Ideas

The Triumph of Christ’s Gospel

No generation of students has faced a world so divided and disturbed as ours, and no generation in modern times has been so poorly equipped with the enduring spiritual realities. The majority of students take it for granted that the interest Christisanity holds for people is primarily a matter of history—that is, of medieval history, or at best, of the past generation. For their pious grandparents it was indeed still a living concern, and perhaps even for a rather surprising number of parents. But in the present influential realms of academic learning, many students seem to assume, it is now established that Darwin and Christ, or Dewey and Christ, or Marx and Christ, belong to two wholly distinct worlds whose interests never bisect. And it is Jesus of Nazareth who is escorted to the world of feeling and fancy, while the real world of the hard realities of this life is associated with the names of contemporary idols.

Whoever thinks in such terms, however, is simply uninformed. For Christianity has as much to say and to offer this generation, and particularly its centers of thought, as any. In fact, the dire need of Christian perspective was never more pronounced than now.

Christianity has indeed lost its hold on large segments of the modern mind, and the shaping philosophy of most of the American universities and colleges doubtless sags far below any respectable Christian orientation. The need for a great Christian university remains, in fact, one of the indispensable priorities of this century, if an adequate evangelical leadership is to be rallied in the world of learning. The influence of the intellectuals upon any generation is always a decisive force in the charting of cultural compass-bearings and the direction of institutional life. What the DEW line is to the military and civil defenses of the nation—by supplying a radar shield which, when detecting hostile missiles, gives warning that permits their interception and the consequent survival of the masses—the university or college classroom is in its critical interception of controlling ideas which would elevate or enervate the cultural outlook.

Yet not because of irrelevance or because of incoherence has Christianity lost its hold upon much of the world of learning. Relevance and reason are wholly on the side of the Christian religion, and only the irreligion of the world of learning conceals these facts.

Why are the claims of Christ and the Bible bypassed in the centers of worldly wisdom?

1. Because modern man (professor and student included) seeks first the satisfaction of desires other than life’s spiritual needs. His recognized appetites are primarily this-worldly: economic, political, scientific. He stumbles at the Nazarene’s exhortation, “Seek ye first the kingdom of God … and all … shall be added” (Matt. 6:33).

To consider it a defeat for the Gospel that modern man’s basic attitudes have become so materialistic that Madison Avenue shapes his gods, or so sensate that the mass media best reflect where his heart and treasure lie, is a failure to understand the biblical truth that the loss is not the Gospel’s but man’s. How does one “get through” to the conscience and spirit of those whose souls are given over to the things of this world? Surely not by any compromise of Christ’s “seek ye first …,” but rather by its reassertion to those who think of kingdom or empire only in terms of men and things.

2. The young intellectuals, or the so-called “angry young men,” delude and then comfort themselves with the notion that Christianity is academically discredited. The claims of Christ are more disowned than disproved, however. Even in the great centers of learning the truth of the Gospel is not without its confident witnesses today. There are professors of stature in the Big Ten universities, and in the Ivy League, as well as in the broad stream of American universities and colleges, who own Christ gladly and openly as Saviour and Lord. There are probably even more such disciples in the science departments than in the humanities, incredible as that may seem to the propagandists for naturalism. And in respect to the campuses generally, students tend to run ahead of their professors—and especially of college administrators—in the matter of interest in spiritual things. During Billy Graham’s Madison Square Garden Crusade, talk of a Christian university in the New York area was actually precipitated by the fact that of the thousands of university and college students who made the first commitment of their lives to Christ, many expressed an interest in higher education that would supply a cohesive and coherent integration of all the disciplines of learning. The virtual polytheism implicit in their college courses (each professor spawning his own god-concept) and the spiritual indifference pervading the campus often have a dulling and chilling effect upon the spiritual interest of all except those students whose religious vitality is drawn from outside the campus atmosphere. The religious emphasis week attracts a pathetic response. But those who on this account consider Christianity a fossil-religion in need of replacement simply misinfer its mortality from their own ignorance of Christianity’s vitality.

3. The real reason Christ is bypassed by many intellectuals today is simple: Christianity demands more in the way of spiritual decision than the self-seeking modern man welcomes.

It demands, first, that a man humble himself by acknowledging that he is a sinner. This requirement is as hard for a university professor to meet as it is for some ministerial candidates!

It requires, second, that a man call upon God for grace and new life. “Ye must be born again,” said Jesus Christ. “Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit he cannot see the kingdom of God.” A generation interested mainly in controlling or changing its external environment does not easily accommodate itself to Christ’s demand for a new race of men—which is, in fact, a demand for individual rebirth.

It insists, third, that a man acknowledge his dependence upon the supernatural God by affirming the need of divine revelation and redemption. To concede one’s own creatureliness, and to glorify the Creator; to concede one’s own sinfulness, and to worship the Redeemer; to surrender one’s own willfulness, and to serve the Spirit of God—all this is part of a Christian view of life.

Much, indeed—very much, indeed—turns on the response of the university and college world to the claim of the Gospel. The philosopher Rudolf Eucken said prophetically after World War I, when the naturalistic attacks upon Christianity by the higher critics were greeted in the German universities by resounding applause, that the Christian religion would soon be doomed as a force in the life of that nation unless the university mind were gripped anew by the power of the Christian outlook. No modern prophet could have warned more surely of the rise of Hitler and Nazi Socialism in the land of Luther and of the Reformation.

Yet one fact remains. While much depends upon the fortunes of Christianity among the intellectuals, not everything does. The fortunes of the Gospel are not ultimately suspended upon the consent of the intelligentsia, true as it is that Christianity claims to be the one true religion and much as it needs to be emphasized that all the supposed reasons for rejecting Christ are but rationalizations. The Apostle Paul, himself an alumnus of the university in ancient Tarsus, reminded the Christians in Corinth, that old center of Greek learning, that by any worldly standard few among Christ’s converts in that place were men of wisdom. In the well-worn words of the King James Version, “For ye see your calling, brethren, … not many wise men after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble …; but God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise … that no flesh should glory in his presence” (1 Cor. 1:26–29). Paul had himself gone to Athens and pressed the claims of Christ upon the Epicurean and Stoic philosophers of his day, and their world-wisdom marked them indeed as unlikely converts to the truth. But the progress of the Gospel was not subverted because these intellectuals by and large went whoring after false gods. For, as W. E. H. Lecky (himself by no means a partisan of Christian supernaturalism) notes in his A History of European Morals, “the greatest religious change in the history of mankind” took place “under the eyes of a brilliant galaxy of philosophers and historians” who disregarded “as simply contemptible an agency which all men must now admit to have been … the most powerful moral lever that has ever been applied to the affairs of men.” So it was in that first century, and, if there should be a resurgence of the Christian religion in our time, so it may again be in the twentieth.

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American Education: Facts Speak For Themselves

A Saturday Evening Post article on “Uncle Sam’s Rejects” (Dec. 8 issue) by Lt. Col. George Walton, USA, forms an ominous signpost which points accusingly at the American educational system. His facts are geared to shatter widespread complacency. In World Wars I and II, he observes, the combined rate for military rejections of all kinds was about 30 per cent. Last June more than 9,000 of 16,000 men were rejected, an all-time high rejection rate of 58 per cent. And in the past year one of every four young Americans examined for Selective Service was rejected for failing the written Armed Forces Qualification Test, not a difficult one. A study of one group of rejectees showed that more than half of those failing the written test had finished the eighth grade, and some 6.5 per cent were high-school graduates. Even college students have failed, indicating that they are too unlettered to understand even the simplest Army training manuals. Comments Col. Walton: “It is shocking and sickening that this country does not demand a better educational system than the one which has produced more than 1,000,000 illiterates of draft age in the past decade.”

A mere chronicling of the facts should be sufficient to produce the necessary editorial opinion in the minds of our readers. For the facts themselves sound a trumpet call for the nation to wake from slumber and do something about an educational system which fails to teach so many students to read adequately and to do simple arithmetic. A gigantic preserver of illiteracy is the least of our needs.

Lines Of A Poet And The Way Of A Pilgrim

Robert Frost is gone. His passing at the age of 88 was the occasion of high praise indeed for both the man and his works. The four-time Pulitzer Prize winner has been hailed America’s uncrowned poet laureate, her finest poet since Whitman.

To review the New Englander’s poetry is to sense his love of nature, his feeling for the common—yet uncommon—things of creation which reserve their great stores of delight for those with sensitivities attuned to behold them and joy in them. He would muse upon the sound of trees, the whisper of his scythe, then explore the crater of an ant. There were rabbits in hiding, yelping dogs, and always woods and leaves. He sought to get “some color and music out of life.” And yet this was coupled in his realism with a melancholic recognition of the bleak. In middle life he wrote:

Now no joy but lacks salt

That is not dashed with pain

And weariness and fault.

In one of his poems Frost pointed to the futility of a life “with nothing done to evil, no important triumph won.…” In his orderly marshaling of the language, the poet dealt vigorous blows to evil as represented by the forces of disorder and chaos.

Frost’s most famous lyric was “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening.” Its last lines carry a hint of death.

The woods are lovely, dark and deep,

But I have promises to keep,

And miles to go before I sleep,

And miles to go before I sleep.

These lines have been applied to many situations. Surely they are richly suggestive for the Christian pilgrim who will one day account for his stewardship of time and talents. One thinks of the Apostle Paul pressing toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus. He is seen climbing through the gloomy defiles of the Cilician Gates, pressing westward to Ephesus and Athens across the broad plains of Asia Minor, planting churches as he went.

Our Lord spoke of a broad way and a narrow way. To adapt Robert Frost, Paul could say—to history’s great benefit:

I took the one less traveled by,

And that has made all the difference.

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Tax ‘Reform’ Would Lessen Deductions For Church Giving

According to government spenders it will help to balance the overall economy if, in order to achieve long overdue tax reductions, the national deficit is increased by $11.9 billion in 1964. Most citizens are probably too practical to see how such arithmetical gymnastics can be reconciled with the elemental facts of economics. Or has the phantom of paradox invaded the fiscal realm no less than the theological, so that the illogical becomes promotive of strange faith? The widespread conviction that taxes are oppressive doubtless calls for reductions. But if achieving such reductions necessitates deploring the champions of a balanced budget as victims of a puritanical morality, then it is high time to champion puritan virtue above political expedience.

At one point at least President Kennedy’s proposed reforms will work a hardship on religious interests. Deductions for contributions to church and charitable activities up to a 30 per cent maximum will be allowed only over and above a non-deductible 5 per cent base, just as the first 3 per cent is now disallowed for medical expenses, plus a 1 per cent floor for drugs. This seems to us a highly dubious way to promote “reform.” If the Kennedy administration wants to plug tax loopholes, it should look into the matter of (1) large church properties held for investment purposes and not used in the specific mission of the church, and (2) corporations engaged in competitive business enterprises but tax-exempt simply because they produce profits for religious institutions. Such situations are more obviously in need of reform.

It is true, of course, that Christians support their churches as a matter of religious principle, and not for the sake of tax deductions. But the federal government has been penalizing voluntarism in the field of benevolence long enough. More and more the government has taken over welfare activities once carried by the churches, and the rising taxes required to support such federal programs tend to decrease people’s capacity for philanthropic giving. The proposed tax revision would be a further blow; not only would it continue to commandeer burgeoning taxes for expanding programs of government welfare, but it would disallow basic deductions for gifts to religious causes.

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Evangelical Tensions And Liberal Objectives

Ours may be the first generation in which unbelief at times tries to parade an evangelical banner. The term “evangelical,” in fact, has undergone some interesting changes. A generation ago liberals held nothing but contempt for the word and yielded it without protest to newly founded organizations like the National Association of Evangelicals. In more recent years some ecumenical spokesmen have cherished the evangelical ingredient for a breath of fresh theological rejuvenation. And no less a giant than Karl Barth has captioned his private brand of neoorthodoxy Evangelical Theology: An Introduction.

Now that ecumenical inclusivists are specifically trying to penetrate evangelical effort, the ensuing theological ferment that now and then plagues certain conservative institutions should come as no surprise. Supportive constituencies, of course, have one sure way of dealing with institutions whose perpetuation of cherished convictions is in doubt: withholding their gifts. At the same time, the importance of academic freedom needs to be protected.

This need not, however, contribute to academic delinquency. Any institution worth its mettle has come into being because of fundamental convictions which those on the payroll have no license to destroy. In some religious institutions, regrettably, much criticism is leveled against administrative authority in the name of academic freedom by staff members who simultaneously cloak their revolt against the scriptural authority long espoused by their institutions.

For evangelical Christianity the high view of Christ, the high view of Scripture, and the high view of the Church stand or fall together. Only sad confusion and delusion enable anyone to profess that he serves Christ or Church by degrading Scripture, that he serves Scripture or Christ by degrading Church, that he serves Church or Scripture by degrading Christ. Such a one may claim to be evangelical; in truth he is but conjuring up new and deadly meanings for theological terminology.

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Exposition Of Sex Problems Calls For Something Better

Many pastors are hoping a pamphlet published by The National Council of Churches for The United Christian Youth Movement will not find its way to their young people. The over-priced brochure (25ȼ for 14 pages) by William Graham Cole is titled Called to Responsible Freedom: The Meaning of Sex in the Christian Life. Not only does the presentation reflect nothing of the stern New Testament condemnation of sex sins: it hardly touches the biblical teaching on the subject of sex. The material is sociologically oriented without any concept of scriptural obedience. In some respects it might even be considered an unfortunate invitation to sexual promiscuity; at any rate, it promotes an attitude of sexual permissiveness.

1. The booklet espouses an antinomian approach to the freedom of sex life. It implies that the life of sex need not be controlled by divine moral laws, nor defined in terms of scriptural standards. It deplores as Pharisaic those who would impose any rules whatever upon sex mores; they are caricatured as persons who would permit holding hands in the theater, or a chaste goodnight kiss at the door “provided only the lips met without further bodily contact,” or necking in a parked car “for six minutes and thirty seconds, but no longer” (p. 5). The scriptural disclosure of the divine will, which is very specific in respect to some sexual practices, is minimized by the pamphlet. “As long as we are men and not God,” we are told, “we never can be absolutely certain that anything we think or do is absolutely right” (p. 6). “Life is a series of grays and not pure blacks and whites” (p. 7).

2. The booklet virtually makes “love” a cover for doing what may not be right; sexual behavior must answer only the simple requirement that others be treated as persons rather than things. “The crucial question … about any sexual contact—from holding hands to complete intercourse—is not so much what is done as what is meant. A relatively mild necking session can mean a crude and selfish abuse of a person as a mere object while a more intense type of petting can mean that two human beings are expressing a genuine and deep love for each other.… We are interested in the quality of interpersonal relationships and not simply in their quantity” (p. 10). “What justifies and sanctifies sexuality is not the external marital status of the people before the law but rather what they feel toward each other in their hearts” (p. 11). “No one outside yourself can tell you … it is ‘all right’ to go so far in expressing affection for a member of the opposite sex and all wrong to go farther” (p. 12). “You have got to make up your own mind, in the best light of your own conscience, what your own standards of conscience are going to be.… No one else can tell you” (p. 13).

Not many young people in Protestant churches will be helped by a treatment of this sort. But at least it does not promote the reading of obscene literature, as does one other publication of the National Council of Churches. This is not much of a compliment, however, for an effort that professes to speak to one of youth’s most urgent and critical problems.

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What Have They Seen in Your House?

The infant of today is the young man or woman of tomorrow, leaving home to enter life with the equipment largely provided by parents.

You, fathers and mothers—what have they seen in your house? Have you prepared them to face life, or have you robbed them of those things which they should have seen and experienced?

Has your example been such that they might profit by it? Have your concerns been centered on time or on eternity? on material or on spiritual values?

Has your son been conditioned to regard the making of a living, a “success” in life, of primary importance, or do the kingdom of God and his righteousness come first?

Has your daughter learned the social graces at the expense of spiritual truth? Does she know the source of true beauty? Has she the built-in safeguards to purity, or are her standards those of the world?

Christian parents have the future of the world in their hands. The children of today are the leaders of tomorrow. Character developed in the home can be the safeguard of tomorrow. The compromises of parents can become the weakness of their children. The folly of parents can develop into the undoing of their children. The flaws of training develop into the weaknesses of mature life.

The responsibility of parents is such that only God can give the wisdom, firmness, and love which must characterize the Christian home. Nor can this responsibility be shifted to other shoulders. Teachers, whether in church or public schools, have their own responsibilities, but they must be supplemental to those of the home, not the sole source of child training.

Basic to child training are the disciplines which center in God and his Word. That we live in a time of undisciplined lives—lives of adults and children alike—is a frightening thing. “Foolishness is bound in the heart of a child,” we are told in the Book of Proverbs; we also know this by experience. Christian parents must exercise the wisdom of reproof, of restraint as well as of guidance, if their children are to learn the lesson of true discipline.

What do your children see in your home?

Is yours a home where prayer is given its rightful place? Do your children see you turning to God, praying for guidance and help? Do they sense that there is a divine power available to those who look to God for specific needs? Do you pray with and for the little ones God has given you? Do your children know that God is near and that he can be talked to as a loving Heavenly Father? Is prayer incidental, reserved for emergencies, or a way of life in your home?

What place has the Bible in your own daily living, and in the training of your children? Is it a pious ornament on your table, or the Book of reference and inspiration to which you turn daily?

No child has been properly trained until he knows that the Bible is God’s Word and that it speaks to the deepest needs of the human heart. What attitude toward the Scriptures are your children learning from you?

Do you have a family altar, a place of prayer, praise, and the hearing of God’s truth to which all resort each day?

Again we ask: What have they seen in your house? What have your children experienced at your hand?

Have they had the blessing of discipline? Have they learned that you can say “Yes” in love, and “No” with equal love and firmness? Have they learned the meaning of honoring their parents? Is your example such that they should respect you?

What are the basic concerns in your home? Do things have first place, or do spiritual and moral values come first?

What place has the Church for you and yours? Is it incidental or vital?

Is the cause of world missions kept before the boys and girls under your roof? Do they sense the prime importance of world evangelism, of the needs of those who do not know Christ?

Are the needy turned away from your door? Do the disasters, sorrows, and privations of others bring tangible reactions from your home? Do your children know the joy of helping others?

What have they seen in your house? What have they heard in your house? Bickering and strife? conversations taken up with trivialities? the standards of Hollywood and its latest movies—or the standards of Christ?

Is there a spirit critical of neighbors, pastor, or friends? What is the impression—of love or of carping criticism?

Do your children see compromise with wrong? Do they sense that your words and actions do not jibe, that there is some basic compromise with sin?

This is written primarily to you parents because your responsibilities are great, the privileges and opportunities of molding young lives for eternity.

Moses expressed this responsibility to the children of Israel, the passing on of a godly heritage: “And thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up” (Deut. 6:7).

Such responsibilities carry over from one generation to another. Parents bear a priestly relationship to their children. Like Job of old they must pray for those God has given them. Like Joshua they must make the decision, “But as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord” (Josh. 24:15b).

Your children will only too soon pass out into the world. With them will go the impressions and training of youth. They will go either equipped for life or unprepared to meet the temptations and buffetings which are inevitable. Their future is being determined today.

What have they seen in your house?

Eutychus and His Kin: February 15, 1963

Ruleg

Education, that serious world of retention and detention, of stimuli and alumni, now offers Ruleg. Ruleg is a system of programmed learning. It presents the learner with a concept, or rule, followed by a number of examples, or egs. (If your Latin is up to Vatican standards, you will surmise that an eg is an e.g., which is short for exempli gratia.) Programmers are now counting responses to see which should come first, the concept or the eg.

If statistics show that we should begin by adding egs, a new recipe will be necessary. What this inductive approach should be called, I’m not sure. Since examples may lead a learner to formulate an abstraction, something like Extraction or Egnition might serve. Gelur is a possibility—Ruleg in reverse.

Pastor Peterson has long been practicing both Ruleg and Gelur in his sermons. Either way the egs abound. He insists that E.G. would be a better degree than D.D. to keep the practicing preacher down to earth. For every egghead who follows abstractions there are a dozen eg-heads who need an example.

But the Pastor regards the Ruleg-Gelur controversy as a case of Big and Little Endianism. Swift was satirizing theological disputes when he described the Lilliputian controversy as to which end of the egg ought to be broken. Today more people seem dead serious about education than about religion. Big and Little Endian movements rise where they are taken seriously.

“The Bible,” says the pastor, “is concrete and abstract at once. What statement could be more concrete or more abstract than ‘God is love’? Or, for example, take the parables.… By the way, do you know the Negro spiritual, ‘Set Down Servant’?”

“Certainly—‘my soul’s so happy dat I cain’ set down!’ ”

“What Scripture does it refer to?”

Since I wasn’t sure, the pastor read Luke 12:37: “Blessed are those servants whom the lord when he cometh shall find watching: verily I say unto you, that he shall gird himself, and make them to sit down to meat, and will come forth and serve them.”

“There’s abstract concreteness for you; spend half an hour thinking about it. Read Luke 17:7–10, too.”

I did. I don’t know what to call the process, but those parables brought together project a rainbow of grace.

Pentecost

The article, “Plea For the Pentecostalists” by T. F. Zimmerman (Jan. 4 issue), left a great many questions in my mind about the biblical foundation of key Pentecostalist beliefs.…

Out of the list of passages quoted in support of the author’s position, not one will do. Surely it is unfair to quote statements from the Gospels about the future reception of the Holy Spirit as evidence for the author’s position, for these statements were made before there had been any outpouring of the Spirit (John 7:39), and any statement about the Spirit’s permanent work must be spoken of as yet in the future. Perhaps the most ironic point in the article is that the verse the author quotes as his climactic point proves exactly the opposite of what he intends. The verse (Eph. 1:13) is quoted from the KJV, which says, “in whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed with the Holy Spirit.” The Greek has no suggestion of a time interval between the “believing” and the “sealing,” but would be literally translated, “in whom also believing you were sealed.” The construction clearly indicates that the sealing was at the time of believing or as Abbott (I.C.C.) renders the phrase, “in whom when ye also believed, ye were sealed with the Holy Spirit.”

The outpouring of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost was a permanent fulfillment of God’s promises. It is only through the present work of this same Holy Spirit that any response can be made to the Gospel, as Paul so clearly indicates when he says, “No one can say ‘Jesus is Lord,’ except by the Holy Spirit.” We may respect the Pentecostalists for their enthusiastic evangelism and their concern for the reality of the Spirit’s work, but surely we cannot accept any notion about the Spirit’s person or work which lacks scriptural support.

First Reformed Church

Rocky Hill, N. J.

Acts 2:4 certainly tells us that all were filled with the Spirit, but can we be so certain that all spoke with tongues? They spoke as they “were given utterance”—but does this necessarily mean that all were given utterance?…

Further, the article states “that the initial physical evidence of speaking in tongues signals the infilling of the Holy Ghost.” Today then … speaking in tongues is considered to be an end in itself. On the day of Pentecost, however, it was a means to an end! Why has the pattern changed? Why do not people today, when enpowered to speak in tongues, go forth and preach the Gospel in that language …? If this is not done, do people really have the right to call themselves “Pentecostal”?

Vice Pres.

Nyack Missionary College

Nyack, N. Y.

I have found Pentecostalists choosing to disassociate themselves from the major orthodox denominations, not so much because they have “faced opposition from the community and established churches” as because they claim to offer the Holy Ghost (pronounced HO-lyghost) as a bonus to people already “saved.” A Christian aristocracy?…

Also, we question the accuracy of the author who reports Martin Luther’s having “spoken in tongues.” Next we will hear that Augustine, Calvin, the Wesleys, Jonathan Edwards, and Moody “spoke in tongues”.…

The Methodist Church

Walker, La.

I read with keen interest the Rev. Mr. Zimmerman’s excellent article.…

I have been a Pentecostal for a number of years and can say no experience on earth is comparable to it.… This Pentecostal experience can certainly be had for the asking—regardless of your denomination.…

New Haven, Conn.

The article by James Daane ought to be given wide circulation. It is excellent. In these days when there are reports of people within various evangelical churches who meet together with the express purpose to “conjure” up the Holy Spirit, an article such as “The Christ-centered Spirit” needs to be considered.…

Dept. of Sociology and Economics

Salem College

Winston-Salem, N. C.

It was somewhat paradoxical to find … Zimmerman’s [article] in an edition of CHRISTIANITY TODAY being so wholly devoted to the doctrine of the Holy Spirit. For the Spirit, like the wind which bloweth where it listeth, manifests himself in spite of, even contrary to man’s will.

Former Pentecostalists everywhere rejoice at being released from prerequisite sanctimoniousnesses, which derive from carnal and soulish self-appeasement, into that objective spiritual peace which none can describe. And there are many spirits with which we may be filled; yet only one Holy Spirit of the Living God, which not only comforts, instructs, and edifies, but also reproves, rebukes, and convicts Christians.

Paul’s testimony, that he “spake with tongues more than ye all” (1 Cor. 14:18), immediately qualifies itself in verse 19: “… in the congregation I would rather speak five intelligible words, for the benefit of others as well as myself, than thousands of words in the language of ecstasy” (NEB).

Vancouver, B. C.

Surplus

As a reporter for a daily newspaper who covered a few Roman Catholic parochial school Christmas programs this past Yuletide season, I think the following subtitle would have been appropriate for such productions: Mary christmas.

One of them had two “Marys” on the stage at once.

Austin, Tex.

While the Bible quiz may have caught the attention of the people, Israel’s favorite game has been incorrectly identified (Nov. 23 issue). Israel’s favorite game is justifying her existence. For this she and her friends spend millions of dollars every year, while America subsidizes her. The names of the holy places said to be everyday places to the Israelis have been evervday places for most of them for only the last 14 to 20 years at the most. The people for whom they were everyday places for many years before that were forced out of their homes to make room for the new immigrants.… Many of these who had to leave their homes and all they owed are among our finest Christian and Muslim friends.

Many evangelicals seem to be playing this justifying game with the Israelis either because they view Israel as a fulfillment of prophecy or because they feel sorry for the Jews on account of the persecution they suffered in Europe. Neither is a correct foundation for justifying what has taken place in Palestine. The evangelical is called to stand for righteousness. For the Jewish Zionist terrorists to have been able to take over Palestine and set up a Jewish state in a multi-religious area was not righteous. To continue support of this state and to justify its existence is not righteous.

I am sure that Mr. Kent misspoke himself when he referred to Jericho as the name of “a bus stop, the address of a friend, a picnic area” for Israelis. However he is sort of ironically correct about the “address of a friend” for he could be referring to the hundreds of refugees living in the two huge camps near Jericho who used to be neighbors of the Palestinian Jews. Palestinian Muslims, Christians and Jews were and are rightly entitled to set up a free state in the land that is theirs. Zionism has called and is calling Jews from all over the world to come occupy the homes and the land from which they have evicted the rightful inhabitants. This is quite a game!

Instructor in Religion and Philosophy

Beirut College for Women

Beirut, Lebanon

Up, Ireland!

It was with a great deal of interest that I read “Review of Current Religious Thought” (Nov. 23 issue) by J. D. Douglas.…

It is the irony of our times that brilliant men, honest men, diligent men, men who have received vast blessings from the Reformation, should at such a trying time in the history of men and nations attempt to go back to that from which, by the grace of God, they through their ancestors were set free.…

You eliminate the Irish from Romanism and what have you left? Nothing else but the entire fall of Rome.…

Philadelphia, Pa.

Up, Scotland!

Ivan Bennett (“The Best There Is in the World,” Nov. 23 issue) is wrong in saying the Archbishop of Canterbury gave the Bible to Queen Elizabeth—it was the Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland.

London, England

The Gospel and the Collegiate Mind

In introducing Billy Graham to a gathering of 1,800 students at the University of Chicago last April, Dean Warner A. Wick remarked, “Dr. Graham brings something to this university which it may not or cannot give to you.”

The founders of American colleges and universities would have considered such a tribute most unusual; to exclude any area of life—the religious especially—from the university would have seemed strange to them. Today, however, either by general consent or neglect, the Saviour is considered out of place on campus. Experiential Christianity is often regarded as out of bounds for the university mind. It is this barricaded territory that evangelical student groups are attempting to open up once more on the American campus.

Statistics that purport to register growing religious interest and engagement among students are misleading. The average student is quite indifferent to the thought currents, religious or otherwise, that ebb and flow in his academic environment. And by and large he tends to ignore those individuals who either seek change or protest it. The liberals who refuse to accept present status symbols pursue their ideals with determination. The new conservatives show equal zeal for their particular goals. It is these students of one extreme or the other, rather than the 95 per cent uncommitted or mildly committed, who have the power to determine the future. The four American students responsible for the now famous Haystack Meeting of 1806 influenced the spread of Christianity far more significantly than did all their remaining fellows.

Last February students at Northwestern University held a three-day conference on “Personal Commitment in an Age of Anxiety.” While it was not what one would call a religious conference, it seemed to augur a new vitality for the American scene. These students were trying to discover how they as students could participate effectively in this world. The silent generation seems to have roused from its passivity.

The usual subjects such as Communism versus capitalism and individualism versus conformity that characterized discussions of the 1950s were absent at this and similar conferences. Student concerns have changed radically. Attention now centers on problems of race, hunger, injustice, ignorance, poverty, the struggle for freedom, and so on.

The present generation of students is the first to have been born and to live solely under the threat of total nuclear destruction. No other factors have made so great an impact on their conscious lives as the Supreme Court decision on integration and the launching of Sputnik. For older generations this time of ferment may seem incomprehensible, dangerous, and chaotic; for those who have known nothing else it may represent a fertile current of life. These young people, with their potential for creative achievement, are the ones we must strive to reach for God.

Where do students of the space age stand spiritually? In general, although they know little about either Jesus Christ or the Bible, they hold both in fairly high regard. This admiration they fail to transfer to Christ’s followers or his Church, however. For most students Christianity is an irrelevant heritage from the past rather than a valid way of life for today. One professor recommended quite matter-of-factly that his history students become acquainted with a local Inter-Varsity group; its members, he said, were the only persons he knew who indulged in the medieval practice of an all-pervading God-consciousness.

Ten years ago a fraternity bull session on Christianity involved questions on evolution and Genesis, the reliability of the manuscripts, theories of inspiration, the place of reason, and so on. Today this is not the case. Now students concern themselves with the relationship of science to religion, the validity of Scripture for life, God’s judgment of the heathen, and the psychology of conversion. For the most part, the religious solution to personal and international problems is not an acceptable option. While students do not equate Christians with medicine men, they consider Christianity inadequate for our troubles. After a three-hour discussion on the Gospel and the reality of the Saviour, one international student told me: “You think Christianity is big enough for the problems of my country. It will take more than Christ.” Like many others, he stumbled at the evangel’s fundamental insistence on personal and individual reconciliation to God. Because, unfortunately, they have seen so little demonstration of the Lord’s power to meet people’s needs, these students look elsewhere for help and hope.

Indifference to Christianity and assumption of its irrelevancy to man’s actual problems in modern society are only part of the story. Beneath the surface of campus life, affecting the left, right, and vast middle groups alike, and both Christian and non-Christian, is an emptiness which is difficult to define to those who have never experienced it. What is the meaning of life? is the major though perhaps unvoiced question. Many students simply assume life has no meaning. This meaninglessness, moreover, is something quite normal for young people; they have come to terms with it, and the absence of ultimate significance does not distress them at all. The frightening predominance of this concept and attitude is a definite barrier to communicating the Gospel.

There are not a few, however, who never seem to adjust to this sense of meaninglessness. They suffer from what Christians call the “hungry heart” and others call “angst” or anxiety. Tillich refers to the horror of nonbeing. Psychoanalyst Victor E. Frankl describes it as “existential vacuum” against which conventional psychoanalysis is helpless. Many people experience this absence of purpose, responsibility, and meaning as a misery to be endured, perhaps, but scarcely to be accepted as normal. Youth reacts in a mass move toward cynicism.

This inner dissatisfaction, which for some is the “quiet desperation” of daily life and for others a vague uneasiness, may erupt under the stresses of modern academic pressures. The strain of qualifying examinations and of competition for which high school has left them unprepared takes its toll. Lack of certainty as to life’s meaning, coupled with fear of failure, suggests the short way out. One eastern university had more than 60 attempted suicides last semester. Suicide seems logical and unusually attractive when life has no purpose.

Christian students are not immune to this mood of anxiety. In fact, especially on secular campuses, they must fight against the whole tenor of undergraduate life to maintain faith in God’s goodness and design. Often Christian friends fail to support each other at this point. There may be an insinuating suspicion of one who departs temporarily from “the Christian line,” or the doubt that Christ can or will meet a problem of any real magnitude—particularly in moral or emotional areas. Often their spiritual background is such that students do not know that Saviour whose greatness is sufficient for every problem. They judge the adequacy of Christ by their own limited experience.

One Christian student asked an Inter-Varsity staff member, “Can Jesus Christ help me from wanting to commit suicide?” To the answer, “Yes,” he replied, “How?” In the conversation that followed he showed neither unbelief nor doubt. But he simply could not see how Christ was sufficient for his present crisis. At first it did not help to point him to the Lord of the New Testament, because he thought he held the biblical image of Christ. The fact is that his sense of spiritual reality lagged behind the reality of his own developing maturity, a gap that required several months to bridge.

It is difficult for campus Christian organizations to cope with students’ fears and anxieties. This spirit of disillusionment handicaps the organized Church as well. Church leaders, say the students, have “let us down. They never have anything to say.” While this report is not necessarily valid, it does point the finger at student pastors, chaplains, and other professional student workers, Inter-Varsity staff not excepted. Yet it is just here, at the place of personal contact between Christians and non-Christians, that God is working. For convinced believers, be they students, faculty, or Christian workers, the campus offers opportunities for evangelism unknown for 45 years.

The wistful longing for commitment combined with the sense of lostness is what gives this new openness to the Gospel—provided, however, that students are convinced of its pertinence for their own lives. Usually it is the life of a Christian student or faculty member that provides the opening wedge to communication.

Whatever the current “student mind” may be, the content of the Gospel and the way into fellowship with God remain unchanged. Four major thrusts characterize the present campus approach to students:

1. The message which we proclaim is the message of the Bible. As a consequence, it carries unmistakable authority.

2. The person we preach is Jesus Christ, very God of very God.

3. The core of the Gospel is Christ’s sacrificial and atoning death for us. It expresses God’s love in response to human need by his free provision of his Son, the Redeemer.

4. The demand of Christ is commitment to total personal relationship with the triune God through the abiding presence and reality of the Holy Spirit.

The danger of college and university Christian witness is either to ignore academic-intellectual issues or to allow them to dominate. Although the final issue is moral and spiritual, the Christian student or faculty member who bypasses the intellectual issues of his campus not only abdicates a great part of his personal responsibility but also misses a most fruitful source of pre-evangelism. On the other hand, one who succumbs to the temptation to place all the issues within intellectual bounds frequently misses a seeker’s deepest needs. An evangelical Christian has responsibilities not only as a believer, but also as a scholar and friend.

Hundreds of students each year accept the Gospel, not just to “make a decision,” but to commit themselves to life in Jesus Christ and to the fellowship of his Church. Staff members of several student organizations, chaplains, student pastors, and Christian faculty who proclaim this message and who demonstrate its power are seeing what God can do. In recent months 5,000 students gave up their Christmas holidays for a conference to face God’s call to world evangelism. At a Colorado college last fall, half the entire student body heard the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Even the beaches of Fort Lauderdale were the scene of Christian witness and response. While this response may be relatively small in view of the extensive opportunities, in God’s goodness it could become a floodtide of spiritual power. If the Gospel is to penetrate the campus significantly, all students, student workers, and faculty members committed to Jesus Christ and his Word must dedicate their love and talent and lives as never before.

General Director

Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship

Chicago, Illinois,

A Student’s Prayer

Written by Professor Moeller of Concordia Theological Seminary, Springfield, Illinois, at the close of the first session of summer school on July 13, 1962.

Psalm 19:14

O God of book and printer’s ink,

Of pen and paper, scholar’s toil,

Of clause and phrase and substantive,

Of term paper and midnight oil,

Thou who alone canst give to learn,

Help me to learn!

O God of Truth, O God of Grace,

O Word Made Flesh, O Holy Dove,

Thou Wisdom, Glory, Righteousness,

Peace, Mercy, Patience, Hope, and Love,

Thou who alone canst give to know,

Help me to know!

O God of Moses, Samuel,

Of Jeremiah, Daniel,

Of Peter, James, and John, and Paul,

Of Michael and of Gabriel,

Thou dost for Thy work servants choose;

Do Thou me choose!

For sloth and petty prejudice,

For pride and willful ignorance,

For lack of zeal and will, and prayer,

For self-imposed incompetence,

For shirking at Thy work, O Lord,

Thy mercy, Lord!

My brain and hands dare bring to Thee,

Because Thy blood pays all my guilt,

This votive offering of my work,

Small thanks for precious ransom spilt.

Accept my thoughts and words, O Lord,

Accept, O Lord!

ELMER J. MOELLER

The Peril of the Plausible

There are many safeguards to protect the life and property of human beings but very little protection in the realm of ideas. It is much easier to exploit the thinking of a man without suffering any penalty than it is to swindle him out of his goods. Congress can enact laws to defend the citizen against physical harm, but legislation can do little to protect him against erroneous ideas.

Error makes its way by appearing reasonable and by concealing its specious character. We apply the term “plausible” to ideas or situations that seem to be reasonable and proper but are deceptive in appearance and false underneath. One of the best ways to defend against such deception is to encourage alertness against “the peril of the plausible.”

In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus sounded such a warning when he spoke these words: “Beware of false prophets which come to you in sheep’s clothing but inwardly they are ravening wolves.” This admonition of Jesus, like many of his figures of speech, is objectively simple in its language but, like those which follow it, is profound and far reaching in its application. Jesus’ words might be paraphrased to say, “Beware of false principles which come to you in a guise of plausibility, but underneath are fallacious.” Jesus cites a number of these fallacies in the discourse which follows, using simple metaphors from common life.

One such fallacy underlies the hearty affirmation that “anything the majority of the people want is good enough for me.” This has a ring of plausibility and seems to be a vote of confidence in democracy. The processes of democracy do operate on the majority principle; hence this seems like a sound basis for making individual decisions. Majority opinion is commonly equated with correctness.

The shortcomings of such a method for determining truth may be illustrated by imagining a party of persons lost in a forest at midnight. Is it possible to ascertain the correct direction by taking a vote and following the majority? It depends upon who is voting. Only if the voter’s opinion is based upon sound premises, logical thinking, and some assimilation of accumulated wisdom will it have any real value. Without these, even a democracy may lose its way. The opinion of one person with adequate knowledge and clear thinking might well outweigh the collective opinion of a dozen or a hundred that has no such basis.

Jesus’ words, “Enter by the narrow gate,” proclaim the fallacy of the majority. Not only might the majority be wrong, but, in matters of moral choice, Jesus asserts that the majority is likely to be wrong. “The wide gate has a broad road that leads to disaster,” he said, “and there are many people going that way. The narrow gate and the hard road lead out into life, and only a few are finding it” (Matt. 7:13, 14, Phillips).

The course of history many times has vindicated minorities that stood courageously for unpopular causes against the opposition of powerful majorities.

Another counterfeit catchword of our time is “Live it up—it’s later than you think.” This is the modern version of an ancient philosophy that focuses upon immediate gratification to the neglect of ultimate consequences. For this fallacy of the immediate Jesus also had an answer: “Ye shall know them by their fruit.” Using a metaphor from everyday life, Jesus was saying, “Take the long look. Judge any course of action not by its proximate effects but by its ultimate consequences. The flower may be sweet, but it may bear a bitter fruit.”

The ability to deprive oneself of present pleasures in the interest of a distant but larger satisfaction has been called “tension capacity” or frustration tolerance. Children have little of such endurance, but as understanding grows, young people become able to visualize distant goals and to accept immediate deprivation in anticipation of more important long-range objectives. The development of frustration tolerance is a mark of maturity. By this criterion our culture is moving steadily away from, rather than toward, greater maturity. The fallacy of the immediate needs to be exposed for a generation that is ignoring long-range consequences in its emphasis upon immediate pleasure. Those who work with the ills of personality see at close range the bitter fruit of hedonism.

Another spurious presumption is commonly introduced by some such comment as, “Ordinarily we wouldn’t do it, but circumstances being what they are …” or, “I know it’s usually considered wrong, but this is for a good cause,” or “We’ll do it only this once.” These prologues to a course of expediency imply that one can somehow circumvent the usual consequence of a questionable choice and come out ahead.

Jesus had an answer for the fallacy of the expedient: “A bad tree cannot bear good fruit.” This simple metaphor emphasizes the inescapable principle that the means determines the end. The nature of the tree determines the kind of fruit it will produce. If wrong is inherent in the character of an act, evil will be present in its consequences.

The fact that a good end is sought will not make a good means out of a bad one. And if a bad means is used, the result will be a bad end, for the means determines the end.

In travel, one may select a certain destination on the map, but he cannot get there without traveling the right road. When he chooses the road first, he limits his choice of destination to the places on that road, and no amount of earnest intention will bring some other desired destination into that route. As the nature of the tree determines the fruit, the route chosen determines the destination and the means selected determines the end. The principle is far ranging in its applicability, and stands in judgment upon dishonest and shoddy practices in economic and political as well as in personal life.

The most demoralizing fallacy of all is the conclusion that Christianity is bound to fail. In a civilization dominated by force and power politics, the law of love is said to be anachronistic and naïve. As Freud put it, the Christian idea of love is absurd and unpsychological. Christians are by no means immune from assault by this plausible doctrine. Faith is buffeted unmercifully in the marketplace and at the podium. Truth seems to be forever on the scaffold and wrong forever on the throne.

Jesus confronts the fallacy of failure with a confident assertion of ultimate triumph: “A good tree cannot bear evil fruit.”

This confidence cannot be substantiated without defining success and failure in ultimate rather than proximate terms. We incline to judge failure in its proximate aspects. By these criteria, the cause of Christianity failed with Jesus’ death on the cross. Through the centuries since then the verdict of failure has been pronounced repeatedly upon Christianity as its leaders have fallen or as the temper of the times has run against it.

This measurement of success and failure by proximate criteria has infected all our culture. Ultimate values and goals have been eclipsed by the importance given to material objects. As never before in human history, “things are in the saddle and ride men.” The label “post-Christian” applied to our time is an acknowledgment that the proximate has outrun the ultimate in our prevailing value systems.

But the ultimate verdict is the one that counts. Peter Marshall was contrasting these two when he said, “I would rather fail in a cause that is bound to succeed than to succeed in a cause that is bound to fail.” Through the contemporary blare of materialism the quiet voice of Jesus can scarcely be discerned. But those who are listening hear in the words “a good tree cannot bear evil fruit” the steady assurance that right principles cannot fail, but will ultimately triumph.—Remarks by DR. ORVILLE S. WALTERS, Director of Health Services, University of Illinois, in the series “The Faculty Speaks on Religion” on radio station WILL.

WE QUOTE:

REVOLUTION IN EDUCATION—Our world cries pitiably for the fruits of Christian Faith, especially in today’s youth who must drive a way through tomorrow’s hazards and uncertainties—“firmer and stronger character, higher integrity, larger spiritual vision, unimpeachable and unshakable fidelity, what one of our foremost American statesmen keeps pleading for, ‘a righteous and dynamic faith.’ ” The desired fruits can be had; but only from roots capable of producing them. What is required—what alone might prove adequate—is revolution, conversion, an about-face, in both the assumptions and the goals of our living; and likewise, of the training of our youth. Not the curriculum only, but every aspect of the philosophy and structure and spirit of education, cries for radical remaking.—Dr. HENRY P. VAN DUSEN, professor of systematic theology, Union Theological Seminary, God in Education (1951).

Best Access for the Gospel

Trying to explore the “best access” of the Gospel to the collegians on secular campuses may seem a rather cryptic pursuit. CHRISTIANITY TODAY’S findings are based on the comments of Christian professors stationed on such campuses from coast to coast.—ED.

Freshmen arrive at the campus with “whatever pattern of religious conviction or code of morals was nurtured in the home church or high school” (Dr. Harold L. Alden, emeritus professor of astronomy, University of Virginia). “Young people mature early these days; I am pretty sure that most of them have already decided whether or not they are interested in any form of religion, and possibly just which form, before they reach college. Hence the importance of high-school programs like Young Life” (Dr. John R. Brobeck, professor and chairman of the department of physiology, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania). Most students will profess to be religious on entering, says Dr. Elbert H. Hadley, professor of chemistry at Southern Illinois University, “but the great majority leave their religion at home when they come. By the time they graduate, only a minority attend church.” Professor Hadley thinks the pressures contrary to Christianity are overwhelming: “During 15 years of teaching I haven’t seen a dozen students acknowledge Christ as their Saviour. I feel we must get the students before they come to college.” Granting that more students than we realize begin higher education with an “all settled” frame of mind, notes Dr. Arlan L. Edgar, associate professor of biology at Alma College, Alma, Michigan, nonetheless even an incoming student with a Christian background is “in for a rocky freshman year as far as his faith is concerned.” The early fall of a freshman’s career comes when he is faced with the most serious misgivings about his previous positions; it is then, Professor Edgar thinks, that Christians can help him develop a mature, considered faith. When an upperclassman, an instructor, or someone else with campus status earnestly says he does not believe in God, believing students may become frustrated, while the uncommitted may become assured of their doubts. Reflective students who view college as an adventure of the mind either maintain their reservations or uncover new threads of doubt. To some extent responses are conditioned by promotions, friendship, and prestige. Certain naïve leaders who condemn the Church and slam Billy Graham may at the same time label as biased anyone who speaks of Christ or invites students to attend a crusade. In such an atmosphere there can be no effective authoritarian presentation of religion. Since the anchorless student has rejected the appeal to former voices of authority (Bible or Church), he depends more than his forebears on “lives that seem to speak authoritatively of some unifying belief or ruling passion,” or on evidence of a faith that works.

The average evangelical church, says Professor Youngberg of Oregon State, “is not reaching the university student—they do not understand each other.” He suggests personal contact or informal “bull sessions.” Even here it is important to call conversations to their true center in the redemptive work of Christ, and to avoid special pleading. Professor Davies of Thiel College declares that “on the intellectual level the theory of evolution has constituted a massive assault on the Christian faith, and any bona fide evangelical weakening of some unproved biological assumptions could be a valuable academic contribution to the Gospel.” Some teachers feel that local churches could do more by way of adding student pastors and sponsoring group activities aimed at the welfare of students. A simple, straightforward presentation of the Bible in the churches and in small study groups, says an Indiana professor, is the best approach. “A pseudo-intellectual approach is often more harmful than helpful,” he adds. “Sincerity and personal interest on the part of the Christian are very important. A positive stand and a kind, loving tolerance are both needed, and they are not mutually exclusive.” The influence of an individual who has received some previous notice of professional success or of his Christian life and witness may be specially felt, as in the case of Christian athletes. But, remarks a Pennsylvania professor of humanities, “individuals or organizations representing institutionalized Christianity” (the “professional Christians” whose salary and livelihood come from the organized Church) have no very noticeable impact on the college community in casual contacts because of “the institutional veneer through which they are distortedly seen by the cynical non-Christian.”

The Gospel’s best access to the student is to be found, thinks Rochester Institute of Technology Professor Dane R. Gordon, in his sense of moral concern and in “the obvious fact that he is a young human being.” And he adds, the student’s best access to the Gospel is “through the example set him by Christians whom he meets.” Professor Joseph E. Grimes, whose doctoral field at Cornell University was linguistics, argues for a direct thrust: “Jesus Christ makes it possible for life to make sense and to have a worthwhile goal.”

Professor Hadley of Southern Illinois University thinks evangelical, campus-based religious foundations that contact students in their dormitories might exercise a worthwhile spiritual influence. A West Coast professor notes that “much Christian apologetics and potent philosophical writing is presently available, and these works are of help. But the best access is personal contact as ‘born again’ students tell their colleagues of the reality of Christ in their lives. Student-led dormitory or fraternity Bible study, with the simple presentation of the Gospel, and backed by dedicated prayer and a Christ-centered life, is still God’s most potent arm on the American campus.” But the Christian student must be respected also for his bona fide scholarship and his deep interest in other students as persons. Dr. D. W. Tieszen, dean of instruction at Central Missouri State College, notes that the secular campus offers dedicated Christian students multiple opportunities to nourish their faith; moreover, a decisive role is often played by campus religious groups and by the continued interest (or lack of it) of home churches in following young people in their campus careers.

But the most important relationship of all on the university campus, Dr. Thomas D. Parks points out, remains that “between professor and student.” Dr. Parks, associate director of Proctor and Gamble’s Product Development Division, stresses his point as follows: “Because the professor is at the university to teach and the student is there to learn, the professor exerts a greater than normal influence either for good or for evil.” Dr. Alden of the University of Virginia notes the influence of Christian professors who take an active part in the religious life of the community. “Somehow a medium and a mechanism must be found,” remarks Professor Boutwell of Temple University School of Medicine, “for Christian professors to witness effectively both to their students and to their colleagues, since the witness of convinced and devoted Christian professors offers the most promising possibilities of challenging the secular student to a consideration of Christ.”

Dr. Stanford W. Reid of McGill University, Montreal, considers two things essential for reaching university students on behalf of Christ: “friendship and an intellectually respectable Christianity which faces the problems and deals with them; sentimentalism, legalism, and high pressure provide no avenue.” Professor Cook of Valparaiso University stresses that “the intellectual side” is the “most open point of access. A clear explanation of the Gospel, avoiding side issues, is the best approach to students.” Professor Carnell of the University of Florida thinks the geographical barriers to communication might be overcome by having coffee houses that sponsor free discussion and Christian witness. He thinks that after being strengthened by a two-year collegium-type residence, evangelical students could be thrust wholly into the secular campus environment for an effective witness. He also urges weekly seminars, led by Christian professors, to discuss the relationship of evangelical faith to issues raised in academic work and to explore the hidden secularist assumptions underlying various courses. Another contributor strikes a similar note: the slowly growing number of committed professors who reflect their Christian concern for students both in and outside of the classroom represent the greatest thrust on campus today. Student groups like Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship and Campus Crusade do their most effective work on campuses where dedicated professors give strong, continuing support.

END

Testimonies of Students

Miss Sybil Stallings is a Dean’s List student at the University of Georgia. She is chapter president of Alpha Omicron Pi, one of the 14 national social sororities. She serves the Sociology Club as parliamentarian, Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship as missions secretary, and is a member of Westminster Fellowship and of Panhellenic Council, the governing board of national social sororities. On a campus of 9,200 students, she was voted one of 15 best-dressed coeds during the 1961–62 academic year, and was nominated for the national title of “Girl of Alpha Omicron Pi.” Her special interest is an enlarging book of inspirational poetry titled “Prisms.”

The greatest truth which I have gradually learned during three years at the University of Georgia has been the ultimate realization that Jesus Christ lives today—this very day—and that he lives and cares for me. How do I know this? Because I have learned that he knows us, as students, much more intimately than we know ourselves. He perceives our anticipations concerning our tomorrows; he understands our sinful nature and forgives us even at the moment we part our lips; and he waits patiently when we find ourselves involved in intellectual discussions of the Bible, and leads us to his truths. He is the same person who cares for the sparrow. How much more then will he care for you … and for me? Yes, I trust Jesus Christ because he is all of these things to me today and is through and in all the future which lies ahead. He is the author and finisher of my faith.

ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY—Not until college years did I become aware that to me church attendance meant nothing more than a social engagement. I was told that I needed a personal experience with Christ, one of complete surrender, relinquishing the throne of my life to him. I began to evaluate my life and I did this. Since then I have felt a great sense of satisfaction and peace of mind which he has imparted.—KARL DENNISON, 1960–61 student body president.

ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY—After setting up goals during high school and college and always finding them empty and meaningless, once I had obtained them, I found reality in Christ. My life has changed a great deal since then, and football is no longer my god. My greatest desire is to serve Christ.—NOLAN JONES, varsity halfback.

UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA—I heard the cry “be an individual” and “think for yourself.” But few chose to be different and to stand up for their convictions; most preferred to conform to the crowd. I felt there must be more in life. Sensing the void, I decided to discard my prejudices toward God and to examine the claims of Christ. He said that man could live an abundant life and have fellowship with God. He said, “I am the Way.” Finally, I asked Christ to come into my life. He has changed my values, goals, and total outlook. I now know the transforming power of Christ and Christianity.—JACK LEMAN, graduate student in clinical psychology.

BROWN UNIVERSITY—In Jesus Christ, God has shown me the only absolute in a world of many values and attractions. My understanding of this world, my attempt to live, and my value as a person are meaningful only as God in Christ stimulates, directs, and fulfills the life he has given me.—RONALD HARDY, a junior, elected 1961–62 president of Brown-Pembroke Christian Fellowship.

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA (Berkeley)—What is a life without Christ? What is a cell without a nucleus?… Just as the nucleus is biologically essential for life in a cell, Jesus Christ is spiritually essential for life. Since I have become a Christian, I realize that everyone needs God and the love he offers through Christ, whether one will admit it to himself or not.—LINDA MONTANELLI, psychology major.

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA (Los Angeles)—My personal trust in the Christ of the Bible has been the most rewarding aspect of life. My relationship with him provides freedom from guilt, loneliness, and anxiety, as well as a stable perspective of the crises of our times. This perspective is centered in God’s revelation through his Son, Jesus Christ, of his redemptive purpose for mankind. Knowing him personally is the greatest thrill of my life!—MARK BIEDEBACH, graduate fellow in the department of biophysics.

CARNEGIE TECH—I am utterly convinced that Jesus Christ is God’s perfect revelation of himself. I place unhesitating trust in him for my personal reconciliation to God and to men, and for the resetting of the direction of my life and character. I am further persuaded that God’s written revelation in Scripture is totally relevant to the deepest problems and experiences of life.—JOHN M. DISHMAN, graduate student in physics; selected as outstanding senior at Georgia Tech.

UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO—After weighing the evidences, I realized I would have to either accept or reject God’s gift. I accepted by inviting Jesus Christ to come into my heart and become my Saviour and Lord, and he did. As I gave myself completely to him, he began to live out his life through me. I began to experience real joy, a solid peace, specific answers to specific prayers, and his overwhelming adequacy in every situation.—SWEDE ANDERSON, 1959–60 student body president.

Carrying the flag of the United States in the 1960 Olympiad in Rome was a tall, dignified American Negro named Rafer Johnson, UCLA’s track and field Hercules, who set a new world record of 8,303 points in the decathlon—ten special events constituting a whole trackmeet in miniature. In 1958 he had traveled to Russia to compete in the U.S.-U.S.S.R. trackmeet just weeks after Kuznetsov of Russia had set a new world’s record; in one of the most spirited athletic duels of modern times, in Moscow, Johnson beat Kuznetsov and set a new world mark. At UCLA Johnson was a leader both off and on the cinder track, taking active part in Youth for Christ and serving as student body president in his senior year. Recently signed for the leading role in the historical film The Fiercest Heart, he maintains a devout life.

All the trophies and championships received from men will pass away. I would rather strive to be the greatest Christian than the greatest athlete because when the lights go out it will be the Christian team, coached by Christ the Saviour, that will finally win. Since that night I took Jesus Christ into my life, every phase of my life has been so much fuller and richer, socially, academically, athletically, and spiritually.

UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO—Several years ago I began a search for God. I turned to science, nature, and philosophy. Though these convinced me there is a God, they didn’t help me find him. Then a man showed me that I could not find God but God must find me through Jesus Christ, his Son.… When I finally let Christ rule my life, I began to experience the true joy of Christian living.—JOE ROMIG, who gained 1960 Big Eight Conference football honors.

DARTMOUTH COLLEGE—Through the eyes of a personal faith in Jesus Christ I see what life really is and what I, as a man, must do to live this life to its fullest. Presently, I do not know all of the answers, but I am confident that through His revelation he will make the way clear.—DARYL R. ERICKSON, president of the Dartmouth College bands.

UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA—After trying to discipline my life to Christian standards and realizing the inner frustration of failure, I put my complete trust in Jesus Christ to discipline my life. My personal experience of God’s power as promised to man in the Bible has assured me that the personal relationship to God revealed in the New Testament is the only answer to man’s problem today!—MACK CRENSHAW, varsity basketball player and returning letterman on the tennis team.

HARVARD MEDICAL SCHOOL—I thank Almighty God for his revelation of divine justice and love contained in the Bible and in the person of Jesus Christ. I have discovered, and continue to find, that a personal commitment to Christ as Saviour and Redeemer brings forgiveness and fellowship with God, and provides motivation, direction, and challenge for my life.—ROGER G. MARK, presently in a combined educational program leading to an M.D. from Harvard Medical School and a Ph.D. in electrical engineering from M.I.T.; past president of M.I.T.’s chapter of Eta Kappa Nu (electrical engineering honor society).

HARVARD MEDICAL SCHOOL—Jesus said: “I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life.” My entire Christian experience has been one of a growing understanding of the meaning and relevance of this claim. My life’s goal is to make known this stupendous truth to those who have not yet realized its significance.—SEPPO E. RAPO, third-year medical student.

JULLIARD SCHOOL OF MUSIC—Christianity is more to me than material for intellectual games. It is Christ’s influence in making me like himself, replacing the urge to push myself ahead without consideration of others. Through absorbing God’s Word daily I become a “partaker of the divine nature,” which leads me even higher than my own ambition.—STEPHEN CLAPP, Candidate for Diploma in 1963 and member of this year’s Student Council.

KUTZTOWN STATE COLLEGE—Since I’ve been in college Jesus Christ has become more than my Saviour. He is relevant to everyday life—tests, gab sessions, activities, and even the Cuban crisis; to be able to leave such practical things to his guidance and concern gives me confidence and peace. Freedom cannot come with democracy, education, and the like. Man is captive within himself. We can only experience true freedom when we realize our need of complete dependence on Christ.—GAIL MANNHERZ, major in secondary education in the area of foreign languages; recently pledged to Kappa Delta Pi (national honorary society in education).

MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY—Although I had gone to church and Sunday school all my life, I did not experience a real, living relationship with God until I invited Jesus Christ into my heart. Since then my trust in God has increased as I have studied the Bible and pursued scientific studies and research. I am now fully convinced both in my heart and in my mind that a personal trust in Jesus Christ as the only Saviour from sin and the Giver of a new life which begins in this world and continues in the next is the only hope for individuals and for the world today. I have found that science students are looking for something which is not only reasonable, but which works—that is, can be tested and proven in the laboratory of life. I recommend a careful consideration of the claims and promises of Christ to any student of science.—A. JAMES WAGNER, doctoral studies in meteorology; B.A. honors graduate in physics from Wesleyan University.

MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY—I have given Jesus Christ complete control of my life. A personal relationship with him has filled me with peace, power, and purpose. The Bible has come alive with relevant passages that guide all of life. How could I ever distrust the One whose love and grace give me such an abundant life?—BOB ANDRINGA, president of the Interfraternity Council and of his sophomore class, and recipient of outstanding junior award.

MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY—The difference between triviality and true value is often subtle. I recognized a need for a strong foundation, something true and absolute but relevant to every area of life. I discovered that Christ is the answer to that need. The Bible taught me, “If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature; old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new.”—BOB CAMPBELL, communications arts major.

UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA—Godly parents in a Christian home showed to me my need of Jesus Christ as personal Saviour, and I put my trust in him while yet a child. This early faith continues and helps me to meet the tests of a college student—both the intellectual and the spiritual ones. Indeed as we see the search of students for direction, for truth and knowledge, for an objective in life, the words of Christ saying, “I am the way, the truth, and the life” find their application.—GAIL COTTRELL, Dean’s List student and vice president of the Arts College Board.

NORTH DAKOTA STATE—I have surrendered to Christ’s claims on my life, and have discovered that I am now on talking terms with God, and that he meets every need I have as a student.—KEN NELSON, Blue Key award for religious leadership and president of his freshman class; now a junior.

OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY—A student’s religion, or lack of it, affects every area of his life on campus. For life begins when a man receives Jesus Christ as Saviour; it continues as he abides in Him through faith. A personal relationship with Christ provides life with purpose, direction, peace, and the greatest joy that can be known.—DAVID A. LARSON, awarded research assistantship as a graduate student after graduation from Purdue University “with highest distinction.”

UNIVERSITY OF OREGON—After talking with my roommate about the person of Christ, I made the most important choice of my life—that of inviting Him into my heart. Now that I know him, I have a new sense of direction that I had never known. The actual presence of Christ in my life is thrilling.—STEVE BARNETT, tackle on the varsity football team.

PORTLAND STATE COLLEGE—Throughout history man has been unable to live a peaceful, satisfying life without God, and it is no different today. I know I will be spending eternity with God, because Christ died for my sins and was resurrected bodily. Knowing this removes fears and gives purpose to my life. I owe everything to Christ.—JIM YOUNG, president of the 1963 graduating class and member of the forensics team.

SMITH COLLEGE—I had tried a lot of solutions to the riddle “where am I going? and why am I here?” Good grades, accumulated social activities, and beaux were insufficient. In the last two years I have found that the claims and promises of Jesus Christ to his followers are the only answer to life. Instead of that war inside between what I knew I should do and what I did, there is new unity and harmony at the center of my life. Instead of running away from or falling under those daily problems that arise, I have a new strength that enables me to meet and go through any obstacles. Jesus said he came to bring us each an abundant life, and he does just that.—VIRGINIA GROSE, Senior, house officer.

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA—When I first came to USC, I found myself searching for happiness and true purpose in life which college did not seem to offer.… I found something which has utterly changed my life. It is a personal relationship with Christ.—GINNI MCKOON, music major.

UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS—I can say that the excitement and adventure of the true Christian life is greater than winning a thousand races.—JOHNNY COTTEN, quarter-miler for the Texas “Longhorns.”

Miss Carole D. Reinhart is a senior at the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Florida. In 1960 she was honored as “National College Queen” and in 1962 as Miami’s Homecoming Senior Princess. She served as Associated Women Students Orientation Chairman in 1962–63. She is attending on a symphony scholarship (first student trumpet). She has been treasurer of Sigma Alpha Iota (Women’s Professional Music Fraternity), and has made guest cornet and trumpet appearances in Europe and Great Britain. She is a member of Phi Kappa Phi, vice president of Delta Theta Mu, and secretary of Nu Kappa Tau.

Music has always been a major part of my life, and it was through music that I found Christ as a personal Friend and Saviour. Through music I’m trying to serve him.

And what could be more fitting in this time of fear and uncertainty than to use the “universal language”—music—to tell others of the peace and harmony found only in Christian living!

It isn’t always easy, especially as a college student, but then it’s reassuring to have His promise, “I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world” (Matt. 28:20).

I love Christ, and want to go on praising him “with the sound of the trumpet.”

The Image of the Secular Collegian

CHRISTIANITY TODAY asked scores of professors on secular campuses from California to Connecticut about the mood and mentality of the United States collegian: What are his ambitions and high hopes, his fears and frustrations, his commitments and conpromises? And to these same professors, in all instances faculty members of devout evangelical persuasion, CHRISTIANITY TODAY addressed a second question: What approach constitutes the best means of confronting the college student with the Gospel?—ED.

Today’s students are more serious than their counterparts of a decade ago—less interested in football and other “collegiate jazz.” Yet they are still game to “try anything once, if it’s not too much effort,” and not a few would “rather make a record piling people into a telephone booth or drinking large amounts,” reports a director of women’s counseling at a midwestern campus, “than make A’s or keep virginity or run a mile.” The liberals are “trying desperately” to shake off all authoritarianism—and to test requirements just for the sake of testing, comments an Ohio educator; they despise as antiquated such ideas as respect for parents, classroom decorum, and politeness among themselves. The conservative students, on the other hand, are willing to listen, somewhat eager to learn, and not in rebellion against society. On one Florida campus several thousand students turned out for a television personality, while a dozen or so attended a lecture by an outstanding theologian.

THEY ARE ALL INDIVIDUALS

Students differ from each other in almost every conceivable manner, for they are all individuals. Yet a few types seem to predominate. There is: (1) the confident, aggressive follower of Karl Marx who holds rigidly to materialistic determinism; he believes he has all the answers; (2) the somewhat sentimental “arty” student who, consciously or unconsciously, imitates Bunthorn in Gilbert and Sullivan’s Patience; (3) the usual type—most numerous—that lives and acts like other Americans. He comes to the university from a nominally Christian home. But nearly always he soon finds himself at sea religiously, since so many of his subjects and instructors seem completely indifferent to religion. This type often quickly adopts a strongly rationalistic and “scientific” attitude, and rejects all beliefs, conventions, and morals that are not “scientifically” validated.—W. STANFORD REID, director of men’s residences, McGill University, Montreal.

The secular collegian is an “experience-oriented” person, and combines his uncertain hopes for the future with a cynical approach to authority. He is “a chronic middle-of-the-roader cautious about committing himself and suspicious of absolutes” (Dr. Corbin Carnell, assistant professor of English, University of Florida). Orthodoxy loses appeal because of its inflexible theology, and also because of its separatist taboos; moreover, pietistic Christianity seems irrelevant if not unreal. The serious student is immersed in the day-after-day course requirements. He can gain acceptance by being pro-evolutionary and anti-missionary, pro-Bertrand Russell and anti-House Un-American Activities Committee; Dr. Ivan J. Fahs, assistant professor of sociology at Bethel College, calls this “the rites of passage necessary to professional status.”

On campus these students are confronted by divergent convictions and codes that at first sight seem to have the same validity as their own. One of the more commonly held beliefs is that “all world religions—if they are of any use at all” are, in the words of a Pennsylvania college professor, “about equally insightful and spiritually valid.” The collegians are “highly and sincerely tolerant of various religious views and persuasions,” and, adds Dr. Robert B. Fischer, professor of chemistry and director of laboratories, Indiana University, they consider religion and church “a good thing for those who want it.” Dean W. Robert Holmes of the Junior College of Albany, New York, reports that the secular collegian is “uninformed on religion, including his own; if Catholic, deeply emotional about it nonetheless.”

The pursuit of pleasure and material gain—along with knowledge—is uppermost in his mind, but such pleasure-seeking and sex-saturation already exist elsewhere in our society. The social pressures of his own peer groups keep him emptied. Only a minority of students seek “knowledge for knowledge’s sake”; the majority look for utilitarian education, and view their degrees in terms of larger salary, bourgeois comforts, and greater financial security. Yet a broad humanitarian benevolence receives much lip service, and enters still into many occupational decisions.

The fact that our age is concerned with values leaves its stamp upon the student, but, notes Dr. Dane R. Gordon, assistant professor in philosophy at Rochester Institute of Technology, “he is not at all influenced or attracted toward religious activities.” He has little or no interest in Christianity, although he is more disinterested than antagonistic. He has broken with formal religion and has only vague and confused impressions of the Christian religion—observe the Golden Rule and all will be well (Dr. C. T. Youngberg, professor of soils, Oregon State University). “Many of the less thoughtful,” adds a Florida professor, “easily abandon a faith that has been equated with moralism, or continue with a loose ‘Christianity of culture.’ ” They consider Christianity to be “little more than an agency of social good works and a medium of psychological uplift and are, in fact, quite illiterate of the claims and content of historic Christianity” (Dr. Robert B. Fischer, Indiana University). “Usually their thinking is hazy concerning true Christianity,” an Indiana professor notes, “not only because of misinformation, but also due to muddled explanations or sermons with an overemphasis on minor points.” They have been confused further by neoorthodoxy, which has preempted orthodox vocabulary while destroying the older beliefs (Dr. Robert M. Davies, chairman of the Division of the Humanities, Thiel College). The “typical collegian,” thinks Dr. Virginia Lowell Grabill, director of women’s counseling at Evansville College, Evansville, Indiana, “believes Christianity concerns ‘being good,’ which to him means having a good reputation (even though he loudly declares he will live his own life and doesn’t care what people think). He reports illegalities only when he himself is affected; he thinks it cute to flout the law. He does not believe in a standard of morality.” His concept of knowledge, suggests Dr. Calvin Huber, assistant professor of chemistry at University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, is so influenced by recent scientific technology that all knowledge is assumed to be objective (outside the self and perceivable by self-effort only), and the Gospel is easily assumed to be subject to rejection on the authority of self-decision.

Although preparing for “life in a corporation-oriented society,” he looks beyond mere conformity and is searching for “something that will make life meaningful” (Dr. Joseph E. Grimes, Summer Institute of Linguistics, Wycliffe Bible Translators). Dr. A. Gilbert Cook, assistant professor of chemistry at Valparaiso University, finds him “usually an agnostic with an open mind.” Yet he gives the appearance of wishing to be “intellectually perceptive, just in his social relationships, and broadly tolerant on moral issues.” But “only a minority,” remarks an East Coast professor, are “interested in giving their attention to anything which demands commitment,” although the more thoughtful are open to “a hearing for Christian theology.” Alongside the willingness to discuss religion, reports a midwestern professor, exists an attitude of skepticism toward any deep religious experience.

The reflective student who is aware of the limitations of the scientific method, particularly in respect to moral and religious questions, will probably “test the warmhearted Christian” to discover whether a believer can also be a “hardheaded scientist,” and whether Christians know where the scientific method fits and where it doesn’t. He will expect Christians—thinks sociologist Ivan Fahs of Bethel College—to be fluent with the secular community’s “scientific language,” including such terms as “independent and dependent variables, units of analyses, correlation, probabilities, causation, a priori considerations, ex post facto judgments, ad hoc decisions,” and similar jargon, while he himself despises “the fundamentalist’s language.” But the secular collegian really wants “personal involvement” with others, despite a surface mien of brusqueness and unfriendliness. “He will respond to personal friendship,” adds Professor Fahs, “on a personal level over a glass of beer—and for the evangelical Christian this is the end of what could be a beautiful friendship.” Yet the dean of a New York college adds that some students are “idealistic and interested if challenged.” The university student is “willing to discuss Christianity—and sometimes is eager to do so—as a philosophy of life,” reports a professor in the Pacific Northwest. “In moments of thoughtfulness—when he cannot drown the mood in beer—he knows that having enough to eat and two cars is not enough, that he is more important than merely a tool to build material security,” comments Professor Grabill, and that is where Christianity can challenge him. His thinking is “geared to the future,” remarks Professor Cook, and “a discussion of purposes and goals in life immediately draws his interest.” He knows there was a day when men had a religion expressive of their faith and not of their doubts, and he wants a firm place to stand when all the world seems in motion.

END

“I found Christ as a freshman forty years ago. To my Christian faith I owe the major joys of life, a philosophy, a code, a confidence, and insights which would otherwise elude me. Youth in this stormy age need such blessings. I find no more urgent task than the endeavor to tell them so in language they understand, avoiding none of their problems, and giving a reason for faith in forms that reason will accept.”—Dr. E. M. Blaiklock, professor of classics, University of Auckland.

Testimonies of Professors

GORDON J. VAN WYLEN

Chairman, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, University of Michigan

While I believe the Christian faith apart from its particular benefits, it touches my life in the university in three specific ways, namely: my work has purpose and significance because this is God’s world, and all study and learning are gifts of God to be used for his glory and the benefit of our fellow men; it provides enlightenment and understanding on many problems, from the pride of man to the future destiny of the human race; and it gives a motive and pattern for service through the example we have in the character and the incarnation and suffering of our Lord.

Robert B. Fischer

Professor of Chemistry, Indiana University

The explosively expanding frontiers of knowledge and its implications and applications make this an intensely exciting, yet awesome age in which to live. All these serve to intensify, but not really to modify, the relevance of Christ to the world. Man is a spiritual being, as well as a physical being, and only through personal faith in Christ can any individual be made complete. We as Christians, individually and collectively, must be ever alert to the urgency of bringing the fullness of the Gospel to the whole man.

C. C. Morrill

Chairman, Department of Veterinary Pathology, Michigan State University

The scholar in whatever field constantly searches for relevance. According to God’s Word, this search, to be most fruitful, must involve Jesus Christ for “in [him] are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge … and ye are complete in him” (Col. 2:3, 10). By opening our spiritual eyes, he gives all of our knowledge new meaning—new relevance. Thanks be to God who has delivered us from the power of darkness and translated us into the kingdom of his dear Son!

Richard D. Campbell

Assistant Professor of Chemistry, State University of Iowa

Modern science seeks to understand more about the strange, adverse creation in which man finds himself. By the power of disciplined human reason the scientist seeks knowledge which will hopefully improve man’s physical well-being. To believe that the knowledge of science is enough to fulfill the needs of the whole man would be a denial of man’s experience and a false hope.

From some minor triumphs of reason in the physical realm and dark gropings in the human intellect, the mind of man has been led by his own pride and conceit to the belief that he can solve all of his problems, physical, mental, and spiritual.

Only when man realizes the limits of human reason and turns to his Creator-God revealed in Jesus Christ, can he find a purposeful and satisfying life. “In Him is Life, and that Life is the Light of man.”

Robert H. Cameron

Dept. of Math, College of Science, Literature and the Arts, Univ. of Minnesota

Communism offers the hope of an ultimate Utopia for the bodies and minds of men, but nothing for their (supposedly non-existent) souls. Though some claim that medical science will ultimately cause men to live forever, none dare assert that it will ever raise the dead; so Marx will never see his Utopia. Death has conquered Marx and Lenin, but Christ has conquered death. He has lived in my heart ever since fellow students at Cornell University explained Christ’s atoning death and triumphant justifying resurrection in terms that I could understand and accept. I await with confidence his everlasting kingdom.

Orville S. Walters

Director of Health Services, University of Illinois

Troubled students on campus today have a high incidence of anxiety that is primarily spiritual. When we penetrate their superficial symptomatic concerns, focused upon study or interpersonal relations, we often find a substrate of lostness and yearning for some sense of purpose. The Christian understanding of personality has long recognized this hidden hunger. The deep need of man for forgiveness and reconciliation cannot be satisfied by technological achievement and intellectual excellence. Commitment to Christ is relevant to today’s human need, as it has always been.

A. M. Rempel

Acting Head, Department of Education, Purdue University

For some years now it has been my privilege to be a part of college campus life—as student, as professor, and as administrator. I am grateful for this opportunity. I have found, however, that scholarship and the quest for knowledge, although often exciting, do not completely satisfy. Added to them must be a life which alone gives them unity and meaning. I have found this life in Jesus Christ. To experience his redeeming and energizing love, to share in his passion and purpose, is to discover a reality “which surpasses knowledge.”

David H. Ives

Assistant Professor, Dept. of Agricultural Biochemistry, The Ohio State University

Not only is the university preparation for life, but it is life. Yet during this same period, so full of exploration and intellectual ferment, students often forget or misunderstand the relevance of the Christ they knew as children to the more sophisticated world they now find themselves in. In an era when the very continuation of life seems dependent upon the whim of a few powerful world leaders, when an errant flock of geese on a radar screen could release destructive forces of unimaginable proportions, when evil so often seems to triumph over good, it must be recalled that Christ is still the Lord of History. The great miracle is that this same omnipotent Lord chooses to work through the lives of individuals to carry out his purposes.

James H. Roberts

Professor of Physics, Northwestern University

Mankind has tapped the basic source of physical power in the universe—nuclear (atomic) power. This power can be used for terrible destruction or for great benefits. Thinking people—students and faculty alike—feel helpless to guarantee its proper use. Some realize we must depend upon a still more basic source of power—God himself. His love and concern are made known through Jesus Christ. He alone is able to give inner peace, courage, and wisdom, and to motivate us to use the knowledge of the atom for the good of mankind as we exercise personal faith in Jesus Christ.

JOHN W. ALEXANDER

Assistant Dean, Letters and Science, University of Wisconsin

Our main objectives in the academic world are to advance the frontiers of knowledge through research and to communicate truth through teaching. The fund of knowledge by now is so vast that no human mind can comprehend it all. Hence the question: Is there any knowledge of such significance that every learner (whether sociologist or pedologist, historian or geographer, chemist or musician or whatever) should know it? The Christian answers, “Yes, the knowledge of God through Jesus Christ who said, ‘I am the Truth.’ ” But it is not enough to know about Jesus Christ; one must know him. The good news to every searcher for truth is that he can personally know Jesus Christ, who then satisfies the deepest hunger of his mind and heart.

JAMES H. SHAW

Associate Professor of Biological Chemistry, Harvard School of Dental Medicine

In world crisis or calm, in personal turmoil or satisfaction, Jesus Christ rightfully is the “Source, Guide and Goal of all that is” (Rom. 11:36, NEB). In the search for truth, the eternally important question through the ages and today was and is centered in every individual’s response to Christ’s claims about himself and to his message about salvation and adoption into his spiritual family. Belief in, personal commitment to, and dependence upon Jesus Christ by student or faculty member are essential for understanding life’s true meaning. This vital personal relationship to the Lord brought previously unknown joy and fulfillment to my life.

J. Marshall Miller

Associate Professor of Planning, School of Architecture, Columbia University

Collegiate education today stresses the acquisition of “knowledge” with little or no attention to the acquiring of “wisdom.” Even less time is devoted to the understanding of the relevance of Christ, his teachings, or the potential power of the Holy Spirit. The language of the Bible is a foreign language to teacher and student alike. And yet it is a substantiated fact, certainly in my own life, that daily, personal fellowship with Christ and the powerful working of the Holy Spirit hold greater significance than all the lectures, research efforts, and reference books combined.

John A. Mcintyre

Sloane Laboratory, Physics Department, Yale University

Today, the university student is seeking. He speaks for himself in this, the last editorial of the Yale Daily News in 1962: “Most of us graduate unsure of life’s calling. Yet Yale, which has determined the kind of life we seek, has imposed substantial barriers in the way of that life’s accomplishment. The university has demonstrated how the daily existence of most Americans can be criticized, even ridiculed, without prescribing the formula for a useful, rewarding life—and without showing how one can reconcile himself to a ridiculous world.” Was the call to preach the Gospel in Macedonia any more clear and urgent than this?

Ronald C. Doll

Professor of Education, Hunter College of the City University of New York

Today’s student lives in an era of fear and tension; of abounding knowledge, which doubles every 8½ to 12 years; and of impermanent ideation, which replaces much that was recently considered verity. No wonder despairing cries go up from our campuses: “I’m afraid!” “There’s just too much to know!” “Tell us what we can believe!” The very special answer to Herbert Spencer’s famous question, “What knowledge is of most worth?,” is to be found in the Person of Jesus Christ, whom to know is inner peace, ultimate truth, and entire confidence that he is “the same yesterday, today, and forever.”

Cyrus W. Barnes

Professor of Science, School of Education, New York University

We moderns need a goal, a plan for action, and the opportunity to proceed. The Christian life gives me a purpose bigger than my life, meriting and requiring commitment, and thoroughly challenging. One can have direction for today and means of proceeding toward eventual achievement of His kingdom, a universe characterized by love and respect. One’s efforts, though microscopic in large perspective, have worth and significance. Failure is possible but temporary; the cause will prevail. A privilege I value highly is association with Christians whose presence is a tonic: friends, colleagues, relatives, and committed youth of campus and camp.

S. I. Fuenning

Medical Director, University of Nebraska

As stated in St. Paul’s letter to the Christians at Colossae, “Your own completeness is only realized in Him, who is the Authority over all authorities, and the Supreme Power over all powers.” This phenomenon is the mystery of the ages, which is, as St. Paul further states, “Christ in you, the hope of glory.” The full realization of Christ in man does free him from the infantile core in human nature and creates in man a new nature which has as its characteristics “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, fidelity, adaptability and self-control”.

Walter R. Hearn

Assoc. Professor, Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Iowa State University

Scientists devote themselves to studying the works of God in the universe, imitating their Creator when they seek to be creative with their minds and hands (although some know little of God and care little to acknowledge him). Christians love the living Word of God enough to devote their lives to Him, imitating the Lord Jesus Christ by seeking to redeem the whole world through him (although some know painfully little about that world and care little to study it). What a privilege for some of us to be active citizens of both communities—Christian scholars with the opportunity to live both creatively and redemptively!

Rene De Visme Williamson

Professor of Government, Louisiana State University

Students on our secular campuses want to “belong” and to believe, but their loyalty waits for a worthy object in an age when institutions are unstable and ideologies have been unmasked as idolatries. It is for us Christian professors to confront these students with the claims of Christ, who alone can impart new meaning to life, new strength to institutions, and new vitality to human thought. Even the pagan world must reckon all history as before or after Christ. So must each individual reckon his own personal life as before or after Christ’s birth in his own life. Faith in Christ is not the end of the road: it is the beginning of a new road on which each person is assured of guidance and companionship, the only road whose destination is his destiny.

Philip C. Munro

Instructor in Electronics and Engineering, Washington University

Since becoming a Christian 2½ years ago, I have seen the Lord Jesus guide every detail of my life, as I have asked to see this. The truth of the Bible is not only a sufficient truth, but the necessary truth for every university person to understand and to personally trust.

CALVIN D. LINTON

Dean, Columbian College of Arts and Sciences, George Washington University

Man’s estrangement from the universe, and his loneliness within it, are not assuaged by his vastly increased information about it but are rather made the more acute. The comfort of Newton’s neat machine, predictable, comprehensible, and controllable, has vanished, and man stands at the edge of a dimensionless abyss, not only doubting his own mastery of his environment but growingly fearful that the nature of reality is ultimately unthinkable. His fear of physical death has been transcended by the greater fear of total meaninglessness. He must descend the stair of arrogance, self-conceit, and self-righteousness—and be still. Only thus can he hear the words of the One by whom the worlds were made, without whom was nothing made that was made, who declared, “I am the way, the truth, and the life; no man cometh unto the Father but by me.” Only the heart which puts its trust in this Jesus of history and of eternity can face today’s world and today’s universe without fear.

CHARLES HATFIELD

Chairman, Mathematics Department, University of North Dakota

The church of tomorrow, if not its secular historians, may well record as the sickest sin of this age that we saw this global crisis as anything but spiritual. How can we afford such superficiality? If we cannot confront the world with the Gospel of Jesus Christ and all its implications for life today, we shall have failed. But if we live to exalt Christ and him alone, I believe that God will bare his strong arm and forge his own instrument for the defeat of Communism and the other conspiracies that seek to smother his truth.

Kenneth Scott Latourette

Sterling Professor of Missions, Emeritus, Yale University

Use the present opportunity to the full for these are evil days. That injunction is as imperative and that description as accurate as when first uttered. The days are fully as significant for the eternal welfare of the billions who now constitute the human race as they were for the few hundred millions who were the total of mankind in the first century. The current situation on the planet threatens that welfare as strikingly as it did then. For all, now as then, Christ is the door to life eternal.

Today the world has more who bear the Christian name than at any previous time in history. But it also has more who have never had the opportunity intelligently to accept or to reject the Good News than in any earlier century. The obligation upon Christians should be apparent.

THE CLIMATE IN THE COLLEGES

A UNIVERSITY EMBLEM—In Thy Light we shall see light.—Inscription on the seal of Columbia University.

DEFECTION AND ITS CAUSE—A Catholic report published in America (April 8, 1961) quotes Bishop Robert E. Lucey: “The dangers to faith and morals are at least as great in a downtown office as on a secular campus.” The national survey of Time magazine (1952) is cited to the same effect: “No appreciable number of defections,” say Newman Club chaplains at the University of Illinois and the University of Iowa; those which do occur “result rather from weak religious background prior to college than from campus living and experiences.” The Harvard Crimson poll [1959] … records a high rate of defections—40 per cent among Protestants, 25 per cent among Catholics, 12 per cent among Jews—among the 310 students who answered. But in almost every case the defection had its roots in precollege days, especially in high-school experience.—MICHAEL NOVAK, “God in the Colleges,” Harper’s (Oct., 1961).

EDUCATIONAL CLIMATE—The new educational climate is more favorable than the former to the pursuit of the liberal arts which have been historically associated with a Christian culture. In fact the new emphasis paves the way for a distinctively Christian education.—MARTIN HEGLAND, Christianity in Education (1954).

CRISIS IN COMMUNICATION—The university faces the problem of the Tower of Babel; the church faces the problem of glossolalia, strange tongues.

Theologians can contribute to the cure of both ills by boldly adopting a language common to humanity, or at least by seriously searching for such a language.—H. JACKSON FORSTMAN, assistant professor of religion, Stanford University, “Theology in the American University,” Encounter (Autumn, 1961).

OPTIMISTIC ANALYSIS—Behind the masks, the disguises, of this student generation, I see alert minds, (honed sharp by the present age of intellectual competition), generous hearts (with a compassion and concern for their fellow man, unequaled in any age), strong bodies (when challenged to meet the test to defend a principle which they believe in), and a sound philosophy (which needs only an understanding of the nature of man and of the grace, mercy, and love of God). It is this generation the church must address. To do so calls for (1) confession of failure, (2) proclamation of the revelation of God’s forgiving love in Jesus Christ, and (3) a demonstration of the love, trust, and confidence in the lives of those who claim to be a part of her, both the ministry and the laity.—VAN D. SPURGEON, university minister, Oklahoma State University, “The American College Student Today,” Encounter (Winter, 1962).

The Task of Educated Leadership

Ours is a task of witness in educated society. The first task of the educated Christian is moral leadership. Isaiah describes a man of God as “the shadow of a great rock in a weary land.” The word “rock,” no doubt, prefigures Christ, in whose shadow we find salvation, but it is descriptive of any man who fronts the storm and stands firm against the tide. Sir George Adam Smith has written one of his purple passages on this very theme. Where the desert touches an oasis, he writes, life is continually under attack from the wind-driven infiltrating sand. The rains come, and a carpet of green struggles to life on the desert’s edge, and there is a promise of fertility. But it is doomed, for the thrusting sand creeps in, and stunts and chokes the feeble aspirations of the green. But set a rock on the sand. After the brief rains, life springs up on its leeward side, and in time there comes a garden. The boulder has stayed the drift.

The shadow of a rock is life in those arid lands. Hence Isaiah’s image. A man can be a “hiding place from the wind and a covert from the tempest.” He fronts the deadly storm and stays the drift. In the shadow, weaker life can live, and pant through the harsh hours. Protected from the arid drift, useful life and faithfulness can grow. So stood Isaiah himself in the days of the great Assyrian invasion. Hezekiah was a weak man and unwise. The prophet was his rock. In the shelter, the king could strike roots of sustenance; courage could grow to fullness, and faith find place to spring.

And Hezekiah, thus nourished and protected, saved Jerusalem. There are those who fall and die in the struggle for faith and righteousness because they never see these values potent and uplifted against the storm in another and stronger personality.

Here, then, is a noble function for the educated Christian, especially for the teacher in school or university. Many a young man and girl have been preserved from devastating doubt and moral ruin by the mere spectacle of some Christian teacher standing firm. The prerequisites are exacting. Second-rate scholarship, shoddy work in the classroom, dour aloofness, and lack of social grace, can destroy such usefulness. The rock, in the critical eyes of youth, must be truly based, without flaw or fundament of clay. It is easy to fail those who seek such shelter; but occasionally to pass the test, to be conscious that some feebler life has taken root in the beneficent shadow, to see that life grow and learn to face the storm alone, is the fairest privilege of the Christian teacher’s, or, let me add, the Christian parent’s life.

Let us covet the best gifts, of which this is one: to stand fast by God’s grace, unwearied, uncompromising, unafraid, and proclaim Christ among the intellectuals.

It is no easy place of witness where agnosticism is a cult, and the search for truth a fetish rather than an adventure of discovery—where a live Christian faith is often snobbishly dismissed as bad form, or written down cruelly and falsely as bad scholarship. But such artificial attitudes are commonly those of lesser academic lights, who find their foothold precarious among the educated. True thinkers do not dismiss thus the Christian’s claim to have apprehended vital truth, and discussion with fine and unprejudiced minds on the bases and essentials of his faith can be the Christian’s most stimulating and searching experience. In Luke’s fine narrative we can watch one of the most superbly educated men of the ancient world, Paul of Tarsus, meet thus the intellectuals of two worlds. He debates, single-handed, against the combined learning of the Jerusalem Jews. He meets the Jews of the Hellenistic synagogues, heirs, like himself, to the cultures both of Greece and of Palestine. He passes to Athens, and makes the tremendous intellectual adjustment thus demanded, arguing like Socrates in the Agora or facing the philosophers of the Areopagus with Greek reasoning, quotation from Greek literature, and local illustration. “Prove, correct, encourage,” Paul urged the young Timothy, “using the utmost patience in your teaching.” Paul put that precept into practice with superb tact, relevant learning, and precise argument. It was no doubt with such an example before him that Peter, no intellectual, but an incisive and vigorous preacher, wrote near the end of his life, “Be ready at any time to give a quiet and reverent answer to any man who wants a reason for the hope that you have within you.”

Intellectual Leadership

I have already trespassed on my second point. The educated Christian’s role is not only moral leadership. He has also a duty of intellectual leadership. “A liberal Protestant,” runs a paragraph in the Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, seeks “an anti-dogmatic and humanitarian reconstruction of the Christian faith,” an attitude which, according to the same authority, “until recently appeared to be gaining ground in nearly all the Protestant churches.” The words we emphasize are the dictionary’s tribute to the conservatives. Perhaps we should pause a moment to stress that which we have sought with such toil to conserve.

The principle object of our jealous conservation has been an authoritative Bible. We cannot see how without the loftiest doctrine of inspiration, the teachings of Scripture can be preached or taught with cogency or confidence. Granted a Bible which is the Word of God, a man can preach without misgiving the traditional message of Christianity—a divine Christ, an atoning death, a unified Bible telling the story of a great historical process culminating in God’s inruption into history, a coherent New Testament with no division between Christ and Paul, between the Jesus of history and the Christ of faith. Once shake substantially the authority of Scripture, and the haphazard collection of documents into which the Bible forthwith dissolves becomes of little more than antiquarian use in preaching or devotion. Interpretation becomes rationalist and subjective. The Bible ceases to speak. Authority must be objective, not dependent on a reader’s whim or choice. Such is the conservative’s quite logical belief. This position is finding wider acceptance because conservatism has learned to speak in the language and thought-forms of the day, and to meet undoubted problems coolly and face to face.

But if we are to fulfill our function, conservatism must be informed conservatism. Orthodoxy should be something more than a mere emotional attitude. It should be the stand of an educated Christian, free from credulity, shibboleth, and superstition, above the noisy controversy which so often passes for loyalty, and careful to avoid hot polemical attitudes.

Informed conservatism recognizes the indefensible positions which ill-informed orthodoxy has sometimes sought nervously to hold; it admits those legitimate areas of difference where opinion is free, and where dogmatic attitudes cause unnecessary division. Informed conservatism welcomes all the light which learned research can throw on Scripture. It is no devotee of literalism, nor is it committed to Ussher’s dates, Elizabethan English, or the views, in their sacrosanct entirety, of the Reformation theologians. Informed conservatism believes that no truth can be alien to the Word of Truth, and that no honest scholarship can harm the faith. It does believe that, as Goethe once put it, each generation must win over again its spiritual heritage and experience truth in its own person, that the need is ever with us to rephrase old doctrine, to relate it afresh to the changing patterns of life, to think boldly and apply our faith to the problems of our generation. Our task is to keep the cause alive, modern, active, adaptive; to meet the need of the world we live in; and to demonstrate the eternal relevance of what we believe.

Devotion To Scholarship

Hence the need for thought, and a task of intellectual leadership, a role which conservatism was too late in recognizing. Over significant and lamentable years in the latter half of the last century, conservatives neglected scholarship. The reasons were three. The pulpit was the goal in a great age of preaching, and the pulpit is an exacting master. Spurgeon, Parker, Moody, Talmadge—these were not great scholars. There was also current a widely proclaimed and accepted eschatology which, Thessalonian fashion, further encouraged men of ability to seek the pulpit rather than the lecture-room. It proclaimed a Second Advent so imminently near that plans of preparation involving years of study seemed a confession of unbelief. Thirdly, thanks to the blessed and forgotten British Peace, the world was opening with incomparable opportunities for missionary enterprise, and ability was drained off into these open and useful channels in a manner which had the unfortunate result of stripping the church at home of leadership in thought.

Meanwhile liberals, not so keen on missionary activity, skeptical of orthodox eschatology, and lacking the strong evangelical urge to preach, gave energy and enterprise to church politics and theological teaching. In a word they practically monopolized the schools. Such a triumph involves a time-lag of half a century even when promptly countered by an alert opposition, for the teacher has pupils who bear the mark of their classroom through another generation. And the liberals’ capture of the classrooms was not promptly countered. One must not forget such men as Orr and Denney, and later Machen and others like them, but the fact remains that liberal theology dug its defenses deep in strategic places—a most lamentable victory, won by conservatism’s default. “Until recently” the position was unchallenged. The conservatives, newly aware of a great neglected responsibility, are at last on the march, and a mass of modem, useful publications and enlightened teaching are beginning to reverse the situation.

Liberalism Is Bankrupt

Liberalism is proven bankrupt. At first, thanks to conservatism’s timid retreat, its Cross-less and modernized Christianity had seemed to some the answer to the century’s need. Its optimism, based on the current evolutionary philosophy, fitted the bright Victorian notions of progress and the curiously hectic hopefulness which survived the First World War. It turned Christ into a young Apollo suited to an age of youth; it expended its energy on social problems, and substituted a personal mysticism for the lost authority of an inspired Bible.

Then came disillusionment. The Thirties and the Second World War marked the end of easy optimism and secular millennarianism. A Christianity which failed to deal with sin and to meet man’s need with a true Saviour, failed to hold ordinary men. The Bible diagnosis of man seemed so obviously correct. Scientific progress, with the growing menace of nuclear disaster, seemed somehow to be discredited, and visible human helplessness and depravity began to daunt the remaining agnostics who believed that

These things shall be, a nobler race,

Than e’er the world hath known shall rise,

With flame of freedom in their souls,

And light of knowledge in their eyes.

It became clear that liberalism had no message. Preaching based on a “Christian ethic” without dynamism, personal challenge, or divine authority to back it, has failed to hold the crowds. The empty pews of the well-remembered shot in Noel Coward’s Cavalcade were convincing enough argument for many honest men who had seen in liberalism the synthesis of religion and scholarship, and who, thanks to the conservatives’ pre-occupations, had seen in the liberal leaders the intellectual wing of the Church.

But the pew was decisive before the menacing Thirties came to daunt the vision of a man-made millennium. Able men, of whom Harry Emerson Fosdick was a striking example, held full churches by their personal strength of character and eloquence. The rank and file were disillusioned. Men in the liberal ministry in greater and greater numbers became conscious that they had nothing cogent to preach. Some sought less compromising ways of life. Many sought outlet in social work. Lloyd Douglas, whose biography is a document of liberalism’s bankruptcy, passed through such a phase before his spirit found an outlet, and the clear beginnings of a pathway back, in religious-novel writing. There were others, worldwide, who genuinely returned to a conservative faith and found it satisfactory. Others invented neoorthodoxy. On that theme I cannot, in the compass of my present task, embark. At its extreme left, neoorthodoxy is a species of double-talk in which the man in the pulpit preaches ancient doctrine with a reserved, symbolic, and private meaning, unshared by the simpler folk in the pew. At the extreme right, if I may use political terms in a theological situation, the neoorthodox preacher expounds ancient doctrine as any conservative does, but he lies under the strain of holding such doctrines without a clear faith in an authoritative Bible to justify the tenure, and only because he discovers empirically their potency to save, to upbuild, and to feed the soul.

Amid all this scattering and bewilderment of liberal churchmen, the theological schools remained for a long time unrepentant. For young men called to the ministry after a vital religious experience, the seminaries often presented an ordeal, a sort of Mithraic initiation by heat, through which the would-be preacher passed, stopping his ears. Like something prehistoric, a dated liberalism still lies entrenched in many theological schools, and the ardent youth still has, in some quarters, a gauntlet of the mind to run on his way to the pulpit steps.

Why all this excursion into theological history? Because I blame the conservatives, who abandoned or neglected their task of intellectual leadership. That fault is now recognized and purged. It was a hard fight in the days when we were few, and perhaps in the heat of conflict blows were dealt which might have been withheld. It was a time of hard testing for those who stood firm a generation and more ago, when the battle was hottest, especially for educated men who found their scholarship labeled and called into question because they refused to accept a devastating criticism, yet had not, at the moment, a more crushing reply than that of faith to make to it. It was a stern battle, and it was fought too clumsily for its survivors to cherish self-esteem. The worst conflict is over. We are called now to a confident forward march. Let us move on with firm steps, all of us—and we are many.

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