Cover Story

Substitution

One of the tragedies of modern theology is that the concept of substitution has become suspect and has been so largely abandoned. This has been primarily due to the revolt against biblical and confessional teaching which has been increasingly predominant since the later seventeenth century and especially in more recent times. On the other hand, unfortunate and inadequate presentations of the doctrine have given an appearance of justification to the attack. It may well be asked whether many of those who verbally make much of substitution have really considered its true content, meaning and scope.

A Biblical Motif

There can be no doubt, of course, that substitution is taught in the Bible itself. Prefigured in the vicarious suffering of the servant in Isaiah 53, it is demanded by a strict reading of the New Testament prepositions. In addition, we think of the great passage in Romans 5 where Jesus Christ is portrayed as the representative and head of a new race. Reference may also be made to the “reconciliation” of 2 Corinthians 5, which carries the distinct thought of an exchange, especially in the light of verses 14 and 21. Indeed, it can be asserted with confidence that the Gospel loses its intelligibility and power if we do not accept the truth that Jesus Christ took our place, that in that place he did something for our salvation which we could not do for ourselves, and that the only place which now remains for us is in him.

Life And Death In View

The content of substitution, however, must not be restricted narrowly to the death of Jesus Christ; for the whole purpose of his coming into the world was to effect a substitution. Substitution begins in fact with the incarnation of the divine son—unless we are not to trace it back to the will and purpose of God in eternity. When the Son of God became man, he became man in our place; the true man to whom the whole of the Old Testament had pointed and upon whom all the dealings of God with man were now concentrated. As this man he lived the brief but full life of obedient humility which Adam and all others rejected in their sinful arrogance. He did not need to do this for himself, nor was there any point merely in giving an example which even if we had the will we do not have the capacity to follow. He was the obedient and suffering servant in our stead, living this life as the One for the many. It was a life which necessarily led him to the cross as the fulfillment of identification with sinners—indeed of his replacement of sinners. The way was direct from the baptism of Jordan to the baptism of Golgotha.

But the crucifixion especially cannot be construed just as a death for himself. He was not a sinner that he deserved to die. He was not defeated. He was not concerned only to offer a gruesome demonstration or rather intimidating example. It was a death died in our place and on our behalf. But although in a sense the substitution culminated in the death of Jesus Christ, it did not end there. Otherwise it would merely have been a substitution for death and not for life, carrying a message of despair and judgment and not of hope and salvation. The one who died for the many was raised also for the many and ascended into heaven. This, too, must be regarded as part of his substitution. For in Jesus Christ risen there was introduced the new man who has his place with God and is heir to his eternal kingdom. As the one who has taken our place, Jesus Christ not only tasted death but entered into life, and where he now is there is a prepared place for those who are content to be found in him.

Meaning Of Substitution

But what is the meaning of substitution? Obviously, we must begin by considering its literal sense. It involves an exchange. One person (or sometimes “thing”) takes the place of, or replaces, another. In the case of a person, the one who replaces does something which the other perhaps ought to do but for some reason cannot. Traditionally, this has been seen almost exclusively in a penal context. Jesus Christ has taken the place on the cross which ought to have been occupied by the sinner. And this is a true and central part of the substitutionary work of the incarnate son, although, as we have seen, we must not isolate it from the complementary truths that he lived the life of righteousness which the sinner could not or would not live, and that he was raised to the new life to which the sinner as such could not be raised. The substitution of Jesus Christ did indeed involve his offering “a full, perfect, and sufficient sacrifice, oblation, and satisfaction for the sins of the whole world.”

Scope Of Substitution

It is not always asked, however, what is really involved in this substitution. It is one thing to conclude, as from one angle we may, that the taking up of the penalty of sin by Christ means its removal from us. But it has also to be realized that there can be no question here of “cheap grace,” since in its fuller and deeper sense a replacement means a displacement. The whole action is now undertaken by the substitute, and the one whom he replaces does not come into consideration at all except in the person of the one who acts in his name and stead. In relation to the substitution of Jesus Christ, this means that God’s dealings are now wholly and exclusively with the One who acts for the many. It is by him that the life of righteousness is lived, on him that the weight of judgment falls, and in him that the new man is introduced. Sinners themselves are, as it were, crowded out. Their place has been taken. They can have a part in the saving action of God only as they attach themselves to the one, identifying themselves in repentance, obedience and faith with his life and death and resurrection and entering into himself and his work in the place which he occupies for us. In this deep and serious sense substitution has no relationship whatever to the caricature of an artistic and rather dubious transaction.

On the contrary, it belongs to the very core of the Gospel in incarnation, reconciliation and redemption. And at the same time it confronts sinners with the whole comfort and challenge of the Gospel: the comfort, because we can be assured that if Christ has taken our place what is done in that place is well done; and the challenge, because unless and until we are in Christ we are “displaced persons” self-excluded from the gracious work of God.

Once we grasp the meaning of substitution, it is only a step to a realization of its scope. Nothing can be more disastrous than to reduce the vast sweep of the replacement which took place on Good Friday and Easter Day in his death and resurrection for sinners. Yet even in face of this great act of substitution the reaction of the sinner is to cling to a place for himself, or at any rate, to keep as much of a place for himself as possible. The Christian, for example, may acknowledge gratefully that Christ bore sin’s penalty, but as far as reason, personality, conduct, gifts, nature or calling are concerned, there is no real difference. He is still, as he thinks, in his place. He lives, speaks, acts and thinks as though Jesus Christ were not his substitute. Business is as usual.

But if Jesus Christ really lived, died and rose again, the one for the many, the old life of the many is rejected, judged, executed and removed in the one, being replaced by a new life. The natural and sinful reason is dead, and they now have the mind of the Lord their wisdom. The old nature of sin is dead, and they are raised up a new man with a new outlook, interests and capacities. Their old personality, gifts and conduct are nailed to the cross, and all things are made new.

This is not just an ideal. It is not just a pious hope. It is not just a theme of exhortation. It is the new fact, the true reality, of the situation; the divinely created fact and therefore the only one which really counts; the fact which we can know in this world only by faith; but the one real fact all the same, because it was accomplished by Jesus Christ and by him on our behalf and in our stead. The calling of Christians is simply to recognize, believe and live out this fact as that which in spite of all appearances to the contrary is their true and present reality in the one who took their place.

The Wider Sweep

There is also, of course, a wider sweep for the nature and life and activity and fellowship of the church, of which we cannot now speak in particular. For example, it gives the church its message, as the proclamation of accomplished new facts rather than religious theory or subjective experience. It gives the church its organization, as the body of those who are transformed according to the pattern of the servant. It gives the church its methods and resources, not as a worldly enterprise with human skills and personalities and plans but as a body of new men equipped with the gifts and graces of the Spirit. It gives the church its unity, not just a spiritual unity and certainly not a mere ideal unity or least of all a man-made and artificial unity, but the unity of those who are the one body of the one who took their place in death and resurrection, the unity of substitution which they are to accept and express as the real fact of its existence.

Seriously to reckon with substitution is indeed a daunting but a necessary and salutary business. We have only to survey Christians and Christian churches to see how little it is really believed and worked out even by those who protest it most loudly, let alone by those who have not even begun to try to understand it. In this deep and comprehensive sense, it demands the true repentance which is self-denial. It can be satisfied with no less than that we really are righteous because God counts us righteous in Jesus Christ. It really believes that the new life is the true life. It recognizes that every sin, every act of the old man, every acquiescence in being the old man, is a contradiction of its true essence. It has to take seriously that both individually and in company life has to be lived as that of the many who are crucified with Christ, so that the life which they now live they live by the faith of the Son of God who loved them and gave himself for them.

To what extent do we really believe and accept substitution? Do we really believe and accept it in any serious sense at all? The answer to these questions is not given in verbal protestations. It is given by the discipleship and renewal in which we genuinely acknowledge that there is no more place for us, that Jesus Christ has taken our place, and that our only place—but a true and eternal place—is now in him.

Preacher In Red

ON THE SAME TEAM

I was absent from my pastorate in Iowa when I received a long distance phone call from the funeral director that a lady in the community had died. Would I return in time to conduct the services? I agreed that I would.

Everything conspired against me at the last moment. I had a blowout. The spare I put on to replace it went flat on a nearly deserted road I had taken to save time. Finally the machine quit altogether. A farmer, whose wife was in town with their car, worked desperately to repair mine. At the very moment the service was to begin I was hurrying up the church steps past a harried undertaker. I went directly to the pulpit and had no opportunity to speak to anyone.

Several times during the brief sermon, I referred to the lady who had departed. Each time I mentioned her, I noticed a remarkable restlessness in the audience, accompanied by a good deal of whispering. After I had spoken several minutes, the mortician stepped quietly up behind me and whispered in my ear.

“Begging your pardon,” he spoke almost breathlessly, “But I think there is some mistake. Her husband is the one who died.”

That was the nearest I ever came to having a double funeral.—The Rev. ROBERT W. SHIELDS, 222 E. Delaware Place, Chicago, Illinois.

For each report by a minister of the Gospel of an embarrassing moment in his life, CHRISTIANITY TODAY will pay $5 (upon publication). To be acceptable, anecdotes must narrate factually a personal experience, and must be previously unpublished. Contributions should not exceed 250 words, should be typed double-spaced, and bear the writer’s name and address. Upon acceptance, such contributions become the property of CHRISTIANITY TODAY. Address letters to: Preacher in the Red, CHRISTIANITY TODAY, Suite 1014 Washington Building, Washington, D.C.

The Rev. G. W. Bromiley, rector of St. Thomas’ English Episcopal Church in Edinburgh, Scotland, holds the Ph.D. and D.Litt. degrees from University of Edinburgh. From 1946 to 1951 he was lecturer and vice-principal at Tyndale Hall, Bristol.

Cover Story

The Holy Spirit in the Gospels

Oddly enough, a study of the Holy Spirit in the Gospels introduces us to both the first and the last word of the New Testament concerning this doctrine. In the first three Gospels (called the Synoptic Gospels since their contents for the most part are held in common and can therefore be arranged in parallel columns on a page and “viewed together,” i.e., synoptically) the emphasis is primarily on the pre-pentecostal aspects of the Holy Spirit’s work in Jesus’ own life and mission. In the Fourth Gospel, on the other hand, the teaching, though drawn against the background of the earthly ministry, is anticipatory of the future pentecostal work of the Holy Spirit in believers. In the Synoptics the Old Testament idea of the Spirit is in process of fuller definition in the life of Jesus himself. In the Gospel of John the function of the Holy Spirit after Pentecost receives its definitive treatment in the New Testament.

The Synoptics And The Fourth Gospel

No serious study of the Holy Spirit in the Gospels can overlook this basic difference between the Synoptics and John. In the Synoptics it is the earthly Jesus who lives and fulfills his ministry in the power of the Holy Spirit; little is said of either the present or the future relation of the Holy Spirit to Jesus’ disciples. In John the situation is just the reverse; little is said of the Holy Spirit’s relation to the incarnate Jesus, while much is made of what the Holy Spirit’s coming will mean in the experience of Jesus’ disciples and the church.

This is not to say that these emphases are in any sense contradictory. Yet the witness of the Synoptics and that of the Fourth Gospel have often been set over against one another in contrast. Interpreters have spoken of the silence of the Synoptics regarding the Holy Spirit and then have questioned whether the ample references of John have any basis in historical fact. E. F. Scott, for example, bluntly concluded that since the Synoptics have little to say of the pentecostal work of the Holy Spirit in believers, Jesus could not have said what John attributes to him. E. K. Barrett’s scholarly work, The Holy Spirit in the Gospel Tradition, is written with this same general assumption.

This raises the problem of the relation of the Synoptics to John. The history of this problem in modern criticism reflects a wide variety of opinion and a great deal of inconclusiveness. Even evangelical thinking on the issue has been unstable. F. L. Godet, the nineteenth-century evangelical, convinced of the superior historical worth of John, spoke of the Fourth Gospel as supplementing and correcting the history of the Synoptics. The more common idea in the past, however, has been that the Synoptics are more historical, while John is more interpretative.

Current studies recognize that the interpretative element is not peculiar to John. Stress falls on the fact that none of the Gospels are mere biographies, but that the Synoptics as well as John were written as witnesses intending to elicit faith in Jesus as the Christ, the Son of God.

Current study also stresses that the Fourth Gospel is of more historical value than once was supposed. Writers of no less prominence than Vincent Taylor, E. C. Hoskyns and W. F. Howard argue for the historicity of the Johannine teaching concerning the Holy Spirit. They show that the Synoptics leave room for and even prepare the way for the Johannine emphasis (e.g., Matt. 10:20; Mark 13:11; Luke 12:12; 24:49). Thus the essential unity of the different emphases of these two sections of the New Testament writings increasingly is being recognized.)

The Teaching Of The Synoptics

The Earthly Jesus as the Bearer of the Holy Spirit. Critical scholarship, preoccupied with the problem of the alleged silence of the Synoptics regarding the Holy Spirit, tends to obscure the real contribution they make to the doctrine. The burden of the Synoptic teaching is that Jesus fulfills his earthly ministry in the possession and power of the Holy Spirit.

In making this emphasis the Synoptics draw heavily on the Old Testament, where a central place is given to the Spirit in Israel’s eschatological hope. Israel longs for the day when the Spirit will be permanently and universally outpoured. In contrast to Old Testament leaders, who experienced the Spirit only provisionally, there is the promise of the shoot of the stem of Jesse on whom the Spirit will remain (Isa. 11:2). This permanent endowment of the Messiah with the Spirit is particularly prominent in the Servant prophecies: “Behold my servant whom I uphold; … I have put my Spirit upon him; … He shall not fail nor be discouraged” (Isa. 42:1–4; cf. 62:1, 2). The Synoptics interpret this hope as fulfilled in Jesus (Luke 4:18; Matt. 12:18).

Conservatives have neglected the Synoptic emphasis, possibly because it appears to detract from Christ’s essential deity. If his power is mediated by the Spirit, then is he really the Son of God? That this is not a real problem is evident from the fact that the earliest of the Synoptics, Mark, makes a special point at the outset of his Gospel of the close connection between Jesus’ unique Sonship and his special anointing with the Holy Spirit.

Mark commences, “The beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God” (1:1). First he takes up the ministry of the Baptist, stressing particularly that he fulfills the Old Testament prophecy of a way preparer. Once introduced, the Baptist predicts concerning the coming Messiah, “He shall baptize you with the Holy Spirit” (1:8). Thus the Son of God as Messiah is linked with the age of the Spirit which he inaugurates.

In the account of Jesus’ baptism (1:10, 11), this connection between Sonship and the Spirit is even more explicit. Here, as G. S. Hendry suggests in The Holy Spirit in Christian Theology, the stress is not on the descent of the Holy Spirit, but on the manifestation of Jesus both as anointed by the Spirit and as Son. It is not that Jesus had previously been without the Spirit, nor that he was not the Son until the baptism. But now, as he inaugurates his public ministry, these facts are revealed.

Mark says that after the baptism the Holy Spirit drove Jesus into the wilderness to be tempted by Satan (1:11; in Luke 4:1, 14, the Spirit’s role is more fully described). There is nothing here of a docetic Christ who had no real moral victories to win. Instead, the ethical reality of Jesus’ special sonship is seen precisely at this point: Jesus is the unique possessor of the Holy Spirit.

Mark 3:7–30, one of the central passages of the Gospel, stresses this still further. Here Jesus’ power over the unclean spirits wrings from them the confession that he is the Son of God. Then Jesus withdraws from the multitudes for the ordaining of the twelve, that he might send them out to preach and to cast out devils. Later, scribes from Jerusalem charge that Jesus casts out demons because he is demon-possessed. Jesus responds by asking, “How can Satan cast out Satan?” and asserts that he has already bound Satan (in the wilderness temptation experience?) and is now spoiling his house. But, most significant, verses 29, 30 teach that to attribute to Satan Jesus’ power over demons is unforgivable blasphemy against the Holy Spirit. Why is this so? Obviously because Jesus casts out demons in the power of the Spirit (Matt. 12:28; cf. also Luke 4:18; Matt. 12:18). Jesus reveals not only the hidden depths of the more-than-human struggle in which he is engaged, but also the fact that his power as the Messiah is the power of the Holy Spirit.

Matthew and Luke trace the relation between the Spirit and Jesus’ special sonship back further than Mark, by recounting Jesus’ miraculous conception by the Holy Spirit and his virgin birth. It is not necessary to set Mark over against Matthew and Luke in a contradictory manner, as criticism does when it suggests that the story of the miraculous conception is suspect since Mark does not mention it. The argument from silence must always be the weakest sort of argument. Suffice it to say that one whose public life is as unique as is the life of the Son of God portrayed by Mark must have been miraculously conceived, as recorded by Matthew and Luke. Conception by the Holy Spirit fits a life uniquely endued with the Holy Spirit.

These references do not exhaust the Synoptic teaching, but they do mark out its main emphasis, which is also supported by the rest of the New Testament (Acts 10:38; Rom. 8:11; Heb. 9:14). Jesus, the anointed of God, is the unique possessor of the Holy Spirit. Before the Holy Spirit is poured out at Pentecost, he is first defined by the life and mission of the incarnate Jesus. Hereafter the Holy Spirit is known as the Spirit of Christ. For believers Christ-likeness and the power of the Spirit have now become synonymous.

The Teaching Of The Fourth Gospel

The Glorified Christ as the Bestower of the Holy Spirit. In the Fourth Gospel, although there are suggestive references to the earthly Jesus as the bearer of the Holy Spirit (1:32, 33; 3:34; 6:63), the emphasis falls on the glorified Christ as the one who bestows the Holy Spirit on his followers. Two passages are of special importance.

In John 7:37–39 Jesus stands on the last day of the Feast of the Tabernacles to offer living water to those who believe. John then explains editorially that Jesus is referring to the Holy Spirit whom believers were yet to receive as the gift of the glorified Christ. The association of ideas here is important; the living water, the Holy Spirit and Pentecost are explicitly connected. This throws light on Jesus’ interview with Nicodemus in John 3, where Jesus speaks of being born of the Spirit and of water; on the interview with the Samaritan woman in John 4, where he speaks of the living water and of worship in spirit and in truth; and on the discourse on Jesus as the living bread in John 6. In each of these instances Jesus’ teaching is projected forward to experiences that were realized by believers only after Pentecost.

John’s climactic teaching is in the great Farewell Discourse, chapters 14–16. In this discourse, delivered in the upper room on the eve of the crucifixion, and recorded only by John, there are five sayings relating to the work of the Holy Spirit: 14:16, 17; 14:25, 26; 15:26, 27; 16:5–11; and 16:12–15. Two distinctively Johannine terms for the Holy Spirit are used in these passages: the Paraclete (or Helper) and the Spirit of truth. These terms, taken in context, constitute the clearest teaching in the New Testament of the personality of the Holy Spirit as the third person of the Trinity.

In these Paraclete sayings, it is the glorified Christ who sends the Spirit, and the mission of the Holy Spirit when he comes is to guide believers into the truth as it is in Christ. Jesus speaks of the “yet many things” that he would say to the disciples, but explains that he cannot say them at the time because they are not yet able to receive them (16:13). He promises that the Holy Spirit will speak these things when he comes.

G. S. Hendry describes the work of the Paraclete in declaring the things of Christ as “unoriginal” and as “reproductive” only. But the best commentary on what Jesus did mean is the New Testament itself, for the New Testament is the record of the Paraclete’s work in leading the disciples into the truth of Christ. Even a cursory comparison of the parabolic and incomplete teaching of Jesus before his death with the clear, ample and discursive witness of the New Testament writings indicates that the work of the Spirit of truth is inadequately described as a reproduction, which is too suggestive of a mere remembrance of a departed Christ.

Jesus’ promise of the Paraclete has a further application which pertains to all believers. It suggests that the truth as it is in Christ, and as witnessed in the New Testament, has the dimension of the Spirit, i.e., that it remains ever new and that we never exhaust it by our interpretations. The living Christ continues to speak to believers and to his churches through the Scriptures by the Holy Spirit.

If the neglect of the Synoptic emphasis on the earthly Jesus as the unique possessor of the Spirit has been costly in inadequate Christological formulations, and in the failure, as in Pentecostal sects, to define the Holy Spirit in terms of his relation to Jesus Christ, how tragic has been the neglect of the Johannine stress on the Spirit of truth as the gift of the glorified Christ. Our present ignorance and impotence are no proof that Jesus has not sent the Holy Spirit as he promised, but they are proof of our neglect of the Spirit. How much there is yet that the living Christ would speak through the Word by the Paraclete!

W. Boyd Hunt has been Professor of Theology at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Fort Worth, since 1953. After teaching on the Seminary faculty from 1944–46, he became pastor of the large First Baptist Church of Houston from 1946–53, and then he returned to the campus. He holds the A.B. degree from Wheaton College and the Th.D. degree from Southwestern. He is author of Sixteen to One, a missions study book.

Theology

Review of Current Religious Thought: March 18, 1957

In the numerous periodicals read in preparation for this column, we found one sequence of articles to be among the most interesting and easily the most significant. We refer to Professor James R. Branton’s “Our Present Situation in Biblical Theology” and its several replies. Religion in Life (winter 1956–57) had the liberally-inclined Millar Burrows and the Barthian-inclined James D. Smart and Robert McAfee Brown respond to this lead article. Together these four articles provide something of a mosaic of the non-orthodox or nonconservative or non-creedal or non-evangelical or non-fundamental, or whatever term you use, theology of our day. Their importance is so great that we give the whole column over to a summary of this discussion.

Colgate-Rochester Seminary Professor Branton first speaks of the liberal developments of the last century which listed Harnack and Bacon among its champions and interpreted Christ as merely a social reformer. Albert Schweitzer later pointed out that the liberal school had overlooked some historical aspects of Jesus such as his consuming interest in eschatology. This “new biblical approach moved onto the stage, and accused the older of posing as objective, but of actually being so culturally bound as to involve more eisegesis (reading teachings into the Bible) than exegesis (bring out the Bible’s own teaching).” Barth and Brunner followed this new approach to the Bible itself, trusting its message versus the dictates of culture and reason. G. Ernest Wright, C. H. Dodd and Rudolph Bultmann are also cited as part of this movement which “has placed the Bible back in the center of our thoughts” and made faith, not reason, the faculty by which it is understood and its unity, rather than its diversity, of teaching, a chief characteristic. “For several years now the Old Testament and the New Testament scholars have fallen into step with this school of thought.”

Times are now changing, Branton continues. “But by now this popular revival of biblical theology is itself calling for a serious evaluation. Indeed it has been weighed in the balances of some competent scholarship and, like the liberalism it repudiated, it too has been found wanting.” Professor Branton urges the following criticisms: 1., “It has lost its real rootage in history”; 2., is guilty of some poor exegesis; 3., often approaches the Bible with its own idea of biblical unity; 4., has overworked the mythological idea in the Bible; 5., found a kernel of doctrine in the message (kerygma) of the church that was not always there; 6., did not ground its Christology in sufficient history; 7., has a tendency to cut the nerve of ethics by the knife of theology; 8., has a wild growth of subjectivism; 9., has an “exaggerated emphasis upon eschatology.”

“Already there are signs that the needed changes are on the way. Oscar Cullman in Time Magazine (May 2, 1955) says that ‘there is a trend away from Barth … and there is a tendency on the Continent, as in the United States, toward neo-liberalism in theology.’ ”

A statement to the same effect by Harvard’s Amos Wilder is cited in which we find an interesting contrast between neo-orthodox and orthodox Christology, both of which Wilder rejects: “ ‘The Man Christ Jesus preached by the neo-orthodox is a kind of symbol X, an unknown entity—Christ is preached but it is unreality. The old orthodoxy preaches Christ, a supernatural figure, God himself—’ and neither is biblical.” (We cannot help noting in passing that orthodoxy has not merely affirmed Christ to be God, but equally emphatically has affirmed his humanity.)

Branton then suggests some necessary features of the new emerging theology. It must be thoroughly scientific. It cannot have preconceived notions and see systems where they do not exist. It must not live on an island of irrationality.

In our opinion, Professor Branton politelv kissed neo-orthodoxy good-bye. Yale’s Professor Burrows must have thought the same thing: “Let me say first that I am in complete sympathy with his (Branton’s) main position and applaud his vigorous statement of it.” He proceeds to mention various criticisms, the most interesting of which is this: “The only thing wrong with it (the older liberalism)—was that it did not go far enough. The remedy was to go all the way, not go back again to the beginning.”

Dr. James D. Smart (formerly Editor-in-chief of The New Curriculum for the Presbyterian [U.S.A.] Board of Christian Education) spoke for the theological viewpoint which Branton had described as on its way out. Branton’s position, as Smart sees it, is plain liberalism.

Branton would be justified in rejecting the new orthodoxy, he concedes, if it were guilty of all the sins Branton lays at its door. But Branton was battling a man of straw. “Any use of the term ‘biblical theology’ should take account of the wide variety of phenomena that are to be included within it.” Branton has viewed only one phase. Smart then cites a Jew, a Jesuit, an Anglican and others who are examples of “biblical theologians.”

Dr. Smart criticizes the oversimplifications of Branton’s account of the rise of biblical theology. He then retells the whole story with much more detail and comes to the conclusion that the new theology was not a break away from the old but the adding of a new dimension, the insistence that the Bible scholar had to be a theologian as well as, not in lieu of, being a research scientist. This functioning as a theologian was what led to the discovery of unity in the Bible. “A science that had eyes only for the human phenomena of religion had lost the clue to the unity of Scripture. On the purely human level nothing could be found except the widest diversity. But a science that approached the Scriptures as the record of both divine revelation and human religion began to hear one voice in both Testaments.…”

Union Seminary’s Robert McAfee Brown’s “Is There ‘Biblical Theology’ ” throws its weight, very cautiously, on Smart’s side. He questions the assumption that there is a biblical theology in the Bible and the wisdom of asking the Presbyterian ordained, “Do you sincerely receive and adopt the Confession of Faith of this church as containing the system of doctrine taught in the Holy Scriptures?” His comment on this shows the uneasy conscience of such thinkers in conservative denominations: “There are ways by which this question can be answered in the affirmative but the lurking sense of inquiet remains unstilled in many a Presbyterian heart: ‘is Scripture really for the purpose of giving us a system of doctrine?’ ” He refers to (but does not attempt to prove) the “breakdown of fundamentalism” which believed there was such a system of doctrines taught in the Bible. Disposing thus lightly of the traditional orthodox position of the church, Dr. Brown seeks to find some other type of biblical theology.

The problem of authenticating of the Bible is the central problem. Brown considers three answers. First, there is the “encounter” test of the Bible (Brunner). When the Bible speaks to me it is the Word of God. When reading it I have an encounter with God: I know it is God’s Word.

But Brown seems to be disturbed by Tillich’s criticism of this “encounter” view that it leaves no room for the fact of despair about the meaning of life. Tillich suggests “absolute faith” which has no special content. Brown, seeming very unsure of himself, “hopes” that this “contendess faith” can contain the “God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.”

Third, there is Reinhold Niebuhr’s notion of “self-authenticating” faith. This turns out to be the self-authenticating faith in parts of the Bible only. And what parts? Well, it seems to depend entirely on the individual whose faith it is. The slaying of the Amalekites, the Second Coming of Christ, for example, cannot be authenticated, according to Brown, who seems not to know that there are millions of people who think they can. Dr. Brown quaintly concludes: “in other words, there is certainly a high degree of discrimination involved in selecting those elements of the biblical perspective which we find to be self-authenticating.” Brown tries to escape the charge of complete subjectivism by saying that men learn something from some of the hard passages of the Bible too.

Still trying to escape this trap of subjectivism, or more accurately, trying to extricate himself from it, Dr. Brown introduces what he calls the principles of the Reformers. The first is the testimony of the Holy Spirit and the second is the doctrine of the Word. The Word turns out to be only the Incarnate Word, Jesus Christ, “the Word within words.” Acceptance of the words as authentic is bibliolatry, he says. So the reliance on Christ apart from the authority of the words of the Bible is still pure subjectivism in which anyone can make Christ what he pleases.

And the testimony of the Holy Spirit, independently of the words of the Bible, is pure subjectivism in which anyone can make the Holy Spirit what he pleases. So, we say sadly, all those who would reject the Bible theology, which has been historically expressed in the creeds of Christendom, must end up as Brown does, with no “authenticated” saving theology at all.

Books

Book Briefs: March 18, 1957

Biblical Preaching

Protestant Preaching in Lent, by Harold J. Ockenga. Eerdmans, Grand Rapids. $3.95.

The spiritual vitality and fruitfulness of Boston’s famed Park Street Church are undoubtedly traceable to a number of factors. Certainly among the chief of these elements would be the priority given here to the foreign missionary enterprise and the program of solid biblical preaching which is characteristic of this pulpit. The book under review provides a good taste of what this congregation is fed, and in that respect gives us a fresh insight into the importance and the possibilities of the preaching ministry in any church.

Dr. Ockenga is convinced that we Protestants do not make enough of Lent, in the sense of using this season to direct the minds of men toward the meaning of the passion of our Lord. For twenty-five years he has devoted the Lenten season, and especially Holy Week, to series of sennons dealing with Christ and his Cross, and in the current volume, he presents seven such series, of varying lengths. Obviously, the complete sermons are not given here, but on the other hand, neither are these brief outlines. The substance of each sermon is here, together with some of the illustrative material. In addition, each series is prefaced by an introduction, which in some cases gives suggestions as to other sermon themes which might be developed under the same general topic.

This is careful, thoughtful preaching, thoroughly based in the Word. (Many of the sermons preached today in evangelical pulpits are doctrinally sound, yet lack a strong biblical foundation.) Dr. Ockenga’s work shows all the marks of thorough study. His outlines are helpful, and they consistently present a logical development of thought. A whole series of messages on Isaiah 53 comes out of a careful exegesis of the Hebrew text. On occasion, he takes a phrase of Scripture and allows it to be the starting point or the presentation of an important biblical doctrine. An example of this is his sermon on the Kingdom of God, based on the text “Art Thou a King?”

These presentations of scriptural truth are scholarly, but in no sense academic, in the unfavorable sense of that term. Dr. Ockenga is preaching to the needs of his congregation and he is ever insisting on a human response to Divine truth.

The book commends itself for devotional reading, but it should have a further ministry in quickening pastors and other Christian leaders to a more thorough study of the Book, and a more adequate presentation of its truths.

H. L. FENTON, JR.

Lenten Sermons

The Seven Words Front the Cross, Ralph G. Turnbull. Baker, 1956. $1.50.

This compact volume of sermons under the headings of Forgiveness, Assurance, Comfort, Desolation, Suffering, Triumph and Committal contains much source material of value to preachers and teachers. The outlines are homiletically correct and reveal considerable originality and imagination. “The Word of Suffering,” for example, is developed around three simple but striking points: it was Natural; it was Unnatural; and it was Supernatural. Strongly doctrinal in its orientation, the volume abounds in telling illustrations. Certainly the author leaves no doubt as to his own understanding and appreciation of the historic Christian faith. Yet the volume leaves something to be desired from the point of view of finished expression of these ideas. At times Dr. Turnbull’s sentence structure is rather choppy and his choice of words not too discriminating. Greater precision of expression might have enhanced the book’s worth, though the sermons were obviously prepared to be preached rather than read.

ERIC EDWARD POULSON

Antithesis

Speculation in Pre-Christian Philosophy, by Richard Kroner. Westminster. $5.75.

This is the first of three volumes in which Professor Richard Kroner, lately of Union Seminary, now at Temple University, will attempt to explain the entire history of philosophy on the basis of an antithesis between impersonal, objective speculation and practical, personal revelation.

While this antithesis at first sight seems eminently applicable to medieval philosophy, one wonders whether it can contribute to the understanding of the Greek period.

In defense of the thesis that Greek philosophy is a compound of speculation and revelation, Kroner begins with the somewhat enthusiastic assertion that Thales’ speculation is “an analogue to the revealed truth on which Christian thinkers later relied” (p. 10).

After Thales, “from the perspective of the relation between revelation and speculation it is of supreme importance that Anaximander, though on the level of cosmotheism or pantheism, thus approached the biblical conception of the Supreme Being. He anticipated what the Bible and Christian theology mean by the infinite” (p. 83).

Here Kroner tries to argue that Anaximander’s Infinite is not something potential, but a mysterious Actual; and that the ordinary interpretation which views the boundless simply as the reservoir of physical stuff out of which our cosmos developed, “as if only the language were imaginative … is extremely arbitrary and ‘unscientific’ ” (p. 85). Yet the doxographical material supports the usual interpretation, as does the matrix of pre-Socratic philosophy from which it comes. Even if Anaximander’s boundless were infinite in space (a view against which Cornfed has raised sober objections), and still more if the boundless is infinite in the sense of having no definite quality, it would be hard to see any resemblance to the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.

When further it is said that the stories about Socrates (drinking the rest of the crowd under the table?) “immediately put us in mind of the gospel stories” (p. 133), one is reminded of the Platonic thesis in the Phaedo that that which stimulates the memory need have no resemblance to what is remembered. Here Kroner has given himself over to pure impressionism; and his other assertion that “all historians of philosophy agree that he (Socrates) is the greatest figure in the history of philosophy” (p. 151) is simply false.

A number of times Kroner modifies his first breath-taking statements. “Socrates was a Greek anticipation and counterpart of Jesus Christ” (p. 133); but then adds, “the difference between the Son of God and the Athenian … is so enormous that it makes any comparison absurd and ridiculous.” Quite so! And therefore his prior assertion is absurd and ridiculous.

The constant aim seems to be to picture Greek philosophy and the Christian Gospel as essentially the same. In one place it almost seems as if the New Testament contributed nothing to Christianity. “In Philo, Greek speculation and biblical revelation met … The whole movement of pre-Christian speculation, directed toward a more holy and ethical conception of the divine being than that offered by Greek religion, culminated and terminated in this great event …” And Kroner refers with evident approval to another author who held that “without Philo there would be no Irenaeus, Athanasius.…” Again, “He taught that the ideas are the thoughts of the living God.… Through this simple device Philo threw a bridge across the chasm dividing two spiritual spheres” (p. 237–238).

Aside from the fact that in these lines Kroner denies that Plotinus and Neoplatonism are the culmination and termination of Greek philosophy, this interpretation not only ignores the New Testament as a prerequisite for Athanasius, but it also minimizes the role of the Old Testament for Philo. It pictures Philo’s philosophy as arising, not altogether, but predominantly out of Greek themes. This is most clear in what I take to be a serious failure to grasp the significance of Philo’s making the ideas thoughts of God. This is no superficial transformation of Platonism, no simple device to bridge a narrow chasm.

In the Euthyphro when piety is defined as that which is dear to the gods, Plato asks, Are pious things pious because they are dear to the gods, or are they dear to the gods because they are pious? Now, it is not surprising that Plato chose the second alternative, but it is extremely instructive to note that he does not bother in the least to give a single reason for rejecting the first. Usually Plato gives reasons for rejecting a proposal; but not here. Does this not indicate that Plato was unable even to conceive of a God on whose will morality depends? Instead of a God who legislates, Plato could conceive only of a God subordinate to independent laws.

Philo therefore, rather than having been the culmination of a tendency already in paganism, broke completely with its deepest convictions and insisted on the totally different biblical conceptions of sovereignty and transcendence. No doubt there are similarities between Philo and Plato or the Stoics; but they are superficial. (Cf. my Thales to Dewey, pp. 183–210.)

But perhaps the major defect of the book is its hazy notion of revelation. Kroner’s characterizations are as follows: “Revelation is the work of God; the truth of revelation is practical, personal, and indemonstrable; God does not incline himself to man in order to inform him, but to command, advise, and redeem; such divine actions do not provide theological information; theological information is incompatible with the true relationship between the Creator and the creature.”

These representations partly depend on an incomplete disjunction and partly on a neglect of biblical themes. Of course it is true that God commands and redeems; but this is not incompatible with his giving information to man. When God said to Abraham, “Thou shalt be a father of many nations,” it was information; and when John wrote, “the World was made flesh,” it was information. Now, it may be true that God’s redemptive acts do not of themselves inform; but in addition to the act God has provided us with its explanation. ‘Christ died’ is the act, but ‘for our sins’ is the informative theology. Far from theological information being incompatible with the true relationship to our Creator and Redeemer, this true relationship is impossible without a minimum of information; and the more the better. Like the Athenians we cannot worship an unknown God.

Existential anti-intellectualism is no contribution to Christianity or to Greek philosophy, either.

GORDON H. CLARK

Careful Scholarship

The Life of Our Lord upon the Earth, by Samuel J. Andrews. Zondervan, Grand Rapids. $5.95.

The sub-title of this volume gives an accurate summary of its contents—“considered in its historical, chronological, and geographical relations.” Students of the life of Christ have long treasured this work of careful scholarship. This printing makes use of the revision done by Andrews in 1891. It contains a new feature, a biographical introduction by Wilbur M. Smith which puts readers for the first time in possession of information about a man who deserves to be more widely known. Dr. Smith makes the observation that this is the only scholarly life of Christ produced by an American.

Andrews was well acquainted with continental and British literature in the field, as his bibliography amply attests. His revision necessitated the consideration of a vast amount of material which had appeared in the thirty years which had intervened since the first edition was published. This was carefully appraised and sifted. One must not get the impression that the work is a mere compilation of diverse scholarly viewpoints. The considered judgment of the author is regularly brought forward and presented with modesty and discretion.

The question will inevitably be raised as to the wisdom of printing once more a book which is now more than half a century old. But the truth is that no recent book does for the reader what Andrews does, for modern works are concerned for the most part either with questions of critical methodology or with details of the narrative. Andrews provides a factual, comprehensive approach, with special help in the area of chronology (the book begins with an essay on this subject). With the aid of this volume one is in far better position to evaluate the modern works, for he will understand the basic problems of the text.

EVERETT F. HARRISON

Sources Of Power

Six Mighty Men, by W. J. Smart. Macmillan. $2.00.

Every minister and witnessing Christian longs to experience the life-changing power of God in his life and service, yet all too many of us are conscious of the lack of spiritual power in our running to and fro in the name of Christian service. What is the secret of being effectually and powerfully used by God?

In these short biographies, W. J. Smart has sought to point his finger clearly at the spiritual secret of the passion and power of six men whom God has used in a mighty way. Declaring his aim in the preface, the author says, “My aim in this book has been to catch the passion of the six men about whom I have written, and to locate, as far as possible, the secret of their power and their message for today.”

Lest we fall into the error of longing for the good old days or into the modern mood of seeking something entirely new and different, the lives of these six outstanding evangelicals span the past century. Whether we look at George Mueller, Dwight L. Moody, Hudson Taylor and Samuel Chadwick of the past or at Hugh Redwood and Billy Graham in the present—the answer is basically and fundamentally the same for God does not change.

Variety of calling is seen here—a missionary, two evangelists, a founder of an orphan’s home, a teacher and a newspaper man—but the principles and passion for Christian service are the same. Will these principles work today? These lives remind us that they will as long as the Holy Spirit works to keep the promises of God, and the spirit of God will always work to supply material and spiritual needs when out of earnest, believing hearts anyone seeks to do what God wants him to do.

These biographies are too short to tell much about the lives and labors of these men. If we want that we must turn to other sources. These stories are told with a minimum of well chosen words yet with a maximum of piercing insight focused on their sources of power. What is told of their lives is realistic, free from excessive overstatement, in good taste and characterized by an authentic note.

In our day, masses of people are giving attention to religion yet so many of them do not know what it means when they hear talk about people being surrendered and powerfully used. This small book of 151 pages would be very helpful for general reading by these people or for use as the basis of devotional talks to any small groups.

W. G. FOSTER

New Life

Christian Maturity, by Richard C. Halverson. Cowman, Los Angeles. $2.50.

This is a devotional essay addressed to all that is shallow and superficial in the church and in Christians; a plea that we let our religion “grow up.” In his foreword, Louis H. Evans describes it as a “thrilling answer” to the frustrated longing of multitudes on the spiritual frontier for a Christianity which will bring real power.

The author declares that he is not writing for those outside the fellowship of the Christian faith but to those who, though belonging and participating, may be “fed up” with their inadequate apprehension of those resources which they had expected to offer much more than they are getting. He begins by suggesting that there are—within evangelical circles, indeed—many who are “frankly bored with it all. Their Christian experience has worn thin, the spontaneity is gone, Jesus Christ himself is unreal most of the time, the lift and thrust of a new life has vanished.”

That, we must say, is quite a beginning. And if there is a major flaw in this book (which does not really suffer for having such a flaw) it is that the author does not, after all, address himself to the condition he describes, but rather to the original longing of any life without Christ. It is one thing to point out that “new life” in which there is a stirring “lift and thrust;” it is another to write to those in whose new life the lift and thrust has vanished. The author does the former. And he does it well.

The answer to any inadequate spiritual experience, explains Mr. Halverson, lies altogether in opening the door of one’s life to Christ. Spiritual growth involves progressively opening hitherto unyielded areas of the life over which Jesus Christ must be given control. If the emphasis be put on the imitation of Jesus, he continues, then let it be put upon the central control of his life, not the outward effects. Receive Christ, yield to Christ, walk in Christ. This is spiritual maturity.

This book is a delightful treatment of the golden promises of the Gospel, especially as these may be contrasted with any approach to religion which seeks the answer in anything man can do for himself or anything which can be found anywhere but in Christ. It is the kind of book of which a busy pastor wishes he had more to put into the hands of confused and hungry people.

G. AIKEN TAYLOR

Careful Exposition

Studies in the Book of Jonah, by James Hardee Kennedy. Broadman, Nashville. $1.75.

Dr. Kennedy, who is professor of Old Testament and Hebrew at the New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, has written this book out of the conviction that “for many serious and capable students of the Bible, Jonah offers a study of distractions. Engrossing questions bring positive teaching into eclipse and side issues become dominant” (p. XII). As a result, the author’s paramount concern has been to present the basic teachings of this Old Testament book and to show their relevance for Christian living. He has been eminently successful in accomplishing this aim.

Dr. Kennedy is thoroughly familiar with the various interpretations of Jonah, and he does not hesitate to quote scholars whose point of view differs with his own. But he is thoroughly convinced that here we have a trustworthy historical narrative that has much to say for our own day. His book is a good example of how a careful exposition of the Word of God may meet the needs of the people in the world.

The author has a real gift for sensing the underlying significance of each section of the book. In bringing forth these truths, he does not hesitate to introduce elements of exegesis of the Hebrew text, and while not every preacher will be able to follow him in the fine points of Hebrew grammar, all will appreciate his thoroughness. Many a pastor could learn much from Dr. Kennedy about how to present the Old Testament in the context of the twentieth century. Many a layman will find here that which feeds his own soul and stimulates his further thinking concerning timeless truth.

HORACE L. FENTON, JR.

China News: March 18, 1957

Voice From Within

Foreign churches in Red China are “doomed … because the Reds have their own brand of religion which ignores God.”

These words were spoken recently in Hong Kong by an American woman after her arrival from Shanghai on a British freighter.

The woman, Mrs. Juanita Byrd Huang, formerly a missionary of the Southern Baptist Convention, said her husband, a businessman, arrived in Hong Kong a month earlier. She was free to leave 18 months ago but waited until her husband was safely out of the country.

Mrs. Huang, 53, said she had been in China since 1929, when she was commissioned by the Southern Baptist Convention for evangelistic work in the Shanghai area. This continued uninterrupted until her marriage in 1946.

She reported that she had taught English at St. John’s University and Shanghai University until these schools were “reorganized” by the communists.

‘Forced To Confess’

(The following item is taken from a sermon preached by the Rev. Robert W. Young, North Presbyterian Church, Pittsburgh—ED.)

I remember seeing Dr. Albert Einstein walking Princeton’s streets as a refugee from Germany. He said, “Being a lover of freedom, when the revolution came to Germany, I looked to the universities to defend it, knowing that they always boasted of their devotion to the cause of truth; but no, the universities were silenced.

“Then I looked to the great editors of the newspapers, whose flaming editorials in days gone by had proclaimed their love of freedom, but they, like the universities, were silenced in a few short weeks.…

“Only the church stood squarely across the path of Hitler’s campaign for suppressing truth. I never had any special interest in the church before, but now I felt a great affection and admiration because the church alone had the courage and persistence to stand for intellectual truth and moral freedom. I am forced to confess that what I once despised I now praise unreservedly.”

Digest …

► Methodist Church to build $4,000,000 theological seminary near Delaware, Ohio.… Southern Baptists contribute average of more than $1,000,000 daily during 1956 for all-time high in total giving of $372,136,675.

► Station WBKB, Chicago affiliate of ABC, to show “Martin Luther” on April 23.… Msgr. Edward M. Burke, chancellor of the Chicago Roman Catholic archdiocese, denies that archdiocese in any way responsible for same film being cancelled by WGN-TV last December.

► Three-and-half acre hotel property, with private ocean beach, acquired in Carlsbad, Calif., as home for aged by Lutheran Services, Inc., of San Diego. Purchase price, $450,000.

► Bill proposing to make Ten Commandments part of Arizona law introduced by Rep. L. S. Adams (D-Phoenix). Other 20 volumes of laws meaningless without Ten Commandments, he says.… Wheaton College hosts seventh annual Theological Conference May 3, with “Eschatology for Today” as theme.

► Dr. John R. Cunningham, president of Davidson College since 1941 and former moderator of Presbyterian Church in U. S. (Southern), named first executive director of Presbyterian Foundation. He will resign college post September 1.

Worth Quoting

“We need Bible-saturated preachers, whose very manner of life is involved in the language of Scripture.”—Dr. Dale Moody, Professor of Theology, Southern Baptist Seminary, Louisville, Ky.

“All originality and no plagiarism makes many a dull sermon.”—Dr. J. D. Grey, First Baptist Church, New Orleans, La.

CHRISTIANITY TODAYis a subscriber to Religious News Service, Evangelical Press Service and Washington Religious Report Newsletter.

South America News: March 18, 1957

Auca Flights

Men armed only with the Gospel are again flying over the jungles of Ecuador where five young missionaries were slain last year by the Auca Indians, according to the Rev. Harvey R. Bostrom.

Mr. Bostrom has headed missionary work of the Christian and Missionary Alliance in Ecuador for 12 years. He predicted that the barrier of savagery built by the Aucas would be broken down.

“Missionaries are again flying over the Auca district dropping gifts,” he said. “But it will take time to gain their confidence. One missionary, his wife and child are living on the rim of the jungle inhabited by the Aucas. This family has not been molested.”

Mr. Bostrom headed base operations for the party that entered the jungle and recovered the bodies of the martyred five.

The Alliance leader said there were two theories as to why the Aucas had turned from apparent friendliness toward the missionaries and had become bitterly hostile.

“One theory is that the Aucas wanted to present a young girl to the missionaries as a gift,” he said. “The girl, a woman and a tribesman had spent a day with the missionaries, radio messages from the mission band had indicated. When the proffer was refused, it may be that the Aucas became infuriated.

“The other theory is that the Aucas became convinced the missionary party, bearing camp equipment, was setting up permanent quarters. The Aucas may have feared a trick.”

Mr. Bostrom said the martyrdom of the five young men had proved a great stimulus to mission work.

Continent News: March 18, 1957

Important Event

For the first time in Italian history, the government-sponsored broadcasting system recognized the event when Italian Protestants celebrated the 109th “emancipation” anniversary of the Waldensians.

The Waldensians, offspring of the medieval revival led by Peter Valdo (CHRISTIANITY TODAY, October 29, 1956), were held in a condition of subjection for centuries. But on February 17, 1848, King Carlo Alberto of Piedmont enacted the so-called “Patent Letters of Emancipation of the Waldensians.”

Commemoration of the date for religious freedom in Italy took place in the major Waldensian Church in Rome. It was packed to capacity.

Special speakers were the Reverend Guido Comba, a Waldensian; the Reverend Manfredi Ronchi, a Baptist; and Dr. Sante U. Barbieri, Bishop of the Conference of Latin America Methodist Church and one of the Presidents of the World Council of Churches.

Mr. Ronchi said the Italian Constitution clearly provides a wide degree of religious freedom but that cases of intolerance still occur. “We must persevere in the defence of religious freedom because it is fundamental to human dignity,” he added.

—R.T.

Britain News: March 18, 1957

Lectures In Belfast

Anglicanism was described as “the true and natural development of primitive Christianity” by Dr. J. C. W. Wand, former Bishop of London, in a series of lectures at Queen’s University in Belfast.

Speaking of the comprehensiveness of the Church of England, Dr. Wand, a noted theologian of the “High Church” school, said the rising generation wanted clear and definite dogmatic statements in religion, and that a strain of Puritanism often combined with a High Church view of the church and ministry. He said, in his opinion, the existence of parties in the Church was the salvation of Anglicanism as Anglicanism and that tension always existed where truth was strongly held.

He referred to the massive contribution of Anglican scholars—Lightfoot, Westcott and Hort—to New Testament scholarship, but said difficulty was faced in producing adequate scholars in the Old Testament.

“Anglican piety,” he added, “did not aim very high, but neither did it sink very low. It did not exhibit emotionalism, and moved over a long level road rather than one which mounted steeply.”

A Little Help

The Congregational Union reports that a determined attempt will be made to raise the stipends of ministers in Britain’s 3,000 Congregational churches.

Out of 1,300 ministers, 353 are on basic salaries of $1,050. This will be raised to $1,200 in July of this year and, it is hoped, to $1,500 in 1958. Additional payments of $75 a year are to be made for each child.

Membership of the Congregational churches in Britain totals 220,000.

Difficult Objective

The Komsomol (Soviet Youth Communist League, with claimed membership of 18,000,000) is in a bit of a mess, according to Radio Moscow.

Youth leaders have called for nationwide efforts to stamp out “widespread alcoholism, hooliganism and idleness” among young Russians.

With this noble objective in mind, Committee Secretary A. N. Shelepin scored Komsomol leaders for having failed to give Soviet youth moral training. He said their mission is “to imbue young people with selfless devotion to the socialist motherland by educating them in the spirit of the contemporary world outlook, atheism and the struggle against religion.”

An American parallel might be the man who is trying to borrow himself out of debt!

Africa News: March 18, 1957

Empty Seats

The seats of church leaders on the official reception stand were empty as fetish priests danced and poured a pagan spirit libation on the ground at a ceremony in Accra marking the Declaration of Independence on the Gold Coast in Africa.

The rite was an offering to the gods asking their blessing on the Duchess of Kent, Britain’s official representative at the celebrations. Leading the boycott were the Right Reverend Richard Roseveare, Anglican Bishop of Accra; the Reverend G. Thackray Eddy, Methodist Church, and the Reverend E. Max Dodu, moderator of the Presbyterian Church.

In a letter to the Accra Municipal Council requesting that the libation rite be dropped from the program of welcome, the church leaders pointed out that it included prayers addressed to gods in whose existence Christians do not believe.

The Accra Council, in refusing to drop the rite, said a service conducted solely by the Christian Church Council was to be held on the following day as part of the official program.

Bishop Roseveare clashed with Prime Minister Nkruman last year when he protested the government leader’s attendance at a pagan sacrifice following a state church service.

Invasion Aftermath

A missionary looks at Egypt from the inside:

Since the schools of Egypt were permitted to resume their activities, late in December, there has been a steady hum of serious “nose-to-the-grindstone” work … to make up lost time during the recent invasion.

A quick survey of the school situation reveals that all private English and French schools are now being run by the government. Apprehensive parents have been assured that standards will be maintained and that they need have no fears about continuing to send their children. In spite of these assurances, not a few have changed.…

Losses of French and English teachers in expropriated schools have caused some scrambling and scraping for qualified replacements. Foreign wives of Egyptian subjects, in some cases even British and French, have been urged to accept teaching posts.

Meanwhile, the weeding-out process continues. Although most subjects of enemy countries have by now been eliminated, a sprinkling remains.

The recently-promulgated law requiring the Egyptianization of all banks and companies has given rise to widespread concern in all foreign communities. It is felt that this law only adds to the growing list of reasons why foreign capital and business interests refuse to come into Egypt; or, in case they’re already in, will look for the earliest opportunity to pull out. As the head of one American company said recently, “If I were being invited today to put my five piasters into Egypt, my answer would be a flat ‘No.’ But since my five piasters are already here, I can only wait for an opportunity to get them out.” Another American company has already ordered the transfer from Egypt of its once bustling regional office in downtown Cairo.

Other causes for apprehension in business circles are traceable to the difficulty of obtaining foreign currency with which to carry on normal business. Scores of businesses are reported to be closing out. In the same week that the local press reported the huge rise in deposits at the National Bank with the comment that this was proof of public confidence and sound business activity, one businessman was heard to say, “Business? Yes, we’re doing lots of business, if by ‘business’ you mean selling. We’re selling all the time. Our bank account is growing larger, and our shelves emptier, because we can’t import replacement inventories. We’ll soon be out of business.”

What are the implications of all this? Government statements on the general state of economic affairs are uniformly reassuring. There appears to be no shortage of essentials.… Unemployment is on the increase, due to the heavy exodus of foreigners and the slow pace of business. Stocks of drugs and medicines on which many relied are now exhausted. The increased interference of government in private affairs (as in the case of the newly-required identity cards) is resented. The sky-rocketing price of corn puts new furrows in piasterconscious brows.

Some see in all this nothing more than the dislocations and inconveniences attendant upon Egypt’s move toward political neutrality.

Little Words About Big Need

“If God called his Holy Spirit out of the world, about 95 per cent of what we are doing would go on and we would brag about it.”

This blunt statement about church programs by Dr. Carl Bates of Amarillo, Texas, was coupled with an equally blunt question to ministers at the annual Baptist Statewide Conference on Evangelism in Columbia, S. C.: “What are you doing that you can’t get done unless the power of God falls on your ministry?”

He added:

“If we are to stop the terrible overflow of godlessness in our generation, it will only be as the Holy Spirit fills and empowers us. Our churches are full of members; our denomination is flooded with preachers who have never been touched with an all-consuming desire to be filled with the Spirit.

“Baptists are ready to do everything else but repent. They will go to conferences, cooperate and cooperate, tithe their income and adopt programs, but repentance is something else again.”

Dr. E. N. Patterson, Professor of Homiletics at New Orleans Baptist Seminary, said as a young preacher he was “timid” about telling all he felt on the freshness and exuberance of preaching with the Spirit’s unction.

“I know there is danger in superficiality,” he said, “but there is greater danger on the other side. I’m not afraid of the brand that goes with dependence on the Holy Spirit.”

Dr. J. D. Grey of New Orleans, former president of the Southern Baptist Convention, urged Baptists to pray for Billy Graham’s New York Crusade, which begins May 15.

“You and I have an obligation to pray that God will come in miraculous power to do more for New York through Madison Square Garden than He did for London through Harringay,” he said. “We should feel toward that concentrated effort in New York as Paul felt when he wrote of his driving desire to preach the Gospel at Rome (the world center of his day).”

—T. M.

Others look with grave alarm on current trends and feel convinced that Egypt’s leaders are being advised or maneuvered into a situation in which their only recourse, without losing face, will he to align themselves with communist Russia. Such alarmists point to the flood of Red books and magazines which are now available everywhere; to the press, which never publishes comments or local news that is critical of Russia; to the enormous Russian Embassy staff, said to be the largest in this part of the world; to the hundreds of iron curtain citizens who are reputed to have come to Egypt in the capacity of engineers and technicians of various kinds; to the Russian Industrial Exhibition and the Russian Ballet which have enjoyed Cairo’s spotlight for several weeks; to the Red regime commodities which are now beginning to appear in certain shops.

It adds up to what? The average onlooker, trying to be impartial, is frankly non-plussed. The seriousness of the situation he knows and feels. The mutterings he may hear, if he has friends who are hold enough to speak. But even making allowances for the country’s rumor-making capacities, he can hardly believe that Soviet influence is anywhere near what the alarmists make it out to be. Then he remembers China, and Korea and Vietnam and reminds himself not to slide into any sort of complacency simply because he has such a distaste for any form of alarmism.

Result? He just goes on being nonplussed!

—W.A.M.

He Being Dead Yet Speaketh

WORLD NEWS

Christianity in the World Today

(Dr. Clarence Edward Macartney died February 20 at the age of 77 after many years of effective service. His influence reached far beyond the bounds of a church or city through his inspired writings, thought-provoking addresses and the well-trained assistants who spread out across America. The following article about Dr. Macartney was written forCHRISTIANITY TODAYby Dr. C. Ralston Smith, pastor of First Presbyterian Church, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma since 1948. After completion of his studies at Princeton, he served as Dr. Macartney’s assistant at First Presbyterian in Pittsburgh from 1937 to 1940—ED.)

For 40 years he had proclaimed the “glorious gospel of the blessed God” from two of the most historic of Presbyterianism’s pulpits—Arch Street of Philadelphia and First of Pittsburgh. Now, in death’s cold silence, his body lay in state upon the marble dais in the latter sanctuary.

Appropriately, Clarence E. Macartney was clothed in his pulpit gown, for he was primarily a preacher. The somber black was softened by the beautiful garnet velvet coverlet lying in soft folds across his knees, a little beyond the touch of those reaching hands.

The church was filled with a cross-section of the steel-city society. Government officials and business magnates rearranged tight schedules to attend the funeral. School children gave up lesser things on the Washington’s Birthday holiday to be present. Preachers and laymen from out-of-town made the early morning trip to be there. Poor families, whose tenement-house halls had known his footfalls, and tycoons, in whose salons he had discussed his worldwide travels, mingled before the bier. The group of church officers who sat together included those who had welcomed him as their new pastor in 1927 and many who were in that chosen company because of his ministry.

It was fitting that participating in the public services should be Dr. Macartney’s successor, Dr. Robert J. Lamont, and eight former assistants who came from New Jersey, California and intermediate points to honor their chief. Prepared by Dr. Macartney in great detail, the procedure was characteristically simple and strong in its dignity. The subjective song, “Amazing Grace,” and the beautiful tune, “Duke Street,” were used—the former as a reading and the latter as the medium of one of the congregational hymns.

The more intimate family services followed in the boyhood home, “Ferncliffe,” on the campus of Geneva College at Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania. John Robertson and Albert Joseph, surviving members of the quartet of preacher brothers, joined a longtime friend and the minister of a local Presbyterian Church in the brief service of reminiscence and hope. Significantly, two Psalms were sung in metric version by a mixed octet of students from the covenantor college. At last the body was interred in the family plot, high above the Beaver River and in plain view of the eternal hills. Graven on one side of the granite marker are the names of the parents and hard-by nestled the bodies of an older brother, Ernest, and his wife. On the back of the stone seat, facing across the valley, are the words which epitomize the strong convictions of the whole family, “who shall separate us from the love of Christ?”

When, in the middle twenties, Clarence E. Macartney was elected moderator of the Presbyterian Church, U. S. A., he was one of the youngest men ever to occupy that high office. His methodical mind gave ready response to any issue before the church and his courageous spirit marked him early for great leadership. With forceful, deliberate speech, his simple, clear language proved ample conveyance for the dogmatic positions to which he gave quick allegiance. His conservative theological position was a source of encouragement and hope to many and a nettlesome bother to a few. He had the great advantage of finding strong allies for his opinions in both the Bible and the Constitution of the church within which he had taken his ordination vows.

A review of the life and work of this stalwart prophet ought to be of some ongoing benefit to the church in our time. Dr. Macartney would be quick to admit his own limitations and failures, but beyond these he made a contribution of lasting value. To three groups within the church he would, by example and precept, have something worthwhile to say.

To preachers he would speak concerning industry. He was a prodigious worker. His celibate life made more practical his intense study schedule. The time of day was of little significance when he was laboring on an important theme. Those who heard him as often as four times a week, year after year, testify that never once was there an iota of lack of preparation or shoddiness about his public utterances. Everything in life was grist for his sermonic mill, but it was finely ground and well beaten and baked before being sliced for public consumption. Second only to faithful adherence to the clear teachings of Scripture, I think he would advocate hard work in the study as a requisite for a beneficial ministry. The variety of his interests, even in his favorite field of history, witnesses to the scope of his knowledge. His illustrations were chiefly historic or literary and were always “meaty,” in contrast to those gaunt anecdotes and quips with which too many of us are satisfied. To a success-conscious group who people our pulpits he would say, “Many want to be known as great preachers. It is better to be a preacher who does some good.”

To leaders in the church generally the word this administrator would speak would be—“choose wisely.” It must be admitted that as presbyter our friend left something to be desired. In a day when the mesh of churchmanship was not nearly so entangling as now, he appeared on the floor only as “something important” was being discussed. To even close friends and devotees, this was a source of despair. However, his loyalty and untiring zeal were always available to causes of lasting value to the family of God anywhere in the world. One can recall the pertinent remarks which he made along this line in the recital of the story of that pathetic parabolic figure in the Old Testament who, concerning the great prisoner delivered into his hand, had only to report: “While I was busy here and there, lo, he was gone!” It is the “here and there” of lesser things that dissipates our limited strength and usurps the precious hours which might be spent on more important matters. The jingle,

If you can walk with crowds and keep your virtues

Or talk with kings nor lose the common touch

If neither foe nor loving friend can hurt you

If all men count with you but none too much

bespeaks the aloofness which was repulsive to the casual acquaintance of Dr. Macartney and frustrating even to his closest friends. Yet, the aloofness was the product of this very singleness of purpose which made him abhor the trivial and adhere to the timeless. The resultant life was one invested in great enterprises and its dividends were high and constant.

For the great body of evangelical Christians who make up the life of the church, there is a message, too. These uncommon folk represent the strong center of the army as contrasted to the wide flanks in either direction. Among them Dr. Macartney was a staunch fellow-soldier of Jesus Christ. This pivotal position is difficult to maintain when popular trends are disposed to tip the level. To both liberal modernists and rabid fundamentalists this man was disconcerting.

Asked to contribute an article along with other eminent clergymen in a magazine series emphasizing the change of view over a decade, he reversed the prevailing tide by underscoring the continuance of his confidence in the faith once delivered to the saints. Yet, at one time the church of which he was minister was picketed by a group in whose pulp paper much type was wasted trying to fabricate a case for his “compromise” because he would not join their walkout.

Thus he stood, not with mere stubbornness, but with intrinsic steadfastness. As has been said of another, “He was not intolerant, he was intransigent.” He had a firm hold on the root of the matter. Neither the blasting winds of frigid liberalism nor the siren songs of popular acclaim could move him from a sane, thoughtful acceptance of the glory and grace of the miracle-working triumphant Christ whom the Scriptures portray.

This attitude of avoiding the extreme while maintaining the strong mean is worthy of the imitation of all evangelicals in our time.

He was on many occasions the humble worshipper in other congregations. Whether in a cathedral of some metropolis or the clapboard chapel of a country village, he was at home upon hearing the eternal message of “Jesus and the Resurrection.” Conversely, the eminence of the pulpiteer or the ordinariness of the preacher failed to impress him in the absence of the great tones of the transforming truth.

A ministry world-wide through air wave and printed page he has now relinquished into the care of One who is answering an ancient, fervent prayer—“The work of our hands, establish thou it.”

To Dr. Macartney oneness with Christ was most important of all. That he attained to this enviable union might best be attested by his last words to a fellow-minister of the Gospel, “Tell the brethren that the anchor still holds.”

Bus Service Protested

Protests have been flying in all directions at Augusta, Maine, in a controversy regarding city school bus service for Roman Catholic students.

The Board of Education adopted a “hands off” policy and said, “It’s up to the city government to decide the issue.”

More than 600 parents threatened to transfer their children to public schools unless the city provided transportation.

Public bus service for parochial schools was approved in an advisory referendum at the city’s election last December, but the city council refused to provide the service.

The Rev. Shirley B. Goodwin, president of the Maine Council of Churches, supported the city’s position. He said the dispute involves the “old question of Church and State.” If parents want children to have a “special private education,” he said, “they should fulfill all the obligations.”

Public School Superintendent Perry F. Shibles declared that the city’s schools were overcrowded, but said that Roman Catholic students would be “welcomed.”

Supreme Court Rulings

The U. S. Supreme Court in recent weeks delivered two significant rulings.

In one the Court found that involuntary blood tests taken from unconscious suspects in drunken driving cases do not deprive liberty without due process of law.

By a 6–3 decision (Justices Warren, Black and Douglas dissenting), the Court upheld the legality of the decision of a New Mexico physician in extracting a blood sample from an unconscious man after an accident involving his truck and a car. Three occupants of the car were killed. Justice Clark delivered the opinion.

The Court pointed out that 47 states use chemical tests, including blood tests, to aid in cases involving driving under the influence of alcohol.

In the other case, the Court unanimously ruled unconstitutional a Michigan law banning the sale of any book deemed to contain “obscene” material tending to endanger the morals of youth.

Justice Frankfurter, who wrote the decision, declared that the legislation was “not reasonably restricted to the evil with which it is said to deal. The incidence of this enactment is to reduce the adult population of Michigan to reading only what is fit for children. It therefore arbitrarily curtails one of those liberties of the individual now enshrined in the due process class of the 14th Amendment.”

Eleven other states reportedly have laws similar to the Michigan statute. They are Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Maine, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia and West Virginia.

WCC Membership

The Evangelical Lutheran Church has formally applied for membership in the World Council of Churches.

At its annual meeting in Minneapolis, the ELC’s Church Council, acting on a directive from the million-member church body’s biennial convention last June, authorized the president of the church, Dr. Fredrik A. Schietz “to take the necessary steps” to seek World Council membership “on a confessional basis.”

In a complete reversal of the position adopted by its 1948 general convention, which voted against WCC membership by 872 to 546, the ELC last June voted by 1,434 to 685 to seek “immediate” membership.

This action removed a major obstacle to the planned 1960 merger of the ELC with the American Lutheran Church-899,078 baptized members—and the United Evangelical Lutheran Church-59,832 members, both of whom are members of the World Council.

‘Sign Of The Times’

The major report, two years in the making, called attention to the “spiritual hunger” and “mass movement” of Americans to church as a “sign of the times” and then had this to say:

“Evangelism in our time must speak to the deep needs of men for radical healing—deeper than any conscious desire for comfort and success.”

The report was the work of a group of Protestant leaders and theologians for the National Council of Churches’ General Board.

“Like other mass movements,” the report said, “this one moves on many levels, from superficial quest of new emotional satisfactions or ways of escape from hard reality to the profound discontents of honest, vigorous, penitent men and women in revolt against shams and half-realities, truly crying out for the living God.

“All alike need to find themselves face to face with the God and Father of Jesus Christ in his unyielding judgment and infinite mercy—both those who already know the depth of their need for healing, and those who are trying to settle for something less than the radical surgery of redemption.”

Asserting that the nation’s spiritual hunger exists against a backdrop of a “world in turmoil,” the commission warned that “the driving forces of history … are now racing at top speed … long-repressed emotions and explosive desires—for freedom, prestige, power, vengeance.”

Modern technology, it added, is suddenly supplying “in dizzy profusion” for both good and ill tools “that make men giants in speed and strength” without making them gentle and wise.

Tight Money

Short, short story:

Sidney Frank, president of Schenley Distillers, told a recent New Orleans distributors’ meeting that tight money is helping “soft goods and hard liquor sales.” According to press reports, he said:

“The money market is getting tighter and people can’t get enough credit for homes and hard goods, so they’re using a lot of their money for soft goods and whisky.”

As a result, the report said, individuals, interest groups, whole peoples are haunted by loneliness, “corroding” anxieties, bewilderment and mistrust.

The cure for the sickness of such a time, according to the commission, is not to be found in more technical prowess, factual knowledge, economic or political realignments, but in effective proclamation of the Gospel.”

The document, presented to the General Board by Dr. F. Eppling Reinartz of New York, secretary of the United Lutheran Church in America, is expected to have a major influence on many of the activities of the National Council of Churches.

A Doctor Speaks

The distinction between abstinence and spiritual conversion has been underscored by a New York physician’s contention that many “cured” alcoholics become mental cases because they can’t adjust themselves to reality.

In other words, a man may lick the temptation to drink, but still lead an empty life, devoid of basic spiritual needs.

Dr. Curtis T. Prout, assistant director of the New York Hospital, Westchester Branch, in an address to the American Psychopathological Association, described numerous cases of alcoholics who stopped drinking and turned to such alternatives as overeating, gambling and narcotics.

Challenge On Tv

The right of Jesuit institutions to own and operate television stations has been challenged in an open letter to members of the Federal Communications Commission by Protestant and Other Americans United for Separation of Church and State.

Dr. Glenn Archer, executive director, said in the letter that the Jesuit order is “alien” in control and therefore ineligible to operate a TV channel.

The move was directed chiefly against Loyola University at New Orleans and St. Louis (Mo.) University, Jesuit institutions with applications for television channels pending before the FCC.

He said testimony of the presidents of these schools shows that their supervising boards are composed entirely of Jesuit priests who are subject to removal by a superior general who is not an American citizen and that ultimate control is lodged outside of the United States.

In a separate statement, Dr. Archer said his organization’s action “is a part of a counterattack against the sectarian pressure which caused the banning of the film ‘Martin Luther’ by a Chicago station.

“We are opposed to an increase of Catholic power over the air waves, because it now seems self-evident that Catholic policy is opposed to freedom of the air. One way we can curtail sectarian control of this important medium of information is to fight against alien sectarian ownership as a direct violation of the law.”

Hall Of Fame

Five Methodists were named to the denomination’s Hall of Fame in Philanthrophy at the annual convention of the Nation Association of Methodist Hospitals and Homes.

The awards, presented by Bishop William T. Watkins of Louisville, Ky. were received by the following for outstanding contributions of time, services and money to Methodist philanthropic institutions:

Dr. Karl P. Meister, Elyria, Ohio; Edwin O. Anderson, Jersey City, N. J.; Otto C. Pfaff, Fort Dodge, Iowa; James F. Stiles Jr., Lake Bluff, Ill. and Miss Dora E. Young, Sweetwater, Tenn.

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