrection City in Washington to address delegates and lend support to the BABC. Their cause was also backed by some two hundred dissident students led by Andover Newton seminarian Terry Smith, who complained that youth were excluded from participation in ABC decision-making. He asked that the ABC “reorder its priorities along the issues of war, race, and poverty.” Woods and Smith attempted unsuccessfully to have ABC presidential nominee Culbert G. Rutenber, Andover Newton Theological School professor, decline the nomination in favor of Dr. Thomas Kilgore of Los Angeles, who later also refused to participate in the Woods-Smith plan to create a black-versus-white floor confrontation.

Philadelphia Negro pastor and civil-rights leader Leon Sullivan urged creation of a million-dollar ABC “crisis fund” for blacks, a call later put forth in an amendment but voted down—along with proposed ABC endorsement of the Poor People’s Campaign—by maverick-minded delegates.

The race issue overshadowed other significant action. Continuing controversy over ABC evangelism tendencies flared into the open during council sessions. A long-awaited report of the “Special Study Committee on Evangelism” recommended that “constituents recognize our American Baptist pluralism of theology and methodology” and that the American Baptist Home Mission Societies “consider making structural changes which will demonstrate American Baptist concern for enlisting and conserving the individual person in a redemptive relationship with Jesus Christ and for building up the local church.” Former ABC President Carl Tiller said he “deplored” the ABHMS evangelism staff’s “seeming inability to recognize our pluralism,” and he censured the unliberal attitude at this point of ABC evangelism head Jitsuo Morikawa. Outgoing ABC president L. Doward McBain, a Phoenix pastor, reported that “the rank and file are further to the right than most of our leaders” and that “the evangelism problem demonstrates a sharp cleavage between the majority of the people and the emphasis of our national program.” ABHMS executive William H. Rhoades replied that committee findings were in accordance with ABHMS trends, that no ABHMS action was ever contrary to ABC policy, and that a gap between leadership and constituency was essential. The council asked the recently organized American Baptist Evangelism Team to report on future evangelism matters.

At Tuller’s recommendation, the council again turned down an invitation to join the Consultation on Church Union.

In other action, the ABC:

• Adopted a stand that abortion should be permitted upon “request” prior to the thirteenth week of pregnancy (a statement described by one of its supporters as “the most progressive” of any denomination);

• Urged churches to establish draft counsel centers, but referred a controversial eight-page resolution on Viet Nam to next year’s convention;

• Initiated merger talks with the Progressive National Baptist Convention;

• Acknowledged continued talks with the Church of the Brethren;

• Reported topping its $20 million world-mission campaign capital-funds goal by more than $2.2 million;

• Adopted a $13.3 million operating budget for 1969;

• Committed itself to implementation of the Kerner Report and to study of proposals for a guaranteed annual income.

EDWARD E. PLOWMAN

The Choices

Dr. W. A. Criswell, pastor of the 12,000-member First Baptist Church of Dallas, was elected president of the Southern Baptist Convention. The 58-year-old Criswell was chosen even while Robert F. Kennedy lay dying. “It broke my heart,” Criswell said. “This is a sad day.”

Criswell voiced support of a progressive statement on race relations and the urban crisis adopted by the convention’s 14,000 messengers. The statement was approved by secret ballot “by a clear majority.” The actual tally was not immediately announced. The statement had been drawn up by seventy top executives, editors, and board heads in the convention.

Dr. Culbert G. Rutenber, elected to a one-year term as president of the American Baptist Convention, is professor of philosophy and social ethics at Andover Newton Theological School. He previously taught at Eastern Baptist Theological Seminary.

MORE THAN A NOSTALGIC STROLL

The decision to permit women to enter the ministry; support for the rising tide of Scottish nationalism; the resolve to invite a Roman Catholic to next year’s assembly; a changed attitude toward homosexuality and the law; and a strongly worded protest to the government over the supply of arms for use against the Biafrans—these were among the topics that provoked the liveliest debates when the Church of Scotland General Assembly met last month in Edinburgh. For nine days at assembly time the Scottish flag flies over the ancient Palace of Holyroodhouse, the regalia is brought out, and Auld Scotia’s former glories are recalled.

This year, however, it involved more than a nostalgic stroll down memory lane, for after sweeping victories in local elections the nationalist party is for the first time a force in the land. A visitor to the assembly was British Premier Harold Wilson, who was welcomed and invited to speak, not as party politician but as leader of the government. Mr. Wilson made no bones about his rejection of the Scottish Nationalist Party (which three days earlier had won yet another significant seat in Edinburgh itself), warning against those who “preach a future based not even on the present divisions of nationalism but on still narrower, still more inward-looking, Nationalist concepts.”

Three days later, the assembly took up consideration of what Mr. Wilson had condemned. The premier can take no comfort from the outcome. Point after telling point came in a statesmanlike speech by the Rev. E. G. Balls, convener of the Church and Nation Committee: parliament at Westminster too cluttered with business to give adequate attention to Scottish affairs; the fallacy that what suits England suits her nothern neighbor, so that legislation is passed (Mr. Balls gave some examples) that for Scotland is “ill considered and inappropriate.” It was not simply a matter of economics. “The political center of power in London,” continued the convener, “inevitably attracts to itself other centers of power, industrial, financial, scientific and social, to the swelling of the tide of emigration from Scotland … and the mood is mounting that the time has come to call a halt.…”

His committee advocated, not complete separation from England—“in a shrinking, competitive and dangerous world our interests are and will remain too closely woven together; nor … would the people of Scotland wish for an independence that would weaken or impair in any way the role of Britain in the world”—but the setting up of a royal commission that would, within the framework of the United Kingdom, consider the degree and direction that a measure of self-government should take.

This substantially was what the assembly accepted, despite a flurry of counter motions and addenda.

The debate was responsible and cool-headed—a notable triumph of grace on the part of 1,340 commissioners crammed into an absurdly small space that knew nothing of air conditioning to discuss something on which Scots feel keenly. Many of them, moreover, had stayed the pace the previous evening when the assembly did not adjourn until 11:13.

On the first day, there had been the customary pomp and ceremony attendant on the entry and presence of the Lord High Commissioner (this year again Lord Reith represented the Queen). The stately procession heralding his appearance caught the Archbishop of Canterbury unawares, and the most prominent nonconformist visitor present was halted in mid-step before he had gained his seat in the throne gallery. In bringing a message from the Queen, Lord Reith assured the assembly of Her Majesty’s resolution “to maintain Presbyterian church government in Scotland.” Quite properly, Dr. Ramsey displayed solemn interest in this pronouncement.

When the question of women in the ministry came up, it was reported that forty-two presbyteries approved their admission, seventeen disapproved, two were equally divided, and two expressed no opinion. The Rev. A. M. Giles of Broughty Ferry was not satisfied, and pointed out that the figures on how individual presbytery members had voted would show that 1,817 had approved, 1,030 had disapproved. He asked that the matter be referred to Kirk sessions and congregations. In the ensuing debate, it was pointed out that no congregation would be compelled to call a woman as its minister.

If Mr. Giles was for delay, the Rev. Eric Alexander of Newmilns, a prominent Keswick speaker, was not: he asked the assembly to reject the scheme. This was not a matter of sentiment or expedience, he urged, but an issue of doctrine. While the Bible upheld an equality between men and women, it was an equality of status, not of function. Not the changing patterns of the times but the eternal authority of the Word of God must determine their view of the ministry. The assembly evidently had no yen for theological debate; both these speakers were clearly defeated on the vote, and the eligibility of women for ordination became a standing law of the Kirk.

Another thorny problem reappeared in discussion of the report of the Moral Welfare Committee when the convener touched on homosexuality. He said that many ministers, doctors, and others had told his committee that they were “profoundly distressed, even ashamed” at the Kirk’s attitude as the only major British church that disagreed with the Wolfenden Report on the subject (that homosexual acts between consenting adults in private ought not to be penalized by law). An elderly minister, supported by an elderly layman and abetted by some unguarded remarks from the flogging’s-too-good-for-them school, did less than justice to their own case, and the General Assembly, “whilst not condoning or approving homosexual acts,” urged more sympathetic understanding, regretted the comparative lack of psychiatric and medical treatment, commended homosexuals to ministers for “special pastoral concern … that they may know that the Gospel of Redemption through Jesus Christ is for all,” and asked the government to consider whether such acts by adults in private “should continue to be an offence under the Law of Scotland” (the English have already removed it from the statute book).

The government then came in for a clobbering over the supply of arms to Nigeria. In an astonishing display of unity on such a controversial theme, exmoderators and committee conveners joined with the Kirk’s missionaries present from Biafra in condemning the British decision to continue to permit the export of unknown quantities of arms to one side in the struggle.

The most effective speech came from Dr. R. R. Burnett, a medical missionary who had treated hundreds of wounded people in Biafra during a civil war in which arms were being used by the Nigerians not for defense “but for senseless butcher.”

The assembly also:

asked the Panel on Doctrine to consider the place of the Westminster Confession as the Kirk’s principal subordinate standard;

approved in principle an alteration in the law that, with certain safeguards, “would allow designated hospital authorities to remove vital organs from a dead body for therapeutic purposes” and instructed its committee to watch future developments, “particularly where these might affect human personality”;

approved the appointment for four years of Professor John McIntyre as principal of New College, Edinburgh.

In his closing address, the new moderator, Dr. J. B. Longmuir, said he had returned “a little depressed” from the World Council of Churches’ New Delhi meeting in 1961. “It seemed to be accepted as axiomatic by so many people,” he stated, “that all religions were valid, that each contained sufficient of the truth.…”

Dr. Longmuir made it very clear he did not believe this but rather agreed with Dr. James Denney’s words to his students: “Gentlemen, we must realize that any man who does not know God in Jesus Christ is in a very definite sense lost.” The moderator reminded the fathers and brethren of what was probably the 289th General Assembly since 1563 that “our commission is from God and it is to preach Christ, Christ crucified and Christ risen—when we do this we lose our fear, men listen, for this is what they have been waiting to hear, and the Church becomes militant again.”

J. D. DOUGLAS

C.B.A. MILESTONE

A former Harlem gang leader last month told 1,200 Conservative Baptists that “the most unreached community on the North American continent” is the Negro community. “An overwhelming number of black people,” the Rev. Tom Skinner said, consider Christianity “a white man’s religion.” He exhorted the Baptist leaders to “go back to your own communities and churches and fight racism.”

Delegates to the twenty-fifth annual meeting of the Conservative Baptist Association of America responded with resolutions “to seek to eliminate sinful prejudice and racial exclusiveness” and “to encourage our churches to include in their memberships believers from every racial, cultural, and economic group.”

The CBA and its allied home-and foreign-mission groups have no governing authority over participating churches. But many of the “messengers” from 1,400 congregations were pleased with the expression of a new attitude toward Negroes.

The Chicago meeting also celebrated the twenty-fifth anniversary of the association’s Foreign Mission Society. National leaders from Ivory Coast, Brazil, and India addressed the group, and thirty-seven new missionaries were commissioned.

In other actions the Baptists:

• Urged prayer for “an early cessation of hostilities” in Viet Nam and “complete military support of our armed forces as long as they are engaged in this struggle.”

• Deplored the increase of crime and violence and called for “such legislation as will strengthen the hands of those who are charged with maintaining law and order, while protecting the rights of all persons.”

• Installed Dr. Russell A. Shive of Portland, Oregon, as general director and re-elected Dr. Lester Thompson of Prescott, Arizona, as president.

ALLITERATIVE ISSUES

Merger, marriage, and mission confronted the Reformed Presbyterian Church, Evangelical Synod, at its meeting last month in Wilmington, Delaware. The denomination, formed when the Evangelical Presbyterian Church and the Reformed Presbyterian Church merged in 1965, is continuing union talks with the Orthodox Presbyterian Church. During the thirties, both churches left what is now the United Presbyterian Church because of theological liberalism in that denomination.

What has divided the RPCES and the OPC is a difference of attitude toward the Christian life. Traditionally, RP’s have maintained certain taboos while OP’s have allowed greater individual freedom. In committee meetings prior to the synod, both churches gave a little and called for “temperate and proper enjoyment of the things of this life.” The synod readily adopted the document, which also declared the division of the churches regrettable and unfortunate.

“We dare not oppose the unity of Christ’s true church,” said Dr. Edmund T. Clowney, an OP minister. “Our dissent from what we judge to be a false ecumenism demands a proportionate zeal for a true ecumenicity.” Clowney, who is president of Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia, asked why the denominations should remain separate since they both preach the same inspired Bible and endorse the same confession.

The union of races in marriage also concerned the 200 churchmen. In 1966, the RPCES had adopted a general statement on racial questions but had asked for further clarification on inter-racial marriage. The revision—accepted after long discussion—declared that Scripture admonishes believers only to marry believers and does not prohibit marriage across racial lines. But because of social difficulties, the statement warned, interracial marriage “should be approached with caution.”

The Church’s mission was the subject of Dr. Arthur F. Glasser’s evening address. “In our day,” said Glasser, director of the Overseas Missionary Fellowship, “the Church is abdicating its responsibility toward the nations.” He challenged his denomination to work for greater relevance and better methods of evangelism.

Laymen were elected to the denomination’s top posts. Retired Dupont executive Dr. Wesley G. Vannoy was elected moderator, and Dr. Marion D. Barnes, president of the denomination’s Covenant College in Tennessee, was elected vice-moderator.

BLACK LOBBY WINS

A three-week-old Black and White Action group advocating integrated action on urban problems cried “betrayal” after the Unitarian Universalist Association’s seventh annual General Assembly voted 836 to 327 to recognize a Black Affairs Council.

BAC, made up of six Negroes and three whites, grew out of a black Unitarian Universalist caucus held last winter, according to Religious News Service. The caucus was called by Hayward Henry, Jr., 25, a doctoral student in biochemistry now on leave from Boston University.

The association’s board of trustees endorsed BAC as the urban-affairs agency in the printed agenda that assembly delegates received before coming to the meeting in Cleveland.

Under pressure from those who felt that the 180,000-member denomination’s traditional principle of brotherhood and its racially integrated program were threatened, the trustees issued a new recommendation just before a vote on BAC recognition. The new effort was to have ghetto programs placed in the hands not only of BAC but also of BAWA, a group inspired by members of the integrated Community Church in New York City. The vote on BAC thwarted action on the alternative.

BAWA members met after the vote and elected officers. Later, they called a press conference to charge that “an injustice and a tragedy” had been committed by the delegates.

“We were outmaneuvered by a juggernaut of power committed to racially exclusive action,” said co-chairman Glover Barnes, a Negro professor at the University of Buffalo Medical School.

Henry did not indicate specific efforts that BAC would launch, but he noted interest in a “black lobby in Washington” that might use one-tenth of the association’s $2,500,000 annual budget.

Delegates turned down a trustee recommendation to close one of two theological schools, Meadville in Chicago or Starr King in Berkeley, California. They also urged Tufts University to continue its Crane Divinity School, at least for students in Christian education. Tufts has said it is closing the school.

The Engineers Of Merger

A Southern Presbyterian pastor heads the fourteen-member commission assigned the task of drafting a plan of union for nine denominations. He is the Rev. William A. Benfield, Jr., minister of the First Presbyterian Church in Charleston, West Virginia.

The plan of union is to be presented to the Consulation on Church Union by 1970, or perhaps earlier.

Named to the commission along with Benfield were the following:

African Methodist Episcopal—Bishop G. Wayman Blakeley, Philadelphia.

African Methodist Episcopal Zion—Professor John H. Satterwhite, Wesley Theological Seminary, Washington.

Christian Methodist Episcopal—Bishop E. T. Murchison, Birmingham, Alabama; and W. A. Soloman, Columbia, South Carolina.

Disciples of Christ—The Rev. George G. Beazley, Jr., Indianapolis; and Oliver Schroeder, Jr., Cleveland Heights, Ohio.

Episcopal—The Rev. Stephen F. Bayne, New York.

United Church of Christ—The Rev. James O. Gilliam, Mercer Island, Washington; and Mrs. Vernon W. Newbold, Denver.

United Presbyterian—Stated Clerk William P. Thompson, Philadelphia: and Mrs. Ralph Stair, Waukesha, Wisconsin.

United Methodist—Professor John Deschner, Perkins Theological School, Dallas; Bishop Paul Washburn, Dayton. Ohio; and Professor Paul Hardin, President, Wofford College, Spartanburg, South Carolina.

Book Briefs: June 21, 1968

Flying Saucers In The Bible?

The Bible and Flying Saucers, by Barry H. Downing (Lippincott, 1968, 221 pp., $3.95), is reviewed by Albert L. Hedrich, assistant director of research and development, Page Communications Engineers, Washington, D. C.

The credibility of the Bible and the authenticity of flying saucers are both subjects of controversy today. The Bible has successfully withstood attack for centuries and continues to be accepted as the authority for Christianity. During the past several years, flying saucers have been the subject of several books and many articles, both pro and some con; today there is little unanimity of opinion on their origin or even their existence. Therefore it seems strange indeed to find a defense of the Scriptures based on the existence of flying saucers.

The Bible and Flying Saucers could be judged worthless but harmless were it not for the distortions it contains and the credentials of the author. He holds a doctorate in theology from the University of Edinburgh.

Downing’s purpose seems to be to show that introducing the idea of flying saucers or unidentified flying objects (UFOs) makes certain events described in the Bible more “realistic” or believable. Some of the events to which he links UFOs are:

1. the pillar of cloud by day and the pillar of fire by night during the Exodus;

2. the parting of the Red Sea (here the UFO uses an “anti-gravity” beam);

3. the taking up of Elijah;

4. the bright cloud at the transfiguration of Christ;

5. the Spirit’s descending on Jesus at his baptism;

6. the ascension of Christ;

7. the bright light at the conversion of Paul.

One finds it hard to imagine how the author expected to accomplish his purpose, for he himself doubts the existence of flying saucers. He asks why no study like his has been made before and then answers: “One obvious reason is that the existence of flying saucers is highly suspect.” He estimates that the “degree of probability” which he “emotionally feels” about the existence of UFOs is 70 per cent.

Downing begins on a defensive note and maintains it throughout the book. He anticipates the reader’s reaction with his first words: “Before you become either extremely angry or even more extremely amused because someone is attempting to link together the Bible and flying saucers, consider the following.… “Then in the next paragraph he states: “I think, however, that it is no more ridiculous to talk about the relation between the Bible and flying saucers than it is to describe God’s funeral.” This is a rather weak justification for the subject, particularly when the author later goes to some pains to declare himself opposed to the “God is dead” concept. Indeed, I find it difficult to imagine a weaker argument for the reliability of the Scriptures. The effort expended in writing the book could certainly have been put to some better use.

Downing attempts to make the resurrection of Christ seem “realistic” by suggesting that men from some other world participated in it and that the associated earthquake was caused by a UFO’s “anti-G” beam. He seems to be saying that belief in this most vital event demands some physical explanation of it. We can agree with his disavowal of attempts to demythologize the Bible and to see its main value as literary; as the Apostle Paul asserts in the fifteenth chapter of First Corinthians, our faith rests on the Resurrection, and if it is myth, we are to be greatly pitied. But the attempt to counter the charge that the resurrection is myth with an argument based on the existence of flying saucers—an existence he himself admits is “highly suspect”—is not only ill advised but also dangerous. To associate the vital event that lies at the heart of our faith with something as controversial and, to many, improbable as a UFO is to diminish, rather than enhance, its credibility.

Space does not permit a complete account of the scientific distortions contained in the book. In the preface Downing states that he “is not an authority on Einstein or on heaven.…” This does not deter him, however, from devoting a chapter to the question, “Where is heaven?” He admits that his discussion “reads very much like science fiction” and “is not necessarily true”; but it may, he says, “help to set our minds free from the somewhat depressing agnosticism we now find ourselves in when we even being to entertain the idea that we might live eternally—as part of God’s plan.” He then proceeds, with complete abandon, to do violence to both Einstein and heaven with over twenty pages of pure speculation.

I have spent a number of years in the pursuit of truth, both in the Bible and in the study of God’s creation (science), and have found no substantive contradictions. When force is applied to bring science and the Bible into apparent agreement in areas where there is no valid connection, distortion of one or both must result. This only reinforces barriers between the Bible and those people tending toward naturalism. Those of us who have been working to break down these barriers through a rational approach to the subject can only hope that this book has a very limited circulation.

Handing Down The Bible

A Literary History of the Bible, from the Middle Ages to the Present Day, by Geddes MacGregor (Abingdon Press, 1968, 400 pp., $7.95), is reviewed by Bruce M. Metzger, professor of New Testament, Princeton Theological Seminary, and chairman, Committee on Translations, American Bible Society.

In his Literary History of the Bible Dr. Geddes MacGregor, distinguished professor of philosophy at the University of Southern California, weaves an instructive and fascinating account of the transmission of the Scriptures in Western Europe from about A.D. 500 down to our day. Rather than presenting merely a chronicle of the personalities of translators, the author fills his account with interesting and wide-ranging information on cultural, political, and theological currents that influenced the interpretation and use of the Scriptures.

About one-fourth of the volume deals with the Bible as it was interpreted in the Middle Ages, when there was no printed English Bible. Here MacGregor relates in a lucid and lively manner information about Hebrew scholarship, the Thomist hermeneutic, and vernacular manuscript Bibles. Each of the half-dozen great English Bibles of the sixteenth century has a chapter devoted to it, and the seventeenth-century King James Version receives detailed treatment in five chapters. One of the five is an interesting account of the typographical curiosities in subsequent printings of the KJV. For example, in 1643 the Westminster Assembly of Divines complained, in a report to Parliament, about editions that contained some atrocious printers’ errors, at Genesis 36:24, for example, “found her rulers” displaced the correct reading “found the mules”; at Ruth 4:13, instead of “the Lord gave her conception” there appeared “the Lord gave her corruption”; and at Luke 21:28, “your redemption” was printed “your condemnation.” In the following century the university presses of both Oxford and Cambridge, seeking to eliminate the shocking accumulation of errors, regularized the spelling and punctuation in what came to be regarded as standard editions.

Among modern English versions MacGregor naturally devotes considerable attention to the Revised Standard Version (1952) and also the New English Bible, of which only the New Testament has thus far been published (1961). It is strange that he makes much of Nelson’s Catholic edition of the RSV, which was issued in 1965 as a common version for Protestants and Roman Catholics but has sixty-seven alterations from RSV text, but says nothing of the Oxford Annotated Bible with the Apocrypha (1966), which, without one alteration in the RSV text, received Cardinal Cushing’s imprimatur and approval for Catholic usage.

Amid an almost encyclopedic coverage of his subject, MacGregor enlivens his pages with many a salty and forthright comment. Thus, of John Reynolds, at whose suggestion the King James Version was undertaken, he writes:

He was able to command the respect even of opposing camps.… Reynolds’ combination of noble character and great erudition, which elicited respect from his enemies, caused his friends to have a saying that it was hard to decide whether it was his scholarship or his piety that ought to command the greater admiration. Churchmen today do not often confront their friends with the necessity of making such a decision. Sometimes the decision has to be, rather, which is more forgivable, the lack of character or the deficiencies of learning.

Reformers’ Stand Still Valid

Principles of Biblical Interpretation in the Lutheran Confessions, by Ralph A. Bohlmann (Concordia, 1968, 144 pp., $4.95), is reviewed by J. A. O. Preus, president, Concordia Theological Seminary, Springfield, Illinois.

Ralph Bohlmann has done a great service for his own Lutheran church and for all confessionally minded theologians interested in the connection between the confessional statements of their churches and modern hermeneutical methods and problems. Bohlmann tests the hermeneutical principles that guided the authors of the Lutheran confession to see whether these principles of biblical interpretation are still valid; the same kind of testing can be done by other denominations with doctrinal statements coming out of the sixteenth century.

His conclusion is that the Reformers hermeneutical principles are still substantially correct, and that the confessions are therefore not merely historical oddities but valid doctrinal statements to which the Church of today can subscribe as confidently as did the Reformation church.

In Part I Bohlmann deals with the confessional view of Scripture, pointing out that in form the Scripture is the Word of God and that in function it is the norm and source of doctrine and life, with the purpose of pointing to Christ as Saviour. He continues by showing that the confessions assert the clarity and intelligibility of Scripture, and that the central message of Scripture is justification by faith in Christ, the Law, and the Gospel.

Then, in Part II, he actually gets down to the confessional principles of biblical interpretation. The Lutheran confessional writers assumed that we should deal with the Bible on the basis of grammar, derive the meaning of a passage by ordinary exegesis, and seek the intended sense of the author. Scripture interprets itself. At length and with great insight Bohlmann discusses the currently popular Law-Gospel dialectic as a touchstone of biblical interpretation; he concludes—quite correctly—that this single principle will not answer all questions or tell us how to understand all passages of Scripture.

This book is refreshing and helpful and will be of use far beyond the borders of Lutheranism.

A Glimpse Of Gladden

Washington Gladden: Prophet of the Social Gospel, by Jacob Henry Dorn (Ohio State University, 1967, 489 pp., $8), is reviewed by Lee M. Nash, associate professor of history, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff.

That Washington Gladden should have lain half a century in his grave before his first biography appeared is a measure of the historical neglect of American liberalism and the social gospel, movements he so prominently represented. Dorn’s book, based upon careful research in rich sources, is objective and readable and deserves space in every American church-history collection.

Most of Gladden’s fifty years of pastoral ministry were spent at the First Congregational Church in Columbus, Ohio, where in 1902 his influential flock included one-fourth of the Ohio State University faculty. He published more than forty books, most of them sermon collections, popularizations of current thought rather than original scholarship.

Profoundly influenced in early life by Horace Bushnell, Gladden saw the organizing focus of faith in a divine-human Christ, whose life and teachings provided a model for all and a standard by which the Bible, creeds, and social issues should be judged. He accepted theistic evolution and the moral-influence view of the Atonement and commended the higher criticism to laymen in Who Wrote the Bible? (1891). Yet his expressions that we are “being saved,” that truth is unified, that the Bible is not a book of science, and that “Protestant monasticism” is to be resisted, suggest talk by some neo-evangelicals in the 1960s. His piety was such that he could counsel seekers nightly at a Moody meeting in 1878, cooperate with J. Wilbur Chapman, and compose “O Master, Let Me Walk with Thee.” Lines commonly omitted from the hymnals hint that even a pious liberal excited controversy:

O Master, let me walk with Thee

Before the taunting Pharisee.…

Thus he might have described his bitter public quarrel with Billy Sunday during Sunday’s 1913 Columbus campaign, an incident that helped to begin the long era of modernist-vs.-fundamentalist warfare.

For decades Gladden devoted his Sunday-evening sermons to social questions. The creative gamut of his concerns from the 1860s included the promotion of recreation (in one article he playfully ridiculed President Blanchard of Wheaton for prohibiting croquet on campus), labor unions, help for the urban poor, honesty in city government (he served a model term on the Columbus city council), modest Negro civil rights (a rare stand among social gos-pelers), and opposition to church acceptance of “tainted money” from dishonest millionaires.

Dorn fails to credit the revivalist-reformers of the 1850s with contributing to Gladden’s early social concern, and identifies liberalism too closely with social Christianity before 1900. Not only were many evangelicals much interested in reform; many liberals espoused “gospel of wealth” social conservatism. But Gladden’s lifelong interest in social issues was always articulated in a liberal theological setting, providing important preparation for Rauschenbusch’s subtler, more socialistic rationales for the mature social-gospel movement after 1907.

Happily, today’s evangelicals are beginning to see again the social dimensions of the faith after over-reacting to the liberal takeover of the social gospel. Still, it is difficult enough in the average city to find a ministry with a sound evangelical message that also demonstrates an empathetic understanding of persons in material and social distress. This understanding Gladden had in eminent degree.

Reading For Perspective

CHRISTIANITY TODAY’S REVIEW EDITORS CALL ATTENTION TO THESE NEW TITLES:

Jesus—God and Man, by Wolfhart Pannenberg (Westminster, $10). The English translation of a scholarly work in Christology that contends for the historical resurrection of Christ and sheds light on Jesus’ deity and humanity.

The Biblical Doctrine of Heaven, by Wilbur M. Smith (Moody, $4.95). This significant work draws together scriptural teaching and scholarly judgments on many facets of a glorious but often neglected doctrine. Recommended.

Dying We Live, edited by Helmut Gollwitzer, Kathe Kuhn, Reinhold Schneider (Seabury, $2.75). Touching and inspiring letters and other writings of faith and courage by Germans who valiantly resisted Hitler and suffered triumphant martyrdom during World War II.

A Harvard Dean’S Final Book

Religion in a Technical Age, by Samuel H. Miller (Harvard, 1968, 146 pp., $4.95), is reviewed by William Edmund Bouslough, professor of biblical studies, Westmont College, Santa Barbara, California.

The late dean of the Harvard Divinity School here presents a selection of his addresses to a variety of audiences relating more or less to the need for American religion to “come of age,” that is, to come to grips with the technological culture in which it is immersed.

As an administrator in an institution that produces men for the American ministry, Dean Miller was particularly concerned with the ingredients that go into the product. Six of these twelve essays speak specifically about the preparation of the minister—the man and his schooling—and all of them speak about the minister’s message to modern man.

Miller defines religion as the sum total of the images, symbols, rites, and myths that give modern life meaning and purpose. He finds constant need for pushing “into the depth where man feels and feels deeply, where he is himself involved, where things mean something to him, and he either fights them or defends them.” He hungers to have the men who have been influenced by his school keep their vision open to “the acts of God in the secular circumstances of common history.”

I never heard Dr. Miller speak, but these messages suggest that he must have thrilled his audiences. Often his expressions are beautifully apt, his descriptions vivid and poetic. He alludes frequently to modern authors, Camus and Jaspers being two of his favorites.

His message is this: Our world is in a mess. There is more freedom and more fear; so much prosperity that it smothers us; “more power but the humble joys of the skillful hand go unfulfilled”; more free time but less true leisure; “more information but less wisdom; more speed but less direction”; more ambition but less satisfaction; and so on. The task of religion in this deficient world is to give us discernment, depth, and personal definition:

It is for religion to declare in unmistakable terms, both of insight and of compassion, the sin and the sublimity which constitute our nature as men. In the freedom we cannot escape, try as we will; we must take this world in all its disturbing newness and bewildering size and frightening power, and shape it until at last it manifests our meaning and reflects our purpose.

When Was The Spirit Given?

The Holy Spirit in the Acts of the Apostles, by J. H. E. Hull (World, 1968, 202 pp., $6), is reviewed by Howard M. Ervin, professor of Old Testament and assistant dean, Graduate School of Theology, Oral Roberts University, Tulsa, Oklahoma.

At a time when the charismatic renewal is commanding attention in the so-called historic churches, this volume by the professor of New Testament in the Northern Congregational College, Manchester, England, comes as an important contribution to the charismatic dialogue. Presented originally as an M.A. thesis at the University of Manchester, it is characterized by meticulous documentation, mature reflection, and logical argumentation.

I heartily agree with some of the author’s points, such as the integrity of Luke as a historian and the dominant evangelistic theme of the Acts. However, I have a few complaints, mainly on matters of method.

Hull’s reliance upon source criticism leaves many of his conclusions suspended in the dialectical tension inherent in the hermeneutics of this criticism. More than once, he resolves his evaluation of exegetical options solely by a reliance on subjective a prioris. An example is his claim that “in the synoptic Gospels … only six sayings about the Spirit are attributed to Jesus before His death.… Only three of these sayings have the ring of authenticity …” (italics mine). And in discussing the “Paraclete sayings of Jesus inserted from an independent source into the Farewell Discourse because John felt the occasion propitious,” the author faults John’s integrity: “One cannot but feel that even John was mistaken in his sense of appropriateness” (italics mine).

More serious is a fundamental philosophical mind-set that comes from an over-reliance on source-critical methodology. The limitations of critical judgment in appraising the content of Scripture must be recognized. In my opinion, the human mind can sit only in negative judgment upon Holy Writ. It cannot sit in positive judgment. It can say what cannot logically be included in Holy Scripture; but it cannot say what must be included. This is a limitation that Hull does not accept when he writes: “Had Jesus referred to the coming of the Paraclete that night [i.e., of the Lord’s Supper] as John alleges, His words would have so burned themselves into the memory of those who were present and, through them, into the tradition of the Church, that they could not have been omitted from any of the Gospels” (italics mine).

An example of the unsatisfactory results achieved by Hull’s hermeneutical approach is his suggested reconciliation of John’s “insufflation” of the Spirit on Easter Sunday with Luke’s “effusion” of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. Accepting C. H. Dodd’s view that “there was a moment in history when men received the Spirit as they had not received it before,” Hull concludes that “one must agree with John in ascribing that moment to Easter Sunday. One may still doubt, however, whether the disciples realized so early that they now possessed the Spirit. Historically, one may well believe, that realization came at Pentecost or thereabouts and it is this truth which is preserved for us by Luke.”

This is the author’s drastic reinterpretation of Luke’s description of the Pentecostal phenomena. He dismisses the empirical nature of these phenomena by remarking that “Luke’s greatest weakness was the importance he attached to objective reality. Nowhere is his interest in the outward and visible signs of the Spirit’s presence more clearly displayed than in his account of the baptism of Jesus … and his account of Pentecost.” But Luke is not alone in this preoccupation with objective reality. At the beginning of his first epistle, John states his intention to write of “that which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled, of the Word of life”; and Paul offers objective and empirical proofs of the resurrection of Christ in First Corinthians 15.

In characterizing “the importance he attached to objective reality” as “Luke’s greatest weakness,” Hull seems to have seriously prejudiced his own view of the integrity of Luke as a historian. Surely the factual reporting of “objective reality” is a primary responsibility, not a weakness, of the historian.

Despite the shortcomings of this book, I recommend it as an important contribution to the charismatic dialogue.

Confusing Musings?

WHO TRUSTS IN GOD, by Albert C. Outler (Oxford, 1968, 160 pp., $3.95), is reviewed by Cornelius Van Til, professor of apologetics, Westminster Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Do you think God is either dead or absent? If you do, says the author of this book, then you are perhaps less interested in the death of God than in the triumph of man—over God’s dead body, so to speak. Without a firm faith in God’s reality and sovereign grace, “you find that for you questions about Christology are finally meaningless.”

Then let us chat about your problem. I grant at once that the existence of God is not the real problem. The real “problem of God” is that of the “credibility” of his “active presence in this world.” And this is the question of providence. I would like to present to you “in ruminative fashion what I take to be the gist of traditional affirmations of God’s provident presence in creation and history.…”

Please do not fear that I will weary you with the claims of the “museum-guards of fossil-Christianity.” But though I am not a fundamentalist, “I still hold to the Anselmian formula (fides quaerens intellectium).” Have you ever “discovered any significant inquiry (quaestio) into matters that lie close to the human heart that does not begin with a faith-commitment”? Let us be open-minded and critical and then look at the evidence together.

You will agree, I trust, that man is “both a problem and a mystery to himself and to others.” Surely, too, you will allow me to say that man is free and in this sense supernatural. Man is a “mysterious reality that reaches out beyond the boundaries of time, space and the causal order.” But if you agree with me on this, then why should you not also agree when I add that “as spirit (self-hood) … man is in concourse with the Creator Spirit—and with his fellow human spirits.”

We must conclude, then, that “all finites … are set in a matrix that is encompassed by the Eternal Mystery.”

With this broad traditional view of God and his presence in the world we are safe from all molestation by fundamentalists. In our perspective, “nature … is not threatened ‘from beyond’ by episodic intervention or disorder.” “By the same token, however, nature is not fully autonomous and not at all explanatory.” You may think of nature “as a sort of ‘parenthesis,’ the full meaning of which is supplied ‘from beyond’ without negating the significance of what lies ‘inside.’ ”

This, in short, is Outler’s argument in this book of “musings on the meaning of providence.” What shall we say of it?

If the views of such men as Luther and Calvin may be said to have any connection with the traditional view of God’s presence in the world, then Outler’s does not. Our author might as well have left his God-is-dead protégé where he found him. Why take the trouble to convert a man committed to an overt expression of human autonomy to belief in a “god” who is but a more inward projection of the same human autonomy?

Such men as Hamilton, Van Buren, and Altizer ought not to feel challenged by Outler’s argument to forsake their position. They, and with them Outler, ought rather to be challenged with what is in fact the traditional position, the Reformation view of God’s presence in the world; for without this God it doesn’t even make sense to say that God does not exist. The “presence” of Outler’s god is identical with the “absence” of Altizer’s god; in both cases there is the attempt to repress the presence of the God of Paul and of Christ. The argument is doomed in advance.

Salt And Pepper

AFTER YOU’VE SAID I DO, by Dwight H. Small (Revell, 1968, 251 pp., $4.95), is reviewed by C. W. Brister, professor of pastoral ministry, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Fort Worth, Texas.

Dwight Small’s discussion of communication between husbands and wives grows out of his twenty-five years of counseling and lecturing on marriage. He now is pastor of Peninsula Covenant Church in Redwood City, California.

The “heart of marriage is its communication system,” he says, and he addresses couples of all ages who want to discover new ways of reaching each other in marriage. The seventeen pithy chapters—with pop titles like “Are You Listening—Really?,” “Buttoned Lips and Boxed-in Lives,” and “Don’t Forget Feedback!”—deal with ways of improving communication and dealing with difficulties when they arise.

A sermonic quality characterizes the initial discussion. Small tells us that the “deepest satisfactions of … life are found in marriage or not at all,” and that a couple’s communication is a learned process. Their greatest security, he says, is the “development of dialogue in depth,” and their “only ultimate failure is not doing what appears necessary when a breakdown comes.” No one would argue with that.

To his credit, Small tries to maintain reader interest with appealing topics, though they tend to promise more than they deliver. He examines countless semantic problems, citing the writings of specialists rather than clinical evidence from counseling. A considerable part of the material, in fact, is adapted from semanticists like Jurgen Ruesch, ethicists like Helmut Thielicke, sociologists like Talcott Parsons, and behavioral scientists like Carl Rogers and Erich Fromm. One chapter contains twenty-five documented quotations; elsewhere, Small quotes extensively without giving data on sources.

Readers who bog down in his disorderly logic may give up before reaching the practical help to be found in the book’s closing chapters. Although his argument is coherent, it is not always cohesive or convincing. One’s reading is retarded by a mishmash of other people’s ideas. The gross product here is an uneven, salt-and-pepper mixture of semantic principles, biblical ideals, psychological trivia, and sermonic advice.

Book Briefs

First Century Gnosticism, by G. Van Groningen (E. J. Brill, 1967, 209 pp., 24 guilders). An examination of Gnostic documents from the first and second centuries A.D. that reveals the spirit of scientism in existence then. Van Groningen claims that early Christian teachings basically opposed Gnostic thought and motifs and were not influenced by them (as Bultmann claims).

The Stranger in the Mirror, by James William Russell (Harper & Row, 1968, 215 pp., $4.95). A former minister writing under a pseudonym describes his psychological disturbance in which he dressed as a woman and committed grand theft and his later restoration to health and usefulness.

History of Dogma, by Bengt Hägglund, translated by Gene J. Lund (Concordia, 1968, 425 pp., $9.95). This English edition of a useful standard Swedish work on the development of Christian thought includes a brief section on the theology of nineteenth-century revivalism and a short but penetrating chapter on early twentieth-century theology and recent trends. The approach is more objective than that of Hamack, who sought to vindicate a presumably primitive Gospel from supposedly Hellenistic speculation, or of others who give to contemporary interpretations of Christianity a validity equal to or surpassing that of the scriptural revelation. Hägglund assumes that the substance of the Christian “rule of faith” was fixed from the outset by originally given truths of faith and by the content of Scripture, and that only its form is variantly expressed in many of the traditional verbal formulations. But he sketches the development of Christian thought as part of the realm of ideas without giving an obtrusive dogmatic critique.

My Flickering Torch, by E. Jane Mall (Concordia, 1968, 176 pp., $3.50). A Christian woman’s victorious story of her experience after her chaplain husband died and she was left with five adopted children.

Lutherans in Conceit, by Frederick K. Wentz (Augsburg, 1968, 221 pp., $5). Cooperative efforts by Lutherans, 1918–66.

The Conscience of the State in North America, by E. R. Norman (Cambridge, 1968, $6.50). In this comparative study of separation of church and state in Britain, the United States, and Canada, Norman contends that the three nations, contrary to popular belief, are similar in this relationship.

Just as I Am, by Eugenia Price (Lippincott, 1968, 184 pp., $3.95). Genie supplies her own spiritual interpretation for each line of the familiar Victorian hymn.

The Invitation of God, by Adolf Köberle, translated by Roy Barlag (Concordia, 1968. 238 pp., $5.95). Challenging sermons of biblical substance by a professor of theology at the University of Tübingen.

Nationalism and Christianity in the Philippines, by Richard L. Deats (Southern Methodist University, 1967, 207 pp., $5.95). Deats’ Study of the work of the Philippine United Church of Christ and Roman Catholic, independent, and Methodist churches points to the need for an indigenous church, which should prosper under a “healthy nationalism.”

The Spiritual Journey of Saint Paul, by Lucien Cerfaux, translated by John C. Guinness (Sheed and Ward, 1968, 236 pp., $5.50). A solid biblical work by a Catholic scholar that introduces one to the life, thought, and spirit of St. Paul; extracted from Cerfaux’s trilogy on Pauline theology.

Thinking Faith, by Fritz Buri (Fortress, 1968, 100 pp., $3.50). An existentialist theologian from Basel considers the way to a philosophical theology.

God Up There?, by David Cairns (West-minister, 1967, 111 pp., $2.95). A Scottish scholar assesses contemporary theologians’ views of God’s transcendence and favors Brunner’s thought that divine transcendence is disclosed both in historical revelation and in creation. Brief but astute.

Jesus and the Gospel Tradition, by C. K. Barrett (Fortress, 1968, 114 pp., $3.50). This post-Bultmannian professor claims Jesus was mistaken in many details (belief that his disciples would suffer with him, that the kingdom of God would come and world history would end immediately after his sufferings, that God had forsaken him) but was right in all that really mattered. The Son of God will be glad to know that Barrett doesn’t hold his mistakes against him!

Profession: Minister, by James D. Glasse (Abingdon, 1968, 174 pp., $3.75). An effort to solve the identity crisis of the parish clergy without an adequate exposition of the ministerial “calling.”

Sixty-one Worship Talks for Children, by Eldon Weisheit (Concordia, 1968, 134 pp., $3.50). A Lutheran pastor offers short and lively examples of how to communicate the Gospel to children.

The Holy Spirit in Five Worlds, by Wayne E. Oates (Association, 1968, 123 pp., $3.95). Explores the Holy Spirit’s role in the psychedelic, nonverbal, articulate, new-morality, and administrative realms.

Studies in the Four Gospels, by G. Campbell Morgan (Revell, 1968, 1,288 pp., $13.95). One-volume assemblage of work by the “Prince of Expositors” on Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.

Corporate Worship in the Reformed Tradition, by James Hastings Nichols (Westminster, 1968, 190 pp., $5). A historical survey of the formation and characteristics of Reformed worship by a Princeton Seminary church-history professor.

Paperbacks

Questions on the Christian Faith Answered from the Bible, by Derek Prime (Eerdmans, 1967, 128 pp., $1.45). Brings the teaching of the Bible to bear on basic questions of God and man. Ministers will find the topical Scripture references helpful in preparing sermons.

The Great Awakening in New England, by Edwin Scott Gaustad (Quadrangle, 1968, 173 pp., $2.25). Paperback edition of a superior account of the religious revival in the American colonies, 1740–42.

The Life of Christ Visualized, by Ray E. Baughman (Moody, 1968, 256 pp., $.95). A biblically sound, easy-to-use book for church groups studying the life of Christ.

Revelation, by Charles Caldwell Ryrie (Moody, 1968, 127 pp., $.95). A clear and concise futurist interpretation of the Bible’s last book that views the prophecies of chapters four through twenty-two as yet to be fulfilled.

Are You for Real?, by Larry Richards (Moody, 1968, 160 pp., $1.95). A lively book for teen-agers that stresses the need for Christian values.

Mandate for Mission, by Eugene L. Smith (Friendship, 1968, 157 pp., $1.75). The WCC’s executive secretary for the United States attempts to strike a balance between witness and service in church mission. He commends antipoverty and civil-rights efforts, criticizes “revival services.”

Social Ethics, edited by Gibson Winter (Harper & Row, 1968, 266 pp., $3.50). Readings from contemporary writers reflecting diverse approaches on issues in ethics and society.

The Theologian at Work, edited by A. Roy Eckhardt (Harper &Row, 1968, 253 pp., $3.50). An exposure to the variety of views held by recent thinkers in theology.

Contemporary Religious Thinkers, edited by John Macquarrie (Harper & Row, 1968, 285 pp., $3.50). Reprints of significant essays by scholars representing the great diversity of religious thought in the recent past.

The New Testament: An Introduction for the General Reader, by Oscar Cullmann (Westminster, 1968, 138 pp., $1.95). Dr. “Heilsgeschichte” introduces the general reader to the history of the New Testament text, its writings, the formation of the canon, and its theology. Worth buying and reading.

Best Church Plays, by Albert Johnson (Pilgrim Press, 1968, 180 pp., $3.95). A comprehensive bibliography of religious drama arranged by subject. Lists publisher, cast, set, theme, price. Valuable for church program directors.

Good News: A Christian Folk-Musical, compiled and arranged by Bob Oldenburg (Broadman, 1967, 95 pp., $2.95). A good try at working a gospel appeal into Moral Re-Armament’s successful “sing-out” format. Eighteen songs, mostly upbeat, in basic scoring for teen chorus, plus staging hints. Recording available for $3.98.

The Minister’s Workshop: A Full Life for the Elderly

He sits in his chair and just looks out into space. He sees what is happening in the room, and when someone speaks to him he answers. But the old spark of interest is gone. He confessed to me that he has difficulty in following my conversation. He loves Christ and the Church and spent half a century in the ministry, but now even this seems to be of only passing interest. Radio and television mean nothing to him. He seems very lonely.

This man, my father, is only eighty-six. (I say “only” because with each passing year thousands more people are living beyond that age.) When the pastor comes to call on him, how shall he deal with him? Every pastor faces this challenge of ministering to elderly people.

A few years ago the then president of the American Medical Association reportedly told an audience that within the lifespan of some of them, the average life expectancy for Americans could well reach 100. Then he went on to say that the problem is not so much keeping the body alive as it is keeping the mind functioning.

We who have the privilege of ministering to people need to take care that in this increasingly youth-oriented society we do not forget the aged. They have some very particular needs. First, they, like everyone else, need to be treated as individuals. They do not want to be lumped into a group and classified as “old people” or “the elderly.” I remember very vividly a time when my mother, then in her eighties, said with gusto, “I don’t want to move into that home and live with all those old people!”

Elaine Cumming and William E. Henry in Growing Old (Basic Books, 1961) speak of the “disengagement theory,” in which the process of aging is understood in terms of the degree of relationship to people and events that a person maintains. Withdrawal may be initiated by either the elderly person himself or by others. It may, the authors say, be accompanied by an increasing preoccupation with the self. They go on to point out that although one does not suddenly grow old, yet we tend to speak of youth, middle age, and old age as well-defined periods. Our approaches to pastoral counseling and care often follow the same pattern. A pastor must take into account the physical limitations of the person, of course, but his pastoral care should never merely confirm the situation; rather, he should help the patient reach up a little, never unrealistically high but just a little higher.

The recently retired, many very vigorous and still going full steam, need pastoral attention as they try to find a satisfying way of life. A great many women of retirement age will still be busy for many years in the work of keeping a home. But many men, and some women, need counseling and assistance to begin a new life—and that is just what it should be. Fortunate is the retired person who discovers that now he can devote himself to the most rewarding occupation—helping others.

A second need of elderly people is a sense of personal integrity. By “integrity” I mean an undivided, unbroken state, one of completeness. Aging does not necessarily limit the ability to feel joy and sorrow, to experience temptation or victory, to become interested and involved in people and projects. But too often society gives the impression that to grow old is to be put on the shelf. One certainly does not feel “complete” if he feels left out. He does not feel loved, no matter how comfortable the retirement home, if he longs to hear the laughter of children or to share the problems of a friend or loved one.

Someone has said that we begin life being carried and pushed and end life the same way. But most elderly people do not want to be carried and pushed. Physically, it may be a necessity, but not psychologically and spiritually. This is what I meant by saying that our pastoral care should foster personal integrity. Most pastors can recall being asked by a well-meaning son or daughter to speak to a parent and persuade him to do a particular thing. If the older person is not capable of making a decision, then it must be done for him. But if he is capable, then he has the right and the responsibility to make the decision himself.

A third great need is an emphasis on today, not tomorrow. Too often, pastors perform an obituary-type ministry for older persons. They feel it appropriate to talk much about heaven and little about this earth. Certainly the pastor must be greatly concerned for the salvation of elderly parishioners. But he must not stop at that.

When someone in his seventies asks, “What have I got to look forward to?,” chances are the minister has not met his need if he tells him only, “Heaven.” But if he says “today” and sets about helping him become engaged with today instead of in retreat from it, he has made today much more satisfying and the anticipation of heaven happier. The older a person becomes, the less future-oriented he is. In counseling and in pastoral care, the emphasis should be on the immediate. Elderly persons may also become overly wrapped up in the past. The pastor’s redemptive emphasis on the present will help in the acceptance of the full grace of God.

Most people, regardless of age, want to live. It is the responsibility of the pastoral counselor to help stimulate people to find meaning and purpose in whatever type of life situations they find themselves in. As long as life lasts, people need other motives for living besides the anticipation of heaven.

A final need of the aging is to know that someone is listening and cares. This need, present in all of us, increases with age. The older person wants very much to feel he is being heard and loved, rather than forgotten.

“Caring” involves much more than providing for physical needs. We may well ask, Do we really listen in our pastoral visitation? It is particularly easy to be impatient with elderly people; real listening takes time and concentration. But if the minister cannot give himself in this manner, he will leave lonely people feeling even more lonely. We should use every resource of pastoral care to show that we both hear and care.

Pastoral counseling is more than a one-to-one encounter for the purpose of meeting a particular problem. Success in dealing with critical incidents is largely dependent upon a successful continuing pattern of pastoral care.—KENNETH R. STROM, assistant to the director, Chaplain Service, Veterans Administration, Washington, D. C.

Discipline vs. Permissiveness

Recently i was the guest in a home where there are three children, ranging in age from six to eleven. These children are blessed with parents who devote a great deal of time to them, who are interested in all their friends and their school activities, and who take every possible occasion for short trips together, picnics, and other little things in which children delight. These children are secure, know they are loved, and are as happy as any I have ever seen.

But these devoted parents have also demanded and received obedience from their children. There is never any argument when they tell a child to do something, only the expectation that the command will be obeyed without question. Corporal punishment, though rare, is applied without hesitation if necessary. The parents recognize the truth found in the Book of Proverbs: “Folly is bound up in the heart of a child, but the rod of discipline drives it far from him” (22:15).

America is suffering from a generation of permissive parents who, by not requiring obedience from children, have produced teen-agers and young adults with little respect for either God or man. These undisciplined young people are proving themselves a disruptive force on many school campuses, and they are a source of embarrassment and great concern to the nation. Although they are only a small minority, they are jeopardizing the entire structure of society.

Unfortunately, permissiveness is not confined to the home; it has also infected the attitudes of some who have been given the authority and power to control lawlessness. The failure of police officials to enforce law strictly during the April riots in Washington, so that in numerous cases looting continued unhindered, is a case in point. Moreover, stern measures taken by police in Miami and Chicago brought words of severe condemnation upon those who insisted that law and order must be maintained.

In past generations the Christian home was the bulwark of the nation. There children were cherished, trained, and required to be obedient to parental authority. Have we drifted so far the other way that the future is hopeless? No, not if we are prepared to take a firm stand in training our children as they should be trained, rather than leaving them to their own devices.

In bringing up children according to God’s precepts there is no room for harshness; the Bible clearly warns against this attitude. After Paul has admonished children in Ephesians 6 (“Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right. ‘Honor your father and mother … that it may be well with you and that you may live long on the earth’ ”), he immediately speaks to parents: “And now a word to you parents. Don’t keep on scolding and nagging your children, making them angry and resentful. But bring them up with the loving discipline the Lord himself approves, with suggestions and godly advice” (v. 4, “Living Letters” translation).

How can parents determine how to train their children rightly? Children can be brought up “in the discipline and instruction of the Lord” only when parents recognize the Bible as the ultimate source of reference for life. And coupled with obedient faith in God’s clearly revealed truth parents must have a yearning love that softens discipline and illumines instruction, a love that the child can sense. This love is a gracious gift of the Holy Spirit.

Let no one say that the Ten Commandments are “no longer relevant” for child-rearing today. In them one finds God’s moral law, which speaks precisely to us and the problems we face in a world that grows steadily more pagan. Nor is there any irrelevance in the great Bible stories, which children need to know and ponder. The story of David and Goliath, for instance, carries a compelling message of faith in God.

Give the Bible its rightful place in your home. It is from Scripture that children will learn about good and evil, right and wrong, God and Satan, Christ and redemption, heaven and hell. There they will find moral and spiritual standards on which to base convictions that will last them through life.

The Bible is plain in its teaching about morality and immorality, about purity and impurity, about honesty and dishonesty. When biblical standards are given their rightful place in the training of children as well as in the behavior of parents, one may be sure that the foundation for a Christian home has been laid.

The permissive parent and his opposite, the harsh parent, can look forward to a day when their failures will rise up to smite them. Some time ago a young woman was murdered in sordid surroundings of her own choosing. Confronted with the tragedy, the grieving parents said in bewilderment, “We gave her everything she wanted”—not realizing that this itself might have been part of the cause of their sorrow.

Obviously there can be no Christian home without faith in God and in his Son. In this faith there must be evident a priority. God must come first in everything.

And because God comes first, prayer must be given its rightful place—unceasing, importunate prayer for the children and parents alike. Prayer is necessary for guidance in decision-making, not only for the seemingly “big” problems but also for the routine tasks out of which many lifelong practices and opinions proceed.

A home of stern discipline and required obedience should be a place of obvious love—love for God, of parents for each other, of parents for children, and of children for parents.

Children are amazingly astute. They can sense what parents want for them above all else. They also know whether parents are requiring of them moral and spiritual standards that they themselves do not practice. How greatly parents need the presence of the living Christ in their own lives! The greatest heritage any child can receive is the privilege of being raised in a godly home where Christ is supreme.

In a day when permissiveness has spread from careless homes into the life of our nation, even infesting the area of judicial procedures, it is the duty of every Christian to pray for a reversal of the trend. At the same time he should be setting an example of right living that can carry weight far beyond the confines of his home.

Permissiveness and disobedience breed unhappiness for all concerned, perhaps more for children and young people than we dream. Many disobedient and lawless acts are actually pleas for strict discipline.

Parental authority is a responsibility ordained by God, one for which he will give the necessary wisdom and strength. In its right exercise there is blessing for all concerned.

On the other hand, permissiveness breeds lawlessness, with tragic results for all concerned.

The wise will take heed to these words from the fifteenth chapter of First Samuel:

“Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice,

and to hearken than the fat of rams.

For rebellion is as the sin of divination,

and stubbornness is as iniquity and idolatry.”

Ideas

Where Is America Going?

The shooting of Senator Robert F. Kennedy, in a land that earlier witnessed the assassination of his brother, President John F. Kennedy, and then of the Negro crusader Dr. Martin Luther King, is further evidence that the American dream is turning into a nightmare. The stunning shock will serve the nation best if the initial disbelief yields a new awareness that the American temper is changing. “The world has gone mad,” remarked Senator Henry Jackson, when informed of the assault on Kennedy. But the grim fact that madness now stalks the streets from Washington to Los Angeles, in a land that long has been a symbol of hope around the world, compounds the tragedy. The worsening crime rate and widening violence in America can only add to the spirit of contemporary despair.

We extend Christian sympathy to the Kennedy family and urge the prayers of believers everywhere in their behalf.

Political assassination has an ancient if unpromising history, and the casualty risk for kings and politicians has often run high. But over against brute totalitarian powers, the contemporary free world prides itself upon rule by law and order, and by democratic processes.

The American trend signals three awesome elements:

1. A decline of confidence in reason and persuasion, and a reliance instead upon existential thrust and compulsion, is a conspicuous factor. Political demonstrations that are motivated by civil disobedience and that ignore available democratic processes in order to achieve coercive pressure and swift change have contributed to this mood. Many in the political arena today privately pray for law and order yet publicly identify themselves with those who seek rapid change by compulsion.

But what federal or state law in the United States, we ask, still seriously discriminates against a minority (particularly the Negro)? If perchance an exception remains to the rule of American equality, why cannot this be changed by existing democratic processes? All forums of social change congenial to democracy are fully available; all branches of government—legislative, executive, and judicial—are responsive to persuasion and the majority will. Minorities today even have a disproportionate access to a free press and all the mass media, and have the right of peaceful demonstration. Why does a vociferous minority forgo reason and persuasion and the democratic process to seek objectives by militancy and violence, by blatant disrespect for law, by disregard of majority will? The demand for instant millennium by political magic is not far removed from a demand for utopia by revolution.

2. The American academic arena is also in dire trouble. Not only do the campuses neglect the great concerns of the intellect that must stand at the center of any enduring civilization—such concerns as spirit, truth, conscience, and above all the reality of God—but they also increasingly reflect the spirit of the age rather than challenging and criticizing it. A decade ago many educators were saying, “The Church has had it”; today not a few observers are tempted to say, “The universities have had it.”

3. The deepest disappointment of all, however, is the institutional church. Many of its leaders have forfeited the mission of redemption for the game of politics. Spiritual vitalities in America are passing rapidly outside institutional Christianity into cell groups and lively efforts not grounded in ecumenical power-structures. But these movements still are unable to give visibility to spiritual concerns in national life, while agencies that could express the public significance of the will of God are largely preoccupied with partisan political particulars.

Some two hundred ecumenical churchmen now misuse ecclesiastical influence to support social revolution. For the ecumenical movement to escape the baneful influence of this cadre of revolutionary activists will take a decade—unless it becomes self-perpetuating. A half century ago, social activists confused Christianity with a social-gospel “democracy”; but instead of bringing in the Kingdom, their efforts gave rise to a massive muddle. Now the activists confuse Christianity with social revolution and create needless sympathy for Communist goals. Their abandonment of democratic processes is treacherous, and their abandonment of spiritual priorities is knavish. If God is “where the action is,” Hitler and Mao Tse-tung belong to the galaxy of saints.

The American atmosphere now contains more of the early-morning fog of revolution than we dream. The scores of urban riots this spring along with the shooting of Dr. King and Senator Kennedy should shatter our illusion that widespread revolution cannot happen here. It can and will happen if we allow dissension, vituperation, angry demonstrations, hate, and eventually violence to take the place of cooperation, tempered judgment, and orderly change. Without these, America will not long endure.

The Church of Jesus Christ must seize the opportunity to be the healing balm and agent of reconciliation in our troubled nation and world. Denominations must decisively repudiate leaders who promote church involvement in the violent revolutions of our day. All Christians must unitedly bring the message of the eternal Christ to all men in the midst of unrest. Students must be shown that only Christ, not utopian dreams for hedonistic pleasures, makes life joyful and purposeful. Affluent materialists must be helped to see that the Son of God alone can fill the void in their lives. Disadvantaged citizens must learn that Jesus Christ can bring stability to their lives and give them the power to persevere and change their circumstances. Unless the Church, through proclamation of law and love, exerts significant influence on these and other groups, America could soon lose its national identity. If we respond rightly to God’s gracious demands, the gathering clouds of revolution could become refreshing showers of divine blessing on our land.

FIASCO AT RESURRECTION CITY

Poor People’s campaigners at Resurrection City have turned an elm-shaded grassy park below the Lincoln Monument into fifteen acres of debris and scarred ground. In a similar way, the Ralph Abernathy-led crusaders are making a shambles of their campaign to boost the cause of low economic groups in America. Belligerent demands and irrational and illegal tactics are antagonizing rather than influencing government officials and the public, and contributing little to true racial harmony and economic progress. In the process, hundreds of unfortunate people, many of them recruited by high-pressure SCLC spokesmen, are being exposed to the health hazards and hardships of living in shanties that one day are cold and wet, another day hot and humid. For the good of the hundreds of poor people who have left their hometowns for shanties in Resurrection City, for the safety of Washington citizens, many of whom are now apprehensive about possible violence, and for the effective working of our system of government, we hope the marchers will leave the nation’s capital peacefully when their campaign permit expires this month. If they choose not to do so, we feel appropriate steps should be taken to prevent their continued encampment on federal property.

Passage of open-housing legislation by Congress prior to the establishment of Resurrection City was proof of the government’s desire to improve the status of disadvantaged citizens. But despite this constructive congressional action, Poor People’s leaders have relentlessly castigated government officials and staged unruly demonstrations. Their language has often taken the form of demands and threats. Invoking a biblical reference to totalitarian oppressors, and giving it a modern economic turn, Mr. Abernathy recently said, “We must plague the Pharaohs of this nation with plague after plague until they decide to do something about the plight of the poor people in this country.” Marchers have made nuisances of themselves by hounding the residences of House Ways and Means Chairman Wilbur Mills and Senator Robert Byrd (Dem.-W. Va.) without having made any attempt to obtain appointments with them. Demonstrations on Capitol Hill have resulted in arrests of noisy protestors and in the breaking of windows in the Supreme Court Building. Perhaps the most exasperating tactic occurred at the cafeteria of the Department of Agriculture when militants refused to pay their lunch bill of $292.66. SCLC leader Jesse Jackson asserted that the bill should be compared with what “the Government owes to the poor people of this nation” because of its failure to feed them. “Whoever owes the other,” he said, “will pay.” Payment of the bill the next day did not undo the ill will created by the incident.

To many Americans, the television-covered exhibitions staged by Poor People’s leaders have smacked too much of Madison Avenue techniques to generate great personal involvement or release profound feeling. The use of mules, largely outmoded even in the rural South, to lead the Poor People’s march at its outset was a theatrically ineffective ploy. Few appreciated or even laughed at their naming the noble beasts “Eastland” and “Stennis.” Abernathy’s occasional wearing of Levis while he lived in a comfortable modern motel—to the displeasure of the shanty-town inhabitants—failed to communicate the image of a destitute man. Even the placing of certain unfortunate people—the crippled, the aged, the raggedly clothed child—before television cameras has had little impact because the appearances were so obviously contrived.

Poor planning and internal friction have further contributed to the fiasco at Resurrection City. Housing frequently has been unavailable to meet marchers’ needs at their time of arrival. Intolerable living conditions have caused hundreds to leave prematurely. Mexican-American and Indian marchers have complained that the dominant Negro leadership has given them short shrift. Demonstrations have lacked coordination, and legislative objectives have been unrealistic, ambiguous, and sweeping. Campaign spokesmen have frequently contradicted each other. The shake-up and reassignment of SCLC leaders has shown plainly that the campaign was never adequately planned or staffed. To the Negro civil-rights movement mesmerized by the charismatic oratory of Martin Luther King, Jr., it is becoming increasingly clear that new leader Ralph Abernathy possesses neither the eloquence nor the administrative ability to attract and hold followers and mold a movement that will exert significant influence on the public at large.

To the extent that legitimate food or economic problems qualifying for government assistance exist, Poor People’s campaigners can render a distinct service by calling them to the attention of local, state, and federal officials. The American people are more than willing to help destitute people incapable of providing for their basic needs, and both voluntary and public agencies are alert to destitution and unemployment. They want to see jobs made available to all who can and will work. They desire nutritional diets and adequate housing for all citizens. But the government and the public will not and should not respond to the angry demands of pressure groups that assert that the world owes them a living. Campaigners who misrepresent the severity of the poverty problem, persist in implacable demands, and maintain a pugnacious stance do harm to the cause of the truly disadvantaged and sow disunity among people. Men of good will in protest groups must follow reasonable courses and not allow those who would destroy the American way of life to exploit a movement for their own ends. The government and citizenry also must not be deceived by men who use humane causes to advance nefarious objectives. Compassion must never be lost, but it also must never become blind to evil committed in its name.

The bellicose spirit and combative strategy of Resurrection City will not enable the really poor people to arise from their low position in society. This can occur only as communities—primarily the private sector—provide opportunities for the able-bodied to help themselves. The poor must work to better their living conditions. Bread may be secured temporarily by forceful means, but dignity is conferred only on the basis of merit. If everyone will seek to help his fellow man and will assume his own responsibilities—as God would have him do—economic progress will surely take place. Men must abandon their angry efforts to build resurrection cities and follow the spirit of the Resurrected Christ in devising humane legislation and practicing genuine brotherly love. If America chooses his way, not only the poor will be blessed but all men throughout the nation.

In preparation for the Fourth Assembly of the World Council of Churches at Uppsala, drafts for the sections have now been published. These are not official pronouncements; they are simply preparatory documents for discussion. But it is obviously hoped that they will be the basis of, or at least the guidelines for, the ultimate findings. Therefore, they call for provisional scrutiny and assessment.

A rather disquieting feature is the proportion of space allotted to the various aspects of ecumenical concern. While it is no doubt good that this should vary somewhat from council to council, questions of life and work easily predominate in these drafts, claiming at least two sections to one each for faith, order, and mission, and exercising a certain domination in all but the first section. Does this express a purely temporary reorientation or is it a reflection of the change of secretariat and of a wider penetration of the outlook of the U. S. National Council of Churches into the WCC? If the latter, the prospect is by no means promising.

Of the various sectional drafts, the first, on the Holy Spirit and the catholicity of the Church, is in many ways the best, and the second, on renewal in mission, is in many ways the worst. Since this second section seems to epitomize many of the most unsatisfactory features of the whole booklet, some more detailed comments on it may be of help and interest, partly with a view to its amendment, partly as a warning against its implications.

On the surface, much of the main presentation and the accompanying commentary seems to be healthily biblical. We read of God’s mission, of all things being made new, of the sighing of creation, of conversion and discipleship, of Scripture and the Spirit. A closer examination, however, shows that the statements do not stand up to exegetical analysis. Thus the sighing of creation is not related to the redemption of the body. The vague idea of a new humanity is only a distant echo of the new man referred to in the New Testament. The term “world” is tossed around with little sense of the various nuances and patent ambivalence of the biblical “cosmos.” Even in the fine passage on shalom, the dimension of salvation seems to have dropped out. The discussion of conversion in the commentary is good enough as far as it goes, but it is extremely generalized and also at times tendentious.

Apart from more detailed exegetical points, there are many other signs that the thought of the section is biblical in only a superficial sense. For instance, a call is made for dialogue. Listening to artists, scientists, and agnostics bears little relation, however, to the great dialogues of the Bible, the dialogues of God with Abel, Cain, and Job, the dialogues of our Lord with the Pharisees, the “Jews,” Nicodemus, and Pilate, the dialogues of the apostles Peter and Paul with the crowds at Pentecost or the jailer at Philippi. Similarly, there is much talk of mission, but in concrete terms little is said about mission as it was understood by Christ or enjoined on the disciples or fulfilled by the early Church. The brief section on conversion introduces briefly the eschatological note, but through the section as a whole this clear-cut biblical dimension is conspicuous only by its absence—unless we have here the situation feared somewhere by Barth, that everything is eschatology, and that there is therefore no eschatology!

The broader divergence from true biblical content carries with it a theology that by no stretch of the imagination could be called either biblical, orthodox, or evangelical. That is most apparent in the identification of the work of the Church with the movement of God in history. The undoubted truth that God providentially superintends all history is here given a new and sinister edge by the identification of God’s purpose with the historical process. The specific work of God is confused with the general. Penultimate things become ultimate. The fact that the true and eschatological work of God goes beyond history, and may often have to be achieved in spite of history, is nowhere expressed.

The draft does recognize, of course, that God is not to be confused with the historical process in Hegelian or Marxist fashion. But it fails to state clearly either that good goals in this world are provisional and temporary or that there is a definitive goal that entails, not just a renewal of this heaven and earth, but a new heaven and a new earth. The dangerous saying that a Christian is not to resist change but to see in it the hand of God is one that even the draft itself has to qualify at once. Was the change to National Socialist Germany to be supported rather than resisted by Christians? What about the judgments of God that may fall even on that which is relatively better? Who is to know with certainty the change that is really of God as compared with the revolution that, though overruled by God, is basically an outbreak of human greed or violence? What about the specific ministry of the Church that is to go in all the changes and chances of this mortal life? To see the Church or individual Christians as those who identify their mission with joining every advance-guard movement because a new divine order is always replacing the old may not be the real point of this section, but this is what it seems to amount to. To put it that way is to bring to light its theological and practical absurdity and its appalling exegetical and historical naïveté.

The talk about adopting the world’s agenda as the Church’s business is also theologically shallow. It misses the real point that God’s agenda is the Church’s business, and ought indeed to be the world’s business. It tacitly presupposes that the world and God are one and the same at this level. It overlooks the dimension of sin and fall that alienates the world from God and makes many of the items on the world’s agenda—on the agenda of actual governments and commercial concerns and individuals—the very things Christians must resist. In effect it is more often than not referring to what the Church thinks ought to be the priorities on the world’s agenda, whether the power structures of the world are prepared to deal with them or not. Even then, and even supposing that these judgments are correct, it fails to ask whether these things are the priorities, not merely on God’s agenda, but in his marching orders for the Church. The pleas (1) that the Church not raise its evangelistic item under other business and (2) that theological items not be substituted for the world’s items, merely bring to light the need of true theological work instead of procedure by slogans. In the circumstances, it is not surprising that the third plea is that the world’s self-understanding be taken seriously so we can begin with what is common on both sides. Such a statement is surely possible only where there is no biblical understanding of the world, no recognition that the world’s self-understanding is a misunderstanding.

A further point that emerges only too vividly in this draft is that, for all the brave words about the Bible as a signpost, a profound theological relativism lies at the heart of the presentation. Now, no one denies that certain things are indeed relative. One cannot preach to a university professor precisely as though he were a medieval serf. The forms of mission and church structure undoubtedly change. New jargons rise and fall in the theological world. Conversion may indeed have different orientations in different ages and situations. Great harm can be done by clinging to what is relative as though it were absolute. Perhaps this is where the readiness for change that is so underscored in the draft is indeed required. Perhaps this is where “yes” has to be said to the movement of history, though with the modest recognition that the new form may be less adequate for its age than the old one was for a previous age.

Nevertheless, if the relative is not to be absolutized, by the same token the absolute is not to be relativized. It is here that the draft seems to be on unstable ground. To be sure, there are hints of a better understanding. The possibility is at least considered in the commentary that the world’s agenda may be nonsense, though unfortunately this is only in parentheses and the point is not explored. On the other hand, the statements everywhere seem to assume that the forms of church life are relative only to the historical circumstances of a given age. Thus one reads that “missions” are “historically determined answers of the churches to the challenges of the past,” or that in true mission the forms must be “conditioned by challenges of one’s own age.” What is not perceived or brought to light is that such forms, while indeed relative from one standpoint, must also conform to an essential content that does not change. Thus missions were also answers of the churches to the revelation and command of God. The failure to develop this complementary aspect may be accidental. Or possibly it is rather naively taken for granted. The whole tenor of the draft suggests, however, that there is here a deeper and illegitimate relativizing that is implicitly applied to the content as well as the structure, to the absolute and unchanging element as well as the relative and changing, to the divinely given norm as well as the form. If this is not the intention of the draft, then a far more profound discussion is needed that will consider seriously the danger of secularization as well as that of sacralization. Anyone acquainted either with biblical theology or with the history of the Church knows that this delicate and complex issue, that of the Church’s being in the world but not of it, cannot safely be presented in terms of one aspect alone, whether it be the proper absolutizing of the absolute or the proper relativizing of the relative.

This leads on to a final point. Perhaps in self-defense, the Uppsala drafts claim to be accepting what past assemblies have said. In this sense, are not the drafts themselves relativized? Are they not additional statements that imply all that has gone before? Are they not new developments that possibly overstate a particular point when taken in isolation but that fall into place when set against the wider background?

Up to a point there is merit in this argument. Nevertheless, three considerations suggest that caution is needed here. The first is that the material in the drafts is said to focus on the “precise issues” of the day or “the relatively few subjects which are most relevant to the contemporary situation.” The rest no longer has any such urgency, in the view of the drafters. Secondly, what is tacitly assumed may easily be modified in a drastic way by additions that are explicitly made. This is particularly easy when the earlier statements are no longer presented for inspection. Finally, if a principle of relativism be adopted, then past statements can always be applauded as relevant for their own age; but this means very little, since only those things that present writers still believe, or still think to be pertinent to their own time, are really accorded any genuine recognition. The endorsement of the past may thus be quite sincere. It may also be meaningless.

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