Page 5914 – Christianity Today (2024)

Edward E. Plowman

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Dr. Carl McIntire, the usually indefatigable fighting fundamentalist, threw in the towel twice last month after being clobbered by the New Jersey state board of higher education and, in unrelated action, by estranged leaders of the Valley Forge-based American Council of Christian Churches, which he founded in 1941.

The radio preacher announced that his embattled Shelton College will move from Cape May, New Jersey, to the former Boeing building in his recently acquired multi-million-dollar complex at Cape Canaveral, Florida (see January 29 issue, page 31), in time for the fall semester. The exodus marks the end of McIntire’s hassle with New Jersey over loss of Shelton’s right to grant degrees (see February 12 issue, page 45). The board had cited the school for alleged inadequacies and infractions.

McIntire at first vowed to fight the case in the courts, but, he explained on radio, he would lose too many students and dollars in the long litigation. He switched money solicited on his broadcasts for the legal battle to a “refugee fund” for moving expenses. What about the new building Shelton will leave behind, a million-dollar white elephant? “It will stand as a monument to the educational tyranny of New Jersey,” McIntire says. (The board may not have heard the last of McIntire; he is dickering to buy a huge but deteriorating YWCA building in Atlantic City for a Bible institute and conference center.)

McIntire predicts Shelton will thrive in the milder climate of Florida’s educational requirements. The move aborts his previously announced plans to open a new Florida school named Reformation College.

In the American Council of Christian Churches (ACCC) matter, McIntire acceded to a New Jersey superior-court injunction that forbade him to hold a scheduled convention in Virginia in the name of the ACCC. He canceled the meeting.

The action stems from the ACCC’s annual meeting in Pasadena, California, last fall when McIntire took the floor during a recess, installed himself as president, and purged the ACCC rolls of its incumbent leaders (see November 20, 1970, issue, page 44). McIntire, declaring his group the true ACCC, called for a spring convention in Richmond and set up new ACCC headquarters in New York. The Valley Forge ACCC meanwhile carried on business as usual—though with financial hamstrings.

The dispute resulted in the freezing of ACCC funds by two banks. After months of intrigue and tension, and faced with mortgage foreclosure on its property, the Valley Forge ACCC filed suit.

In addition to banning McIntire’s use of the ACCC name, the court ordered the banks to release their funds to the Valley Forge group, and set a later hearing on the other charges.

The suit charges that McIntire pirated away the ACCC’s International Christian Relief commission, that he misappropriated ICR funds, and that he wrongfully solicited money in the name of the ACCC for his own use. It calls for an accounting and a refund of the money to the ACCC.

In an interview McIntire said he would seek no counter-injunctions: “I would take apostates to court, but not brethren.” He asked ACCC president J. Philip Clark to meet with him and to dismiss the suit. But ACCC executive secretary John E. Millheim vowed to a reporter: “We refuse to back down one iota in our demands.” He said many McIntire backers have become disenchanted and are now in the ACCC corner.

Other troubles plague McIntire. A “truth squad” that says it represents fifty members of his church—the 1,800-member Bible Presbyterian Church of Collingswood, New Jersey—charges that he is neglecting pastoral duties, that attendance is sagging, and that he is not telling the truth about finances or how many stations carry his “Reformation Hour” broadcast (he mentions 600 on the air).

McIntire says the squad’s leaders—George DeFebb and Wayne Rambo—are no longer members of the church. Not so, reply the dissidents, who still attend. They say that since the church board removed them from membership without a hearing or charges (required by church law), the ouster is invalid. Both are former McIntire aides. DeFebb was a liquor salesman when hired by the minister in 1963 as a troubleshooter and advance man. Rambo, who worked in the office, was expelled from Shelton in 1967, says McIntire, “for discipline reasons.”

McIntire tells his listeners that the press is out to get him. In March the Miami Herald ran a two-part article that contained devastating allegations about his broadcast practices and financial dealings. He said he would reprint it in the Christian Beacon with a line-by-line refutation. He hasn’t yet done so.

The April 1 issue of the Wall Street Journal linked McIntire and ICR head James T. Shaw to an international highfinance scandal, involving ICR’s practice of “bartering” donated surplus and unwanted relief goods for cash and other usable commodities. The article said the ICR had on hand $12 million worth of powdered-milk products that contained cyclamate. It quotes McIntire as saying that a John H. Bevel, the central figure of the story and the current object of a police search, came to Shaw with a barter idea. Correspondence on ICR letterheads over purported signatures of Shaw, the article went on, showed that the ICR wanted to make a swap for motor vehicles, and that Shaw granted Bevel “exclusive right” to trade the goods.

The ICR reportedly was unable to deliver relief supplies it had collected for war-starved Biafra because of the Nigerian army’s blockade. After the war, the Journal said, Bevel worked on a deal to sell more than $1 million of these goods to—ironically—the Nigerian army. Last summer, the story asserts, the ICR received for certain supplies $100,000 of a sum Bevel had allegedly obtained fraudulently from American Express—using worthless stock certificates and ICR shipping receipts as collateral.

McIntire told Journal reporter Jonathan Kwitney that he and Shaw backed out of the deal after American Express warned that something was amiss.

However, in an interview with CHRISTIANITY TODAY, McIntire denied ever having had any connection with Bevel, and said the ICR had not received the $100,000. He also denied complicity in the Nigerian army deal. The relief goods had been delivered to Biafra through secret connections, he explained. He refused to answer questions about the whereabouts or disposition of the controverted milk products, but it was learned that some are still stored in the ICR’s name in Baltimore and Houston warehouses. Some have simply been dumped, one foreman said.

Meanwhile, McIntire stepped up recruitment for a big “Victory in Vietnam” demonstration in the nation’s capital on May 8. He thinks Nixon has thrown in the towel on Indochina.

The Nnea: ‘Important Crossroads’

It was no accident that the eighth annual convention of the National Negro Evangelical Association and the twenty-ninth of the predominantly white National Association of Evangelicals were both held in Los Angeles last month only a day apart.

NNEA president William Bentley told NNEA delegates in the convention’s opening address that the eight-year-old organization now stands at an important crossroads. Speaking of possibilities for cooperation, he declared: “How we proceed to do the God-imposed task, and in what direction we will go in fulfilling the charge given us, are questions only we—and not our critics—can answer.”

“The diversity of our leadership can work to our advantage …” Bentley, a Chicago clergyman, continued. “It can also most easily develop down-to-earth strategies for reaching the entire spectrum of black Americans more efficiently than can other less-diversified groups.” Then, speaking of cooperation between evangelicals of different races, Bentley added: “The presence on our board and in our membership of white Christians of good will and honest intent … can be a strength rather than a handicap.”

A pulpit exchange on the closing day of the NNEA convention and the day before the opening of the NAE enabled about a dozen white ministers to speak in black churches in the Los Angeles area and about the same number of black pastors to speak to white congregations.

A dialogue session to explore cooperation possibilities between the black and white groups was planned the same day to bridge understanding gaps between the two evangelical organizations. But the session failed to materialize, and a final press conference was also called off.

The NNEA was organized in Los Angeles in 1963; this was its first convention since in the City of the Angels. It was the first time that the NNEA and the NAE held national conventions in the same city.

The stated objectives of the NNEA are “to promote and undergird a dynamic Christian witness among Afro-Americans and to help all evangelicals to find involvement with vital social issues.”

The sessions at the Los Angeles Hilton were mainly inspirational, however; no resolutions were brought to the convention floor. NNEA field director Aaron Hamlin explained that the convention purpose was to give “an opportunity to pool ideas and discover ways of working together.” About 200 denominations are represented in the NNEA, Hamlin said.

The convention theme was “Christians in the Winds of Change.” Besides Bentley, evening speakers included international evangelist Bob Harrison of San Francisco; William Pannell of Detroit, vice-president of Tom Skinner Crusades; and John Perkins of Voice of Calvary Bible Institute, Mendenhall, Mississippi.

Workshops were conducted in evangelism, Christian education, social action, missions, and youth.

VIRGIE W. MURRAY

Up With Humbard

Mackinac College, Michigan birthplace of Moral Re-Armanent’s popular Up With People youth program, is now the Rex Humbard Center for Christian Development. The plush, well-equipped, thirty-two-acre island campus was purchased by the Cathedral of Tomorrow, Humbard’s suburban Akron, Ohio, church. The purchase price was not disclosed; the school had asked $7.5 million after it folded last year, but some real-estate sources say Humbard got it for $1.7 million. Its value has been estimated at up to $17 million.

Humbard, whose own college degrees are all honorary, immediately commissioned a feasibility study to determine whether he should establish a college and seminary. Initially he hopes to offer training in language, practical ministerial work, and all phases of television. His morning services, attended by 6,000, are televised on 321 mostly UHF stations to a claimed audience of 18 million. His church already owns a UHF station and a videotape production house.

The Nae: New Marching Orders?

In Los Angeles twenty-two years ago Billy Graham started in earnest his march for Jesus that catapulted him and the evangelical movement into a place of respect and power. As the twenty-ninth annual convention of the National Association of Evangelicals drew to a close at the Hollywood Palladium last month,1A full report of the NAE Los Angeles convention will appear in the news section of the May 21 issue. the 52-year-old Graham was giving what amounted to new marching orders.

But many of the troops would find some of those orders difficult, such as the suggestion that “perhaps” it is time for evangelicals to lead demonstrations on Washington. “We are concerned about race, war, and pollution, but our greatest concern is for the spiritual welfare of America,” the evangelist declared in his prepared text. Most evangelicals to date haven’t had an overwhelming zeal for this type of activism.

Possibly even more difficult for some of the sixty-nine mostly small denominations connected with the NAE is his proposal that some kind of new umbrella group be formed to embrace evangelicals around the world. It should be, the evangelist suggested, “wholly for fellowship, sharing experiences, and prayer—and to stimulate evangelical theology, modern missionary activity, and evangelism.”

The idea of bringing evangelicals together sounds superb on the surface. But for some of the denominations that seem to thrive on theological hair-splitting, Graham’s proposal was a bit wide. It would mean establishing contact with evangelicals in churches affiliated with the liberal World and National Councils of Churches.

But Graham asserted that such an international fellowship is necessary. International meetings of evangelicals in recent years testify that a great segment of the world church is evangelical, evangelistic, and missionary-minded, he said.

Some of the troops have been looking around in amazement at what the new wave of youth evangelism has been accomplishing. Graham indicated that those who have always held that the work of God must be accomplished thus-and-so had better stop quibbling and start welcoming the new converts.

“Some of them could use a touching up here and there in their theology,” Graham told a press conference, “but I’m for them. These youth are finding reality in Jesus.”

Graham said of the emerging group of evangelists: “They have great gifts from the Holy Spirit at communicating the Gospel. Many of these young evangelists are on the ‘frontiers’ to which some of us older traditionalists may have seldom contemplated to venture. Many of them may do it differently, but thank God, they are doing it!”

WILLIAM WILLOUGHBY

Snails And Scriptures

Three armed young men in Istanbul attacked the American director of a Bible shop and a Muslim Turk co-worker. Two of the assailants who were arrested said they acted out of opposition to the distribution of Christian literature. “It is like selling snails in a Muslim neighborhood,” they said.

One of the victims was Paul Nilson, 44, of Wheaton, Illinois, who is in charge of Bible-society work in Turkey. The other is a custodian in the building, which houses a Turkish branch of the United Church of Christ Board of World Ministries. Neither was seriously injured. For many years the Bible society has enjoyed the blessing of Turkish authorities. It operates an attractive bookstore on the main thoroughfare in Istanbul. Within the last two years, however, the shop has been broken into several times and burned once. Informed sources blame the harassment on the extreme right-wing Ulku organization, which is both anti-Communist and anti-Christian.

Discredited

Congress must extend its federal trade laws to include non-profit organizations.

That’s the word from a Federal Trade Commission investigator who says the FTA is powerless to stop the alleged “fraudulent claims” of a Columbus, Ohio, correspondence school. He said the school, Ohio Christian College, headed by the Reverend Alin O. Langdon and his Calvary Grace Christian Churches of Faith, “has misrepresented its accreditation and the value and equivalence of its degrees, credits, and courses, and made other false claims.”

Evidence indicates, he adds, that Langdon is in sole control of the operations and all the church property. The operations include Alpha Psi Omega Society, advertised as an organization of guidance counselors (it is not), and the National Education Accrediting Association (officially unaccredited).

At present the FTA lacks jurisdiction over such state-chartered non-profit agencies.

GLENN D. EVERETT

Heritage Preservers

Religious Heritage of America, an interfaith organization “dedicated to preserving the Judeo-Christian heritage and working to instill its principles and influence into all areas of American life,” handed out its annual recognition awards in Washington, D. C., this month to:

• Presiding Bishop John E. Hines of the Episcopal Church, named Clergyman of the Year for his brotherhoodbuilding work with blacks;

• American Can Company chairman William F. May, Churchman of the Year for a variety of humanitarian concerns;

• Mrs. Howard C. Davison of International Christian Leadership, Washington, D. C., Churchwoman of the Year for organizing the Congressional Wives Prayer Group and her work with the prayer-breakfast movement;

• John A. Redhead, Jr., recently retired pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Greensboro, North Carolina, Gold Medal for a lifetime of service as a relevant evangelist.

A joint award was given to RHA’s Nashville head, James M. Hudgins, and Cecil Scaife of Columbia Records for their efforts to ban pro-drug songs and drug-using artists from the recording, radio, and television industries.

Grieving The Greeks

Orthodox-Anglican relations were strained last month when the dean and chapter of St. Paul’s Cathedral canceled a service commemorating the 150th anniversary of Greek independence. In a statement explaining their very late reversal of the decision to permit the gathering in the famed Wren building, the authorities said the occasion “has been used for propaganda purposes in connection with the present regime in Greece.”

Archbishop Athenagoras, ranking Greek churchman in Britain, who was to have preached the sermon, angrily denied that the service would have any non-religious intention, and charged that the dean had allowed himself to be influenced by those given to fishing in troubled waters.

J. D. DOUGLAS

Nigerian Expropriation

Expressing appreciation for the “selfless services” of medical missionaries, a Nigerian government official last month made official the state’s takeover of the Sudan Interior Mission-hospital at Kaltungo.

Keeping The Wolf From Good Shepherd’S Door

Pay up or get out.

That’s what officials of the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS) have been saying for more than a year to Pastor Robert G. Doll and the members of Denver’s Good Shepherd Baptist Church, dually affiliated with the American Baptist Convention and the National Baptist Convention, U. S. A., Incorporated.

Now the Lutherans mean business. They served eviction papers that could bring immediate or delayed expulsion, depending on what section of law applies.

It’s not that Doll, a white, and his predominantly black congregation (two dozen active adults and scores of youth) are deadbeats. Rather, they say, they are trying to strike a blow for Christian ethics and ecumenism. They claim that the building was paid for once by earlier Lutheran occupants and thus became community property of the entire Church.

It all began when a struggling Lutheran congregation abandoned the building in 1964. Later the WELS sold it to Good Shepherd for $24,612.05 at 6 per cent interest in monthly installments of $150. In 1969, Doll, an American Baptist Home Mission Society community organizer, became Good Shepherd’s pastor. The church stopped payments to WELS in April, 1970, with the explanation that the Holy Spirit told them to.

“Why,” Doll asked the WELS, “have some Christians in America been left, with their meager resources, to assume the awesome burden which, in truth, is a total Church responsibility?” Responded WELS executive secretary Harold Eckert: “We must reply that the Holy Spirit … does not speak to us as you claim he spoke to you.” Furthermore, he said later, the WELS had borrowed money against Good Shepherd’s payments and spent it for Lutheran outreach.

In another exchange, Eckert reminded Doll of Psalm 37:212“The wicked borroweth, and payeth not again; but the righteous showeth mercy, and giveth.” and Doll asked him to reread the second part of the verse.

Doll and other Baptist clergymen who have come to his support concede that Good Shepherd has no legal basis for its act, and plead for mercy from the WELS instead. Yet Doll is willing to argue the case in court in hopes of setting a precedent. A precedent of sorts has already been set by the government of Nigeria, which took over two mission hospitals without compensation on grounds that donors had already paid for them (see above).

A Church of God in Christ minister down the street from Good Shepherd has meanwhile offered to buy the contested property from the WELS, and is raising money for a down payment. Last month a youthful fund-raiser stopped at the Doll house and asked for a contribution.

EDWARD E. PLOWMAN.

The commissioner for health and social welfare of Nigeria’s North-East State added that he hoped the hospital takeover would be regarded with “joyous spirit depicting the ability of the government to undertake a function which it rightly owes to the people.”

Several days before the April 8 ceremony, Colonel Musa Usman, a Muslim and governor of the predominantly Muslim North-East State, explained the government’s action to a gathering of mission leaders in the state capital. He said the takeover of SIM’s Kaltungo hospital and the Sudan United Mission’s (Danish branch) Numan hospital is part of a twenty-year plan to assume responsibility for the state’s health services.

There is pressure from some taxpayers, especially in larger centers, he said, for the government to provide free hospital care that missions are unable to do. (The state pays missions’ salaries of Nigerian nurses only; it does not give grants for medicines.) The governor also told the mission representatives his state would encourage new mission work in rural areas where the government can’t provide services.

When asked about the turnover, SIM officials said they saw no problem to future work in the area. While Kaltungo hospital had a spiritual as well as a medical ministry, it was no longer considered essential to church progress in the area, which has 90.000 Christians. Meanwhile, staffing at Kaltungo had become increasingly difficult. The SIM operates a leprosarium and fifteen dispensaries in the North-East State, and three other hospitals, six leprosariums, and sixty-six dispensaries in other states of the federation.

The situation at Numan, seventy miles south of the Benue River, presents a problem for the SUM’s Danish branch. The branch’s central administration is at the same compound, and relocation would be expensive.

The government has so far promised no compensation to either the SIM or the SUM.

Last year another Nigerian state, the North-West, took over a Southern Baptist hospital because the Baptists couldn’t staff it. The nation undoubtedly will nationalize basic medical services eventually, but at present there seems to be no move to control more hospitals.

W. HAROLD FULLER

Doctrinal Changes At Fuller

A few years ago Fuller Theological Seminary was rocked by a theological controversy that led to the resignation of some members of the faculty and board. The seminary has recently published its new doctrinal statement involving changes that were at the heart of the earlier controversy.

The original statement said that the Bible is “plenarily inspired and free from all error in the whole and in the part … [and is] the only infallible rule of faith and practice.” The new statement eliminates “free from all error in the whole and in the part.” The Bible is infallible in those matters relating to faith and practice, according to the new statement.

The former statement committed the school to premillennialism saying that Jesus Christ would return “to establish His millennial kingdom.” Now it reads that he will come to “establish His glorious kingdom,” which permits an amillennial view.

A third change has to do with the condition of the unredeemed dead. The original statement assigns “unbelievers to eternal punishment”; the current statement says “the wicked shall be separated from God’s presence.”

The new doctrinal statement was published at the time the seminary launched a three-year enlargement campaign designed to raise almost $5 million for buildings, endowment, and academic needs.

500Th Anniversary Of Dürer

The West German Federal Republic is noting the 500th anniversary of the famous Reformation artist Albrecht Dürer with a commemorative stamp. The German post office will also issue something new for collectors and art lovers: color postcards depicting five famous Dürer paintings that hang in Nuremberg, including his self-portrait (illustrated above).

Each of the five cards will show a painting on one side and, on the other, the commemorative stamp, with Dürer’s stylized signature. The cards will carry the information that 1971 is Dürer Year in Nuremberg. The artist was born there May 21, 1471.

This year from June 2 to 5 in Augsburg, Protestant and Catholic groups will gather to broaden ties of brotherhood and understanding in place of the annual Kirchentag of the German Evangelical churches and the Katolikentag of the German Catholics.

The West German Federal Republic will issue a commemorative stamp to mark the combined “Okumenisches Pfingsstreffen” (Whitsuntide family gathering).

GLENN EVERETT

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Edward E. Plowman

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NEWS

A giant tidal wave of witness rolled onto the nation’s shores from Daytona Beach, Florida, to the Kona coast of Hawaii during the Easter vacation break. And in between, there were heavy sights and sounds of other Jesus happenings.

More than 6,000 young Christians hit the beaches and streets in personal witness, and thousands more provided backup in concerts, festivals, and other public meetings. Recorded decisions for Christ exceeded 3,000. Mass baptisms of new converts took place in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, the Gulf of Mexico, and a Seattle-area lake. There were large witness marches in Honolulu, Seattle, and Santa Barbara, California.

Beer, drugs, and sex flowed freely among the hundreds of thousands of vacationing young revelers at scattered resort beaches. But so did the Gospel.

Campus Crusade for Christ fielded 1,000 students from eighty-two colleges to circulate among the 100,000-plus at Daytona Beach. The workers spent mornings in Bible studies conducted by Crusade evangelist Josh McDowell, afternoons in sharing their faith on the beach, nights in outreach to street people, motel parties, and the hundreds who showed up for the twice-nightly performances of Crusade’s New Folk singers at the Rap Room—a beach facility loaned by city fathers.

Crusade leader Roger Vann said half the workers came from Christian colleges—a record. Each paid his own way. In addition to transportation it cost an average of $65 each for six days’ motel lodging, meals, and program cost-sharing. Most, said Vann, had no previous beach evangelism experience, yet they led more than 1,200 to Christ. Each convert, he explained, will be followed up by a letter from the worker, a computerized headquarters correspondence series, and personal contacts by Crusade staffers back at the campus.

Also on the beach were 300 Southern Baptist students sponsored by a local church, and an undetermined number of church groups and street-Christian evangelists. Area disc jockeys kept transistor radios occupied with Jesus music.

Crusade also had 250 workers at Myrtle Beach, South Carolina (where a record throng of more than 50,000 gathered), and 300 at Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Crusade’s magician-evangelist Andre Kole outdrew a folk-rock festival at Myrtle Beach. “The students are more spiritually open than I’ve ever seen before,” said Crusade’s Myrtle Beach coordinator David Jones.

Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship sent 275 students and staffers to Fort Lauderdale, and featured two Christian rock bands—the Exkursions and the New Wine—at the city-sponsored bandstand. The bands were kept busy singing and rapping about Jesus to thousands who crowded around from afternoon until midnight. Action was also brisk at coffeehouses operated by IVCF and Crusade. Street evangelist Arthur Blessitt preached on the beach—then baptized dozens. One innovation: IVCF’s “floating forums” aboard a yacht. Twice a day it went out with forty kids and six local clergymen who rapped with them about Christ.

Crusade also had a contingent at Bermuda. And at Port Isabel, Texas, 100 Children of God street Christians witnessed among the 60,000 bathers there.

Nearly one hundred young Christian activists from the mainland took the Gospel to Hawaii beaches, shopping centers, and parks from Hilo to Honolulu. They included turned-on Lutherans headed by David Anderson of Van Nuys, California, twenty Seattle street Christians led by ex-doper Tiny Carper, and others. A Seattle film crew followed them around and made a movie called Hallelujah Hawaii.

The campaign, organized by youth leader Bob Turnbull and other Hawaiian evangelicals, concluded with concerts on Waikiki Beach. The performers included Pat Boone and his family, the Andre Crouch Disciples group, and others. One concert attracted 6,500, and nearly 150 were baptized afterward. At another, Boone’s wife Shirley gave a testimony that brought tears to many of the 2,000 listeners—mostly young people—and hundreds said they wanted Christ.

Music was central to outreach elsewhere in the land. The two-day Faith Festival at an Evansville, Indiana, stadium drew an aggregate of 15,000 to hear street-Christian singer Larry Norman, recording artist Reba Rambo of Sweet Charity, the Sound Generation, and many others. Everybody clapped in time as the Kandels sang “Put your hand in the hand of the man from Galilee,” a Top 40 favorite. The stadium became still as Kit Field Kruger, a recent Miss Indiana, warned against superficial belief and urged listeners to turn to Christ. Then she sang “Amazing Grace,” another recent Top 40 song—and everyone stood and sang with her: teen-agers, gray-haired adults, street people, and straights together.

On the second night mod-composer Jimmy Owens led the Spurrlows in a premiere of Show Me, a now-sound Christian musical he and his wife wrote.

The festival’s spirit was caught by a CBS television network news team and transmitted to the nation. Another film crew made a two-hour movie of the spectacle to show in commercial theaters.

Faith Festival was organized by Tri-State Youth for Christ, but, observed the Evansville Courier, “the one most responsible for the mood and sentiment expressed at Faith Festival, and who was the most welcome, had his own typical Hollywood director’s chair set up on the stage, bearing his name in big capital letters: JESUS.”

In Dallas, Texas, a higher-keyed week’s Festival of Christian Arts was sponsored by Jerome Hines’s Christian Arts organization of New York. A packed house at the State Fair music auditorium heard Hines’s opera, I Am the Way. Other meetings featured nationally known evangelists including Tom Skinner, Bob Harrington, Lane Adams, and Bill Bright.

Publisher Duane Pederson of the Hollywood Free Paper held a Christian rock concert at the Hollywood Bowl on Easter Sunday featuring the Philharmonic (a former acid group recently baptized by Pat Boone in his backyard swimming pool), Larry Norman (still puffing from a hurry-up trip back from Faith Festival), and others, along with Blessitt. The place was so charged up, reports one youth, that more than one hundred streamed to the front to receive Christ—within minutes after the concert began, and before Blessitt had a chance to preach.

The mood was the same in outreach meetings at Melodyland Christian Center across the street from Disneyland. During the final song of Show Me one night, more than one hundred of the 2,000 young people attending left their seats and knelt at the front. No invitation to receive Christ had been given. Another hundred joined them when an invitation was given at the conclusion of the musical. Daytime seminars on ecology and eschatology drew large crowds. More than 800 youths jammed in to hear author Hal Lindsey (The Late Great Planet Earth) on the second coming of Christ.

Santa Barbara was the scene of a large “One Way” outreach campaign involving 3,000 young Christians, including 2,000 from out of town. They witnessed on the streets, beaches, and campuses, and held forth in coffeehouses and nightly in a large auditorium at the Earl Warren fairground. And they backed up IVCF and Campus Crusade in “Spiritual Revolution Day” activities at the once-troubled Isle Vista campus of the University of California (where the quarter-term system did not permit an Easter vacation break). Westmont College students conducted sidewalk Sunday-school type sessions every day for 800 children. The week’s outreach was sponsored jointly by a number of churches and youth organizations under the direction of Baptist minister Tom Collins and Lutheran youth worker Jerry Liebersbach.

“Spiritual Revolution Week” in Seattle was declared by Jesus-people leader Linda Meissner (see January 29 issue, page 34) and her street-Christian friends. More than a thousand attended nightly gospel rock concerts and rap sessions, and 150 were baptized in a nearby lake.

The outpouring of witness throughout the land took on an international flavor when more than 200 southern California high schoolers teamed up with Mexican evangelicals in Tijuana to proclaim Jesus in that city. The mayor welcomed them and said he was glad they were not coming to town for immoral reasons. One public meeting attended by 5,000 featured testimonies of American and Mexican youths and the Billy Graham film, For Pete’s Sake.

One incident on Waikiki Beach sums up the week for many. After a beach concert a young Christian activist approached a mustached youth and said: “I want to talk with you about Jesus.” Replied the youth: “I’ve been waiting for you.”

So were thousands of others.

Colombian Seminar: Whose Mission?

A strongly critical statement—and a swift refutation of its charges—came to light last month over a controversial seminar on mission and development sponsored by the National Council of Churches in Bogota, Colombia, last February.

The statement blasted the NCC for, among other things, trying to “establish a missionary position for Latin America without considering the positions of Latin Americans who represent the thought of Latin American churches.” It was written by five Colombian Protestants who participated in one discussion at the seminar. Their statement was later published by the executive committee of the Council of the Evangelical Confederation of Churches in Colombia (CEDEC) and prepared for presentation to all Protestant churches in Colombia at the CEDEC General Assembly April 22–23.

The lengthy critique of the mission seminar was distributed internationally through the press service of the Evangelical Confederation of Colombia. The NCC’s Latin America department in New York was not aware of the statement until a copy was provided by CHRISTIANITY TODAY after an editor sought a response to it from NCC staff.

The statement charged that neither the CEDEC nor the Presbyterian Church in Colombia had been officially informed of the seminar, nor had either been permitted to send observers. Listed under “impressions” of those who did attend one afternoon session (after some insistence, according to the press release): “It would appear that the speakers consider it is possible to create an appropriate climate for the development and ‘humanization’ of man only through Marxist principles and practices … and that the speakers did not consider the spiritual work of the Church to be important or necessary. There was disillusionment regarding the ‘lack of power’ of the Church in the present time.”

William Wipfler, acting executive director of the NCC’s Latin America department, said in a statement to CHRISTIANITY TODAY that the allegation the meetings were secret “is a serious misrepresentation of the nature of the seminars, suggesting that the content was secret and the discussion sinister.” The local Protestant group was invited to attend the same day its request was received, not “after some insistence,” according to Dr. Lewistine McCoy, Latin America secretary of the United Methodist Church and seminar codirector with Presbyterian missionary James E. Goff of Cuernavaca, Mexico.

McCoy, who with Wipfler drafted the rebuttal statement for the NCC, called the CEDEC charges “either deliberate misrepresentations or the impressions of someone unable to hear the discussion against the background of the social context of Latin America today.”

He said references to Marxist principles were made “in pointing out that even Christian groups have discovered the usefulness of Marxist theory in socio-economic analysis.” And he added that “at no time was the spiritual work of the church denied.… Rather, there was insistence on going back to Christological foundations.”

Concerning the CEDEC’s accusation that the seminar imposed on Colombia’s churches views not representative of Latin American churchmen, McCoy and Wipfler retorted: “No one who participated in the seminar presumed that he was speaking for the churches (nor could any of those who belong to the confederation).… Those who spoke represented a sector of the church that is thinking about development.”

The CEDEC release concluded with a protest against the NCC’s “lack of courtesy” in not informing the confederation and the Colombian Presbyterian, Church “of its purposes in holding such a seminar” and in not permitting observers from these bodies. “We take note of the irony of the seminar: ‘the liberation of the Latin American man’—studied, discussed, and planned by foreigners who are concerned that the ‘Latin American man be the lord of his own destiny.’”

The NCC spokesmen answered by saying that participation in the thirteen-day seminar was interdenominational and interfaith. “Why was only the Presbyterian Church of Colombia singled out for this observation?” McCoy and Wipfler asked rhetorically. “Is it possible local tensions over the choice of certain ‘unacceptable individuals’ as resource persons has been lifted unnecessarily to an international level?”

RUSSELL CHANDLER

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Carl F. H. Henry

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Slowly but surely the hard realities of economics are beginning to crowd evangelical colleges in the United States. Some educators—not, it might be added, of the alarmist type—think that in ten years half the presently existing evangelical campuses will be in a last-ditch stand for financial survival, and that some will close their doors even before then.

Economic crisis has engulfed many of the nation’s campuses; even Harvard, Stanford, and Michigan are among the 1,500 academic institutions that may soon be forced to cut back strategic services to three-fourths of the present American student enrollment. Costs are rising more swiftly than income; worse yet, the long-range purpose and future role of the colleges is somewhat obscure, and public confidence in higher education is wavering.

Evangelical colleges are not exempt from such pressures. While their deepest problems may not be financial, without necessary funds they face extinction. It may be true that there is no absolute biblical necessity for evangelical colleges, and that their justification lies in considerations of strategy more than of principle. Yet the present American academic milieu is such that the need for faith-affirming colleges is more obvious than ever.

At the same time, the need for state support of one kind or another for such evangelical schools in a day when government is funding virtually all competitive education is now increasingly acknowledged. Views about government aid are diverse and divided, although some evangelicals insist that having ardently opposed federal funding without success, they are not now called upon to deprive themselves of what is legally available. Evangelical educators are most favorable to the allocation of federal or state loans or support not to institutions but rather directly to students as scholarship grants to offset the rising cost of education.

Many educators have found that the effects of economic recession do not fully register on the campus until two years after the height of the storm. If that is so, then 1972 will be a time of trouble, albeit that is also the year when the federal government will require private tax-exempt foundations to give away more and more funds. Few foundations are interested in merely paying off mortgage debts; like many alumni, they look for creative programs.

A survey of seven leading evangelical colleges gives an illuminating picture for 1969–70. The average unrestricted endowment figure, $1,265,000, is somewhat distorted because of one school’s exceptional position. But in mean averages, the schools’ unappropriated surplus was $6,142. The book value of their physical plants was $7,729,000 (mean average), with an indebtedness on these facilities of $3,131,000 or 40.5 per cent. For 1969–70 the reported deficit (mean average) was $42,285.

The problems faced by evangelical colleges are not confined to educating secularly oriented students; they increasingly include the presence of faculty who, though competently trained, are not deeply informed in the evangelical heritage because their training was secular. Someone has remarked that most church-related colleges now need “to convert the generals as well as the troops.” Not even the best evangelical campuses are wholly immune to such problems. If the view of reality and truth espoused by the Christian campuses differs from the secular dilution of these terms, then their perspectives must not only be precisely formulated in the service of the evangelical in-group but also proclaimed at the critical frontiers of today’s world. Society is seeking new forms of social relationships, either for reorganizing human life as a whole or for carrying out in subcultures. Are the evangelical colleges able to awe the world with a fresh and compelling statement of educational mission in the modern world? If they do not force secular society to come to grips with the basic questions, are they not isolating themselves in a fast-fading glory of their past?

Several cooperative ventures have recently emerged in evangelical college circles. Twenty-six colleges have established a teacher-placement referral service and are now probing possibilities for a common admissions plan that overcomes the problem of multiple applications and unexpected fallout. One year a school accepted 800 students of whom 500 showed up; another year virtually the whole contingent appeared to precipitate a desperate scramble for lodgings. Under a common admissions program, applications would automatically be referred down the line on the basis of expressed preferences.

In another cooperative venture, fifteen colleges are sharing in a new journal, Christian Scholar’s Review. Other larger possibilities suggest not only new patterns of education but also recognized centers of specialization that offer mutually acceptable areas of transfer credit.

In a recent conference Dr. Earl J. McGrath, director of the Higher Education Center of Temple University, stated the risk in a five-year experimental consortium may be less than that “involved in the continuation of the present policities and practices which for some [schools] at least seem to be leading to an ever less significant place in the whole enterprise of higher education, and in American society.”

The obstacles to an effective consortium are many. Dr. William Jellema has remarked that some college trustees might rather see their institutions die than moderate their autonomy, and that the prime reason for a consortium is not to save money but to offer better programs. But the alternative to ultraevangelical collegiate cooperation may well be the ghetto-survival of a small and diminishing number of isolated institutions.

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Eutychus V

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ENTERTAINING ANGELS

The other day my family tumbled into our debt-laden station wagon and headed for the circus. It’s been years since I was at a circus and I had forgotten the utter confusion that reigns in the stands. We fought our way through a mass of vendors intent on loading us down with toy monkeys, swords, inflated plastic elephants, ray guns, snoopy dogs, and twirling sparklers.

We reached our seats just as the overture began and the spotlights went on, revealing a display of clowns below.

I am crazy about clowns. The attention given clowns as existential symbols of human existence is well deserved. They, of course, constitute the most intellectual element in the circus. Or, to put it in the words of my seven-year-old, “They’re funny!”

Below us in the arena were clowns of all description in glorious display, obviously outfitted by some mad haberdasher. There were astonishing plaids and incredible stripes in all sorts of neon colors. Some had enlarged shoulders, pinched waists, bell-bottomed trousers, oversized shoes and undersized hats. Others had bouffant hair, bulbous bellies and striped stockings. The whole picture was a comic understatement of our human attention to externals.

Standing out in serious relief against this technicolor display was a poor fat fellow in black and white shredded rags, with a lugubrious expression.

In his hand he held a couple of knitting needles and an incomplete sweater. As the other clowns made their turn around the arena, my ragged friend admired each glimmering costume, feeling the material and gesturing helplessly toward his own rags.

With gestures he indicated to a dwarf that he was knitting himself a new costume to replace his ragged outfit.

After a few minutes the clowns disappeared from the arena. Later during the grand procession he reappeared atop a gold and white rococo carriage, smiling happily, and dressed in magnificent gold lame shredded rags. I laughed out loud at his supreme joy over his new attire. How could he be so happy? Gold lameé rags are still rags.

But then, as they observe the earthly arena and my own comic pursuit of gold rags, perhaps angels are entertained by me unawares.

PIETY’S ALOOFNESS

“Look Redeemed” (April 9, page 19) states an obvious truth; that the Gospel should be proclaimed “with authority and conviction” to make an impact.

The sociologists referred to are probably Stark and Glock. The main thrust of their study had to do with the relationship of religious orthodoxy to “works.” What they find is the sad fact, known to many, that the more Christians are committed to conservative theology the less likely they are to have a social concern. They have demonstrated with statistical charts that the churches of the pietistic sector of Christendom are guilty of real heresy and error. The plain teaching of the Bible on the absolute necessity of loving and serving our fellow man is ignored and sometimes ridiculed by conservative Christians.

Wrote the late Kyle Haselden, “A Christianity which concentrates on personal piety and which makes aloofness from the world’s agonies a prerequisite of piety does more mischief in human relations than a score of atheistic cults.”

Peak Publications

Colorado Springs, Colo.

SUCCINCT SIGNIFICANCE

My thanks to Lon Woodrum for “Easter Is Not For Everybody” (April 9). It is the most succinct, well-written statement of the significance of Easter that I have read in quite some time. It was well placed as the first article.

First United Methodist Church

Cambridge, Ohio

STEPPING FORWARD

We read with great interest the news item, “Evangelical Colleges Plan Consortium” (April 9). This is indeed a step in the right direction in giving students at Christian colleges quality education in more areas than one school alone can supply.

Our interest is personal because we feel we have already taken a small step to meet this need at the Urban Life Center in Chicago. In the spring of 1970, a group of students, professional and lay people, and educators—well acquainted with evangelical colleges—decided to put concrete under our mutually felt need for a “semester in the city” for students from suburban Christian colleges. We brought together both suburban students (mostly from Wheaton College and Trinity College) and urban students (from Roosevelt University and also Upward Bound students) in a live-in concentrated program of urban studies, life, and culture. Our instructors include a former Wheaton professor, a Trinity professor, and a doctoral candidate at the University of Chicago. The academic end of our program is currently accredited through Roosevelt University, but we hope to expand to more formal involvement by several Christian colleges.

The consortium concept, regardless of what it will eventually be called, is an encouragement to us, as we feel Christian colleges should and can lend and consolidate their resources and programs to everyone’s benefit. It is our hope that the Urban Life Center can work hand in hand with this forward step.

Coordinator

Urban Life Center

Chicago, Ill.

FAULT WITH ‘NO FAULT’

Without debating the full merits of the case, I must question the validity of your comparing “no fault” auto insurance with the no-fault provisions of life, health, and fire insurance (“No Fault With ‘No Fault,’” April 9). Rarely is a fire loss attributable to anyone but the policyholder. Likewise, rarely is natural death under life insurance or the contraction of a serious illness or an accident under health insurance attributable to anyone other than the policyholder (even though the germs, in the one case, could have come from someone else, rarely can the culprit actually be identified ex post facto).

If you wish to make a comparison, you could perhaps compare fire, life, and health insurance to the physical damage-collision portion of an auto policy, that portion that pays the policyholder if he causes damage to his own car.…

I also would question the need for any kind of criteria for insuring drivers if no-fault insurance were instituted, since the most careful driver might well file numerous claims due to the carelessness of others. Therefore, the safe driver would surely have to pay higher rates, since he would be financially supporting about as many claims for damages as would the careless driver. And, obviously, it would be nearly impossible to award safe-driving discounts or incentives of any kind.

Columbus, Ohio

REFRESHING RAINS OF REVIVAL

It was refreshing to read [the news] report “Revival Reaches Out: SDA Students Carry It On” (March 26). You have done your readers a good service by keeping them informed of the mercy drops that are now falling. We have waited for this revival for a long time. To us it is the “sound of abundance of rain.”

Your report quotes one student as saying that the traditional system failed to communicate Christ. It is hard to imagine how this is possible. Many of us in the ministry and other phases of Adventist work had deep encounters with Christ on Adventist campuses. Christ is the very foundation of the Adventist plan of education. Says Ellen White in Education (page 30): “In the highest sense the work of education and the work of redemption are one, for in education, as in redemption, ‘other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ.’” She further adds: “To aid the student in comprehending these principles, and in entering into that relation with Christ which will make them a controlling power in the life, should be the teacher’s first effort and his constant aim.”

As a church we have endeavored to lead our members and our students to Jesus. Perhaps this is why our students are now accepting him as their Lord. For, like Timothy, Adventist students from their youth up have known the holy Scriptures, “which are able to make” them “wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus.”

The Hampden Boulevard Seventh-day Adventist Church

Reading, Pa.

I was … fascinated by the statement, referring to an SDA student, that “he and others in the movement speak of new respect for Mrs. White.” My own observations have convinced me of just the opposite.… As a case in point, I cite the March 3, 1971, issue of the Lancastrian, official school publication of Atlantic Union College, an SDA institution in Massachusetts. There it stated on page one that “George W. Target, a Seventh-day Adventist novelist and playwright,” was holding a series of lectures at the institution. When I joined the SDA Church in 1943 I was instructed never to read novels or plays; every SDA knows the writings of Mrs. White are full of denunciations of fiction, especially the youth-oriented “Messages to Young People.” The endorsement of novels by an official SDA journal can only be interpreted as a downgrading of Mrs. White.

Pembroke, N.C.

RIGHT ON TO ‘NO-MAN’S-LAND’

Tell the brother from Candler (“Social Reform: An Evangelical Imperative,” by Claude Thompson, March 26) that there is a rapidly increasing number of evangelicals who dare to join him in the no-man’s-land between fundamentalists who lack social concern and liberals who recklessly cast aside basic doctrines. If daring to be evangelical means catching it from both sides, so be it. Right on, Brother Claude!

Asst. Prof. of History

Messiah College at Temple University

Philadelphia, Pa.

JUST ANOTHER CULT

The news story by Edward Plowman, “Followers of the Way” (March 26), is of much interest to us here in Greenville. In addition to some of their heretical views as stated in Mr. Plowman’s article, The Way does not believe in the deity of Jesus Christ. We believe that their denial of the deity of Christ makes them just another cult.

Principal

Greenville Christian Academy

Greenville, N. C.

TRACKING DOWN LIFE

I read with great interest … “Let’s Put Life in Church Services” (The Minister’s Workshop,” March 26).… [Mr. Plowman] is on the right track.

Administrative Asst.

The United Methodist Church

Hopwood, Pa.

HIGHLY MISLEADING

Peter Wagner’s “High Theology in the Andes” (Jan. 15) is misleading. May I make three observations:

1. There was no such thing as an “Inter-Varsity bloc” at the Cochabama theological conference, December, 1970. Several of those who supported my position have nothing to do with the student movement I represent, and at least one who is on the staff of this movement in Latin America lined up with those who opposed my view. Furthermore, those of us who attended the conference did so on a personal basis, not as representatives of any particular organization or church.

2. The question of an inerrant Bible occupies but a fraction of my paper on the authority of Scripture (one and a half out of twenty-nine pages, to be exact). I find it difficult to understand why Wagner regards that point as representative of the whole paper and why he fails to make clear that my real objection was not to inerrancy as such, but to separating the Bible from the history of salvation, the revelation of Jesus Christ, and the witness of the Holy Spirit, in order to make inerrancy the basic issue on which the whole structure of bibliology should rest.

3. While supporting different opinions on the practical importance of insisting on the inerrancy of the Bible’s original documents, Professor Andrew Kirk and I were in full agreement with regard to most of the issues raised during the conference, notably the question of the propositional or verbal aspect of revelation. Significantly, the article makes no mention of the united voice that Professor Kirk and I, with most of those attending the conference, raised against the exegetical acrobatics Peter Wagner engaged in for the purpose of providing a basis for his church-growth theories.

Buenos Aires, Argentina

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EDITORIALS

A wave of protest by many Jewish organizations forced the cancellation of a television program in several cities on the eve of Passover (see April 23 issue, pages 28 and 33). Opponents of the program said that the idea of using the contemporary celebration of Passover as a means to preach the Christian Gospel to Jews was offensive. The producer of the program was the American Board of Missions to the Jews, which is among the largest of more than a hundred such organizations in the country. It is noteworthy that most of these groups have a high percentage of Jewish Christians on their staffs.

This episode is one more illustration of how the whole principle and practice of trying to convert persons from one religious belief to another is denigrated today. Zeal for winning people to one’s views in politics or economics or military policy is generally commended, but zeal in evangelism, or “proselytism,” as its opponents brand it, is held to be a medieval hangup, unworthy of the modern spirit.

Two related issues are at stake. One is the teaching of “universalism,” which holds that whatever salvation there is will be shared by all men regardless of their religion. To try to win adherents of Judaism (or Islam or Buddhism or some other or even no religion) to Christianity is needless because they are saved anyway and can be harmful because it disrupts their normal community relationships. The other issue is the legitimacy, indeed the necessity, of evangelism, or “proselytism.” If someone believes that he has found the truth about the ultimate questions of the universe with which all the great religions are concerned, it would seem quite selfish if he wanted to keep that truth to himself or for the private enlightenment of his own ethnic group or nation. The exuberant sharing of the Good News about Jesus Christ should strike people as no more inappropriate than the sharing of the vaccine against smallpox among all nations. Yet the right to evangelize is frequently abridged, even by persons who are otherwise conscientious defenders of freedom of speech.

In 1966 a Congress on the Church’s Worldwide Mission was held in Wheaton, Illinois, sponsored by the Evangelical and Interdenominational Foreign Missions Associations, whose member agencies include some 13,000 missionaries. Two parts of the declaration arrived at by that Congress are especially germane to the question of proclaiming the Gospel to non-Christians, and because we believe they well represent the evangelical position we reproduce them here (from The Church’s Worldwide Mission, edited by Harold Lindsell, Word, 1966, pages 223–26):

Mission—And Neo-Universalism

The Underlying Issues.

During the first nineteen centuries of the history of the Church, any teaching suggesting that all men ultimately would be redeemed was vigorously rejected as heretical. In our day, universalism is rapidly coming into the mainstream of teaching acceptable to some leading Protestant and Roman Catholic theologians. Many prominent church leaders increasingly champion this viewpoint. The new universalism is based upon a fragmented usage of Scripture, not on an exposition of the Scriptures in total wholeness and context.

The teaching of universalism, which we reject, states that, because Christ died for all, He will sovereignly and out of love bring all men to salvation. It proclaims the essential and final unity of the human race, which will never be broken—now or in the future—by God or by man. All mankind is “reconciled”; those who have met Christ have an advantage above those who have not, but it is a difference in degree, not in principle. If men do not believe the gospel in this life—even if they reject it—their guilt and punishment will ultimately be removed. They are simply not conscious of the riches they possess.

The issue with universalism is not simply one of elevating human reason above the clear witness of the Scriptures and biblical Christianity. The whole mission of the Church is affected. The universalist merely proclaims a universal Lordship of Christ and summons men to acknowledge it in their lives. This can readily lead to syncretism and the eventual abandonment by the Church of its missionary calling. Christ is being betrayed by those calling themselves His friends.

The Witness of the Scriptures.

We fervently accept the universal character of the claims of Scripture: God loves the world (John 3:16); Christ is the propitiation for the sins of the whole world (1 John 2:2); all things have been reconciled to God through Christ (Colossians 1:20). God desires all men to be saved (1 Timothy 2:4), and to unite all things in Christ (Ephesians 1:9, 10) so that every knee should bow and every tongue confess His Lordship (Philippians 2:10, 11), “that God may be all in all” (1 Corinthians 15:28). Scripture, however, must explain Scripture. Christ taught eternal punishment as well as eternal life. He spoke of the cursed as well as the blessed (Matthew 25:34, 41, 46). Paul taught eternal destruction and exclusion from the presence of the Lord of all who obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus (2 Thessalonians 1:8, 9). Although God’s claims are universal and His triumph will be universal, yet His saving grace is effective only in those who believe on Christ (John 1:12). There is a heaven and a hell; there are the saved and the lost. Scripture gives us no other alternative; we must take seriously all it says of the wrath and judgments of the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.

WE THEREFORE DECLARE

That, we will, ourselves, be more forthright and thorough in our preaching and teaching of the testimony of the Bible on the awful reality of eternal loss through sin and unbelief.

That, we shall encourage all evangelical theologians to intensify their exegetical study of the Scriptures relating to eternal punishment and the call to redemption and reconciliation.

That, since the mission of the Church inescapably commits us to proclaim the gospel which offers men the forgiveness of sins only through faith in Jesus Christ, our verbal witness to Him should accompany our service to the poor, the sick, the needy, and the oppressed.

That, the repudiation of universalism obliges all evangelicals to preach the gospel to all men before they die in their sins. To fail to do this is to accept in practice what we deny in principle.

Mission—And Proselytism

The Underlying Issues.

The word “proselytism” means “the making of a convert, especially to some religious sect or to some opinion, system, or party.” Recently the word has also been used as a charge against evangelistic effort, especially among those who are members of any denomination or other ecclesiastical body. In reaction to the dynamic witness of evangelicals, some religious groups and nationalistic forces have demanded that “proselytism can and should be controlled.”

The proselytism that includes forced conversions or the use of unethical means (material and/or social) is contrary to the gospel of Christ and should be distinguished from that which is biblical and genuine.

The Witness of the Scriptures.

Throughout the New Testament the apostles and other Christians ceaselessly proclaimed Christ and persuaded men to accept Him, renouncing their old religious allegiances and joining the Christian church (Acts 5:29; 8:4; 13:15–41; 18:4–11; 19:8). The Jews through whom the revelation of God was transmitted and the idol-worshipping Gentiles alike were exhorted to repent, believe, and be baptized; they then became members of a church.

WE THEREFORE DECLARE

That, all followers of Christ must disciple their fellowmen. From this obligation there can be neither retreat nor compromise.

That, we shall urge church and government leaders throughout the world to work for the inalienable right of full religious liberty everywhere. This means freedom to propagate and to change one’s faith or church affiliation, as well as the freedom to worship God.

That, we shall obey God rather than men in resisting the monopolistic tendencies both within and without Christendom that seek to stifle evangelical witness to Jesus Christ.

That, we shall not use unbiblical, unethical methods of persuading people to change their religious allegiance. However, when we seek the conversion of unregenerate men, even though they may be attached to some church or other religion, we are fulfilling our biblical mandate.

Recipe For Disaster

One of America’s most distinguished philosophers, Dr. Will Herberg, observed not long ago that “the moral crisis of our time consists primarily not in widespread violation of accepted moral standards—when has any age been free of that?—but in the repudiation of those very moral standards themselves.… The very notion of morality or a moral code seems to be losing its meaning for increasing numbers of men and women in our society.”

The attitudes of several young people prominently in the news recently bear out Herberg’s contention.

One is the reported “motive” given by the convicted killers of actress Sharon Tate and six others in the celebrated Manson murder case. “All they said was ‘I did it because I did it,’” said a juror of Charlie Manson and three girl members of his “family” after 167 tedious days of courtroom hassling.

Another example is the rebel philosophy of the author of a fat (160 pages sell for $5.95 in paperback) tome called The Anarchist Cookbook. Written by a 21-year-old freshman at Vermont’s Windham College, the manual is an encyclopedia of everything illegal a revolutionary could desire: drugs, sabotage, weaponry, and “recipes” for explosives of all types. William Powell’s cookbook (published by Lyle Stuart, publisher of The Sensuous Woman, and The Sensuous Man, incidentally), is selling like, well, like hotcakes. The book is one of the most dangerous in print (it has been banned by the Canadian government and by Doubleday bookstores). Powell’s personal perspective is every bit as dangerous: “If I really want to do something,” he adds in a postscript to the cookbook, “I don’t particularly care if it’s legal, illegal, moral, immoral or amoral. I want to do it, so I do it.”

To quote Dr. Herberg again: “To violate moral standards while at the same time acknowledging their authority is one thing; to lose all sense of the moral claim, to repudiate all moral authority and every moral standard as such, is something far more serious.… The modern vogue of regarding truth as relative and conditional rather than absolute and eternal, reached its logical conclusion in the proclamation that ‘God is dead.’”

Exactly. When there are no moral absolutes, when ethics are tied to a shifting relativity, when every man does what is right in his own eyes, anarchy, moral decay and spiritual bankruptcy follow. We are already reaping the whirlwind from sowing the winds of permissive doctrine that shut out belief in God and a firm anchorage to the Scriptures. Biblical moral standards and commitment to God’s immutable laws alone can save our nation—or any nation—from God’s judgment and eventual destruction.

China And Christianity

Now that the “bamboo curtain” has been pierced by a ping-pong ball, the attention of Christians has been focused once again upon the country where approximately one-fourth of the planet’s inhabitants dwell, China. The Church has suffered greatly in that land over the past two decades, and the cost of publicly being a Christian in China is far greater than we in more favored lands can imagine.

In view of the hostile attitudes Chinese leaders have expressed toward America in recent years (not unreciprocated, to be sure), how unexpected was the cordial reception given to our table-tennis team! Is it too much to hope that official attitudes toward religion in general and Christianity in particular can also manifest a dramatic change? China does not have to give up Communism in order to grant more religious freedom. Yugoslavia has maintained both. Nor do we expect freedom for Western missionaries to enter on the terms on which they did before the revolution. Indeed, we doubt that informed Christians would want to do it that overly paternalistic way. But we can hope and pray that our fellow believers in China will someday be granted more freedom to demonstrate that Christianity and good citizenship are fully compatible. Also, we hope that soon Christians from other countries can have opportunities to exchange visits with their Chinese brethren.

Meanwhile we should accept the moves of our government that enhance possibilities for further penetrations of the “bamboo curtain,” both ways. Of great prominence in the foreign-policy views of Christians should be the consideration of what actions are most likely to promote fellowship and evangelism.

Social Action Aborning

Some evangelicals who have not been noted previously for activity promoting social reform have recently been stirred into action by the change of laws on abortion. In taking action they have commendably recognized that rather than trying to make a congregation or denomination the spearhead of the effort, they should form special-purpose pressure groups. In this way they can ally themselves with others such as Catholics and Jews who share their concerns on this issue without compromising or deemphasizing the other issues on which disagreement remains. A broadly based alliance is more likely to accomplish change than a group restricted to people who agree on a broad range of issues.

we do hope, though, that those who have very strong opinions on abortion, anti-Communism, aid to private education, Viet Nam, and the like will not let this disrupt fellowship with their brothers in Christ who disagree with their applications of biblical principles to contemporary problems. This is a major reason for forming special groups, rather than trying to capture church structures for one side or the other. The congregation should be a place where all believers feel welcome no matter what their opinions on matters of specific social policy.

For those who are concerned about the changing climate on abortion, the New Jersey Right to Life Committee (Box 1213, Trenton, New Jersey 08607) offers In Defense of Life, a very practical manual for social action. We urge that the right to a decent life be defended not only for those in the womb but also for those in the ghetto, and that those who oppose abortion as a means of population control support alternative means to that end.

Renewing Church Membership

From time to time it has been suggested that marriages should not be permanently binding. They should be entered into for a specified period of time and be renewable by the consent of the partners when the contract expires. Now the suggestion has been made that church membership be placed on a year-to-year basis with the option to renew.

While we think marriage should be a lasting arrangement, the idea of annual renewal of church membership sounds intriguing. A local minister recently told us that the church to which he recently came has lost contact with a third of its membership. The problem is not only that these “members” do not attend or contribute; they can’t even be located. No one knows whether they are dead or alive.

With tongue partly in cheek we offer the following recommendations: (1) Every church member must reapply for membership by December first of each year. (2) No member will be accepted for renewal who has attended fewer than ten services a year unless he has a good explanation for his delinquency. (3) No one will be renewed who does not give at least 5 per cent (10 per cent preferred) of his income (before taxes) to the work of God’s kingdom. (4) No one can continue who has not led at least one person to Jesus Christ during the year. (5) Each renewal must be accompanied by a pledge to read the Bible through during the year, to pray daily, and to live an orderly and circumspect life.

There go the church statistics!

Drinking In Ireland

Traditionally, the Catholic Church has held a tolerant view of drinking. And in Ireland, land of the stereotyped “hard whiskey-drinking Irish Catholic,” the church’s view has been more than tolerant. But the archbishop of Armagh and primate of all Ireland. William Cardinal Conway, seems intent on changing this stereotype. Last month in a seminar on drugs and alcohol for secondary-school students the archbishop called attention to Ireland’s drinking problem.

The archbishop cited some damning statistics about his country and alcohol. Eleven per cent of personal income is spent on it. Consumption of hard liquor rose 10 per cent in 1969, and most Of the increase, the archbishop said, was due to “the marked growth of drinking among young people.” Cardinal Conway went on to say, “The person with young blood in his veins who needs artificial stimulants to enjoy life has surely something very wrong with him, and it is certainly a topsy-turvy world which regards it as a sign of courage to yield to pressure to take such stimulants.” He stressed that the church will not “pussyfoot” on this issue.

We commend the archbishop for responsibly facing the problem, and for determining to do something about it. However, the Catholic Church seems to be “topsy-turvy” itself in its concern about the drinking problem. At St. Mary’s Hospital, Castleblaney, County Monaghan, the country’s first hospital bar has just opened with nuns tending bar. But the archbishop can be comforted by the fact that the bar will serve only “stout,” not hard liquor. At least the hospital will not be contributing to spirits statistics.

Vanishing Motherhood?

Are mothers a vanishing breed? Aldous Huxley prophesied this in Brave New World. But at that time no one really believed that “test-tube babies” were possible. Now we are in the midst of a biological revolution, with experimentation in artificial insemination, embryo implants, and artificial wombs.

Recently published articles and books tell of a future motherless society. One woman may conceive a child, another carry it to term. Who is the mother? Experiments with sheep in artificial wombs have so far proved successful. And experimentation with human fetuses in tube-like wombs continues. Some scientists are predicting the time when human reproduction will be asexual.

The old Negro spiritual “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child” may become true physically as well as spiritually. Perhaps a child physically may have two mothers, or be his mother’s genetic twin (see April 9 issue, page 11). The biological revolution raises the fundamental question of the meaning of motherhood, a question that science cannot answer. Motherhood—at least as we now think of it—may be on the way out.

Freedom Trek

Five American churchmen traveled around the world last month to arouse sympathy for American prisoners of war in Indochina. They were received by North Vietnamese diplomats in Sweden and Laos but could not persuade the Communists to allow them to go to Hanoi.

Perhaps the most heartening result of the journey was the measure of attention gained for the plight of five American missionaries taken captive by the Viet Cong. Missouri Synod Lutheran president J. A. O. Preus said that the delegation’s appeal in behalf of the missionaries aroused the most interest in the North Vietnamese. President Nathan Bailey of the Christian and Missionary Alliance said the North Vietnamese officials had “heard the story” of the captives but disclaimed any official knowledge of the events, or of the whereabouts or welfare of the missionaries.

The group, which also included Catholic archbishop Joseph Ryan and Presbyterian George Sweazey, got promises of added help from officials of several neutralist nations plus a sympathetic hearing from Pope Paul VI. Conscientious follow-up is now in order. A breakthrough on the prisoners could be the thing that ends the war.

Something To Sing About

A note of joy is ringing through the land these days. It’s sounding forth from the proliferating new Christian music festivals and marathon concerts, the hundreds of churches visited by touring young choral groups with the latest gospel folk musicals, and just about everywhere tuned-in-to-the-Spirit people—young and old alike—congregate in song. They’re singing about Jesus. A recurring theme heralds his soon return and what it will be like for us to be with him.

The reminder is timely. Evangelicals are currently emphasizing this-world implications of the Gospel. It is a correct emphasis, but we must never lose sight of the other-world realities that keep everything else in focus. Jesus personally resides in that other realm, and sooner (by death) or later (by translation at his coming) we will join him there: “And so shall we ever be with the Lord” (1 Thess. 4:17).

This biblical notice of our impending change of address should comfort (1 Thess. 4:18), not distract or dismay. Admittedly, death is hardly a comforting thought when viewed from the departure side rather than the arrival side. We’ve been conditioned to think of death as coming to destroy everything for which we’ve lived. In reality a committed Christian sustains net gain, not loss, affirms Paul (Phil. 1:21).

Funeral sermons often measure the gain as release from bodily affliction and worldly troubles, which it is. For Paul, however, Christ himself is the ultimate gauge. To live is to experience daily the love and wonders of the Lord Jesus Christ, while “to die is gain.” Phillips translates it: “For living to me means simply ‘Christ,’ and if I die I should merely gain more of him.”

Thus the right approach to death and the hereafter is inseparably linked to our love for Christ here and now. There is a joyous meeting ahead. The fourth and fifth chapters of Revelation show that our first reaction in his presence will be one of worship. Then we’ll hold the biggest music festival ever (Rev. 5:9). It may last a long time, for we’ll have a lot to sing about.

L. Nelson Bell

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God’s revealed truth makes sense. I claim neither brilliance of intellect nor unusual clarity of perception. But everything I see, hear, and feel coincides with convictions based on what God has revealed, not not only about this world and man, but also about himself and his relationship to time and eternity.

It all makes sense because these revealed truths satisfy the needs of the hearts and minds of those who are willing to be taught. We can look at men and events and see that they are just as God has told us and that everything either stands or falls according to what men do about his Son and his Cross.

When I read, “In the beginning God,” it makes sense to me, because without him there can be no logical explanation of anything. And when I read that in the beginning he created the heavens and the earth, I know it is true, for on every hand I see the perfect work of a perfect Creator, and I experience and see evidence of the fact that the One who created all is infinite in wisdom, power, and love.

The Book he has given us explains many things for which we could not find answers in any other place. Genesis—beginning with God the Creator—ends with a dead man “in a coffin in Egypt.” Even as we ask the meaning of this, the answer comes. God said “You shall not,” but Satan said, “Go ahead and you will become wise.” And from that time on there is unfolded the drama of man’s disobedience to God and God’s yearning love and desire to restore him to fellowship.

From there on to Malachi, as one reads of God’s warnings and instructions, there is a growing consciousness of God’s holiness as well as an understanding of the terrible consequences of man’s rejection of God—and of the alternative God has ever offered to those who are willing to believe and repent.

While God’s revelation of truth (and The Truth) has been available, man has deliberately turned from it to fables and his own vain imaginations. Little wonder that the Old Testament ends with the warning that, unless there is a reconciliation, God will “come and smite the land with a curse.”

It makes sense when I read that God’s love was so great that he was unwilling to leave man in his self-caused predicament, and that because of this love he sent his own Son to reverse the whole direction of life—for both time and eternity—for those who put their faith in him. There is a breadth and depth in the simple words, “should not perish but have eternal life,” that man could wisely ponder for a lifetime.

Even as one reads of the cause of man’s predicament (sin, disobedience and rebellion), he can see that the Creator spoken of in Genesis 1:1 is also the Redeemer of the New Testament, and that, having opened the gates of eternal life for all who will believe, he will in his own time ring down the curtain of human history and merge time with eternity. He leaves the written record of divine truth with these words, “Surely I am coming soon” (Rev. 22:20). For the Christian this is the “blessed hope,” but for the unbeliever it is the harbinger of doom.

The truths revealed in the Bible and the consistency of their application all make sense. Created in the image of God, we have given to us the inalienable right of decision; we exercise this right, with all that is implied, for time and for eternity.

We can choose to go our own way, disregarding the pleadings and warnings of a loving God, and for the time being we may be accounted successful by the world’s standards. But there is no word in the Bible that bespeaks more truth than the Lord’s affirmation, “The LORD sees not as man sees; man looks on the outward appearance, but the LORD looks on the heart” (1 Sam. 16:7). Jesus gives us the significance of this divine insight in the words, “Out of the heart come evil thoughts, murder, adultery, fornication, theft, false witness, slander. These are what defile a man” (Matt. 15:19).

Surely it makes sense when we are told that with all these inborn evil proclivities we “must be born again.” To be fit for fellowship with God, as he was at his beginning, man must become a new creation, and that transformation comes through Christ and in no other way.

The Bible makes sense to me, not only because of my personal faith, but also on the basis of my experience and observation. I read: “For our fight is not against any physical enemy: it is against organizations and powers that are spiritual. We are up against the unseen power that controls this dark world, and spiritual agents from the very headquarters of evil” (Eph. 6:12, Phillips). And I know that Satan and his agents are real and very active!

How very much it means to me to know that God has provided a two-way communications system by which I may talk to him and he to me. As the pilot of a plane flying blind in heavy clouds finds safety and comfort in his two-way radio connections with the ground, so we find our safety, comfort, and guidance in talking with God.

Then too, it makes sense to me to know that my heavenly Father never requires anything of me for which he does not at the same time supply the necessary wisdom and strength. Only a great God can so order the affairs of this world as to make “all things work together for good for those who love him” (Rom. 8:28)—fulfilling this promise to millions of his children at the same time.

Finally, it makes sense to know that God has a timetable and that we are moving inexorably to “that day” when the world as we know it will be destroyed and when God will set up his kingdom, “which shall never be destroyed” (Dan. 2:44). It was given to the Old Testament saints and those of the New to look beyond the horizon of time to that eternal city “that cannot be shaken,” and to us today there is given a similar vision and an unshakable hope.

The God of creation and redemption, of time and eternity, has not left himself without a witness. He continues to extend his patient offer of a new life in and through the person and work of his Son. That is why the Gospel makes so much sense. It offers the only way out of the human predicament and provides all that we need to live and die by. We can have assurance in our hearts that we are following not “cleverly devised myths” (2 Pet. 1:16) but the testimony of “those who from the beginning were eyewitnesses and ministers of the word” (Luke 1:2). Like the Apostle Paul we can say, “I know whom I have believed and am persuaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day” (2 Tim. 1:12).

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Tradition—For Evangelicals Only

Tradition: Old and New, by F. F. Bruce (Zondervan, 1971, 184 pp., paperback, $2.95), is reviewed by J. Ramsey Michaels, professor of New Testament and early Christian literature, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, South Hamilton, Massachusetts.

Most of what is said in this book has been said before, but it is gratifying to hear it from someone to whom evangelicals will listen. Professor Bruce undertook this study because he had been “increasingly impressed over the years by the prevalence of tradition in churches and religious movements which believed themselves to be free from its influence.” Though he draws illustrations from his own experiences among the Plymouth Brethren, much of what he says is true of evangelicals generally. Few Christians put less emphasis on tradition than they, yet few groups are more influenced by it. All too often “what the Bible teaches” comes to refer to one’s own interpretation (i.e. tradition), while “the traditions of men” becomes a useful label with which to dismiss other points of view. To say this is not to single out anyone for special blame, but only to admit that we all share in the human condition, with its shortcomings.

What is the answer to the problem? Should we cast off our traditions, muster all our historical and exegetical acumen, and find out “what the Bible really teaches”? Or should we acknowledge frankly our indebtedness to tradition and seek to use it positively as a link between biblical times and today, all the while testing it in light of our growing knowledge of Scripture? Though the professional scholar may pursue the first alternative, the Church cannot deny its tradition without denying its own existence in history. Nothing is gained if we affirm the Bible’s historicity at the expense of our own. The evangelical’s task is not to go “back to the Bible,” but to bring the Bible with him into the twentieth century. This cannot be accomplished by historical scholarship alone; tradition too is necessary.

Bruce’s book helps bring these matters into focus by showing that the Bible is itself tradition. Many topics not normally considered under the heading of tradition are discussed here: form criticism (“Tradition and the Gospel,” “The Setting of the Gospel Tradition”), the Nag Hammadi Gospel of Thomas (“Extra-Canonical Tradition”), the use of the Old Testament (“Tradition and Interpretation”), as well as the role of tradition in defining the canon and text of Scripture. Bruce presents a wealth of material; not all of it has direct bearing on the problem with which he began, but almost all of it is interesting and worthwhile. Moreover, it demonstrates the central place of tradition in the Christian faith by reminding us that many things that we call by other names are really aspects of Christian tradition. Some readers will wish that the excellent chapters dealing with tradition in the “traditional” sense (“Tradition in the Early Catholic Church” and “Tradition Today”) were more extensive. Bruce is writing largely for evangelicals, and these are areas in which they need to be better informed.

Professor Bruce calls himself a “biblicist” rather than a traditionalist, but his final appeal is to history. He concludes that Scripture and tradition both must be “tested and validated by historical inquiry as far as such inquiry can take us” and that “where the living voice of the church collides with history, history tends to be victorious in the long run.” This is a very important statement, and one that invites continuing discussion. It is natural for us who study the past to feel that our own discipline is more important than the “living voice of the church,” but it should not be forgotten that the “living voice of the church” is also history. Perhaps the real question is how past and present history are to be related.

Seldom does one find a book with so much of value in so few pages. Besides offering a perspective on tradition, Professor Bruce has allowed us to see a master at work in New Testament criticism and exegesis, Rabbinics and church history. His conservative use of form criticism on page 61 is a gem (though Mark 2:20 has its life-setting in the early Church, verses 18 and 19 “can have no other life-setting than the ministry of Jesus”). And not least in importance are his flashes of humor (for example William Kelly’s judgment that “any unbiased Christian” will affirm the Petrine authorship of Second Peter is called “a good example of the pre-emptive strike in theological controversy”). Minor inconsistencies can be found (for instance, if Paul wrote the Pastoral Epistles, as Bruce seems to assume, why are they dated “towards the end of the New Testament period”?), but they are very rare.

The net effect of this volume is to confirm what we all knew about F. F. Bruce’s preeminence among evangelicals in the biblical field. Everyone interested in Scripture or tradition has reason to be deeply grateful to him.

Timely Analysis In Plain Language

The Church at the End of the Twentieth Century, by Francis A. Schaeffer (Inter-Varsity, 1970, 153 pp., $3.95), is reviewed by John E. Wagner, attorney, Oklahoma City.

God is really at home in the cosmos and has propositionally revealed “true truth” to man in the Bible. This thesis pervades Francis A. Schaeffer’s books, such as Escape From Reason, The God Who Is There, and now The Church at the End of the Twentieth Century, touted as his most significant contribution. In it, he hammers away again in plain language at the central theme unveiled in the prior volumes.

That he surveys the broad horizons of philosophy, history, sociology, and theology, to say nothing of politics, art, music, literature, and films, from the mountaintop of reformation orthodoxy is Schaeffer’s unique gift to the contemporary scene. That he analyzes all this in non-technical language—or at least explains his vocabulary—is his genius.

His latest book speaks more directly to the life of the Church than the first two. Schaeffer opts for a visible and doctrinally pure Church, which he distinguishes from the classic concept of the invisible Church, but he does not tell us where it is to be found. Perhaps it isn’t to be found at all—not even in fundamentally conservative bodies, since they are not as full-orbed in love and holiness as Schaeffer’s vision projects. Unless I am blind to the American scene, the pure Church of which he speaks is a dead ringer for the invisible Church of traditional reformation theology.

His central theme, that God is really present in the cosmos in the way that the Bible says he is, is propounded with intellectual vigor against all comers, sophisticates, scientists, and simple seekers alike. We are in a dying culture, says Schaeffer, that has lost its absolutes: ontological, epistemological, and ethical. This is true because twentieth-century man, who is the victim of Renaissance humanism, no longer posits his epistemology and ethics within the reliable framework of biblical revelation, where “true truth” is made possible. Having cut himself loose from his revelatory base in quest for truth and meaning, man has explored numerous blind alleys and finally has surrendered to irrational despair. The drug culture, the youth revolution, modern art and movies, the New Left, pornography, and ultimately suicide—all these are symptoms of an irrational leap into the void. But the leap is futile, since it is amoral and bears no epistemological content.

In this desperate predicament, Schaeffer says, society will turn either to an establishment elite (whom he likens to Plato’s philosopher-kings) or to a revolutionary left-wing elite, both of whom spell oppression for man, unless biblical, reformation absolutes can be wedged back under the foundations of society and the Church.

How is this to be done? By a doctrinally pure minority involving themselves with holiness and love in the affairs of men. Christians are to do this with humanists and other concerned persons, as the situation demands, but always as ad hoc co-belligerents and never as allies, lest truth be compromised by the alliance. Although Schaeffer does not tell us whether doctrinally orthodox Christians should join with the theologically heterodox to work to solve specific human problems, I gather from his previous volumes that he would not approve.

Moreover, true biblical Christians should beware lest they wander down the seductive path to the idolatrous Moloch of modern theology, where they are sure to be devoured by preachers and theologians who mouth connotation-words—that is, God-words—without orthodox content.

The author chides evangelicals for falling into this trap by calling men to existential commitment to Jesus Christ without giving them authoritative, definitive content from the Bible to explain what they are doing. I question this criticism, since repentance, conversion, and commitment often are initially existential, with intellectual and rational content from the Bible coming afterward. Nevertheless, his criticism is valid if there are those who call men to commitment to a contentless banner called “Christ” with no meaning except the “experience of faith” itself.

Real Christians, he says, should act out their belief with love for the brethren in the pure Church, as well as to the neighbor outside it. His elaboration of this in an appendix called “The Mark of the Christian,” published previously as an independent essay, is a chapter that tempers what some may consider to be a hyper-orthodoxy. His scriptural exegesis of this subject is exciting, filled with the presence of the Word and Holy Spirit, and balances his insistence on theological purity.

Some of the book is elementary Protestant ecclesiology and brings to mind the Declaration and Address of Alexander Campbell when he launched his “restoration movement” in the nineteenth century. Campbell, you will recall, said that the true Church of Christ should return to the primitive New Testament pattern, and should in essentials have unity, but in non-essentials, liberty. Schaeffer calls this “freedom within form,” form being the scriptural essentials for a pure orthodoxy in the Church.

Dr. Schaeffer impresses and enlightens me. Undoubtedly, he is at his best in intellectual circles, but he nevertheless writes well and clearly for readers not technically skilled in the subjects he covers. The book is by no means a profound theological treatise, but rather an analysis of the times and a message to the churches. His historico-philosophical overview will educate thoughtful evangelicals and help them put their biblical faith in intellectual perspective. Moreover, he does not hesitate to touch the flat spots in evangelical life. He is as hard on dead orthodoxy as he is apostate liberalism.

He chastises certain evangelicals for their complacency, brittleness, and unloving rejection of long-haired youth, vomiting drunks, and dark-skinned people. And he thumps hard for an excited and humanly involved Church—excited because it knows the propositionally revealed truth of God and involved because of the indwelling dynamis of the love of Christ. I buy his answer and believe in the vision of the Church that he expounds.

Essays In Sympathy

The Theology of Altizer: Critique and Response, edited by John B. Cobb, Jr. (Westminster, 1970, 269 pp., $7.50), is reviewed by Glenn R. Wittig, reference librarian, Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton, New Jersey.

The popularized “death of God” fad of the late sixties is past, but its leading provocateur—Thomas J. J. Altizer—is very much alive. And the position established in his newest book, The Descent into Hell, is far more radical than that found in The Gospel of Christian Atheism.

God-is-dead theology never was taken seriously by very many scholars; yet it is the framework of this compendium that Altizer can and should be viewed as a constructive theologian. He has, it should be admitted, raised important issues for Christians that demand serious attention. In attempting to center the reader’s attention on Altizer’s affirmations, rather than his negations, the editor has assembled a collection of sympathetically critical essays. Some are original to this work, but most have been published previously and thus do not always take into account Altizer’s latest position.

The introduction is superb in its summarization and analysis and can be considered the most valuable part of the book. The criticisms are generally solid, insightful, meritorious essays that often point out similarities as well as differences with other thought systems. The essays by Runyon and Beardslee, especially, are fulcrum pieces, and fortunately are the first to appear. They confront—and find wanting—such crucial aspects of Altizer’s thought as his style of doing theology and his understanding of reality, time, history, the Incarnation, and eschatology.

King’s essay—“Zen and the Death of God”—approaches Altizer from the ground of the history of religions and, contrary to his supposed rejection of Buddhism, finds Altizer’s radical immanentalism fully Buddhistic. (That conclusion was established well before the appearance of Descent.)

Altizer’s “Response,” as both a strength and weakness of this book, evokes a different feeling. Its absence would have deprived the collection of its “dialogue”; yet its presence is dispiriting. While Altizer acknowledges having learned from his critics, he remains essentially determined to maintain his extreme position at all costs.

The satire in the appendix is in poor taste for this work; and the bibliography of Altizer’s writings is incomplete.

Cobb’s book is valuable, yet certain assumptions and omissions detract from its effectiveness. For one, its organization around confessional alignments negates the importance of issues. Secondly, some crucial issues—for example, Altizer’s supposedly biblical hermeneutic, his ethical indirection, his nihilistic “wager,” and the relation of his thinking to the idea of revolution are not treated.

Working For Survival

The Future of the Christian, by D. Elton Trueblood (Harper & Row, 1971, 102 pp., $2.95), is reviewed by Cheryl A. Forbes, editorial assistant, CHRISTIANITY TODAY.

While many people predict the death of the institutional church, Elton Trueblood offers hope that it will survive. He presents the church as necessarily institutional and therefore organized, and as vital for meeting today’s spiritual needs. But to overcome pessimism and failure, he says, the churches must recognize the ministering potential of four groups within their membership. The “rebirth of the church” will not come through innovations in the forms of worship—a refreshing idea—but only through a centering of activities in the idea of ministry. In using laymen, women, retired persons, and youth, the church will begin once again to fulfill the role Christ intended it to have.

After briefly explaining the potential of each of these groups, Trueblood concentrates on youth. This is the group most necessary for implementing new evangelical strategies. It is time for the churches to use young people to do things for others, Trueblood says, rather than always doing things for young people. They need to channel the restlessness of youth into productivity for Christ and his church. Trueblood quotes one young woman as saying, “As a young person and a follower of the Way, I often feel almost forsaken by the older Christians in any attempt to witness to my peers. I am excited and willing to act.

What Trueblood calls the “new evangelicalism” involves understanding and using Christ’s own methods to proclaim his message. Mobility and two-by-two witnessing are the keys. A response to Christ’s claims means “a response of the whole person” to a person.

The future of the church depends on how evangelistic “evangelicals” become. Trueblood realizes that to survive, the church must be completely Christ-centered. There is no room and no time for anything less. Quoting Cardinal Newman, Trueblood says of the Church of Christ: “She pauses in her course, and almost suspends her functions; she rises again, and she is herself once more.”

Getting Acquainted With Scholars

Contemporary Old Testament Theologians, by Robert B. Laurin (Judson, 1970, 223 pp., $8.95), is reviewed by Lester J. Kuyper, professor of Old Testament, Western Theological Seminary, Holland, Michigan.

Contemporary Old Testament Theologians reviews the works of seven Old Testament scholars: Walther Eichrodt, Gerhard von Rad, Otto Procksch, Theodorus C. Vriezen, Edmond Jacob. George A. F. Knight, and Paul van Imschoot. Since Procksch and van Imschoot are dead, selection of George E. Wright and William F. Albright, to name only two possibilities, might better have served the “Contemporary” of the title. Besides, American scholars would be recognized!

Walther Eichrodt’s extensive works are reviewed by Norman K. Gottwald (American Baptist Seminary of the West). Eichrodt, emeritus professor of the University of Basel, has long been known for his scholarly and conservative writings on the Old Testament and Gottwald gives him an accurate and careful appraisal. Even though I have used Eichrodt with much appreciation, and have found his exposition of the “Covenant” theme and his emphasis on historical reality congenial to my understanding of the Old Testament, I agree with Gottwald when he finds in Eichrodt a lack of precision—employing the covenant in too embracing a fashion, or too readily declaring that a theology of the Old Testament must be historical because God acted in history. Gottwald’s critique becomes more severe in the last pages of his article, and he calls into question the presuppositions of the Swiss scholar. Presuppositions, however, are inherent in any interpretation of the Old Testament, and therefore expose to attack any scholar who interprets the Scripture.

It is at this very point of presupposition that G. Henton Davies (Regent’s Park College, Oxford) makes his critique of Gerhard von Rad. In contrast to Eichrodt’s emphasis on historical reality, von Rad has dim views of the historicity of the patriarchal narratives and of the Exodus. Davies has a great appreciation for the insights of von Rad, yet calls into question his Credo Motifs—or rather, von Rad’s use of the content of the Credos. Davies both attacks von Rad for a lack of historical sensitivity and praises him for perceptive insights. Although he takes up von Rad’s “Relationship between the Old Testament and the New Testament” and in outline presents his position, elaboration on this point by comparison and contrast with other scholars would have been a welcome addition to this good essay.

The chapter on Otto Procksch by John N. Schofield makes available to English readers materials that are in German. The survey gives adequate coverage with little critical evaluation.

Ronald E. Clements (Cambridge University) writes the rather brief chapter on Th. C. Vriezen, Utrecht University, Netherlands. He accurately places Vriezen among those who hold to the revelation of God in the Old Testament coming in the course of history, and correctly observes that Vriezen relates the understanding of the Old Testament to the revelation of God in Jesus Christ.

Edmund Jacob of the University of Strasbourg is reviewed by Robert B. Laurin (American Baptist Seminary of the West), the editor of this volume. George A. F. Knight, formerly at McCormick Seminary and now at Pacific Theological College, Suva, Fiji, is presented by John I. Durham (Southeastern Baptist Seminary). The last essay, by David A. Hubbard (Fuller Seminary), is on Paul von Imschoot, Ghent, Belgium.

This book invites the interested reader to become acquainted with and enjoy the work of great scholars who present the Old Testament as a living Word from God for our times.

Drama Of Left And Right

Protestant Power and the Coming Revolution, by Will Oursler (Doubleday, 1971, 203 pp., $5.95), is reviewed by David E. Kucharsky, managing editor, CHRISTIANITY TODAY.

If American churches are soon to engage in a second act of the fundamentalist-modernist drama, this is the book that could lift the curtain. And Oursler implies that in this act the struggle could even involve bloodshed.

Oursler brings to popular attention the influence of today’s radicals on Protestant denominational leadership. He accurately describes major confrontations of recent years that the average man in the pew has heard little or nothing about. Whether churchgoers will, upon learning of these perversions, rise in indignation to “throw the bums out” is the next big question.

Oursler’s approach is simple and detached. He is not a polemicist for the right or left, and he tends to ascribe good intentions to both sides. Yet he warns that a showdown seems imminent and could entail considerable violence.

The author chose not to dig very deeply, and the underlying theological issues get little exposure. Perhaps he was taking pains to keep the more obvious facts in reach. Thus we have a volume that is more timely than historical, and deserves to be acquired for church libraries promptly.

Newly Published

Encounter With Books: A Guide to Christian Reading, edited by Harish D. Merchant (Inter-Varsity, 1971, 262 pp., paperback, $3.50). Outstanding. Nearly seventy persons have presented annotations of books in their fields for the general reader and student. Some 1,600 books are covered in seven categories: Bible, doctrine, witness, life, ethics, apologetics, and the arts. Excellent guide for building personal, congregational, and school libraries.

Organizing to Beat the Devil, by Charles W. Ferguson (Doubleday, 1971,466 pp., $7.95). A popularly written and highly selective account of the main body of Methodists in America. Avoids theology.

Paul, by Gunther Bornkamm (Harper & Row, 1971, 259 pp., $7.50). A fine study of Paul’s life and theology by a leading German scholar. It is limited, however, by the author’s belief that six of Paul’s letters were by others.

The Theology of Karl Barth, by Hans Urs von Balthasar (Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1971, 323 pp., $8.95). A leading Swiss Catholic theologian offers one of the best books on his fellow countryman. First published in German twenty years ago.

The Jesus Bag, by William H. Grier and Price M. Cobbs (McGraw-Hill, 1971, 295 pp., $6.95). Two black psychiatrists use case studies to illustrate a non-religious, black-formed basis for a new American morality. More than 100 pages of unannotated bibliography.

The Minister and His Work, edited by Michael R. Weed (Sweet, 1971, 192 pp., $3.95). Fifty brief articles, each on a different aspect of full-time ministry, originally appearing in the Christian Chronicle. The suggestions are practical and basic. However, the seeming simplicity should elicit self-examination rather than scorn. We all know that “listening is important,” but do we listen?

The Street People (Judson, 1971, 64 pp., paperback, $1.50). A collection of some of the best articles, drawings, and photos from Right On, an underground newspaper published by evangelical street Christians in Berkeley. One way to get plugged into the scene.

The Gospel of John, by Rudolf Bultmann (Westminster, 1971, 744 pp., $15). Advanced students who aren’t happy with the author as theologian are nevertheless able to appreciate his exegetical contributions. This translation has long been awaited.

The Faithful Sayings in the Pastoral Letters, by George W. Knight III (Presbyterian and Reformed, 1971, 162 pp., paperback, $3.50). A technical study by a professor at Covenant Seminary of First Timothy 1:15; 3:1; 4:8; Titus 3:4–7; Second Timothy 2:11.

Modern Christian Thought: From the Enlightenment to Vatican II, by James C. Livingston (Macmillan, 1971, 523 pp., $9.95). Intended to be neither comprehensive nor concerned with confessional or systematic developments. The author focuses rather on the encounter of selected Christian thinkers with modern philosophy, science, and biblical criticism. Evangelicals will find it helpful within its limitations but will have to look elsewhere for accounts of their own thinkers’ interactions with modern thought.

Laity Mobilized, by Neil Braun (Eerdmans, 1971, 224 pp., paperback, $3.95). A missionary to Japan uses illustrations from that country and others as a basis for insisting on involving all Christians, not just clergy, in evangelism.

Hope and Planning, by Jurgen Moltmann (Harper & Row, 1971, 228 pp., $6.50). Eight essays written 1960–68 by the author of Theology of Hope. Includes “The Revelation of God and the Question of Truth,” “God and Resurrection,” “Towards an Understanding of the Church in Modern Society.”

Religion in the Age of Aquarius, by John Charles Cooper (Westminster, 1971, 175 pp., paperback, $2.45). A quickie sightseeing tour for beginners through the world of the occult from sex-ism to Satanism, but with mostly shallow and a-Christian interpretations of what it all means.

Successful Church Libraries, by Elmer L. Towns and Cyril J. Barber (Baker, 1971, 103 pp., paperback, $1.95). Every congregation should have a well-used library. Particularly on the mechanics, this book will help achieve that goal. However, the book recommendations do not reflect the diversity of evangelical belief.

Liberation and Reconciliation: A Black Theology, by J. Deotis Roberts (Westminster, 1971, 205 pp., paperback, $3.50). Brief reflections of a black theologian who is problack rather than anti-white.

The Pentecostal Movement in the Catholic Church, by Edward D. O’Connor (Ave Maria, 1971, 301 pp., paperback, $1.95). A theology professor at Notre Dame who helped to fuel the growing charismatic movement among Catholics documents its beginnings and spread, probes dangers, assesses it theologically. Scholarly, definitive, timely.

Learning Through Encounter, by Robert Arthur Dow (Judson, 1971, 174 pp., paperback, $3.50). “We all live in tension between two levels of experience: pain and pleasure.” The problem is how to use this tension for creativity and education (individuals and teachers). The author relies heavily on diagrams throughout his insight-filled discussion.

New Testament Theology: The Proclamation of Jesus, by Joachim Jeremias (Scribner, 1971, 330 pp., $10). A well-known German scholar presents a systematic study of the teaching of the first three Gospels. Sees many legendary elements, but can still be of considerable help to those with more confidence in the evangelists’ accuracy.

Garret Vanderkooi

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In light of the numerous recent articles on evolution and the historicity of Genesis 1–3, it seems appropriate for one who is engaged in molecular biological research to write also, in order to clarify the present status of evolution as a scientific theory.

The theory of evolution has been in existence and more or less accepted for more than a hundred years. A large body of circumstantial evidence, much of which was available to Darwin already a century ago, is explained by it. This includes such things as the fossil record, similarities in form among animals and plants, and the geographical distribution of animals and plants. The theory put forward to explain these data is one of gradual development over long periods of time, the logical starting point being inorganic matter, and the logical end point, man.

A theory with such a vast scope, and which by its very prehistoric nature cannot be proved, would undoubtedly be passed off as idle speculation, if it were not for its theological implications. As we all know, the theory offers a naturalistic alternative to the creation account contained in the Bible, and this is considered to be a highly desirable thing by those who do not want to recognize the Creator. The proponents of evolution have done such an effective job of propagandizing this religious theory, in the name of empirical science, that some formerly orthodox theologians are revising their interpretation of the Bible to make room for it.

From the scientific point of view, evolution may have been a plausible hypothesis in Darwin’s day, but it has now become untenable, as a result of fairly recent developments in molecular biology. Darwin was aware that his theory contained various unproved assumptions, which would have to be tested by future generations of scientists. The foremost assumptions were that life could develop from non-life by natural means, and that, given the first cell, all the varied forms of life that we now have could be produced from it.

At one stage, Darwin proposed the supernatural creation of the first cell, but he apparently rejected this notion later in life; the idea was certainly not accepted by his followers. On the second point, Darwin observed that there was sufficient variation among the individuals of a given species to make it possible to breed better strains of domestic cattle or grain, and that a similar process (“natural selection”) occurred in the wild. The assumption has not been borne out either experimentally or by the fossil record. On the contrary, the fossil record would seem to indicate that new classes always appeared suddenly, rather than gradually, as would have been expected by the Darwinian theory.

In the past, evolutionists were confident that the problem of the origin of life would be solved by the new science of biochemistry. To their dismay, the converse has occurred. The more that is learned about the chemical structure and organization of living matter, the more difficult it becomes even to speculate on how it could have developed from lower forms by natural processes. The pat answers given in high school and beginning college textbooks on the origin of life simply do not hold up when submitted to a biochemical analysis.

There is no theory in existence today that even begins to explain the origin of life by natural means. The individual molecules in a living cell are extremely complicated, precisely made, and arranged in a varied but highly ordered network. Both the structure of these molecules and their cellular organization (and thus life itself) are passed on from generation to generation. To think that such a system could ever have come into being by itself is unbelievable. A calculation of the time involved to produce even one of the required molecules by chance shows that four billion years (the estimated age of the earth) is by comparison a very short time.

The weakness of the evolutionary hypothesis is recognized and acknowledged by some members of the scientific community; it is becoming more common to find doubts and reservations concerning the theory expressed in the scientific literature. As a prime example, we may quote from a recent book by two prominent biochemists, Dr. D. E. Green and Dr. R. F. Goldberger (Molecular Insights Into the Living Process, Academic Press, 1967, pp. 406, 407):

There is one step [in evolution] that far outweighs the others in enormity: the step from macromolecules to cells. All the other steps can be accounted for on theoretical grounds—if not correctly, at least elegantly. However, the macromolecule to cell transition is a jump of fantastic dimensions, which lies beyond the range of testable hypothesis. In this area, all is conjecture. The available facts do not provide a basis for postulation that cells arose on this planet. This is not to say that some paraphysical forces were at work. We simply wish to point out that there is no scientific evidence.

A footnote adds that it would be begging the question to suggest that life arose elsewhere, and was transmitted here through space.

These scientists do not propose creation (paraphysical forces) as a way out of the dilemma, because they are speaking as scientists, and supernaturalism is outside the range of empirical science. A scientific appeal to supernaturalism to get out of difficult problems leads to a “god of the gaps”; such a god dies when the gaps are filled with natural explanations.

The origin of life on earth is not properly placed in the domain of science. Scientists might propose mechanisms by which it may have arisen, but how it actually happened is in the domain of history. The mute evidence of the fossil record does give us some historical insight: it tells us, for example, that there are many extinct species; it also tells us that all life apparently did not come into existence at the same time, but that there were several widely separated times at which major new classes of animals or plants appeared. To construct an elaborate causal, historical framework on the foundation of the fossil record is speculation, not science. A written record by someone (an intelligent being) who was present during the events in question is required, before it is possible to say what were the causes and what were the effects.

GOD IS LIKE THAT

So many kinds of prayer there are,

And all the same.

The heart and God, and quietness,

By any name.

To contemplate, to meditate,

Commune, adore;

Hours or minutes consecrate

Invoke, implore.

The heart in words, in acts, in trust,

Aware or cold;

A lighted candle, or a book;

A hope untold.

Adoring knee or head unbent;

Priedieu or mat,

A heart’s “O God,” and He has heard.

God is like that.

JESSIE FAITH HOAG

It is a commonly accepted fact that there were no human beings around to witness the first appearance of life on earth. How then can we have a written record of these events? Only through the revelation of them from God to man. This revelation has occurred, and is recorded for us most fully in Genesis, although numerous references to these events are also found elsewhere in the Bible.

The Genesis record does not contain all the details that we would like to have, but it does give us more than enough information to settle some fundamental questions. For one thing, it tells us that life did not arise spontaneously, but was a creation of God. God did not create only the first cell; rather, at several times he decreed that new forms of life should come into existence. Finally, the first two human beings were direct creations by God; they did not develop from apes. It should be clearly noted that these statements do not contradict science, but actually solve the difficult scientific problems mentioned above. Concerning the last point, it may be noted that the fossil record in no way proves that humans developed from apes, but only shows their similarities, which we knew already from visits to the zoo.

In the minds of many people, it is impossible to reconcile the Genesis account with the observations of natural science. There are two principal reasons for this. In the first place, the observations are frequently confused with the interpretations of natural science; it is also difficult at times to distinguish between valid interpretations based on sound evidence, and mere speculation. I have tried to show above that the general theory of evolution falls into the latter category.

In the second place, the Genesis account is frequently overinterpreted. Problems certainly will arise in reconciling the valid observations of science if we maintain that the six days of creation were six consecutive twenty-four-hour periods. If, on the other hand, we accept the word of those conservative Hebrew scholars who say that it is an overinterpretation of the Hebrew language to hold to this view and that it is equally valid to interpret the days of periods of time of unspecified length, then, though many questions still remain as to the details of the interpretation of both science and Genesis, their basic agreement is evident. This would indeed be expected if they are both forms of revelation from God.

Garret Vanderkooi is assistant professor at the Institute for Enzyme Research at the University of Wisconsin. This article is reprinted by permission from the February 12, 1971, issue of the Christian Reformed “Banner.”

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Norman V. Hope

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“Whosoever heareth these sayings of mine, and doeth them, I will liken him unto a wise man, which built his house upon a rock: and the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that house; and it fell not: for it was founded upon a rock” (Matt. 7:24, 25).

Jesus’ teaching, as set forth in the Gospels of the New Testament, is thought by many people to have little or no direct relation to the hard, stern world in which we live. To be sure, they feel, what Jesus said would be fine if human nature were other and better than it actually is—if, as W. S. Gilbert put it, “hearts were twice as good as gold, and twenty times as mellow.” But as it is, Jesus’ lofty idealism is too impractical for everyday consumption. George Bernard Shaw once described the Sermon on the Mount as “an unpractical outburst of anarchism and sentimentality.” Sigrid Undest has put the same point in a biting sentence in which she speaks about thinking of Jesus as “a frail and kindly visionary with no knowledge of human nature as it really is, or as an amiable young preacher with a special talent for touching the hearts of Women’s Unions.”

At least two things should be said about this whole viewpoint. For one thing, Jesus would have been painfully surprised—not to say dismayed—to find his teaching dismissed in such a way. Certainly he never considered himself a vague and impractical dreamer, living high above the din and tumult of daily life. Still less did he consider himself an effeminate sentimentalist, more at home at pink teas than in the crowded marketplaces of life. On the contrary, he insisted time and time again that his teaching was meant to be soberly realistic in the highest degree. For example, in the well-known fourteenth chapter of St. John’s Gospel, he describes himself as not only the Way and the Life but also the Truth; and, at the close of the Sermon on the Mount, he claims that whoever hears his sayings, his teachings, and puts them into practice will be like a man who has built his house upon the rock—i.e., the most solid foundation in the world—whereas anyone not applying those teachings he likens to a man who builds his house on shifting sand, the kind of foundation that readily gives way in a storm. There can be no doubt that Jesus meant his teaching to be realistic and practical.

Second, this way of regarding Jesus’ teaching has done untold harm to his cause, for obviously it keeps men from taking his teaching seriously. Says Bishop F. R. Barry:

We have heard too much about Christian “ideals.” Nothing has done more harm to the cause of Christ than flabby talk about the Dreamer of Galilee. For, in fact, there has never been in history a man so wholly devoid of sentimentality. He was the greatest Realist ever born. Before his public activity began, he faced the lure of religious sentimentality, refusing to dwell in an inner world of dreams unrelated to moral actuality. The siren voice called to him in vain. He would be true to the facts at all costs—even at the cost of the Cross and Passion. It is not the authentic religion of Jesus which rides away from life on a vague idealism [The Relevance of the Church, Nisbet, 1935, p. 185].

Let us take some of the basic teachings of Jesus and see whether, in the light of our experience of life, he was a starry-eyed sentimentalist, with his feet solidly planted in mid-air, or a realist of the most practical sort.

To begin with, it was one of Jesus’ basic principles that man’s fundamental need is that of knowing God, and of entering into a fruitful and satisfying experience of fellowship with him. Jesus was not blind to the fact that in human nature there are other needs that cry out for fulfillment—the need for health, for example, and the need for food. He even worked miracles in order to ensure that such needs would be adequately met. But deeper than any other need, he insisted, was the need for a vital experience of fellowship with God. As St. Augustine put it, in well-remembered words, “thou hast made us for thyself, and our hearts are restless until they rest in thee.” Jesus insisted on this; and it was primarily in order to satisfy this need that he came to earth—he came to bring man to God by bringing God to man.

Today this basic truth is coming home to many people who have no particular bias in favor of Jesus and his religion. For many men and women are breaking down in various kinds of mental illnesses, and their fundamental problem is that they have no adequate experience of fellowship with God. Their symptoms may be diverse—nervousness, a sense of futility in life, a breakdown in morale, sometimes some physical ailments. But, however skilled and sympathetic the psychiatrists or doctors or counselors to whom they turn, these people never get right with themselves until they get right with God. Some years ago Dr. Carl Jung, one of the world’s foremost authorities on applied psychology, wrote a book with the significant title Modern Man in Search of a Soul (Keagan, 1933). In it he made the following statement:

Among all my patients in the second half of life—that is to say, over thirty-five—there has not been one whose problem in the last resort was not that of finding a religious outlook on life. It is safe to say that every one of them felt ill because he had lost that which the living religions of every age have given to their followers, and none of them was really healed who did not regain his religious outlook [p. 264].

Dr. Leslie D. Weatherhead of London has had an extensive and successful practice in the art of personal counseling. In his book entitled Psychology in the Service of the Soul (Epworth, 1930), he tells the story of one of his patients:

A lady who heard me lecture on psychotherapy asked me to go to a town fifty miles away to see her gardener.… He had been in her employ for thirty years, and had worked well until the last three years. During that time he had become morose, sulky, brooding. He complained of a pain in the chest, and could not do his work. Several doctors had overhauled him without finding anything wrong.… When I saw him, he was in bed. For a time we got nowhere. He could not speak, save in monosyllables. I intuitively felt that he needed God more than any elaborate treatment. Without asking permission, I prayed with him. Then I got up and earnestly invited him to tell me what was on his mind. Out it all came, higgledy-piggledy, in a torrent of language sometimes choked with tears. It was a pretty ghastly story, and I won’t repeat a fact of it. Then I spoke of God’s forgiveness, of its reality and power. I got him to pray, not asking for but taking God’s forgiveness. Suddenly he said: “The pain in my chest has gone.” I went down and told his employer that he would be better; and, while we were still talking in the hall, he came down dressed in his working clothes, and his face was radiant [p. 11].

In this fundamental matter of mankind’s need of God, Jesus’ teaching is inexorably realistic, and to disobey it brings grave calamities in life.

Consider also Jesus’ way of treating wrongdoers. There are three possible ways of handling wrongdoing. First, there is the way of easy-going indulgence and softness. This method consists in not taking the wrongdoing seriously but rather excusing it and glossing it over, either because it is held not to be serious or because the wrongdoer is not regarded as being very blameworthy. In the state, this method of dealing with wrongdoing leads to anarchy, and in the home it leads to pampering and license. Second, and more common, is the way of retribution and revenge. The idea is that if anyone does wrong, he must be punished, not so much to deter other people from such wrongdoing—though this may enter into the picture somewhat—but rather because it is considered just that punishment be meted out to wrongdoers. It was this attitude that, until fairly recently, prompted the penal legislation of most of Europe and America and made prisons the grim, forbidding places they were and in some places still are.

Within the last two centuries, there has been much thinking and writing of a different kind about the treatment of those who have violated the law. One of the first of these works was Crimes and Punishments (1760) by the Italian Marquis Beccaria. This famous book had many followers. One of the principles laid down by Beccaria and his school is that the correct way to treat wrongdoers is to seek to reform them, to restore them to self-respect, and thus in course of time to enable them to become worthy, respectable, and responsible citizens. In principle, at least, this idea is accepted in all up-to-date penology.

What ought to be realized is that this idea goes back to Jesus Christ. Reclamation and restoration was his way of dealing with wrongdoers. Take, for example, the case of Zacchaeus. He was a publican, that is, a Jew who had sold out to the hated Roman overlords of conquered Palestine. He had become one of their collectors of revenue and as such took more for himself than he was legally entitled to take. Not unnaturally, such a man was cold-shouldered by his fellow Jews. Their attitude was this: “He has gone and sold his soul to the devil; well, let him take the consequences. We will have no dealings with him; we will ostracize him and his kind.” But Jesus did not take this attitude at all. He thought more of the man himself than of his sin. So he sought Zacchaeus out, offered him his friendship, and thus converted and reclaimed him (Luke 19:9).

Again, consider the case of the woman taken in adultery, whose story is told in John 8. The legal Hebrew way to treat such a woman was to stone her to death, and those who brought her before Jesus wanted to inflict that very penalty upon her. Jesus refused to approve of such retribution. Instead, he forgave her.

I Feel Sorta Special

When my first son was hit by a car and killed eight years ago, in his first year of school, I didn’t blame God, but I didn’t rush to ask his help either. I did a lot of wallowing in self-pity and other worthless forms of self-indulgence before I finally turned to God. But when I asked for his help, he blessed me immensely and helped me straighten out my life. He gave me two more sons, and the world looked rosy again. I was on the right track, the glory road, with the Lord Jesus Christ as the main theme in my life every day. How happy I was! Life was rich and full and wonderful.

Then another son lay dead in front of our home, the victim of a pickup truck, because he disobeyed and went into the street without looking. He too was just beginning school. This was far too much to bear, and I could do nothing at all by myself. But I told God about it, and he took my burden and made it lighter. He was there every morning when I got up; when I went to bed at night he tucked me in. I was like a poor Crippled child, and my loving Father looked after me.

Grief is a terrible thing. To lose one you love so much, to have your children precede you in death, is a heavy burden to live with. Yet to refuse to let God use this, too, for good only increases the burden. The heartache is very real, but faith in God can far overshadow that hurt. Many blessings have come out of our Ricky’s death, often to people outside our family. God has opened new doors for me, and I’m wise enough now to leave them open and to go through them.

I really feel “sorta special.” Through my suffering I have been fortunate enough to learn “from whence cometh my help,” and I’ve asked for and received that help time after time. God, my heavenly father, has cradled me in his loving arms and rocked me to sleep on many nights, and you can’t help feeling “sorta special” when God is that close.—INA OLSON, Buena Park, California.

This did not, of course, mean condoning or excusing her sin, but by his forgiveness of her, he restored her to decency and purity and self-respect. This was the way in which he habitually dealt with wrongdoers, and today we are realizing that his way is the way of sanity and realism. Dr. Fosdick once quoted Samuel J. Barrows, an American criminologist, as saying:

We speak of Howard, Livingstone, Beccaria, and others, as great penologists who have profoundly influenced modern life, but the principles enunciated and the methods introduced by Jesus seem to me to stamp him as the greatest penologist of any age. He has needed to wait, however, nearly twenty centuries to find his principles and methods recognized in modern law and penology.

Again, consider the question of how man’s social and corporate relationships are to be ordered—that is, how men and groups and nations are to live together in this world. Here Jesus’ teaching was clear and plain. He said that the whole human race was one family of brothers and sisters, with God as the common Father of all. That being so, the only proper way to act was to treat one another as brothers and sisters in the great human family, adopting toward one another that attitude of intelligent and persistent good will which he called love. Such teaching may have seemed sentimental and unrealistic to the Jews of Jesus’ day to whom it was first given. At any rate, it would seem that one reason why they rejected Jesus was that they believed they were God’s chosen favorites, that his favor did not extend to Gentiles and “lesser breeds without the law.” and that these persons were not to be treated as brothers and sisters.

Not only was Jesus’ teaching rejected and flouted in his day by his contemporaries, but to a large degree it has been similarly violated ever since. That is to say, men have tended to treat members of groups other than their own as strangers and foreigners, not as fellow citizens; as raw material for exploitation and robbery, not for understanding and fellowship and good will. This policy has been largely responsible for the sorry state of race relations in this country, and for that international anarchy which, setting nations against one another, threatens an atomic war in which “all men will be cremated equal.” The bankruptcy of every other way of conducting social and corporate life has shown up the sober, sane realism of Jesus Christ’s way. Even George Bernard Shaw, toward the end of his life, said: “I am ready to admit that after contemplating the world and human nature for nearly sixty years, I see no way out of the world’s misery but the way which would have been found by Christ’s will if he had undertaken the work of a modern practical statesman.”

The fact is that, as the late W. Russell Maltby once said, “life will work only one way, and that is God’s way. God’s way has been revealed fully and finally in Jesus Christ, that inexorable realist from Galilee. The sooner we learn this and take it to heart, the better will life be.”

Norman V. Hope is Archibald Alexander Professor of Church History at Princeton Seminary. He holds the B.D. and Ph.D. degrees from Edinburgh University.

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James R. Moore

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The signs of our time are both sexual and supernatural. Men heart-sick for genuine love flaunt the symbol where they lack the reality, in hopes that vicarious excitement in rock, flick, and pulp will dispel the inner ache. Witness the great high priest of hedonism himself, Hugh Hefner: “You know … in the next ten years I would rather meet a girl and fall in love and have her fall in love with me than make another hundred million dollars” (Time, Feb. 14, 1969, p. 70). At the same time those for whom Christ came to give abundant life reach out for some kind of transcendent vitality to halt the pangs of spiritual starvation—from the delightful TV comedy “Bewitched,” through dubious horoscopes and tarot cards, to the darkness of the Ouija board, seances, and Satanism.

What greater efficiency could there be for modern men than to satisfy both sexual and spiritual needs at once? Several practitioners of the media and of the occult have been quick to try; the film Rosemary’s Baby depicts twentieth-century witchcraft invoking the unnamed forces of Satan to impregnate a young woman; Ritual of Evil, a made-for-TV movie, shows a young witch casting spells and inducing astral-projection to satisfy her erotic drives; Anton LeVay, in his California-based Church of Satan, indulges in the ancient sexual rites connected with the Black Mass.

All such efforts are not orgiastic fun and spiritual games, however. Two years ago, in a situation that would make the ministrants of Rosemary’s Baby blush, seventeen-year-old Bernadette Hasles was beaten to death in an attempt to drive the devil out of her. Her murderers, the members of a fanatical European cult, had accused her of having sexual relations with the devil, and had required as penance that she write a 322-page autobiography in which she confessed that the devil often walked beside her, made love to her at Holy Communion, and promised her ten sexually diverse husbands and co-rulership of the world with him. In the March, 1970, issue of Esquire, a description of bizarre and terrifying death-styles in California was chosen to keynote the feature section devoted to the state’s sex-saturated underworld of evil.

The past yields other examples of man’s plunge into the deathly darkness of the evil unknown, taken in careless disregard for the sinister consequences of mingling sex and the supernatural and in sinful ignorance of their divine order. Aleister Crowley, the self-styled “Great Beast” of a generation ago (“Before Hitler was. I AM”), set out to banish the “Dying God” from his New Aeon of Crowleyanity through magic in which sex played a major role. Sex became for Crowley the means whereby he reached up to “Divinity”:

It was his vehicle of consecration, his daily prayers.… Any sexual act (hetero-, homo-, or autosexual) was, in his eyes, a sacred magical deed; he likened it to the blessed sacrament.… Sometimes … The Great Beast reached heights of maniac intensity, ran screaming into the temple, “went all but insane.” He roared out words magical, names barbarous, and in an ecstasy performed his mysterious acts of sex magic [J. Symonds, The Great Beast, 1952, p. 132; see The Confessions of Aleister Crowley: An Autohagiography, 1970].

In her famous history of witchcraft, The Witch-Cult in Western Europe, distinguished Egyptologist Margaret Murray maintains that what we call “witchcraft” was a religion of the people overcome by Christianity. Dishonest and overly zealous Christians, she says, felt duty-bound to discredit the innocuous fertility rites of the defeated religion by making central to them a compact with Satan. Over against this interpretation, Montague Summers in his History of Witchcraft considers witchcraft both heretical and anarchical, a flagrant deviation from the medieval Christian establishment. We ought probably to agree with the mediating judgment of Jules Michelet (Satanism and Witchcraft), who attributes early witchcraft generally to underlying traditions, to dissatisfaction with a decadent church, and to the execrable living conditions endured by the serfs. Alienated from a dead church, abused and exploited by their landlords, serfs found social and spiritual solace in nocturnal revelries we now call witchcraft—activities that prefigured the Witches’ Sabbat of the later Middle Ages. Although it took many forms, for the most part the proto-Sabbat degenerated into a huge carnival of lust under the pretense of magic rites. There were sarcastic buffooneries and mockeries of lord and priest, intermingled with the revived traditions of a vague religious past. With greater form, the developed Sabbat served as a combined religious service and business meeting, followed by an orgy of feasting, dancing, and wild lust. “Indiscriminate intercourse” is a pallid euphemism for the limitless indulgence displayed, and incubi and succubi (the supernatural parties, male and female respectively, in a sexual union between human and demon) were said to have joined the debauch on many occasions.

The Witches’ Sabbat brought a culminating development to the history of witchcraft:

This consummation is only reached in the fourteenth century during the Great Schism when the Papacy had migrated to Avignon, and the two-headed Church seemed no longer a Church at all, when all the nobility of France, and the King himself, are crestfallen prisoners in England, squeezing the uttermost farthing out of their vassals to provide their ransom. Then it is the Sabbats adopt the imposing and grimly terrible ceremonial of the Black Mass [Michelet, Satanism and Witchcraft, 1939, p. 118].

“Imposing and grimly terrible” hardly describe it. Like Crowley’s sex magic, the Black Mass is a diabolical inversion of Christian truth, demonic and perversely sexual from beginning to end. And like the Witches’ Sabbat, the Black Mass gave occasion for widely claimed human-demonic sexual relations. (See Summers. History of Witchcraft, p. 90 f.; D. Hill and P. Williams, Supernatural, 1967; R. E. L. Masters, Eros and Evil: The Sexual Psychopathology of Witchcraft, 1962.)

Alienated from churches hardly worth their name, exploited by employers, taxed to the uttermost—are these conditions familiar? Perhaps then we should not be surprised to find today weird and terrifying combinations of sex and the supernatural that reflect the depraved ingenuity of twentieth-century man. Horrified we must be at such revelations, but not surprised. How can Christians understand the sexual and supernatural signs of our time and offer a way of escape?

Modern demonic manifestations of sex and the supernatural must be interpreted in light of the biblical truth that Satan “speaks from his own nature, for he is a liar, and the father of lies.” He invariably misleads, obscures, and deludes. It is utterly misleading to believe, as most moderns do, that devils and demons are the products of pre-scientific superstition. For a Christian with a knowledge of the Bible and modern occultism, this pandemic notion only serves to confirm C. S. Lewis’s observation that two equal and opposite errors into which our race can fall are disbelief in devils and an excessive and unhealthy interest in them. How then are Satan’s modern converts won? By the obscuring of the demonic in a now familiar appeal. Roman Polanski, director of Rosemary’s Baby and a firm disbeliever in witches (“I’m extremely pragmatic. I went to art school and the electronics school. I know optics and physics”), describes it in words a serf could have used to speak of his evening escapades: “You go to the cinema to have fun …” (Look, June 25, 1968, p. 94). The resultant delusion with regard to the Christian view of sexuality is expressed by R. E. L. Masters: “[The equation of sex with evil] was the poison that Christianity gave to Eros. How much different the world might be, how much healthier … had reasonable men of authority decreed that: The sexual appetite is a normal and healthy one; only Paul bothers about it” (Eros and Evil, p. 167).

Thus Satan brings men to deny his existence, play in his presence, and justify themselves on the basis of a deluded conception of the divine sexual order. In the Satanic inversion of that order, sex becomes paramount. Recall, for example, the hellish atmosphere of 1984, in which Winston demands the reassurance: “You like doing this? I don’t mean simply me; I mean the thing in itself.” He is not content until he gets the answer from Julia: “I adore it.” Paul tells us that men choose not to retain the knowledge of God in their minds and that God gives them up “to impurity … to degrading passions … [and] to a depraved mind.” In the end, divinely ordered sexual love is lost in a cloud of supernatural pollution as Satan arrives to claim another soul. “Eros,” said C. S. Lewis, “honoured without reservation and obeyed unconditionally, becomes a demon. And this is just how he claims to be honoured and obeyed. Divinely indifferent to our selfishness, he is also demonically rebellious to every claim of God or man that would oppose him” (The Four Loves, 1960, pp. 101, 102)

To a world that, like medieval society, is starving for genuine love and spiritual food, the good news of the divine sexual order comes with supreme relevance. The Christian relation of sex and the supernatural is the polar opposite of its demonic perversion: it is love—divine eras—not lust; it causes “undefiled” pleasure, not pain; it knows true freedom, not fear; and it brings life—the “grace of life”—not death. Is there not an important comparison between Crowley’s Satanic understanding of sex as his “blessed sacrament” and the Christian understanding in which “the romantic lover sees in the body of his beloved that ‘the means of grace and the hope of glory are in our bodies also, and the name of them is love’”? And does not sex as Crowley’s “vehicle of consecration” have a meaningful counterpart in the Christian view that the beloved’s flesh is “‘the physical Image of Christ, the physical vehicle of the Holy Ghost,’ … because in its own right it is holy? It shares the co-inherent nature of very love—which is what it means to be holy” (M. Shideler, The Theology of Romantic Love, 1962, p. 142)?

But most wonderful of all is the divine choice of Christian marriage to symbolize Christ’s coming union with his Church—when men shall reign with God over a defeated Satan. And could it be that if the union of husband and wife is a strong analogy for the mystical union of Christ and his Church, then there is in fact a supernatural dimension to sex that consummates and imbues the whole of married life?

There are some Christian thinkers who regard the first union in marriage as cementing a lifelong mystical unity, which is accompanied by mental, emotional and physical changes which can never—at least to the full—be repeated. The one partner discovers the other in a reciprocal act of sell-giving, and the inmost consciousness of each awakens to the fact that the life of each has been fused in that of the other. There will be other pleasurable and deeper emotional experiences, but it is at this point that the marriage is really consummated [W. M. Capper and H. M. Williams, Toward Christian Marriage, 1958, p. 74].

The way of escape from today’s powers of darkness Christ graciously provided in the redemption of the Cross. The path is lit by the light of Holy Scripture and leads to God’s right hand, where there are “pleasures for evermore.” Charles Williams aptly remarked that for those who follow it, “sensuality and sanctity are so closely intertwined that our motives in some cases can hardly be separated until the tares are gathered out of the wheat by heavenly wit.”

James R. Moore is a student at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, Deerfield, Illinois. He has the B.S. in electrical engineering from the University of Illinois.

    • More fromJames R. Moore
Page 5914 – Christianity Today (2024)

FAQs

What happened to Christianity Today magazine? ›

The journal continued in print for 36 years. After volume 37, issue 1 (winter 2016), Christianity Today discontinued the print publication, replacing it with expanded content in Christianity Today for pastors and church leaders and occasional print supplements, as well as a new website, CTPastors.com.

Who is Russell Moore of Christianity Today? ›

Russell D. Moore
Residence(s)Brentwood, Tennessee, U.S.
EducationPh.D., Southern Baptist Theological Seminary; M.Div., New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary; B.S., University of Southern Mississippi
OccupationEditor-in-Chief of Christianity Today
Websitewww.russellmoore.com
13 more rows

Is Christianity growing or shrinking? ›

Christianity, the largest religion in the United States, experienced a 20th-century high of 91% of the total population in 1976. This declined to 73.7% by 2016 and 64% in 2022.

Is Christianity a religion or a faith? ›

Christianity, major religion stemming from the life, teachings, and death of Jesus of Nazareth (the Christ, or the Anointed One of God) in the 1st century ce. It has become the largest of the world's religions and, geographically, the most widely diffused of all faiths.

What is the largest religion in the world? ›

Current world estimates
ReligionAdherentsPercentage
Christianity2.365 billion30.74%
Islam1.907 billion24.9%
Secular/Nonreligious/Agnostic/Atheist1.193 billion15.58%
Hinduism1.152 billion15.1%
21 more rows

What is the oldest religion? ›

Hinduism (/ˈhɪnduˌɪzəm/) is an Indian religion or dharma, a religious and universal order by which its followers abide. The word Hindu is an exonym, and while Hinduism has been called the oldest religion in the world, it has also been described as sanātana dharma (Sanskrit: सनातन धर्म, lit.

Is Russell Moore kin to Beth Moore? ›

Russell Moore and Beth Moore are often mistaken for siblings, spouses, or even parent and child in social media discussions. While they share no familial relation, Russell and Beth have shared similar joys and heartbreaks in their Christian lives.

How large is Christianity Today? ›

According to a PEW estimation in 2020, Christians made up to 2.38 billion of the worldwide population of about 8 billion people.

Who is the current leader of Christianity? ›

The current pope, Pope Francis, is known for his particularly diverse group of cardinals- if you can call a group of old, male, Catholic diverse. There are currently 128 serving cardinals. Of those, Pope Francis created 88 from 56 countries.

What religion is declining the fastest? ›

According to the same study Christianity, is expected to lose a net of 66 million adherents (40 million converts versus 106 million apostate) mostly to religiously unaffiliated category between 2010 and 2050. It is also expected that Christianity may have the largest net losses in terms of religious conversion.

Who is the most powerful religion in the world? ›

Major religious groups
  • Christianity (31.1%)
  • Islam (24.9%)
  • Irreligion (15.6%)
  • Hinduism (15.2%)
  • Buddhism (6.6%)
  • Folk religions (5.6%)

What will be the largest religion in 2050? ›

Characteristic20102050
Christians2,168.332,918.07
Muslims1,600.72,761.48
Unaffiliated1,131.151,230.34
Hindus1,032.211,384.36
4 more rows
Apr 2, 2015

What religion was Jesus? ›

Of course, Jesus was a Jew. He was born of a Jewish mother, in Galilee, a Jewish part of the world. All of his friends, associates, colleagues, disciples, all of them were Jews. He regularly worshipped in Jewish communal worship, what we call synagogues.

Do all Christians believe Jesus is God? ›

Most Christians believe that Jesus was both human and the Son of God. While there have been theological debate over the nature of Jesus, Trinitarian Christians generally believe that Jesus is God incarnate, God the Son, and "true God and true man" (or both fully divine and fully human).

What religion goes strictly by the Bible? ›

The Bible serves as the sole authority for Southern Baptists' beliefs and Christianity practices. Southern Baptists consider the Bible to be divinely inspired and without error, using it as the foundation for all matters of faith, doctrine, and ethical living.

What is the status of Christianity Today? ›

About 64% of Americans call themselves Christian today. That might sound like a lot, but 50 years ago that number was 90%, according to a 2020 Pew Research Center study. That same survey said the Christian majority in the US may disappear by 2070.

Who is the CEO of Christianity Today? ›

Carol Stream, IL – The Christianity Today Board of Directors has unanimously elected Dr. Timothy Dalrymple as its next president and CEO. He will begin his new role May 1, 2019.

What has happened to Christianity? ›

The Pew Research Center recently published an alarming report: “In U.S., Decline of Christianity Continues at Rapid Pace.” Since 2009, the religiously unaffiliated have risen from 17% of the population to 26% in 2018/19. And today only 65% of Americans identify as Christians, down from 77% only a decade ago.

Why did Christianity take off? ›

Ehrman attributes the rapid spread of Christianity to five factors: (1) the promise of salvation and eternal life for everyone was an attractive alternative to Roman religions; (2) stories of miracles and healings purportedly showed that the one Christian God was more powerful than the many Roman gods; (3) Christianity ...

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