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Eutychus V

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GOING, GOING, GONE

When the daily paper arrives, my wife hastens to cut out the auction advertisem*nts and burn them. Otherwise I would attend the auctions—all of them. I have a mania for them, no matter what’s being sold.

One hot summer afternoon I found myself standing for two hours in the blazing sun at a bicycle auction. Nothing else there—just bicycles. That has to be considered a strange use of time for someone whose storage shed already housed four bikes.

To justify my strange behavior I pointed out to my friends that auctions provide an interesting study in the values and tastes of the bidders as well as a glimpse into the lives of those who originally collected the junk—or treasure, as the case may be.

I have pondered the generation gap while watching a Harley-Davidson motorcycle and a Queen Anne chair being auctioned as part of the same estate.

What schizophrenia of taste, I have wondered, could account for the fact that one house spawned both a reasonably good collection of original art and a vast collection of Reader’s Digest condensed books?

But the most interesting exercise at an auction is trying to deduce why people are willing to pay what they do for some of the stranger items. What inner longing is satisfied by the acquisition of an item that is totally useless or consummately ugly?

At one sale the auctioneer held up an intricately contrived device incorporating two cog wheels, three prongs, a spring, and a lever arm. It was the kind of thing my teen-ager would call a “do-golly.”

When the auctioneer called for a starting offer, one cautious bidder asked, “What is it?” The auctioneer examined the device with a puzzled look and replied, “I don’t know, but if you’ve got another one this one would make it a pair.”

Everyone laughed, but someone bought it.

At another sale I watched with fascination as two sixtyish women claimed their purchases: two Mae West shaped vases garishly decorated with blue-green vines. They were aglow with their triumph in being the successful bidders on the twin monstrosities.

I have observed perfectly sane people bidding more than the current retail price for items that had been badly used.

Over and over again as I’ve attended auctions I’ve found myself saying, “They paid that for those?” I’m sure some of those people have later said the same thing to themselves.

I wonder if some dweller in a far-off planet looks at God’s redemptive transaction on earth and thinks of his choices, “He paid that for those?”

But as Publilius Syrus pointed out, “Everything is worth what its purchaser will pay for it.”

A BRIDGE BETWEEN

The generation gap closed completely between this almost sixty-year-old “conservative” Christian and D. John Benson when 1 read “Please, Before I Hit the Ground” (Sept. 10).

Rarely is one so young blessed with such a marvelous gift of insight, or able to write with such pathos while blunting the sting of his satire with such love and gentle humor. Rarer still his ability to bridge not only the generation gap but the communication gap between practitioners of hide-bound orthodoxy and hard rock evangelism.

Carl Junction, Mo.

In pain I write, having just fought my way through D. John Benson’s “Please, Before I Hit the Ground.” With incisive awareness, the author discerns the publican’s plea and with laser beam, penetrates deep into pharisee fog.

Okeene, Okla.

CRIMINAL NEGLIGENCE

In the editorial titled, “How Well Do You Support Your Pastor?” (Sept. 10), we read: “‘The laborer is worthy of his hire,’ Jesus said, but when making out the pastor’s paycheck, many Bible-believing churches do not seem to believe that Jesus really uttered those words.” …

The instruction of the churches on the subject of ministerial support is sadly, almost criminally, neglected. No subject of like importance receives so little attention from the preacher in his pulpit ministrations or his personal pastoral instruction. Some neglect to teach the duty of pastoral support because they are so obsessed with iridescent dreams and utopian theories that they cannot come down to a thing so practical. Others neglect it because of a spurious timidity lest they be preaching for money! Still others neglect it because they do not realize how fundamentally the doctrine is grounded in Scripture teaching. Every word spoken on the subject and every example illustrating it, either in the Old or the New Testament, teaches unequivocally that the preacher must give his undivided time to his ministry, and further that those to whom he ministers must provide his temporal support! The preacher or the church that wantonly, heedlessly, and willfully disobeys or thoughtlessly disregards this reasonable and clearly enunciated Scripture law will come to speedy and irretrievable disaster!

Richfield, Minn.

A SUGGESTION FOR PUBLISHERS

Thank you for your article “Thou Shalt Not Copy, Right?” by Cheryl A. Forbes (Sept. 10). The article saved my church from violating this law; we weren’t aware that what we were about to do was wrong. We had planned to duplicate hymns on a copying machine and then put them in a looseleaf binder as a supplemental hymnal to the one we already use.

We are still, however, in a dilemma. As you are probably aware, no one hymnal is fully satisfying to any one congregation. There are always hymns left out that people feel should have been included. An additional hymnal is not the answer; you get too much duplication, and even then favorite hymns are often not found in either book. I would like to suggest to the publishers that they make available copies of individual hymns suitable for binding in a looseleaf binder. The cost to the publisher would be only a few cents a sheet that he could in turn sell for between five and ten cents a sheet. This would mean that a congregation of two hundred with one hundred looseleaf hymnals could introduce new hymns for five to ten dollars. I am convinced that churches would be willing to pay this much to do this. I would be interested to know the reaction of some publishers to this suggestion.

North Ridge Alliance Church

Raleigh, N. C.

Thank you very much for … [the] article “Thou Shalt Not Copy, Right?” This is an excellent article and [Miss Forbes] handled the material very well.

The Sunday School Board

Nashville, Tenn.

EVIL ‘ECONOMIC WILL-TO-POWER’

Dr. Byron Lambert, in his essay “On Avoiding Work” (Aug. 27), unfortunately underestimates the dimension of evil in man’s work in his attempt to bolster the spirits of the restless and disenchanted worker. While I agree with him that there is no escape from work, I cannot agree with his further implication that all work is therefore intrinsically good, meaningful, and glorifying to God, if only it could be discovered. All work is not intrinsically good. As long as man is able to exercise his economic will-to-power over his fellow man, he will offer him many jobs that oppress and dehumanize him rather than fulfill him and bring glory to God.

His counsel to the worker that he transmute his work into “a discipline that rebuilds the soul” is wholly unsatisfactory—and bad theology. It gives the worker the false impression that what he thinks is degrading in his job really is not and that all he has to do to perceive the goodness of his work is to “engage in it with eternal purpose.” It is bad theology because it blurs the distinction between good and evil in life and gives the erroneous impression that God is not angered with the present, ever-changing subtle forms of evil with which we must constantly struggle. If all work were inherently good, it would be possible to talk about its use for rebuilding the soul. However, since this is not the case, we must not think that personally degrading work ever glorifies God. We do not do justice to God’s sensitivity to evil (or even what should be our own sensitivity to evil) when we attempt to make all evil seem innocuous and potentially good.

It is necessary that we acknowledge much that is patently evil in all economic systems if we ever hope to deal effectively with the plight of the restless worker. No amount of PMA can transmute evil into anything but evil. It is only by rising above, not in acquiescing to, the evil of the particular job that the worker can “grow and rebuild his soul.” While he may grow as a consequence of his confrontation with the evils of his job, the evils themselves will still remain as evil as ever. Dr. Lambert’s advice to the worker might give the disgruntled worker some eternal consolation in his plight; but it is given at the serious expense of removing a solid basis for an effective, persistent attack on the evil of the job itself.…

I would suggest that Dr. Lambert reread Marx. Nowhere, to my knowledge, does Marx suggest that communism will abolish work. It is my understanding that he says communism will relieve the working classes of the oppressive work they must endure under capitalism. It is certainly not necessary to distort Marx in order to disagree with him. If we are interested in truth at all, it is necessary that we state the position of those we disagree with forthrightly so that we, and others, know precisely where our disagreement lies.

Urbana, Ill.

ALLEGIANCE VS. ASSOCIATION?

Your editorial “Affirming Religious Freedom” (Aug. 27) was thoughtful and timely. The new Ontario law indeed restrains labour unions which “demand personal allegiance.” This stipulation, however, is radically different from “association” (as you put it) with both non-Christian employers and unions. Confusion of this essential difference would understandably give rise to the easily answered editorial query. To phrase it in a quasi-biblical way, unlike ancient Jews, Christian Labour Unionists certainly “associate” even with all Samaritans. Those Christians though will never make union with Samaritans on the grounds of a Samaritan allegiance!

Almonte Reformed Presbyterian Church

Almonte, Ont.

PUBLIC EDUCATION: DISGUISED CHARITY?

You report that a Mrs. Ruhlin is lobbying in Congress to discharge a petition to reinstate prayers in public schools (“Prayer Amendment: Second Wind,” Aug. 27). She started when one of her children asked why God is kept out of schools.

He isn’t. He goes there with each Christian child. But consider what else is involved. The subsidized schools’ resources are taken from those who don’t benefit, by force. This is the essence of evil, from which, Christ is quoted as saying, no good fruit can grow.… Public schools teach children that they have “rights” without duties.… Public education is a vast form of cleverly disguised public charity, and, as a careful examination will reveal, vastly a fake, for it takes from the students and their families their basic duty to learn, which is the absolute necessity to moral education.

Plantation, Fla.

WHAT REALLY HAPPENED

I am writing with reference to the allegation of Dr. Carl McIntire of Collingswood, New Jersey, as it appeared in “McIntire’s Mélange” (May 7). Edward Plowman reports McIntire as saying, “Rambo, who worked in the office, was expelled from Shelton in 1967 for discipline reasons.”

The truth of the matter is thus: … Following the leadership of McIntire himself, (I) renounced the jurisdiction of Shelton College’s president, and left Shelton College. It will be recalled many years ago McIntire renounced the jurisdiction of his own Presbyterian Church, and left to form the Bible Presbyterian Church.…

McIntire, being misinformed of the nature of my activities … issued directives against me for “competing with him and his Christian Beacon, trying to put him out of business.”

Oaklyn, N. J.

    • More fromEutychus V

Ideas

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A toothache makes a man miserable whatever culture he is a part of. If he has access to a dentist, the problem is easy to solve. But if he lives in a society where dentists are scarce, or where toothaches must be endured in deference to evil spirits, his misery may be prolonged indefinitely.

Given this kind of problem, it is hard to understand, even in purely human terms, the hands-off policy held by some anthropologists. Vast numbers of human beings suffer intensely from ailments that could easily be diagnosed and cured. Part of the problem is that no one has taken the trouble to tell them of the solutions. Another part is that their cultural patterns may preclude such advice. Still another is this notion in anthropology that cultures ought not to “interfere” with one another. Does the “autonomy” of aboriginal cultures outweigh a sense of compassion for their well-being?

It is true that we cannot relieve the distress of some of the world’s more primitive peoples without tampering with their value systems. But this does not mean that other value systems should be imposed as being wholly preferable. There are no doubt some elements in primitive cultures that people in civilized countries might well emulate. The goal should not be simply to impose Western ideals but to compare insights and to test cultural patterns against one another.

Particularly disturbing is a recent statement prepared by ten South American anthropologists calling for “suspension of all missionary activity” among Indians. These ten, and one from the University of Bern in Switzerland, drafted a scathing attack on missionary work during a six-day symposium in the Barbados earlier this year. The symposium was financed by the World Council of Churches as part of its “Program to Combat Racism.” While the views do not necessarily represent those of the WCC, it is nonetheless appalling that this great global embodiment of the ecumenical movement which grew out of the overseas missionary enterprise is now reduced to funding studies on terminating missionary enterprise.

The so-called Declaration of Barbados, entitled “For the Liberation of Indians,” regards evangelization as a component of “colonialist ideology” that is “essentially discriminatory” and implies “submission in exchange for future supernatural compensations.” The “spurious quality” of evangelization is attacked, and missions are accused of having become a “great land and labour enterprise.” Until missionaries can be gotten rid of, churches are challenged to support ten suggestions ostensibly aimed at reducing exploitation. One of these calls for “true respect for Indian culture,” for missionary work is said to manifest too little “sensitivity to aboriginal religious sentiments and values.” The statement declares, “To the degree that the religious missions do not assume these minimal obligations, they, too, must be held responsible by default for crimes of ethnocide and connivance with genocide.”

The WCC should promptly dissociate itself from these opinions. At best they are gross oversimplifications, at worst a calculated attempt to undermine biblical Christianity. The declaration makes no attempts at distinctions or documentations, so one is left without a clue to the data on which the accusations are based. So sweeping are the generalizations that all missionaries become villains. Even those who gave up their lives for the betterment of their fellow men are implicitly classed with killers.

We regard this as a kind of racism in reverse, a fighting fire with fire. Under the guise of sympathy for people who have been victims of prejudice, an intensive anti-missionary sentiment emerges. Only those who agree with the political and economic presuppositions of the statement are spared from criticism.

All human beings, because of their sinful nature, have at one time or another feelings of superiority based on race, sex, professon, or some other characteristic. And certainly not all missionaries behave with the best of motives or methods. But to single out for special blame missionaries who generally have acted out of compassion when most other men didn’t care is an appalling injustice. The truth is that in the case of Indians and others, the only outside help has been that provided by selfless missionaries.

The Barbados statement invites speculation as to whether it serves to preserve the Indians’ customs and diminish discrimination against them, or whether it represents in itself a tool for exploitation of Indians. The political flavor of the document is only too apparent (not to mention the fact that it assumes its own superiority). One can only wonder whether in return for a championing of what are paraded as the Indians’ best interests, an ideological allegiance is being sought to gain political power.

The Indians of the Americas—indeed, tribal peoples the world over—desperately need friends to relieve their plight. Maybe it takes ill-conceived efforts to prod us to greater sacrifices in their behalf. But the Gospel transcends politics and demands submission only to Jesus Christ. To be sure, there is a price, but not in terms of humanity. Christ offers the greatest kind of liberation a human being can possess.

The Kennedy Center

The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts opened last month in Washington, D.C., amid confusion and tears. Leonard Bernstein’s Mass, the work Mrs. Onassis commissioned to dedicate the center, brought standing ovations at each performance (see News, page 40). But the critics weren’t raving. The work is a mass, but not a mass, according to composer Bernstein; it is also about a mass. Unlike Godspell, written by Bernstein’s associate Stephen Schwartz (also Jewish), Mass regrettably hinges on humanism and sways on the verge of sacrilege.

But no matter what the meaning—or lack of meaning—of Mass, everyone agrees that the center is a major triumph for the performing arts. Although some complained that tickets were overpriced (and hard to get) and that it was a center for the middle to upper-middle class only, the entertainment for opening week ranged from hillbilly singer Merle Haggard to Metropolitan Opera tenor Nicolai Gedda to the rock group Chicago, and, in what is to be the usual practice, there were specially priced tickets for students, the poor, the elderly, the handicapped, and the military.

Many are ambitious and excited about the center’s future. Music director Julius Rudel envisions the development of a conservatory there. We share this excitement, welcome the opening of the center, and hope it will do much to foster enjoyment and appreciation of the talents God has given so many artists and composers.

Attica’S Eloquence

The confusing news out of the previously little-known town of Attica, New York, last month was extremely depressing from almost any perspective. Unfortunately, Attica is not an isolated exception; like many other such tragedies, it is an intense, compact, and bloody model of society as a whole. Men are everywhere in revolt against authority—in the Army, in the Roman Catholic Church, in colleges, in labor unions (as when the rank-and-file refuse to accept the settlements negotiated by their leaders), and not surprisingly in prisons as well.

Hostility between black and white is only accentuated behind bars. Men everywhere brutalize their fellow men. Fortunately, only a few do it quickly and visibly, and many of these get caught and incarcerated. (Others get rewarded, for a time.) Most men practice brutality slowly and invisibly. They proclaim themselves innocent of wrongdoing if they stop short of physically assaulting one another or of plundering others’ property.

But does God, whose view alone really counts, see such men as innocent? Not according to his word: “There is not a single man who is righteous.… All men have turned away from God, they have all gone wrong. No one does what is good, not even one” (Ps. 14:1–3, repeated in Rom. 3:10–12). It is striking that Christians can imploringly quote such Scriptures when thinking of the need for atonement but conveniently forget them when reflecting on tragedies like Attica. Some blame only the authorities, forgetting that, like the criminal on the cross next to Jesus, most of the prisoners are receiving punishment for their misdeeds and that the authorities have to keep order. Others heap all the blame on the prisoners, forgetting even to think of them as human beings. Christians must never forget that Jesus during his death agony dignified the repentant thief with the promise of paradise. Our Lord set the example for regarding all men as humans for whom he died. There was something about Christ that encouraged one of those criminals hanging with him to talk rather than to rail. Are those who bear the name of Christ today like this? There are some Christians and a few organizations focusing on work with prisoners. They need to be better known and widely supported, and their number needs increasing.

By their own admission, the authorities at Attica and in New York had given the prisoners many legitimate grounds for complaint. Why had they not done more to correct the causes of just grievances instead of letting them accumulate till violence broke out? Probably they would plead a shortage of money. But some reforms, those concerning attitudes, for example, may well be more difficult to achieve than bigger budgets.

The place is called the Attica Correctional Facility. Certainly “correction” is a worthwhile approach to the problem of crime. We must try to correct the criminal, to prepare him to live more in accordance with the accepted norms of society. But do the citizens in fact grant through their representatives adequate funds to make this possible at Attica? Maybe the inmates are uncorrectable. But how do we know? For it seems that whatever else the attempt to “correct” involves, it means continuing to treat the person with the dignity appropriate to humans. If the prisoner is treated in an inhumane way, how can we expect him to treat others humanely? Moreover, an institution attempting to “correct” a criminal should make every effort to see that he learns a skill, if he does not have one, with which he can make an honest living. Has this been done at Attica? In short, do Attica and the other “correctional facilities” in our land earnestly try to correct? Or do they serve instead to confirm criminals in their patterns of treating their fellow men inhumanely?

The simple—and sad—answer is that most citizens can’t be bothered to give those prisoners who are correctable a fighting chance. Certainly it would cost money, but the investment would pay for itself many times over. For every convict who gets off the treadmill of crime and imprisonment can become a taxpaying rather than a tax-supported member of society. Spending money to equip a man to take a useful role in society is good economics as well as simple humaneness.

As Christians we have the special opportunity of taking the life-transforming Gospel to men in jails and prisons. Some will be converted. As citizens we share the responsibility of seeing that our elected officials and the administrators they appoint run our “correctional facilities” so as to make as many inmates as possible into more responsible participants in an admittedly imperfect society.

Our Peaceful Pastime

Despite the excitement stirred up each year by the World Series, baseball remains a peaceful game. It tests strength and skill with little of the body contact inherent in other major sports.

Some prefer it otherwise. They complain that baseball as now played is dull and urge that the rules be changed to build in more “action.” Fortunately, majorleague officials have turned a deaf ear. We already have more conflict in our society than we can handle, without getting people all charged up in the name of entertainment. And if baseball became bloody, we could expect to see the worst effects on young boys.

Most countries emphasize sports more violent than baseball. And the fact that over many years baseball has been America’s national pastime is a tribute to this nation. It suggests that our frame of mind as a people has been essentially peaceful. May it so continue.

The Prayer Amendment

In November the House of Representatives is scheduled to vote on a proposed amendment to the Constitution that says, “Nothing in this Constitution shall abridge the right of persons lawfully assembled, in any public building which is supported in whole or in part through expenditure of public funds, to participate in nondenominational prayer.” We think that passage of this amendment would be a mistake.

For one thing, persons already can and do voluntarily assemble for prayer in public buildings. For example, many religious groups hold meetings regularly on campuses. Congregations rent public-school facilities for small fees. Evangelists hold meetings in public stadiums. Where local authorities prohibit this, they cannot legitimately argue they do so because the Constitution forbids it. The Supreme Court has said the First Amendment prohibits government-promoted religious exercises, but it has upheld the study of religion and rights of voluntary assembly and propagation of one’s faith. By not reading these decisions carefully, many people, including government officials, have misrepresented what the Supreme Court has done to protect religious freedom.

Secondly, this amendment is hardly the way to promote a revival of true religion. Undoubtedly the backers of the amendment have worthy motives. Perhaps they wish to recapture some of the spiritual vitality that sometimes prevailed in our country’s past. Genuine piety is fostered not by government, however, but by families and individuals who practice reverence for God and obedience to him in all their activities and associations.

Finally, this amendment leaves open the possibility for some to assert that denominational prayer should not be permitted in public buildings. We must recognize that in this context “denomination” would almost certainly be interpreted to mean Buddhist, Christian, Jew, Muslim, and the like, not merely Baptist, Lutheran, or Catholic. If a group of Orthodox Jews wish to hold a prayer meeting in a public building at some suitable time, they should be allowed to do so even though Reformed Jews, not to mention Christians, would be unable to join in at least some of the petitions. Youth groups such as Campus Life or Inter-Varsity should be able to meet in schools for explicitly Christian prayers without fear that misguided authorities will say only groups praying in a way that is acceptable to all religions are now constitutional.

We urge our readers to reflect seriously on the implications of this seemingly innocent amendment and to convey their views to their representatives.

William F. Albright

The death of William F. Albright at eighty leaves a gaping hole in the field of biblical archaeology and Semitics. Longtime professor of Semitics at Johns Hopkins University, Albright was mentor for scores of graduate students who now occupy teaching positions around the world. Although he was handicapped from childhood by nearsightedness, he nonetheless read and published largely in the fields of his interest. Scholar though he was, he gave popular lectures that helped the common man to appreciate the fruits of his findings.

The archaeological research and writings of Albright did much to confirm the integrity and accuracy of the Bible. He was the first expert outside Israel to say the Dead Sea Scrolls were genuine, and in this way he contributed to the conclusion that the Masoretic text of the Old Testament Scriptures is substantially the same as that of the Scrolls.

Professor Albright has left us a legacy of scholarship, integrity, human kindness, and a flood of written works. We all are indebted to him.

Nikita Khrushchev

It is a bit ironic that even Christians say good things about bad men when they die. The temptation is particularly strong to look for things to commend in Nikita Khrushchev. Rumors have circulated for years that the Soviet leader converted to Christianity and even that he was deposed for that reason. Some claim to have traced the source of the rumors and proved them false. Others maintain a hope that they were true and that Khrushchev died a believer.

Lacking any really solid evidence to think otherwise, we can only say that Khrushchev was what he appeared to be: a man who lived and died a Communist, a faithful adherent to a miserable system that depersonalizes men and locks them into intellectual prisons by demanding conformity without the right to dissent. The jolly-good-fellow air he sometimes put on stood in contrast to the evil of which he was guilty. The system that brought him to the summit of leadership is the same system that brought about his fall and made him a nonperson, which is, after all, what any man is under the Communist life- and world-view.

To Be Or Not To Be Celibate

The third Synod of Bishops of the Roman Catholic Church, which convened in Rome September 30, has as the two major items on its agenda “Justice in the World” and “The Ministerial Priesthood.” The second is for many priests a topic of pressing interest, since it concerns priestly celibacy.

Pope Paul has been cool to the notion of a married priesthood and in every public statement has come out for celibacy. Yet thousands of men have left the priesthood to marry and, at least in the United States, the majority of the priests think celibacy should be optional.

It is true that a man will have more time for his priestly duties if he is unmarried. But it is also true that the single man may still be less effective as a priest. Moreover, for many celibacy is an invitation to fornication, or at least to inner turmoil. Sanctification does not always provide clear-cut victory over normal physical desires.

Schaff in his History of the Christian Church (V, 44) says that in the eleventh century Gregory’s “enforcement of sacerdotal celibacy triumphed in the whole Roman Church, but at the fearful sacrifice of sacerdotal chastity. The hierarchical aim was attained, but not the angelic purity of the priesthood. The private morals of the priest were sacrificed to hierarchical ambition.”

Since the Scriptures do not forbid clerical marriage (indeed, they specify that the bishop is to be the husband of one wife), and since celibacy is an innovation of eleventh-century origin, one is hard put to understand what would be lost if the Pope were to open the door to marriage for the priesthood. Indeed, it may be that maintaining celibacy would be far more costly in the long run than changing the rule and allowing priests to marry.

The subject seems not unrelated to the second theme of the synod, “Justice in the World.” Many people feel that justice for the priesthood should include the right for each priest to decide for himself whether to marry or to remain celibate.

God And Man In The Aspirin Age

The Space Age is here, but for many it’s the same old Aspirin Age of headaches and worries. There are people who couldn’t care less about space capsules but couldn’t care more about the capsules in their medicine cabinets. Daily television commercials prescribe pills that stop pain while floating pressures away. There are pills to make us sleep and wake us up, pills to put us down and perk us up. Physicians are besieged by patients who have lost their patience—and who want to find in a pill brightness of spirit and tranquillity of heart and mind.

People worry and fret over a lot of things: health, work, security, money, the past, loved ones, what others think, the future. Worry, defined as excessive and immoderate concern or anxiety, makes as much sense as sitting awake in a parked car and accelerating the engine all night in preparation for a trip the next day. It’s like pedaling a bicycle that has no wheels: expending time and energy but getting nowhere.

In Matthew 6:24–34 Jesus shows the uselessness and faithlessness of worry. Life is more important than the food that keeps it going, he says, and the body is more important than what is put on it. Worry can never make life better, he indicates, only worse. It can shorten life through emotionally induced ailments. It makes life miserable for self and others. It wastes mental, physical, and spiritual resources. “Don’t fret and worry—it only leads to harm” (Ps. 37:8).

Jesus teaches us that the worrywart lacks faith (Matt. 6:30). The Father is concerned about our wellbeing; he knows our needs (6:32) and he will provide for them (6:33). The only condition is that we allow him to come to power in our lives. This involves both submission to him and trust in him. To worry is to doubt him. David, for one, endured many hours of unnecessary misery learning that God means what he says. Even though David had been given divine assurance that he would ascend to the throne, he worried as a young man over an early death at the hands of Saul (1 Sam. 27:1). We can almost smile at David’s epitaph many years later: he “died in a good old age, full of days, riches, and honor” (1 Chron. 29:28).

The Bible promises that God will supply all our needs (Phil. 4:19). We are exhorted to worry over nothing (Phil. 4:6) and to cast all our care on the Lord (1 Pet. 5:7). “He will keep in perfect peace all those who trust in him” (Isa. 26:3). This peace safeguards hearts and minds (Phil. 4:7), making for a healthier body and a longer, more enjoyable life.

Peace comes not from a pill but from a Person.

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The ‘New Consciousness’

Although social critics devote considerable attention to the so-called new consciousness, the Zeitgeist is so chaotic that no pulse-readings taken at any one time and place will serve reliably to chart the current situation.

Even the mood on American campuses varies widely. Some universities report that little has changed, while others find life vastly different; student revolt has peaked and is discredited, and job-material needs have become forefront concerns.

For all that, the campus world is haunted by monumental frustrations. The so-called scientific world-view, long the captivating goddess of the oncoming generation, is now a despised ogre of counter-cultural youth. The values long championed by technocratic scientism, with its reduction of the externally real world solely to mathematically predictable sequences of impersonal events, are being cast aside by the alienated young. They repudiate the depersonalization of reality as a kind of addictive mythology of twentieth-century pseudo-intellectuals.

The modern mentality remains bewitched, however, by moral relativism, and simply assumes (without any intelligent understanding of it) that the biblical life-view is out of date. Between a repudiated scientism on one hand and a forfeited supernaturalism on the other, the counter-cultural revolt drifts in muddy, murky waters.

Dr. W. Harry Jellema, one of the brilliant philosophical minds of our day, finds the prime cause of modern frustration not so much in what positively identifies the spirit of the times as in what negatively is lacking in it. In remarks to leaders of the Institute for Advanced Christian Studies, Jellema recently noted that from the American elementary schoolroom onward most of the present generation of both faculty and students has had no education in the Christian heritage. The contemporary classroom steeps its learners in the modern secular outlook but presents no viable alternative in terms of the history of ideas or of world cultures. Whether students come from Protestant, Roman Catholic, or Jewish homes seems to make little difference; all of them are immersed in secular concerns to the virtual exclusion of eternal and spiritual interests.

Much campus frustration today stems from inner dissatisfactions with an academic milieu that offers no impressive defense of an alternative perspective on life. However unsatisfying, the prevalent outlook is assumed to have no reasonable or valid rival.

To be sure, many hundreds of evangelical scholars serve on influential secular campuses in one post or another. But unfortunately professors who negate biblical theism tend to dominate the religion and philosophy departments; however vocal they may be for academic freedom to promulgate special viewpoints, they themselves seldom sponsor proponents of historic Christian theism. Instead, they seem to issue a special welcome to the purveyors of novelty.

Evangelical scholars are aware that modern science has created much of its own bad press because some of its spokesmen arrogantly equated the scientific outlook with a certain highly partisan way of projecting science. Consequently not science but scientism came to identify reality solely with the extrapolations of empirical scientific methodology. It then dignified this arbitrarily limited reading of reality as the scientific world-view.

Some empirical dogmatists now go so far as to scandalize biblical values as the source of many modern problems. The divine exhortation that man “multiply” and exercise “dominion” over the earth is blamed for the modern reproductive rate and for ecological problems. It matters little to such propagandists that empirical scientism itself offers no basis whatever for establishing or vindicating any permanent norms. All that seems to matter to such spokesmen is that their dogmatisms be trusted as the latest word. What this line of argument shows most of all is that the younger generation is not alone in its ignorance about what the Bible really teaches.

Dr. Martin Buerger, a former director of the School of Advanced Studies at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has said that neglect of the Scriptural heritage through professional concentration on empirical laboratory interests is one of the vocational hazards to which scientific technicians are vulnerable.

Neglect of the Bible is no less a vocational danger of theologians. This is perhaps least excusable in evangelical circles, which place a high estimate on scriptural revelation. One can be substituting evangelical for non-evangelical activism while all the while revelational compass-bearings become increasingly obscure.

The new-breed theology now in vogue sacrifices personal piety to social activism, and through its neglect of the Word of God tends to misunderstand both man and society. Indeed, it transmutes theology itself from reflection upon God’s self-revelation and the reproduction of his Word to man into reflection on social problems and the implementation of secular techniques for coping with them. Because, as the secular theologian declares, modern man is assertedly earth-oriented and uninterested in questions of spirit, the biblical message is held to be no longer intelligible or relevant.

Strange as it may seem to the secular scientist and secular theologian, counter-cultural youth are repudiating this reading both of external reality and of the inner life of modern man. They see that scientific reductionism has mythologized the real world, and that secular theologians have accommodated their prognosis of contemporary man to that myth. The technocratic scientist concentrates his interest on impersonal and mathematically relatable events, and the secular theologian accommodatingly deflects his interests from the self-revelation of a supernatural God.

But if, as Christianity insists, man is made in the image of God for a destiny in the eternal world, then the existence of God and the realm of spirit must inevitably remain an abiding interest of all who do not suppress it. Every statistical poll of the masses confirms such an interest in the invisible spiritual world.

The youth-revolt, in its turn to the mystical-transcendent, has pronounced its own verdict on scientific reductionism (and by extension upon secular theologians who share its prejudices). Disaffiliated youth call such thinking not simply irrelevant but mythological. We need not belabor the irony of an oncoming generation’s imputation of a propensity for fairylike legend to intellectuals who prided themselves on having banished even miracles from the world of modern intelligence. What we must note, rather, in a day when secular theologians have dropped a curtain over the transcendent spiritual claims of the Christian religion, is the striking revival in Western society of interest in astrology, spiritism, and fortune-telling, and a resort even to Oriental mysticism.

The modern consciousness is not, of course, in all respects the consciousness of yesteryear. But the propensity for myths—whether on the part of the young or of their elders—endures. It is not so much a new consciousness as a new mythology that seems to characterize the successive lost generations.

The only deliverance from this sad predicament lies in setting the question of authentic selfhood once again in the context of God’s creation and recreation of man. If any new factor marks our generation, it is the almost total loss of an intelligible rationale for a transcendent alternative to the secular reduction of reality. Never since the age of Augustine has a reasoned evangelical faith been more imperative.

CARL F. H. HENRY

L. Nelson Bell

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Down through the years the issue of leaving the church, of “splitting the church,” of “separating from apostasy,” has been a live one, and it is still very alive today.

It should be remembered that Martin Luther never intended to leave the corrupt ecclesiastical organization of which he was a part. This step was later forced upon him. The Wesleys had no intention of starting a new church; it was only after Anglicanism had rejected them and a large following was clamoring for a church that Methodism came into being.

We are now confronted in America with a theological liberalism that seems willing to embrace almost any heresy, while at the same time the message of the church is often so attenuated that it has neither meaning nor power. In response there is much discussion about the necessity or desirability of “pulling out” of an existing church to form a fellowship where there is no compromise of the Christ-centered Gospel.

At the beginning let me say that conditions vary so much that a course of action that would be right for one person could well not be God’s will for another. Our decision to stay or to separate should follow very definite prayer for God’s leading, with the request that we be kept from allowing personalities and prejudice to dictate our decision. There seem to be two indisputable causes for separation. If those who control the church to which I belong should demand that I not teach, preach, or witness according to the plain teachings of Scripture, then I would have no choice but to renounce such leadership and seek an environment in which I could continue to witness.

In the second place, should my church, by official action of its governing body, renounce the Christian faith in favor of some syncretistic religion that denies the uniqueness of Jesus Christ as God’s Son together with his atoning death and actual resurrection, I would be forced to renounce and denounce such apostasy.

But in the question of separation there are many gray areas where, if we are not careful, we may let personalities, prejudices, defeats, and extraneous activities become determinative factors while we fail to look at the basic issue that should determine our decision.

For one thing, the “doctrine of separation” can lead people to abandon the opportunity for witness where it is most greatly needed. The Bible teaches that we should be separated from sin, but not from the sinner. Surely we should not remove ourselves from the scene where we are needed most.

When we become aware of a departure from the faith on the part of a church or its leaders, it is easy to assume a self-righteous attitude, wrap around ourselves the robes of personal piety, and give up, rather than to stand up for the truth.

Several years ago a couple came to see me who were members of a different denomination from my own. Both were teaching classes of teen-agers in Sunday school. They were finding that the official literature of their church was filled with attacks on the veracity of the Scriptures and that it fostered social activism in a way little removed from the Communist line. They wanted to substitute well-known evangelical literature in their classes, but their pastor was apprehensive lest he find himself under fire from his superiors. I suggested that they take their pastor to visit the district superintendent and show him samples of the literature they wished to use, together with some of their own denominational literature. This they did and as a result were given the permission they sought.

How easy it would have been for them to give up in disgust and leave those teen-agers without spiritual guidance! The example of the husband in this case was particularly effective, because he had been a popular and successful athletic coach.

It is highly distressing that perhaps the greatest field for Christian witnessing today is within the Church because of the ignorance of the Bible on the part of the members. Our church-related colleges and seminaries have continued to send out a host of people who only too often have at best a foggy notion of the message of the Gospel. Social concerns have occupied the primary efforts of many church leaders. As a result, in both pulpit and pew there is abysmal ignorance and a hunger for spiritual food.

Confronted with this situation many feel like giving up in despair, or going to some other church where the Gospel is proclaimed.

Had I children who were being spiritually starved—or poisoned—by the teaching, preaching, and programs of my local church, I would try my best to remedy the situation; and if this proved impossible, I would take these children elsewhere.

But at the adult level, my own reaction would be to stay in and witness with love and conviction, praying that the Holy Spirit will use this witness to help those who need to be changed.

There is a temptation against which we must guard: frustration because of failure to gain our own way in the church courts—that is, defeat in these courts on positions that we are convinced are right. We need to remember that our risen Lord commissioned his disciples to witness for him. He did not say that our witness would always be effective. In fact, we are not responsible for the effectiveness of our witness (unless, on the negative side, we violate Christian principles in what we say or do), for the fruit of an effective witness is produced by the Holy Spirit and not by us or any ecclesiastical organization.

I happen to belong to a denomination in which many positions that I have felt to be right have been overruled and defeated again and again. This makes some of my friends very unhappy, and some have looked for another church in which their views might predominate. I too would enjoy such a fellowship, but, win or lose, I feel it my duty to stand by, acting perhaps as the “bur under the saddle” or the “catfish in the well,” and hoping and praying that my own witness for what I feel to be the truth will, by God’s grace, be effective in the hearts of some.

Another cause of unhappy ecclesiastical divisions is the feeling on the part of evangelicals that they are discriminated against. Many of these true Christians are an “oppressed minority” within their own communions. Pastorates are denied them and membership on important boards is closed to them, all because they are outspoken in their evangelical beliefs. After a while this does something to one’s spirit, and it can lead to separation. But if this discrimination is accepted with meekness, and a loving spirit is exhibited rather than anger or sullenness, it may well be that God will use this for his own glory.

In general, the history of the separatist movement is a dismal one. Because of personality differences or genuine convictions, there is a tendency to continue bickering and attacks on those from whom the separation has been made. I do not say that separation is always wrong, but if the separatists are led by the Spirit they will exhibit Christian grace and love, even toward those with whom they strongly disagree.

    • More fromL. Nelson Bell

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Old Wine In New Bottles

King James II Version of the Bible, by Jay P. Green (Associated Publishers and Authors), New American Standard Bible, edited by the Lockman Foundation (Creation House and Gospel Light), The Modern Language Bible, edited by Gerrit Verkuyl (Zondervan). The Living Bible, by Kenneth N. Taylor (Tyndale and Doubleday), all available in variously priced bindings, are reviewed by Robert G. Bratcher, who is translator of Good News for Modern Man and is working on the Old Testament counterpart for the American Bible Society.

The spate of revisions and new translations of the Bible continues to flow unabated. Last year two completely new translations were published: the New English Bible, by British Protestant scholars, and the New American Bible, by American Roman Catholic scholars. A new translation to be known as A Contemporary Translation (ACT) is being sponsored by the New York Bible Society; the Gospel of John appeared last year. And the American Bible Society hopes to publish the complete Today’s English Version in 1975; the New Testament (known as Good News for Modern Man) appeared in 1966 and the Psalms in 1970.

Why are these new Bibles published? Obviously because, in the opinion of those who prepare them, the new versions will meet a particular need not met by any other existing version.

The King James II Version has nothing to do with the son of Charles I who in his reign (1685–88) tried to reestablish the primacy of the Roman Catholic Church in the British realm. It is, rather, the old King James (I) Bible reedited, on the grounds that the newer translations, such as the ERV of 1885, the ASV of 1901, the RSV of 1952, and the NEB of 1970, are faulty, slanted, and dangerous. “It is certain that God’s people do not want a new Bible!” translator Jay Green tells us in the preface. “They just want the old one in a form they can read and understand and trust.” Why can’t they trust the newer versions? Mainly because the translators not only updated the English language of the King James but also used different Greek and Hebrew texts.

“Having tilted the foundation in their theological direction, they then paraphrased, interpreted, deleted and added to God’s words without regard to the evidencial [sic] facts available in all the manuscripts, the versions, and the fathers of the first centuries.” Green goes on to give an even dozen examples of these alleged perversions, showing the “biases and unbeliefs” with which they are replete.

Then he lists twelve gains of King James II. He states that “a pre-study of textual criticism encompassing more than 1,000 hours convinced us the best text was that used by Tyndale and the KJV scholars.” Of course, William Tyndale (whose New Testament was published in 1526 and who died in 1536, after having translated some books of the Old Testament) and the translators of the KJV (published in 1611) did not use the same text, but that is of little importance. What matters is Green’s claim that the so-called Textus Receptus of the New Testament, similar to numerous but late Greek manuscripts, is superior to modern editions of the Greek text, which are based on much older and, in the view of the overwhelming majority of textual scholars, much better manuscripts and other witnesses to the text. (A reliable and simple discussion of textual matters is found in Dewey Beagle’s God’s Word Into English, Harper & Row, 1960). The other three translations follow the majority position.

As for translation principles, “This Bible is translated word-for-word in an attempt to give a literal rendition of each and every one of God’s words.… None of God’s words were left out.” Any words that are added for sense are in italics.

What does it all add up to? Not quite a bowdlerized King James, but essentially one in which archaic and obsolescent words and expressions have been replaced by current English. This is harmless enough; few would object to it. But KJII goes beyond this; in places it changes not just the wording but also the meaning of the text. In Isaiah 7:14, where KJV faithfully translates “(a virgin) … shall call his name Immanuel,” KJII has “they shall call His name Immanuel,” in order to make it correspond exactly with the Greek text cited in Matthew 1:23.

The claim that “none of God’s words were left out” is slightly exaggerated. In First Kings 16:11, KJV literally represents the rather crude Hebrew expression for “man”; KJII changes this to “anyone,” whereas the correct translation is “any man/male.” In First Samuel 6:19, KJV has 50,070 men (the Hebrew is literally “70 men, 50,000 men”); KJII has changed this to “seventy men—fifty chief men.” In Matthew 16:19 and 18:18, KJV’s “shall be bound in heaven … shall be loosed in heaven” is changed to “shall occur, having been already bound in Heaven … shall occur, having been already loosed in Heaven.” Is this a “tilt”? KJII has difficulty with the two animals in Matthew 21:1–7. The quotation from Zechariah 9:9 is discreetly changed from “upon an ass, and a colt” to “on an ass, even a colt,” and in verse 7 KJV’s “brought the ass and the colt” becomes “brought the ass, even the colt”; but then KJII continues, “And they put their coats on them.”

An example of the KJII translator’s reasoning on textual matters is this: In Matthew 5:22 modern translations do not include the scribal addition “without cause” with the statement “every one who is angry with his brother”; this means, says Green, that they are saying “Jesus is in danger of the Judgment.”

Is the English language in KJII better than in the KJV? Not always. “Navel-band” in Luke 2:7, 12 is no better than “swaddling clothes,” “shepherd men” in verse 15 is inferior to “shepherds,” and “keeping them afresh in her heart” is hardly an improvement over “pondered them in her heart.” In Luke 16:5, 7 “a hundred baths of oil … a hundred homers of wheat” is less intelligible than the “measures” of the KJV.

Many Bible readers prefer the King James Version to newer translations; we recommend that they continue to read, use, memorize, and distribute the original, not this substitute.

The New American Standard Bible considers the ASV of 1901 “in a very real sense the standard for many translations,” the most faithful and reliable of all translations, “the Rock of Biblical Honesty.” Disturbed by the awareness “that the American Standard Version … was fast disappearing from the scene,” the Lockman Foundation of California “felt an urgency to rescue this noble achievement from an inevitable demise.” The revision was entrusted to an editorial board “composed of linguists, Greek and Hebrew scholars and pastors,” not further identified. Their principles, as given in the preface, include some rather curious statements about Greek tenses. The reader will do well to study the “Explanation of General Format” in order to understand the various devices and sigla used in the text. As a sample here is Luke 7:22:

And He answered and said to them, “Go and report to John what you have seen and heard: the BLIND RECEIVE SIGHT, the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, and the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, the POOR HAVE THE GOSPEL PREACHED TO THEM.”

Not unlike the ASV, NASB is so painfully literal in places as to read more like a “pony” than a translation. John 1:43 is an example: “The next day He purposed to go forth into Galilee, and He *found Philip, and Jesus *said to him, ‘Follow Me.’” The * in the text “represents historical presents in the Greek which have been translated with an English past tense in order to conform to modern usage.” The archaic pronouns thou, thee, and thy are changed to you and your, “except in the language of prayer when addressing Deity.” But Thou is retained in Matthew 16:18 and Mark 8:29 (but not in the similar John 1:49; 6:69).

In places NASB changes the clear meaning of the ASV. In Second Samuel 24:1, ASV accurately translates the Hebrew: “And again the anger of Jehovah was kindled against Israel, and he moved David against them, saying, Go, number Israel and Judah.” NASB has, “Now again the anger of the Lord burned against Israel and it incited David against them to say, ‘Go, number Israel and Judah.’” It appears obvious that this change is made because of the later account in First Chronicles 21:1, where it is Satan, not the Lord, who incites David to count the people. In Matthew 1:16 and Mark 1:10, where the Greek says that Jesus saw the heavens opening, NASB, by using lower-case he, makes John the Baptist see this; the marginal note in Matthew refers to John 1:32, where it is said that John saw the Spirit descending on Jesus. (This was originally done in the Amplified Bible, also sponsored by the Lockman Foundation.) Matthew 16:19 and 18:18 have been changed from “shall be bound … shall be loosed” to “shall have been bound … shall have been loosed.” The similar passage John 20:23 is changed to “their sins have been forgiven them … have been retained,” with a note in the margin explaining “I.e. have previously been forgiven” (and references to Matthew 16:19; 18:18).

On matters of text NASB is scrupulously exact. Kittel’s Biblia Hebraica and, in most instances, the twenty-third edition of the Nestle Greek New Testament (1957) have been followed. The book is well printed, the format is carefully done, and abundant notes on text and translation are given, together with references to other passages. Italics, as in the ASV, indicate that the original text has no verbal equivalent. This device sometimes serves other purposes, however; in John 18:37, ASV translates Jesus’ words, “Thou sayest that I am a king”; NASB has, “You say correctly that I am a king.”

A peculiar feature of this translation (not attributable to the ASV) in its treatment of the questions that in Greek have the negative , which calls for a negative answer. For example, instead of the KJV “Will ye also go away?” (John 6:67), NASB translates, “You do not want to go away also, do you?”

It is doubtful that the ASV merits this kind of revision. The NASB language is not really contemporary, the English is not idiomatic, and one wonders whether the revisers have reached their goal of making this Bible “understandable to the masses.”

The Modern Language Bible is a revision of the Berkeley Bible. The New Testament, translated by Dr. Gerrit Verkuyl, was originally published in 1945, and the Old Testament in 1959. Both have been extensively revised by “several experienced Bible scholars” appointed by the publishers. The names of the Old Testament translators are given (p. vii), and Dr. Verkuyl is identified as editor-in-chief.

The quality of this translation is certainly superior to that of KJII and NASB, as a glance at the sample passage accompanying this review will show. The most distinctive feature of MLB are the footnotes, which are a mélange of observations and information of all kinds, historical, textual, philological, expository, homiletic, moralistic, pietistic, and even some simply fanciful. In First Samuel 16:23, for example, the reader is advised to read Browning’s “Saul” and to see Rembrandt’s “David Before Saul” at the Maurits Art Gallery in The Hague. Psalm 45 is said to be a summary of the Song of Songs. There are other references to Browning (Ps. 31:15), as well as to Napoleon (Ps. 33:16), Immanuel Kant (Ps. 78:57; 94:2), and others. Many passages are either translated or identified in footnotes as speaking directly and explicitly of Christ, beginning with Genesis 3:15 (also Num. 24:17; 2 Sam. 23:2–7; Ps. 2:7; 16:10; 22:1; 34:7; 45:7; 72:13; 110:1). But moralistic notes predominate, and no doubt many readers will profit from reading them.

Surprisingly, however, there are very few, if any, textual notes in the Old Testament (at least in the portions I examined), as contrasted with the New. This may be justified on the grounds that this translation is meant for the average reader, not the scholar. But failure to provide some textual notes conceals the many agonizing problems a translator faces when the Masoretic Text is clearly deficient. An exception is found in First Samuel 13:1, where the Hebrew text is given in a footnote.

Occasionally there are harmonizations of the text, which should have been confined to footnotes. The Hebrew text of Second Samuel 21:19 says that Elhanan killed the giant Goliath; MLB translates “Elhanan … overcame Beth-Hal-Lahmi with Goliath of Gath,” and a footnote conjectures that the phrase originally read “Lahmi, the brother of Goliath” (as stated in First Chronicles 20:5). In Second Samuel 24:1 the text clearly says that God incited David to number Israel; MLB translates, “But the Lord’s anger was again inflamed against Israel, and one aroused David against them, saying …” The footnote refers to First Chronicles 21:1, where it is Satan who incites David.

An interesting example of harmonization is seen in the translation of the hours of the day in the Gospel of John. Dr. Verkuyl’s translation of 1945 correctly translated these by “about four in the afternoon” (1:39), “about noon” (4:6), “at one o’clock” (4:52), and “about twelve o’clock” (19:14). But MLB now has “about ten in the morning,” “about six in the evening,” “at seven o’clock,” and “about six in the morning” without footnotes explaining that John and the Synoptists used different ways of telling time. In Matthew 23:35 a murdered Zechariah is said to be the son of Barachiah, whereas in Second Chronicles 24:20–22, to which MLB refers, he is said to have been the son of Jehoiada. A footnote says that “doubtless Jehoiada was Zechariah’s grandfather, whereas Barachiah was his father,” but without explanation. At the Second Chronicles reference, MLB says that the murdered Zechariah is not to be confused with the son of Berechiah of Zechariah 1:1. (Disregarding such advice, the Harper Study Bible—the RSV annotated by Harold Lindsell and now, like MLB, published by Zondervan—does equate the Zechariahs of Matthew 23:35 and Zechariah 1:1.) In Matthew 27:9 the saying of Zechariah is attributed to Jeremiah; the text is translated faithfully, but the note says that “doubtless ‘Zechariah’ in vs. 9 is due to a copyist’s error.” This is possible, of course, but in the complete absence of any textual evidence to support it, one doubts the validity of “doubtless.” Indeed, the Harper Study Bible offers an explanation that sees no copyist’s error at all!

It seems the purpose of such handling of the text is to deal with apparent discrepancies. But this is certainly not the translator’s task; it is the annotator’s. The translator must render the text as it is, and not try to edit and correct it. Many of the textual problems we have first arose when ancient scribes could not resist “improving” the text as they laboriously copied it. One regrets that these things are still done.

MLB is gratifyingly lacking in any covert or overt attacks on other translations. All the publishers say is that “while some modern translations of the Scriptures tend to be paraphrases, this version of the Bible aims to achieve plain, up-to-date expression which reflects as directly as possible the meaning of the Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek.” This is fair enough, notwithstanding the pejorative sense given the word “paraphrase.”

2 Corinthians 10:13–16 In Five Versions

KJV

13 But we will not boast of things without our measure, but according to the measure of the rule which God hath distributed to us, a measure to reach even unto you. 14 For we stretch not ourselves beyond our measure, as though we reached not unto you; for we are come as far as to you also in preaching the gospel of Christ: 15 not boasting of things without our measure, that is, of other men’s labors; but having hope, when your faith is increased, that we shall be enlarged by you according to our rule abundantly, 16 to preach the gospel in the regions beyond you, and not to boast in another man’s line of things made ready to our hand.

MLB

13 On our part, we shall not boast extravagantly but rather stay within the limit of the sphere which God has allotted to us, the boundary of which stretches far enough to include you. 14 We are not overextending ourselves, as if we did not reach as far as you, for we were the first to reach you with the good news about Christ. 15 Neither are we boasting unduly about fields in which others are serving but we entertain the hope that your growing faith may enlarge our sphere of influence so greatly with your help, 16 that we may evangelize those beyond you, rather than brag about labor that has been accomplished in another’s field.

KJII

13 Now we will not boast as to the things beyond measure, but according to the measure of the rule which the God of measure gave to us, one reaching even to you. 14 For we do not outstretch ourselves, as though we did not reach to you. For we have come to you before also in the gospel of Christ—15 not boasting in other men’s labors, as to the things beyond measure, but we had hope—your faith increasing among you—to be increased more and more, according to our rule to overflowing abundance. 16 And this so as to preach the gospel to that region beyond you, not to boast in another’s rule in regard to the things ready to hand.

LB

13 But we will not boast of authority we do not have. Our goal is to measure up to God’s plan for us, and this plan includes our working there with you. 14 We are not going too far when we claim authority over you, for we were the first to come to you with the Good News concerning Christ. 15 It is not as though we were trying to claim credit for the work someone else has done among you. Instead, we hope that your faith will grow and that, still within the limits set for us, our work among you will be greatly enlarged. 16 After that, we will be able to preach the Good News to other cities that are far beyond you, where no one else is working; then there will be no question about being in someone else’s field.

NASB

13 But we will not boast beyond our measure, but within the measure of the sphere which God apportioned to us as a measure, to reach even as far as you. 14 For we are not overextending ourselves, as if we did not reach to you, for we were the first to come even as far as you in the gospel of Christ; 15 not boasting beyond our measure, that is, in other men’s labors, but with the hope that as your faith grows, we shall be, within our sphere, enlarged even more by you, 16 so as to preach the gospel even to the regions beyond you, and not to boast in what has been accomplished in the sphere of another.

I came to the Living Bible tremendously impressed with the work of Kenneth Taylor. The foreword “At Last!” to the last published volume in the series, “Living History of Israel,” is an eloquent statement of his emotions as he finished his work: “For now, at last, I lay down my commission and my pen—the task is finished to the best of my ability after these fourteen arduous years.” His closing prayer is in line with other great prayers, such as Augustine’s at the end of his De Trinitate (which is a good prayer for translators also, and not only for theologians). What Taylor has done is to take the ASV of 1901 and make a clear, plain, and idiomatic paraphrase. As he defines it (in his introduction to “Living Prophets”), paraphrasing attempts to retain the accuracy while removing the wordiness. “It tries to clear away from the fertile fields of Scripture the rocks and brush and rubble of literal translation.…” In the preface to “Living Letters” he stated it more precisely: a paraphrase is “a restatement of an author’s thoughts, using different words than he did.” No one can object to his aim, which is that of all good translators. For those who make an invidious distinction between “translation” (good) and “paraphrase” (bad), Ronald Knox has the scornful retort, “The word ‘paraphrase’ is a bogey of the half-educated.… It is a paraphrase when you translate ‘Comment vous portez-vous’ by ‘How are you?’” A translator of the New Testament wants to make the writers say in good, natural English of the twentieth century exactly the same thing they said in Greek in the first century. But what no translator can do and no paraphrase should do is to make the writer say something quite different from what he said or, under the furthest stretch of the imagination, what he would say if he were writing in English today.

So my initial good will began to dissipate somewhat as I found numerous instances of clear and obvious mistranslations. Second Samuel 24:1 is softened so as not to contradict First Chronicles 21:1; Second Samuel 21:19 is made in the text to conform to First Chronicles 20:5, with the correct translation in the footnote; First Samuel 13:1 is also correctly translated in the footnote, but not in the text. In Second Samuel 15:7 the Hebrew has the difficult “forty years,” but Taylor follows the Lucianic Septuagint, Syriac, and Josephus and has “four years,” without any footnote.

These are serious matters for a translator, even if they are not of tremendous consequence for the readers. The translator’s first, second, and last duty is to be faithful to the meaning of the text, and he must resist all attempts to improve it or correct it in any way. A high view of Scripture demands that we treat it seriously and faithfully represent its meaning. In this way we honor the Lord of the Scriptures. In the LB rendering of Matthew 5:18, the plain meaning of “Till heaven and earth pass away” (ASV) is evaded, and the two temporal clauses are telescoped into the non-troublesome “until its purpose is achieved.” Sometimes words are added, with the footnote “implied,” and so the reader knows that this is the translator’s understanding of the text: “premature” in Hebrews 5:7, “as proof of Christ’s death” in 9:18, and “sometimes” in Job 24:22 are examples. A reader will judge for himself whether the added information is really implicit in the text.

In Job 27:23, “Everyone will cheer at his death, and boo him into eternity” is somewhat free, and the subject “Everyone” cannot be sustained; it is either “it” (the wind) or “he” (God). Mark 13:30 and Matthew 24:34 do not represent the plain and obvious meaning of the text (both of the Greek and of the ASV). Mark 13:30 says (ASV), “This generation shall not pass away, until all these things be accomplished,” and Matthew 24:34 says identically the same thing. But Taylor has, “Yes, these are the events that will signal the end of the age” in Mark, and “Then at last this age will come to its close” in Matthew. Why should this be done? Could it be that the translator felt the text would cause difficulty to the reader and so must not be allowed to say what it clearly says?

In his preface to “Living Letters” Taylor deals with the question of what is a translator to do when the original text is not clear. He says that in this case “the theology of the translator is his guide, along with his sense of logic, unless perchance the translation is allowed to stand without any clear meaning at all. The theological lodestar in this book has been a rigid evangelical position.” Certainly when the original text is not clear, the translator cannot avoid letting other considerations affect his choices. But when the original is very clear, what right does the translator have to change its meaning? I regret having to be this negative in tone, especially when LB has so many excellent qualities.

In summary, I think that the King James II and the New American Standard are not sufficiently worthy improvements over their predecessors; in some places the new translation is a step backward. However, used with care, the Modern Language Bible and the Living Bible offer worthwhile additions to the great variety of translations of the Word of God that are available to the English reader.

Describing Dialectic

Great Dialecticians in Modern Christian Thought, by Ernest B. Koenker (Augsburg, 1971, 159 pp., $5.95), is reviewed by Bert B. Dominy, assistant professor of theology, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Fort Worth, Texas.

This author describes a dialectical thinker as one “for whom tensions and contradictions have been more fundamental than unity,” one who has refused “to reduce the mighty opposites which present themselves to human experience into a rational system.” However, dialectic is not adequately explained by contradiction alone, for a true dialectician seeks to overcome contradiction in reality or thinking by transcending the incongruities of life to arrive at a complex whole. Accordingly, much of the history of modern thought can be written as a description of dialectical thinking. What Koenker does is illustrate this history by describing the dialectical elements in the thought of ten representative theologians and philosophers since the Reformation. The ten are Luther, Boehme, Pascal, Hegel, Kierkegaard, Barth, Tillich, Heidegger, Bultmann, and Elert.

Koenker’s work is almost wholly descriptive. He presents the thought of his “dialecticians” with fairness and succeeds in clearly explaining the thrust of each man’s thought in a brief space. There is no attempt, however, at critical evaluation (except for a one-page criticism of Elert’s dialectic law and grace). Koenker affirms rather than argues his own perspective. He leaves no doubt of his belief in the adequacy of the dialectic method. For example, he insists that “where serious thinking is engaged, there dialectic, the examination of contradictions, is inescapable. The opponents of dialectic in this sense … are simply opposed to any genuine quest for truth, for even divine truth must be expressed in the earthen vessels of human words.”

The dialectical method has profound implications for theology. That Koenker is aware of these implications is evident in several passing remarks. With reference to Tertullian as an opponent of dialectic, he speaks of “a different theory of truth, the view that one must know absolutely if he can know at all, in contrast to the view that sees knowledge as always relative to circ*mstances.” Further, he writes that the “dialecticians have always dissolved fixations of doctrines: with their contradictions and insistence on dialogue they have introduced movement into thought, a movement which spurns provisional resting places and launches forth into the uncertainties of an endless quest.” Koenker’s failure to discuss directly the broader implications of dialectic for theology is disappointing and reduces the contribution of the book.

Yet a book should be judged not merely by what a reviewer thinks the author should have done but by the significance of what it actually accomplishes. Koenker has given us a readable introduction to dialectical thinking by surveying some of its notable practitioners. The book is a good starting place for those unfamiliar with dialectic and the thought of such men as Boehme, Hegel, Heidegger, and Kierkegaard. For help in dealing with the more substantive issues raised by the dialectical method, one will have to look elsewhere.

A Book With No Audience

Humanistic Psychology: A Christian Interpretation, by John A. Hammes (Grune and Stratton, 1971, 203 pp., $7.95), is reviewed by Glenn R. Wittig, reference librarian, Speer Library, Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton, New Jersey.

The primary purpose of this book, written by a professor of psychology at the University of Georgia, is “to present the compatibility of scientifically established psychological truth with the truths proposed by a Christian frame of reference.” The intended audience is college students with little or no background in philosophy or theology. Despite some distinctive features, the book does not fulfill the author’s intentions.

Hammes begins his work with a deplorable scissors-and-paste presentation of eight views regarding contemporary man. No effort is made to establish a framework for this investigation, to present an overview regarding possible perspectives of man, or to justify the validity of presenting only eight points of view. The chapter serves no discernable purpose for this book.

Should the reader nevertheless be determined enough to proceed further, he will find in the remaining portion of Part One—“Basic Principles”—a most incisive examination of the methodology of science. Hammes clearly exposes the limitations of relativism and operationism as methods of science, and he admirably advocates the usefulness of philosophy and “divine revelation” for explaining human nature. To this extent he has satisfied his primary purpose. These several chapters constitute a solid piece of work, a truly Christian philosophy of science, and deserve very careful reading.

But the rest of the book leaves much to be desired. In Parts Two and Three, Hammes covers the broad basics of psychology, such as human nature and personal adjustment, from a Teilhardian frame of reference in combination with a vague conception of Christianity. The Ten Commandments, it seems, are the sole standard for man’s behavior. Moral development is possible through education, but there is no apparent need of reference to Christ or Christianity.

In Part Four the work falters even more noticeably. While Hammes proposes to present a synthesis of man’s origin, purpose, and destiny, he does little more than quote in proof-text fashion a sequence of Scripture verses. Very little original text, and no synthesis, accompanies the biblical material.

It is doubtful that this work could serve as a textbook. It has no unifying concept. It is too elementary for most of today’s college students, would have little appeal to lay people, and is hardly suitable for a high-school curriculum. The chapters are embarrassingly brief, and the subheadings fail to distinguish levels of discussion.

Tapestry Of Truth

Romans: Exposition of Chapters 3:20 to 4:25, by Martyn Lloyd-Jones (Zondervan, 1971, 250 pp., $5.95), is reviewed by Earl D. Radmacher, president, Western Conservative Baptist Theological Seminary, Portland, Oregon.

This is no average book. Nor will you read it indifferently. It is the kind of book that will grip your mind and heart as you soar with this great pastor-teacher in his superb exposition of the doctrines of atonement and justification as found at the heart of Romans—chapters 3:30–4:25. My life has been enriched by my encounter with these messages from Romans, first delivered by Dr. Lloyd-Jones at Westminster Chapel in London.

Several carefully interwoven skills are much in evidence in this book. First, what is said is exegetically sound. Throughout the book it is transparently clear that the author has given careful attention to time-honored principles of interpretation, such as the priority of the original languages, the progress of revelation, the unity of Scripture, and the law of the content. He practices what he preaches in such statements as, “Every statement in the Scriptures should always be taken in its context and in its setting.”

Second, Lloyd-Jones is theologically consistent in the results of his inductive studies. Though he is careful to give attention to the meaning of individual words, he is also very much aware that often scholars have sought to decide vital issues according to an odd meaning or shade of meaning of a word. For example, in dealing with the translation of “expiation” as opposed to “propitiation” in Romans 3:25, he pointedly demonstrates that “it is very rarely indeed that the philologist settles any question.” One must get the total teaching of the Word of God, not just a possible meaning of a word.

Another strong point of this volume, one that is often missing in commentaries, is the practical application of the truth to contemporary ideas and developments. For example, in speaking about our constant tendency to do violence to the doctrine of the Trinity, the author observes, with reference to Roman 4:23–25:

I sometimes have a fear that there is much today that passes as faith which never mentions the name of God at all. I am thinking of those who only speak about the Lord Jesus Christ. They always pray to the Lord Jesus Christ, and always speak about Him, and never refer to God the Father.

There tends to be a subtle development of a unitarianism of the Son or of the Spirit.

Finally, I appreciate very much the evangelistic thrust of the book. Lloyd-Jones keeps both content and methodology of evangelism constantly before his readers. In summary, it has been a long time since I have read a book I enjoyed so thoroughly as this. I anxiously await the rest of the series!

Mumbling Morality

Science and Human Values in the Twenty-first Century, edited by Ralph Wendell Burhoe (Westminster, 1971, 203 pp., $6.95), is reviewed by Tommy W. Rogers, associate professor of sociology, Georgia Southern College, Statesboro, Georgia.

Despite the potentially intriguing nature of the general topic, this volume is more promise than accomplishment. It contains papers by five scholars, written at the invitation of Pittsburgh Seminary on the occasion of its 175th anniversary. But it offers remarkably little general insight for the person seeking an understandable treatment of questions related to science and human values. Perhaps some readers accustomed to “communication” in seminars with minds of adequate conceptual ability would find meaning in such assertions as, “There is among us a growing sense of the cosmic relationship and involvement, and therefore of the cosmic consequentiality of everything we do and are.” Most people probably will not, particularly since the process is carried out ad infinitum.

There is very little appeal in this volume’s repeated pages of complex analogies. For example: “Once a water molecule is enlisted in a crystal of ice it is immediately constrained by its interactions with its neighbors and relaxes back into its initial state whenever it acquires sufficient energy to depart from its ordered position”—this is used to illustrate the need for “new means of thawing out our increasingly frozen and unresponsive social order.” This particular presentation—and it is very typical—is followed by what is called “another analogue of peculiar relevance”: “Given an inverted population in which a large fraction of the atoms are in a common high energy state, this ensemble can be triggered to yield, autocatalytically, the coherent rapid release of that energy into the intense, narrowly directed beam of the laser.” To the author this suggests “an affluent, leisured, human population that can be stimulated into a coherent, rapid release of much of their latent energy into very specific channels. Consider Woodstock or the space program.” Before the reader can utter a cry for help, he is assured that such “analogies from science are not just intellectual play, for out of cooperative interactive processes new phenomena arise, and what we humans call emergence is born.” This is representative of practically every page of the entire volume, and probably signifies a near total lack of general appeal.

There is mumbling about “integrating theology into the scientific myth or symbol system.” One writer proclaims that the “shortest path from A to C is the hypotenuse of the triangle, but often ‘morality’ says that we shall not go from A to C by this route but that we shall take the longer route ABC,” i.e., “keep off the grass.” One gets the feeling that some of it (e.g., “We now see that wholes are not only derivative, determined by their parts, but that the character and functions of the parts depend upon the wholes”) contains truths that Joe down at the barber shop would likely recognize in translation as things he himself had agreed with all along. Perhaps philosophers sometimes find that dense, complex language has the value of disguising the simplicity of the ideas being expounded.

Serious scholars have expressed doubts about the wisdom of permitting science and technology to continue their unabated progress. University of Maryland physicist Johannes M. Burger proposed a fifty-year moratorium on experiments that might lead to man’s duplication of himself. While some of these grave matters are touched upon in Science and Human Values in the Twenty-first Century, it is mostly by way of the incidental remark rather than through insight-lending analysis.

Newly Published

Turned On to Jesus, by Arthur Blessitt (Hawthorn, 1971, 242 pp., $5.95), The Jesus Kids, by Roger Palms (Judson, 1971, 96 pp., paperback, $1.95), Jesus People, by Duane Pederson (Compass, 1971, 128 pp., paperback, $1.25), and The Jesus Movement in America, by Edward E. Plowman (David C. Cook, 1971, 128 pp., paperback, $.95). The so-called Jesus movement is sweeping across the land, and these four books offer insight from a variety of vistas. Blessitt and Pederson tell of their own personal involvement as leaders, Palms probes attitudes and beliefs through extensive quoting of persons in the movement, and Plowman traces the movement’s beginnings and tracks its extent—from the street scene to the Catholic Pentecostal phenomenon.

I Married You, by Walter Trobisch (Harper & Row, 135 pp., $4.95; paperback, $1.95). A beautiful, moving story of the author’s experiences while lecturing on sex and marriage in an African city. Marriage problems of both Trobisch and his listeners are solved by applying concepts from the lectures.

Listen to the Green, by Luci Shaw (Harold Shaw, 93 pp., no price given), and Six Days, selected by H. Houtman (Wedge, 142 pp., $2.50). Luci Shaw’s slim volume and the anthology of Canadian verse are evidence that Christian poets can indeed keep pace with their secular counterparts.

The Church Music Handbook, by Lynn W. Thayer (Zondervan, 190 pp., $5.95). Rightly states that the heart of any church’s music program is the adult choir, and gives elaborate suggestions on how to better it. Unfortunately, ability to sing is not one of the requirements the author emphasizes. But overall, this could be a helpful handbook.

I Have Met Him: God Exists, by André Frossard (Herder and Herder, 125 pp., $4.95). The compelling, stimulating story of a young atheist’s conversion to the more mystical quarter of Christianity.

Growing Up With Sex, by Richard F. Hettlinger (Seabury, 162 pp., paperback, $2.25). Hettlinger explains male and female sexuality to teen-agers without talking down to them. Though not specifically Christian, his approach to problems of restraint, love, and early marriage is unusually realistic, tempering permissiveness with caution.

C. S. Lewis: Speaker and Teacher, edited by Carolyn Keefe (Zondervan, 144 pp., $3.95). An informative book for those who want to know more about Lewis as instructor or professor. The chapter “To the Martlets” by Walter Hooper is especially interesting.

New Gods in America, by Peter Rowley (McKay, 1971, 208 pp., $5.95), and The Complete Art of Witchcraft, by Sybil Leek (World, 1971, 205 pp., $6.95). Interest in the occult and Eastern religion continues to rise, especially among the young, making it strategically important for Christians to know content and appeal. Rowley gives a score of cults, mostly Eastern-spawned, the once-over-lightly survey treatment based on personal visits and interviews. For those wanting amplification of the witchcraft section, Miss Leek—“the world’s leading witch”—provides a biased but informative inside account of what it’s like to be a witch.

The Era of the Spirit, by J. Rodman Williams (Logos, 1971, 119 pp., paperback, $1.95). An important contribution to the theology of the charismatic movement by a prominent Presbyterian theologian. He relates Reformed doctrines to neo-Pentecostalism, and examines the references to the Holy Spirit by Barth, Brunner, Tillich, and Bultmann.

The Church Is Alive, by Lambert T. Dolphin, Jr. (Good News, 1971, 96 pp., $2.95). A series of somewhat disjointed articles on the need for—and illustrations of—change in church forms and structures; redeemed by the epilogue, a deeply moving account of a visit to Christians in India.

Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, Volume 7: Sigma, edited by Gerhard Friedrich (Eerdmans, 1971, 1104, $25). English translation of a standard German work published in 1964. One more volume is completed in German and the final one is in progress. This volume has articles on eighty-nine words and word-groups that begin with s. The longest are on the Greek words for flesh, sign, wisdom, synagogues, salvation, and body.

Counter Culture and the Vision of God, by Robert L. Johnson (Augsburg, 168 pp., $4.50). Convinced that Christians need to understand the counterculture, this campus pastor from the University of North Carolina attempts to explain youth to older, more conservative Christians.

The Marriage Affair: The Family Counselor, edited by J. Allan Petersen (Tyndale, 420 pp., paperback, $2.95). An anthology of eighty short, easy-to-read articles on problems of sexuality, marriage, parenthood, divorce, and widowhood. The conservative, evangelical perspective is unnecessarily narrow on political and social issues, such as male-female roles.

Popcorn and Parable, by Roger Kahle and Robert E. A. Lee (Augsburg, 128 pp., paperback, $2.95). A convincing case for the use of contemporary films in church programs as discussion instigators.

The Ghost in My Life, by Susan B. Anthony (Chosen Books, 1971, 221 pp., $5.95). This book could make even the most hardened cynic idealistic. The second Susan B. Anthony, great-niece of the first, tells of the agonies and joys of her life and of the power of God.

The Future Shape of Preaching, by Thor Hall (Fortress, 140 pp., paperback, $3.50). The James Sprunt Lectures, 1970, given at Union Theological Seminary, consider in depth the role of homiletics today.

Donald G. Bloesch

Page 5900 – Christianity Today (11)

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In Part One Dr. Bloesch discussed three areas in which advocates of the new theology have tended to bury the Gospel, to “empty the faith of its biblical content”: social activism, psychological analysis, and liturgical innovation. In this concluding part he adds two areas to that list and then goes on to give an overall view of the crisis in the Church.

Cultural Preaching

Although preaching is indispensable for full Christian worship, it is nevertheless true that much if not most preaching today buries the Gospel in abstraction and triviality. Consequently our people are not being spiritually fed. What they are hearing from the pulpits is not biblical, evangelical preaching but random thoughts on a cultural or ideological theme. This is preaching that reflects and undergirds the biases of the community, that soothes rather than challenges, diverts rather than convicts.

Cultural preaching is often characterized by a false irenicism, since an attempt is made to please all factions. The pastor gives compromise solutions instead of forthrightly declaring the biblical word of truth that brings all sides under judgment. He deludes himself into thinking he is an agent of reconciliation while in reality his preaching reconciles no one, though people may be brought into outward agreement. In biblical terms, heartfelt repentance is the prerequisite for reconciliation, and repentance entails the confession of sin against God as well as against neighbor.

Those who uphold a new social gospel are often cultural preachers because they unite the Gospel with the ideology of the new left and thereby substitute propaganda for proclamation. Instead of trying to discover the social implications of the biblical Gospel, they bring to their flocks a new gospel concerning a kingdom of man that can be realized by social engineering. The ambassador of Christ must never preach social action, but he should proclaim God’s law and relate it to the social condition. When he does this his congregation is then ready to hear the Gospel, the good news of God’s mercy revealed in Jesus Christ.

Sectarian preaching is another way of hiding the light of the Gospel by enthroning the wisdom of men. What is proclaimed is not the whole Gospel but a segment of the Gospel, not the biblical evangel but the pet doctrines of the denomination. The sectarian preacher parrots his church’s party line and thereby confuses the infallible truth of God with the fallible truths of men.

What Peter Forsyth terms “impressionistic preaching” also obscures the Gospel, since the purpose here is not to uphold the Word of God but to impress people with one’s own knowledge and accomplishments. Such preachers may be excellent speakers and even capable scholars, but they are not spokesmen for God. They are burying the Gospel in order to win the admiration of men, to advance themselves in the church and also in the world.

The Gospel fares little better in what has come to be known as “dialogic preaching,” which usually involves not an exposition of Scripture but an exchange of opinions. The preacher and his congregation together declare themselves willing to search for the truth but sedulously avoid standing under the judgment of the truth already declared in Jesus Christ. There is a place for dialogue between preacher and congregation, but on the basis of the sermon preached and the Scripture read. Philip Spener argued for Sunday-evening meetings in which the people could discuss the theme of the morning sermon, but the discussion would be in the light of Scripture, the infallible rule for all faith and practice.

Church Mergers

The trend toward church mergers outwardly appears a good thing, since it was our Lord’s will that his people be one (see John 17:20–23). Biblical faith does not rest content with spiritual unity, however necessary that is, but presses on to give visible, concrete expression to our unity in Christ.

At the same time, visible unity is contingent upon a common understanding of the truth of faith, and when truth is sacrificed for organizational union the Gospel is again eclipsed. Dietrich Bonhoeffer warned against this danger in his criticism of the ecumenical movement: “The Churches in the World Alliance have no common recognition of the truth.… We may not play with the truth, or else it will destroy us” (No Rusty Swords). In Bonhoeffer’s view, coming to terms with the hard facts of doctrinal differences cannot be avoided if true unity is ever to be an accomplished fact. Conciliar theologians, however, frequently brush aside doctrinal barriers and attempt to forge a visible unity on the basis of common social goals (secular ecumenism). Altar and pulpit fellowship between churches is in my estimation not dependent on a doctrinal consensus on all matters, but it does presuppose a basic concord concerning the fundamentals of the faith.

Another disquieting note in ecumenical relations today is that the motivation for church union seems to be, not a united witness before the world, but greater efficiency in organization. There is indeed cause for concern if a new kind of denominational imperialism is being substituted for the spreading of the good news and the advancement of the kingdom of God. Some ecumenists envision a super-church with a common polity and a unified liturgy, but this contradicts the New Testament vision of the Church, in which there is liturgical diversity and various forms of ministry but at the same time a common devotion to the faith once delivered to the saints. The Church in the present age of crisis and revolution must not seek to preserve itself by organizational solidification but must be willing to die for the sake of the Gospel. The choice is to bury the Gospel in organizational bureaucracy and high-powered public relations or to strip down its program for institutional survival so that more energy can be given to the task of evangelism and mission.

Despite the continued advance of ecumenism, there is probably more disunity in the churches today than at any other time since the Reformation. Organizational consolidation has only served to aggravate the tensions and divisions caused by the general departure from biblical moorings and the politicalizing of religion. Before there can be authentic unity, there must first be a genuine spiritual awakening in which people will be confronted by the Gospel and challenged to decision.

Crisis In The Church

The shadow of schism lies over the modern church, both Catholic and Protestant, as the polarization between conservatism and liberalism deepens. Many churches and theologians today are trying to substitute consensus for polarization, but this is seeking unity at the expense of truth. The ground for reconciliation is God’s saving act in Christ and not common cultural interests or institutional survival.

It is well to note that the New Testament urges us to avoid not polarization but factionalism and party spirit. The Gospel indeed creates a new polarization between belief and unbelief. The Gospel is folly to those who are perishing (1 Cor. 1:18), and wherever it is proclaimed men will be confronted with the scandal of the cross that will necessarily cause offense. The Church will be plotting a suicidal course if it seeks to hide this offense by a dubious apologetics. The way to end polarization is by conversion and submission to Jesus Christ, the Lord of the Church.

Liberal theologians never tire of asserting that the crisis today is one of ethical obedience. That the people of God are not obeying his will in the present situation cannot be denied, but behind this disobedience is the deeper crisis of faith. One cannot do the truth unless he is in the truth, and therefore the trumpet of the modern church gives an uncertain sound (cf. 1 Cor. 14:8). Many churches and seminaries today have become fields for evangelism rather than forces of evangelism. This means that apostasy is rife even among the sons of the kingdom. It is well to recognize that unbelief is constantly pictured in the Old Testament as a more heinous sin even than social injustice. The Church has been addressing itself to symptoms and has been ignoring the source of the cancer that afflicts modern society.

New idolatries are emerging to fill the spiritual vacuum created by the Church’s reluctance to let the truth of the Gospel shine into the hearts of men. Among these new objects of deification are the group mind or the social consciousness (as in groupism and progressive education); the nation or race (as in the new nationalism and militarism); the social class (as in Marxism); and the vital instincts (as in pansexualism). The Church today is challenged to unmask these pseudo-gods, but it is greatly hampered in this task by its subservience to ideology, whether of the right or of the left.

Hand in hand with the new idolatries is a new morality that is openly skeptical of any moral absolute and that for all practical purposes serves the technological revolution. The aim of this morality is adjustment to the cultural norm, and its high priests are the social scientists and psychologists. Jacques Ellul is one theologian and social analyst who has been alert to the encroaching danger of a “technological morality,” which, in his words “appears as a suppression of morality through the total absorption of the individual into the group” (To Will and To Do).

A new “democratic” totalitarianism has arisen that seeks to enlist the aid of both the right and the left. Those who give their allegiance to “the rights of man” in the abstract instead of the glory of God and whose slogan is “All power to the people” are unwittingly preparing the way for a totalitarian takeover. They give lip service to the democratic ideal, but in reality the society they envision would be tightly controlled by an oligarchy of sociologists, educationists, and psychologists.

The Church can cope with the present crisis only if it becomes ever more sensitive to social reality by freeing itself from its bondage to ideology. Instead of trying to come to terms with the growing unbelief in our times, it should seek to unmask unbelief as well as proclaim the faith in all its purity and power. It should also be alive to apostasy from within and particularly to the secular humanism that has infiltrated the new social-gospel movement. This kind of humanism is also present in the conciliar movement, as well as in the circles of religious education and pastoral theology. For the sake of true ecumenism and an authentically Christian education, church theologians should begin applying themselves to the task of the defense of the faith within the Church.

What is needed today is a new kind of dogmatics that will at the same time be an apologetics, one that will neither hide nor embellish the Gospel but will confront the world with it. This would be an apologetics in the service of a kerygmatic theology. It would not seek to make the Gospel credible or plausible to the world, but it would not hesitate to expose the pitiful delusions of a great many moderns and the emptiness of their own philosophies in the face of the world crisis.

Martin Marty, rightly I believe, maintains that we are entering an apocalyptic age, an age when the certainties of yesterday will probably be taken from us. The shallow optimism that has permeated secular and political theology will prove insufficient to cope with the harsh realities that lie ahead. Instead of an optimism based on the inherent perfectibility of man and evolutionary progress, the world stands in need of an optimism founded on the divine realities of justification and regeneration. The death of God will be followed by the death of the Church unless the Church abandons the gods of popular culture-religion and begins listening again to the voice of the true God as this is found in Holy Scripture. Then it might rediscover its true role and mission, which is to uphold the glorious Gospel of redemption before a lost and despairing world and thereby prepare the way for the coming kingdom of God.

Another Underground

Thousands of students, laymen, clergymen, and nuns have gone underground in revolt against the traditional structures and forms of their churches.… Basically they seek spiritual renewal and satisfaction for themselves. They hope the wider Church will join their quest. I have found little bitterness among them and almost no inclination to mount a holy war of liberation against the formal church. They are mostly straight Establishment-type people. Unlike the multitudes of hippie converts, these have not dropped out of mainstream society. Many are even in their usual pews and places of service on Sunday—but they also worship with kindred spirits in cell-like meetings later in the week.—EDWARD E. PLOWMAN, The Jesus Movement in America (David C. Cook, 1971), p. 10. Used by permission.

    • More fromDonald G. Bloesch

David Downing

Page 5900 – Christianity Today (13)

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Everyman is tired. He’s tired of taxes. He’s tired of traffic jams. He’s tired of telephones, timetables, and TV dinners. He’s tired of promises, tired of threats. Tired of democrats, dandelions, deadlines, and demilitarized zones. He’s tired of shallow optimism, and shallow pessimism. He’s tired of pollution, corruption, and racism, and he’s tired of being blamed for them. He’s tired of false hopes, false friends, and false advertising. He’s tired of trying to make sense out of it all. Tired.

He feels that there must be some meaning behind the monotony, but he doesn’t even know where to look. He has tried cheap thrills, and not-so-cheap thrills, only to discover that pleasure wasn’t happiness and happiness wasn’t joy. He tried check books, hymn books, textbooks, and sex books, but it all was “striving after wind.” He even tried philosophy and theology, yet he could never get beyond the pious platitudes, formless generalities, and cold abstractions. The Church to him was just a collection of hypocrites, social workers, and tired old ladies. “If those are the people God works with, then, he must not be my kind of guy.” Gradually, Everyman’s search for meaning sagged into a resolve not to be engulfed by the meaninglessness that surrounded him. So one day, with civilization chattering all around him, he just stopped listening.

Once this state of mind has been reached (and it often is among moderns), Everyman is virtually impervious to traditional forms of persuasion. He is convinced that neither the Christian nor anyone else has anything to tell him. Christians have everything to tell him, but often they don’t know how to make him understand. An explanation of the internal and external consistency of their faith is likely to bore Everyman right out of the kingdom of heaven. A Pepsodent smile, an arm around the shoulder, and a promise of a new life style are likely to remind him of Madison Avenue’s latest scheme. He has endured so many frontal assaults on his intellect that he has reached his last, yet most impenetrable, line of defense: indifference.

Yet even while apathy and cynicism rule his rational faculties, his imagination remains free and active. He cannot maintain strict control over his imagination any more than over his heartbeat. For example, realizing that his fear of public speaking (or of the dark, or of heights) is irrational doesn’t help ease the fear. His intellect may declare ghosts to be an impossibility, but under certain scary conditions his imagination doesn’t make much of a distinction between possibilities and impossibilities. Imagination frees a man to fly to the moon and back in a second, to visualize an atom that his eyes can never see, or to feel angered and saddened as he reads of an unjust crucifixion that took place almost two thousand years ago.

Of course, the imagination is not merely a tool for taking mental vacations from “serious thinking.” In fact, “serious thinking” is often the process by which man’s rational faculty tries to organize and interpret the images it receives from his image-making faculty, the imagination. Whether one reacts to the image of immortality by building a complex philosophical system or by simply dreaming of the Happy Hunting Grounds, he is trying to be at peace with his imagination. As the Preacher tells us, “God has put eternity into man’s mind, yet so that he cannot find out what God has done from the beginning to the end” (Eccles. 3:11). Even though Everyman’s intellect has despaired of ever answering the question of meaning, his imagination does not stop asking it. He can stop listening, but he cannot stop wondering, for he has eternity in his mind.

C. S. Lewis was not a Christian apologist in the normal sense of the term; he was a Christian artist. This is precisely what makes his works so effective in helping non-Christians understand the real significance of Christianity. Lewis’s Christian world view does not appeal only to the intellect; it steals into the imagination.

Lewis viewed human imagination as an indispensable tool for understanding ourselves and our existence. This is well illustrated by his interpretation of myth. While most moderns consider myth a synonym for fiction, notes Clyde S. Kilby, Lewis defined myth as the “embodiment of universal truth” The Christian World of C. S. Lewis). He saw myths as reflections of the fundamental patterns of human existence. For example, in Perelandra Ransom discovers that the classical deities Mars and Venus are earthly images of Malacandra and Perelandra, and is told that “our mythology is based on a solider reality than we dream.” In That Hideous Strength Merlin walks right out of medieval legend to become one of the novel’s main protagonists. Till We Have Faces is actually a Christian myth; it is patterned after the story of Cupid and Psyche. In the preface to Pilgrim’s Regress, Lewis explains that “when allegory is at its best, it approaches myth, which must be grasped with the imagination, not with the intellect.” Since Lewis believed that the imagination was needed to unlock the meanings of the universe, his belief in the value of man’s imagination is obvious. Since he felt that the imagination was, in many cases, the most direct route to truth, it is not surprising that he took such care to try to capture the imagination of his readers.

One of Lewis’s primary goals in the space trilogy (Out of the Silent Planet, Perelandra, and That Hideous Strength) is to instill a profound sense of the reality of the supernatural in the minds of his readers. Though this calls in part for a rational demonstration of the difficulties of the materialist view (which Lewis does in some of his expository writings, such as Miracles), it is primarily a matter of stimulating the imagination. If the question of God’s existence becomes firmly implanted in the imagination, it necessarily becomes urgent to the intellect.

Unlike many other fantasy writers, Lewis does not ask his readers to cast off all sentimental attachments to reality before venturing into his novels. Instead, he carefully juxtaposes the natural and supernatural realms until the distinction between them seems somewhat arbitrary. In That Hideous Strength he does this by placing what would normally be considered supernatural events into a naturalistic setting. He begins the novel by describing ordinary, even humdrum, persons and activities in such detail that the credibility of his account rests secure. Then come a few casual hints, and later more concrete clues, that something very unusual is taking place behind those everyday scenes. By the time the quiet little community of Edgestow has become a battlefield between the Forces of Good and the Forces of Evil, the reader is amazed to discover the awesome supernatural forces that lie just beneath the surface of the common workaday world. He feels a little like those who heard Orson Welles’s 1938 War of the Worlds radio broadcast, when a supposedly factual newscast began describing an interplanetary holocaust. Of course, the reader realizes he is only reading fiction; yet his imagination delights in every opportunity it gets to trample on the distinction between the real and the unreal.

Lewis also uses the opposite technique from the one described above for the same purpose, that of making the supernatural realm less remote: he takes common human experiences and charges them with significance by placing them in a supernatural context. For example, everyone has had the experience of thinking he was alone when suddenly, by some unknown perception, he feels there is someone in the room with him, someone silently watching, listening. He glances around, sees nothing, and shrugs the happening off as a little odd. In Perelandra, Ransom senses an unseen Presence whenever he attempts to assert his independence or to shy away from the hard task before him. The Presence is not a mere psychological curiosity; it communicates with Ransom (though not in words) whenever he needs to realize the flaws in his own rationalizations. Once this impression has entered into our imaginations, we cannot help recalling it whenever we have that sense of an unseen Person in our midst. The implication to the reader (and particularly to the Christian reader, who already considers himself under God’s guiding hand) is that his decisions do not affect himself and his immediate circ*mstances; each decision made is either in accordance with God’s plan or in defiance of it.

Another example of Lewis’s device of putting common experiences into supernatural settings is his description of eldils, or angels. He does not portray them as magnificent creatures clothed in radiant garments. Instead they are barely perceptible “footsteps of light.” In Ransom’s first encounter with an eldil (Out of the Silent Planet), he doesn’t even see it. The next one he meets can hardly be distinguished from the dance of sunlight on the lake. Once again, a spark has been lit in the reader’s imagination that will not easily die. After reading the trilogy he will probably find that every peculiar slant of light asks for a second look. “Why, that’s only the moonlight filtering through the trees. And yet, for a moment …”

In the space trilogy, Lewis crosses the barrier between the natural and the supernatural so often that it doesn’t seem much of a barrier at all. This effect is created primarily through literary “tricks” such as those discussed above. The trilogy is not intended to present tangible evidence for the supernatural. Our being able to picture eldils in our imagination does not mean that they really exist. However, in Pilgrim’s Regress, Lewis points out something in the human imagination that may indeed give us reason to suspect that the material realm is not the “whole show.”

Lewis calls it Sweet Desire, and symbolizes it as a recurring vision of a Beautiful Island. It is an “intense longing … in which the sense of want is acute, even painful, yet the mere wanting of it is felt to be somehow a delight” (preface to Pilgrim’s Regress). The object of this longing is never fully realized in this life. A man may spend his entire life trying to satisfy this longing, but even in his moments of greatest happiness, there comes an acute awareness that the longing is still there. Lewis’s theme in the Regress, expressed in the book’s preface, is this:

If a man diligently followed this desire, pursuing the false objects until their falsity appeared and then abandoning them, he must come out at last into the clear knowledge that the human soul was made to enjoy some object that is never fully given—nay, cannot even be imagined as given—in our present mode of subjective and spatio-temporal experience.

Sweet Desire, then, is a kind of unfocused God-consciousness that, if properly guided and refined, will ultimately find its rest in God. It is not just another literary device, nor a convenient organizing principle for, building an allegory. One finds reference to it throughout ancient and modern literature (though the authors, of course, show varying degrees of understanding of what it is).

To expose the false objects of Sweet Desire, and to point out the fallacies in various modern philosophies and religions, is essentially an intellectual task. However, by placing one man’s intellectual inquiry into the allegorical framework of Pilgrim’s Regress, Lewis is able, as Clyde S. Kilby points out, to “make the inner world more palpable by giving it an (imagined) concrete embodiment.”

Lewis is often successful in reaching the jaded intellect largely because he was an explorer as much as an explainer. Instead of battering the intellect with arguments for the existence of the supernatural, he simply stirs the reader’s imagination so that he can feel for himself that “every bush is the Burning Bush, and the world is ‘crowded with God.’” If this point has not yet been persuasive, perhaps this passage will make it clear:

When the servant of the man of God rose early in the morning and went out, behold, an army with horses and chariots was round about the city. And the servant said, “Alas, my master! What shall we do?” He said, “Fear not, for those who are with us are more than those who are with them.” Then Elisha prayed, and said, “O LORD, I pray thee, open his eyes that he may see.” So the LORD opened the eyes of the young man, and he saw; and behold, the mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire round about Elisha [2 Kings 6:15–17].

David Downing attends Westmont College, Santa Barbara.

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Clark H. Pinnock And Grant R. Osborne

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Evangelical Christians are divided against themselves. At a time when the world is hungering to hear “good news” in the midst of the secular wasteland, an acrimonious debate about the legitimacy of tongues in the Christian life divides our ranks and saps our energies. This article is an attempt to clear the air and raise the level of rhetoric on both sides. If the evangelical community followed the guidelines proposed, greater harmony would descend and the mission of the Church would advance.

On a corporate level, it is pleasing to see signs of a growing cooperation between Pentecostals and non-Pentecostals. The involvement of Pentecostals in the National Association of Evangelicals and the leadership of Dr. Thomas Zimmerman, president of the Assemblies of God, in the international Key ’73 evangelistic program are two examples of this. However, on the grass-roots level there is little cooperation and a great deal of suspicion.

Two important points must be clarified at the outset. First, the debate over whether tongues in the apostolic age and today were real languages or ecstatic utterances—which many consider crucial to the question of the validity of glossolalia today—is not really vital to the connection between the two. Actually, there is no uniformity of opinion. Frederick D. Bruner (A Theology of the Holy Spirit. Eerdmans, 1970) says that the charismatic movement as a whole affirms both characteristics, “even though the ecstasy may at times appear somewhat peculiar to observers and the language usually unknown to hearers.” The biblical evidence is also somewhat ambiguous. One must agree with the contention that at Ephesus Luke does not delineate the nature of the gift, nor does Paul at Corinth. Arguments may rage, but no conclusion may be drawn, for Scripture itself is silent. Today it is claimed that both types are manifest (see Morton T. Kelsey, Tongue Speaking: An Experience in Spiritual Experience [Doubleday, 1964], pp. 152–60, for an example of tongues as real languages). This would be possible biblically, for while Pentecost featured known languages, First Corinthians 13:1 and 14:2 point to ecstatic speech. The important point is that the nature of the gift cannot be the criterion for veracity. This must be determined from other considerations, especially the manifestation of the fruit of the Spirit (Gal. 5:22, 23) in the life of the tongue-speaker.

The other preliminary point is the supposed distinction between tongues as an initial sign of Spirit-baptism and as the gift of the Spirit. Many Pentecostals teach a definite difference, holding that according to Acts all Christians must experience the former as the necessary step to a higher Christian walk, but that the latter is given by the Spirit as a gift to the individual believer (see Article 7 of the “Statement of Faith” of the Assemblies of God). It is the thesis of this study that Scripture upholds no such distinction. The first section will show that tongues as a gift for this age is valid biblically, while the second section will make the point that glossolalia as the normative, initial evidence of Spirit-baptism cannot be upheld scripturally.

For The Non-Glossolalist

1. Tongues are a legitimate gift of the Spirit to the Church today.

Those who contest the validity of the tongues movement generally do so along the lines suggested in Benjamin Warfield’s Miracles: Yesterday and Today. He argued that miracles, including the gift of tongues, were signs designed to authenticate the apostles, and gradually ceased with the passing of that age. In addition, it is held that glossolalia, where it does appear in church history, arises in heterodox circles like the Montanists; therefore, it is concluded that the gift ceased after the canon was concluded and never truly appeared again (see Anthony Hoekema, What About Tongue Speaking?, Eerdmans, 1966, p. 111 f.). Exegetical evidence is taken from the book of Acts, and from First Corinthians 13:8–12, where it is asserted that Paul prophesied the imminent cessation of this gift.

These arguments are far from convincing. Not only does Paul acknowledge that tongues is a genuine spiritual gift; he also states that he himself practiced it (1 Cor. 14:2, 18). His remarks against it have entirely to do with its abuse in the assembly. When employed in public, tongues must be accompanied with an interpretation, otherwise it is profitless for the Church (v. 27).

Moreover, the New Testament nowhere teaches that the gifts were given solely to authenticate the apostles or that they were to cease after the apostolic age. Geoffrey W. Bromiley writes,

Scripture does not explicitly restrict these gifts to the apostles or their day, and hence we have no ground on which to limit the sovereign disposing of the Spirit.… Though we may not command or claim the charismata, or any specific charisma, the Spirit’s donation may still be looked for as and when he himself decides [The Fundamentals of the Faith, ed. by Carl F. H. Henry, Zondervan, 169, p. 159].

Irenaeus, in his Against Heresies, mentions “many brethren in the Church … who through the Spirit speak all kinds of languages.” John Calvin in his commentary on First Corinthians not only regarded glossolalia as a legitimate gift of the Spirit but wrote against those who “declaim against them with furious zeal,” saying: “Paul, nevertheless, commands the use of tongues. So far is he from wishing them abolished or thrown away.” In his journal for November 25, 1795, John Wesley noted the occurrence of tongues and expressed the opinion that the danger was less an overemphasis than a suppression or denial of spiritual gifts.

Finally, Paul does not teach the cessation of tongues in particular at the close of the apostolic age. First Corinthians 13 is a bridge passage between his remarks on the distribution of gifts (chapter 12) and their regulation (chapter 14). In it the Apostle indicates that love is the context in which all the gifts must be exercised. The only cessation to which he refers is that which occurs at the coming of Christ (v. 10).

Our approach to tongues must be open-minded, inductive exegesis of the biblical text. Outright repudiation is unscriptural.

2. The glossolalist should be welcomed into Christian fellowship and accepted into all cooperative endeavors.

Divisions over the tongues question are due as much to the harsh condemnation meted out by non-glossolalists as to anything else. Tongues is not a matter of fundamental truth and thus cannot be determinative of fellowship. Contrary to popular opinion, most glossolalists do not weave their entire theology or personal religion around this gift. An even superficial acquaintance with the movement will make clear the centrality of Christ. Honesty requires us to admit that very often there is an exuberance and joy in charismatic circles for which all believers deeply yearn. Instead of condemning and ostracizing, let us put glossolalists to the test: welcome them into worship, fellowship and service. That is the only Christian way.

There is a caricature that must be smashed. Many Christians look down on the glossolalist as a neurotic, insecure person who can express himself only in unseemly emotional ways. But some psychological tests have indicated that the opposite may be true. Glossolalists do not suffer from a higher incidence of abnormal personality than other people, and in many cases the gift as a religious experience seems to contribute to mental health (see L. M. Vav Eetveldt Vivier, Glossolalia, unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Chicago, 1960, and E. Mansell Pattison, “Behavioral Scientific Research on the Nature of Glossolalia,” Journal of the American Scientific Affiliation, XX [1968], 73–86). Hyper-emotionalism is no necessary ingredient of tongues.

There is a tendency also to practice social discrimination with glossolalists. They are thought to belong only to the lower strata of society, economically and intellectually. The prominence of leaders such as Dennis Bennett, Episcopal rector from Seattle, and the appearance of the gift on prestigious campuses throughout the United States reveal this as a baseless charge.

Speaking practically, of course, there are distinctives that make difficult a united worship of Pentecostals and non-Pentecostals. Differing styles of church meeting have developed along denominational lines, just as have differences over the sacraments. However, this need have no bearing on interdenominational fellowship and cooperation; there is a very real basis for unity in all major issues. Moreover, churches need not split when tongues breaks out within them. Paul left room within the worship service for such manifestations (1 Cor. 14:26, 39), so long as certain guidelines were followed—edification (14:5, 26), interpretation (14:5, 13, 28), self-control (14:27), order (14:40), and the absence of proselytizing (12:18–31). This last is the foundation stone of combined worship and continued unity. Anyone who insists on propagating his distinctive practice—be it tongues, a certain mode of baptism, or foot-washing—removes himself from those who do not practice such. The proper view of glossolalia will recognize it as an individual gift depending on the sovereign choice of the Spirit, not a corporate experience every Christian must undergo.

On the positive side, it is impossible to ignore the place of tongues in several highly significant evangelistic movements of our day. The young “Jesus people,” a large body of newly converted Christians, belong, for the most part, to the charismatic movement. It is difficult, after reading David Wilkerson’s The Cross and the Switchblade, to doubt that tongues has played a role in the rehabilitation of many drug addicts.

At the end of Paul’s discussion of the problem, he commands that tongues not be forbidden (1 Cor. 14:39). Granted, it is not the best gift with which tc edify the Church. Nevertheless, it has validity and should be gratefully received by all Christians as coming from God.

For The Glossolalist

1. Tongues is not the normative sign of Spirit-baptism.

Here we must consider the first aspect of the Pentecostal distinction, that the universal, initial sign of Spirit-baptism, itself subsequent to salvation, is tongues. As such it differs from the gift of the experience, given only to some. In all fairness, however, it must be said that many Pentecostals insist that the experience should continue to be enjoyed after the initial reception. Bruner (p. 144) writes, “This reasoning is not difficult to follow, for given the necessity of the evidence of tongues in the Spirit-baptism, not to continue speaking in tongues after having begun seems to be not only unspiritual but unnatural, indicating, it is sometimes argued, a lack of faith (Mark 16:17) and of obedience (1 Cor. 14:5).”

The Book of Acts is held to demonstrate the normative value of tongues. Six special passages are used to defend its necessity—Acts 2 (Pentecost), 4:31 (the second Pentecost), 8 (Samaria), 9 (conversion of Saul), 10–11 (convers on of Cornelius), and 19 (the “Ephesian Pentecost”). Pentecostals argue that in every case in Acts, tongues is present as the conspicuous evidence of the power of the Spirit’s coming upon the individual. Also, they teach that this is meant for every age of the Church.

This argument is weak methodologically and exegetically. Didactic portions of Scripture must have precedence over historical passages in establishing doctrine. We ought to move here from the teaching of First Corinthians to the narrative of Acts rather than the reverse. When one follows this proper methodology, one notes that there is no manifestation of tongues that is normative. Each member of the body of Christ, according to Paul, enjoys a manifestation of the Spirit for the common good (1 Cor. 12:7, 11). There is not one gift that all Christians share (v. 19 f.). Glossolalia is simply not normative. The infallible sign of spiritual fullness is moral and religious (see Gal. 5:22–6:2; Eph. 5:18–20; Col. 3:16). It is germane to point out that the Corinthian Christians, with their overemphasis, tended to be carnal and unspiritual (1 Cor. 3:1–4).

More important to the issue, the Book of Acts does not establish a normative experience for the believer today. Without doubt Acts describes the appearance of glossolalia on at least three important occasions (2:4–13; 10:46; 19:6). It is only fair to point out, however, that in, the other instances alluded to by Pentecostals, Scripture does not mention tongues and does not require such a manifestation. Moreover, each of the three cases mentioned above was a special circ*mstance that marked a turning point in the spread of the Gospel. The appearance of glossolalia in each instance meant God’s authentication of that progression of the Gospel.

Three further points may be gleaned from the evidence of Acts. For one thing, there is a significant absence of the “seeking” of tongues, a central Pentecostal distinctive. There is no record that any person sought the gift, according to the primary passages—Acts 2; 8; 10, and 19. Also, there is no evidence of a Spirit-baptism subsequent to salvation. The phenomenon in many instances accompanies salvation, as in the case of Cornelius and Paul. Moreover, there may be repeated fillings (e.g., Acts 4:31) that are not equated with charismatic gifts. Finally, it is striking how often the outpouring of the Spirit is referred to where glossolalia is not mentioned (see, for example, Acts 2:41; 4:4; 6:7; 8:36; 9:42).

We may conclude that the historical narrative of Acts does not establish the normative role of tongues. Indeed, Acts seems to stress bold witness as a sign of spiritual depth (4:31). This explains the success in the lives of men like Wesley, Moody, Torrey, Graham—each of whom has known the fullness of the Spirit and yet has not been reported to have spoken in other tongues. Men such as these are living proof that this exegesis is correct—there is no Spirit-baptism subsequent to salvation that is initially evidenced by tongues.

2. The glossolalist should not take a superior attitude toward those who have not experienced tongues, nor should he coerce others to do so.

It must be stated that Pentecostals themselves are among the harshest critics of such a “spiritual aristocracy” attitude among adherents. One can easily understand how the person who accepts tongues as the only initial evidence of Spirit-baptism and as a natural subsequent experience could come to look on the person who hasn’t experienced it as spiritually stunted.

However, it is the thesis of this study that glossolalia is not to be sought nor propagated. Of course, one must expect Pentecostals, given their doctrinal stand, to propagate their views; they could hardly do otherwise. The purpose here is to seek the biblical standard against which these views must be examined.

The Book of Acts shows, as we have already seen, that tongues was never sought in the apostolic age. First Corinthians 12–14 places the historical description there on a doctrinal plane. A brief perusal of this passage will establish Paul’s view of tongues. In chapter 12 he discusses the distribution of the gifts of the Spirit, focusing on tongues. In 12:4–11 he teaches that this, like all other gifts, is given according to the sovereign choice of the Spirit rather than the individual desire of man. Verses 12–27 add that each person has a separate function, and that the various gifts distributed to different men unite in a combined whole; the gifts are separately given but corporately united, each with its part in the Body of Christ. The conclusion is seen in verses 28–31, which definitely show that no gift is meant to be universally distributed. In verse 30, which should be translated “All do not speak in tongues, do they?,” the principle is enunciated that this gift is meant only particularly and not universally.

Chapter 13, usually separated from its context, is meant to establish the principle that must guide the exercise of these gifts: self-giving love. In verses 1–3 tongues is placed among other gifts and is not seen as universal any more than the others. The last part of the chapter, beginning with verse 8, then continues this theme, pointing to tongues as one among many gifts, all of which cease at the Parousia, when they will be absorbed by Love.

Finally, chapter 14 applies this practically. While an exegesis of this comprehensive passage is not possible here, a few significant points may be made. First, glossolalia must not be practiced publicly apart from interpretation, and its goal must always be edification (vv. 1–13). Furthermore, it is better for private use than for public demonstration (vv. 14–19), because in public it is a negative sign that will only further the unbeliever in his state (vv. 20–25). Finally, the very strict regulations governing its public manifestation are relevant to this study—the restriction of the number who may speak, the necessity of an interpreter and of rational judgment regarding the proceedings, the prohibition against speaking (a point whose applicability to our time is controversial), women, and the overriding importance of order in the service (vv. 26–40).

These chapters presuppose the limited distribution and use of this particular gift. There is no room for active seeking, only for passive waiting for the particular gift the sovereign Spirit bestows on each one. This is intended for both the initial baptism, which is not sought but is automatically received at conversion, and for the gift, which is different for each individual. In view of such considerations, it is common sense to insist that the value of this gift be soberly measured and its practice carefully controlled. “The spirits of the prophets are subject to the prophets” (14:32).

Conclusion

Non-glossolalists run the risk of quenching the Spirit (1 Thess. 5:19–21). So long as the biblical safeguards are observed, there is no reason why glossolalia should alarm us or hinder the work of God. Glossolalists for their part often place too great an emphasis on the gift and engage in unscriptural proselytizing. It is clear that the spirit of First Corinthians 13 is to condition and control this discussion between brethren. A. B. Simpson was right when he wrote:

We believe the Scripture teaching to be that the gift of tongues is one of the gifts of the Spirit, and that it may be present in the normal Christian assembly as a sovereign bestowal of the Holy Spirit upon such as he wills. We do not believe that there is any Scriptural evidence for the teaching that speaking in tongues is the sign of having been filled with the Spirit, nor do we believe that it is the plan of God that all Christians should possess the gift of tongues. This gift is one of many gifts and is given to some for the benefit of all. The attitude toward the gift of tongues held by pastor and people should be, “Seek not, forbid not” [quoted in the Alliance Witness, May 1, 1963, p. 19].

Clark H. Pinnock is professor of theology at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School in Deerfield, Illinois. He has the Ph.D. from the University of Manchester. Grant R. Osborne is a student and instructor in Greek at Trinity, from which he received the M.A. degree in 1971.

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James S. Tinney

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While blacks in America are searching for a genuinely black theology, they might do well to rediscover that an authentic black faith already exists. It is known as Pentecostalism.

If this description of Pentecostalism as a black faith is offensive to some whites, especially to those within the movement itself, the reason may be a general lack of knowledge about the origins and sources of Pentecostalism. For the origins of the movement—which includes practicing charismatics in nearly every denomination—are distinctively African and Afro-American.

This fact has some startling implications. First, since scholars consider some elements of Pentecostalism to resemble closely the early Church, primitive Christianity is not foreign to the experience of American Negroes and hence is not totally a white imposition. Second, while it is true that whites have tended to impose certain aspects of a culturized religion on black churches, it is also true that blacks have given to more than a million whites a religious form that is significantly Afro-American. Third, since isolated incidents of glossolalia have appeared and disappeared at regular intervals in church history, it is not unreasonable to suggest that without the important role of blacks, there might be no Pentecostal movement of any magnitude today in the United States or the world. Fourth, the ecumenical and interracial factors inherent in Pentecostalism may offer mainstream Christianity, both Catholic and Protestant, some direction in building a truly integrated church.

White charismatics, as distinct from black participants, have captured considerable attention in the news media. Much notice has been given to the appearance of glossolalia in the large denominations and on university campuses, to the fervent proselytism of the Full Gospel Businessmen’s Fellowship International, to the fast growth of the Assemblies of God and several Churches of God, and now to the explosion of the Jesus movement. All these groups are bastions of white membership. Little wonder, then, that the glossolalic churches have come to be viewed as fringes of the white religious establishment.

Consider, however, that there are 800,000 members of fourteen all-black Pentecostal denominations and probably an equal number in the storefront churches of the ghettos. The white Pentecostal churches are virtually all-white, sharing in a politically conservative or Southern mentality. There is almost no visiting back and forth between the two racial groups, and no mention is ever made of any past withdrawal of black churches from white ones. Is it not strange that no one has inquired about the origin of the black Pentecostal bodies? Evidently popular assumption has it that the gift of tongues fell spontaneously and separately on the non-glossolalist black and white churches. However, this is far from the truth.

Both black and white Pentecostalism in America can be traced back to a little band of black believers who met in a storefront church on Azusa Street in Los Angeles in 1906. Nearly every charismatic denomination in this country can trace its beginnings back to that black church setting. Whatever its biblical base or lack of it, Pentecostalism derives from black people in an immediate, although not exclusive, sense.

Some will say this is overly simplified. For example, the Church of God (Cleveland, Tennessee) has long preferred to emphasize a singular outpouring of charisma in 1896 in Tennessee as its antecedent. But that phenomenon did not last long, and the main introduction of tongues to that body of churches ten years later was linked to Azusa.

Others may suggest that C. F. Parham’s Bethel Bible College, a short-lived, racially integrated school in Topeka, Kansas, should be considered the starting point for the movement. It is true that many of the forty students enrolled there received the manifestation of tongues in 1901, five years prior to Azusa, but the incident was virtually isolated. The flame did not pass to other areas of the country at that time. Sister Lucy Farrow, a black minister, took the message of Pentecostalism from the college in Topeka to Houston, paving the way for Parham to establish a similarly short-lived, racially integrated Bible school there in 1905. By this time, Parham’s evangelistic efforts had been so successful that there were 25,000 Pentecostal believers in Texas alone. From Houston it was a black minister, W. J. Seymour, who took the message to Los Angeles.

Here begins the modern genesis of the movement. When he arrived in Los Angeles, Seymour gathered a body of Negro saints into homes and later into the refurbished lumber store that became the Azusa Mission to pray for a recurrence of apostolic signs and miracles. Then it happened: multitudinous gifts, signs, and manifestations—including tongues-speaking—heralded the advent of the Spirit. For days these black saints shouted and spoke in tongues while others were converted or healed. News of the continuous revival and of the recurrence of glossolalia flashed across the United States.

Soon, in a kind of reverse desegregation, white people began attending and receiving the same experiences through the ministry of the blacks who led the meetings. The disunity of races was temporarily mended, and on the terms of God as proclaimed by a black man, W. J. Seymour.

A chain reaction followed.

The Church of God in Christ, originally a Wesleyan body, heard of the Los Angeles occurrences and sent its overseer, C. H. Mason, to investigate. He returned to Memphis headquarters speaking in tongues. The church then reorganized as a Pentecostal denomination. Today, with more than 400,000 members, it is the second-largest Pentecostal body in America and the largest such black group.

The largest and best known of the white Pentecostal fellowships, the Assemblies of God, has its roots in the Topeka and Azusa sites also. In fact, some of the men who founded the Assemblies in 1914 had previously received ordination credentials from Mason and his all-black Church of God in Christ.

The Pentecostal Holiness Church, a white denomination headquartered in Franklin Springs, Georgia, was also influenced by Azusa. Three Holiness bodies officially accepted the additional Pentecostal doctrine and reorganized as one tongues-speaking church a few years after one of their ministers, G. B. Cashwell, returned from the black-dominated California revival.

Furthermore, it was during a church service conducted by Cashwell that the Church of God (Cleveland, Tennessee) general overseer A. J. Tomlinson received his first Pentecostal experience in 1908 in Cleveland. Many other early ministers and missionaries of the Church of God received their “baptism of the Spirit” at Azusa. So the line of succession extends to one white denomination after another, all of them heirs of the black mission.

But the tale is not complete. Soon after the organization of these denominations, the Pentecostal movement was shaken by a modern Sabellian heresy, one that denied the Trinity and taught that Jesus Christ was God the Father. This particular branch now has more than 200,000 members, most of whom are affiliated with the United Pentecostal Church. This white church, like the others, owes much to black men, since its Christo-Unitarian doctrine was greatly influenced by the preaching of a black Pentecostal evangelist in Indianapolis in 1915.

It should be apparent by this time that Pentecostalism, unlike the major expressions of Protestantism, was not imported by the slave master to justify slavery and pacify those in chains. On the contrary, Pentecostalism developed on the black scene and became a contribution of the ghetto to the Christian nation at large. Neither can it be said that black Pentecostal churches deserve the criticisms now being made of post-Civil War black denominations. Vocal members of the Afro-American community accuse the post-War churches of acquiescing to white demands, teaching Booker T. Washington’s inferiority doctrine, and following forms of white middle-class religion. However, black Pentecostalism was not yet in existence during those post-War decades.

Even today, the virile Pentecostal version of soul religion is often a bitter opponent of the more traditional black Protestants and their less exuberant forms of worship. Pentecostalism may be more essentially black in its mode of worship. Many have observed that the percussive sounds that fill the air in charismatic churches are importations from Africa. Although the timbrel or small hand drum is mentioned in Scripture, extensive use of drums is a contribution of black Pentecostalism. As James Baldwin has pointed out, the drum is the indispensable Africanism in Pentecostal worship, and shuffling and dancing are in its convoy, along with highly emotionalized motor reactions, including ecstatic tongues.

However, this is not to suggest that every white Pentecostal church retains prominent African forms in its services. In fact, the degree to which a congregation seeks or obtains a more significant role in the white culture often corresponds to the degree to which it discards these once-universal Pentecostal expressions.

The white stream of Pentecostalism has continually moved further away from both its black heritage and its black brethren. Within four months of the Azusa launching date, the white members of the mission withdrew from the black environment to form an all-white Upper Room Mission. Another organization that had been truly bi-racial in membership followed this precedent; the white constituency withdrew from the large black membership and reorganized as an all-white fellowship in 1924. The white body is today known as the United Pentecostal Church.

The only churches that remain integrated today are the Church of God, and the International Church of the Four-square Gospel, which has headquarters in Azusa. And only in the Foursquare churches are thoroughly integrated local congregations more than minimal. However, the Assemblies of God has recently begun a ministry to inner-city blacks and attempted to attract black ministers and assemblies.

This failure of the Pentecostal movement to remain racially integrated is more the result of a conservative socio-political mentality than a doctrinally inspired action. In its original forms the movement was inspiring for its truly interracial character, achieved largely through the Spirit’s ingenuity rather than man’s planning.

The current revival of tongues-speaking within the mainstream Christian churches witnesses to a natural ecumenical flavor. Perhaps the charismatic movement is an opportunity to rebuild interracial cooperation as well. The historic white churches could include a greater degree of emotional response in worship, use black gospel singing along with modern jazz and rock religious music, and share leadership positions with blacks. Rather than scattering whites, this might attract both black and white participation as it originally did at Azusa in 1906. In this way white churches could relate directly to the black people by means other than social activism. Meanwhile, charismatics could incorporate black members into fellowship groups within the historic churches by recognizing ecstatic speech and experience as recently rediscovered Africanisms.

Thus through the Holy Spirit, blind emphasis on race and dogma could be replaced by a fulfillment of our Lord’s prayer “that they all may be one.”

James S. Tinney teaches black studies at Central High School in Kansas City, Missouri. He holds the B.S.E. from Arkansas State University and has done graduate work at Nazarene Theological Seminary in Kansas City.

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This issue of CHRISTIANITY TODAY will no doubt arouse substantial reactions, pro and con, on the matter of tongues. The truce proposal suggested by Pinnock and Osborne should open the door wide to further, and we hope elevating, dialogue between those who are enthusiastically for tongues-speaking and those who oppose it. Tinney’s essay on the black origins of Pentecostalism provides background material that is important to a historical understanding of the religious movement that is the fastest growing in Latin America and has prospered in North America as well.

Our executive editor, L. Nelson Bell, in his “Layman” column speaks to an issue that is splitting the Presbyterian Church U. S. (see September 24 issue, page 42). Dr. Bell, a medical missionary in China for twenty-five years, was one of the founders of both the Presbyterian Journal and CHRISTIANITY TODAY. He has had to grapple with the question of staying in or leaving the denomination with which he has been connected for a lifetime. Some of his best friends have decided it is time to leave. He has decided to stay. This kind of decision is always difficult, and one can be sure of both plaudits and brickbats whichever way he decides. This much is clear: whenever a church becomes apostate, the true believer must leave. What is not always clear is when a church has indeed become apostate.

Page 5900 – Christianity Today (2024)
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