Eutychus and His Kin: September 15, 1958

CARTOON OF THE MONTH

Some Sunday Schools have given up the time-honored custom of having platform recitations on Rally Day, no doubt because the teachers could not bear to hear the same old doggerel once more. The acrostic below is from the new collection I have edited, Rally Day Revived. The cartoon above is one of the many charming illustrations which your own children may color during the program.

RALLY DAY ACROSTIC

Remember, your neighbors

expect it of you:

To send us to church

is the least you can do.

Although we are little

and somewhat naive,

We know every Sunday

you sleep when we leave.

Long live our dear church school,

for teacher is nice;

Her stories are sticky

with pious advice.

Let’s get to our sandpile,

our crayons and cake;

When this thing is over

we’re off for the lake.

Yet, messing and glueing

and learning by doing,

We share the great insight

that makes us all one:

To quote our director,

“Religion is fun!”

AN ENGLISHMAN’S SALUTE

CHRISTIANITY TODAY (May 12 issue) brought me the news that Nyles Huffmann of the Air Mail from God Mission had been killed in an air crash in Mexico. I knew something of Huffmann and his work and a few years ago I visited his mission station and made a study of his methods and the results that he had achieved. I came away with the feeling that I had been in touch with a man of the Livingstone build.

While still a schoolboy Huffmann made up his mind to be a missionary in Mexico. The war crashed in upon his plans and for some years he was in the air force. He was a typical G.I., tough, determined, fearless and dogmatic.

On demobilization the first thing he did was to make a kind of reconnaissance flight over some of the less known parts of Mexico. That done he went back to college, completed his studies, was ordained as a Baptist minister, and made it clear to the girl he wanted to marry that he was going to a risky, pioneer job, and if she didn’t like the prospect they would not go on with the marriage. A few weeks later they were on their way together to Mexico. It was all rather breathless and unusual. But that’s the kind of man Huffmann was. He knew what he wanted and he hated to waste time.

That was in 1948. Into the 10 years between his start and the final crash … he crowded as much as most men achieve in a normal lifetime. He didn’t bother to join up with a missionary society. He just told a few friends what he was going to do, asked them to pray for him and to send him from time to time just what financial help they could.

Some 50 miles or so south of Mexico city they found a hill with a sufficiently flat top to serve as a rough kind of runway for the plane. In a little hamlet they acquired a bit of land where, with their own hands, they built their home. Their living room was nothing more than a mosquito-screened veranda, while their bedroom was also the office, the walls of which were plastered with large-scale maps of Mexico. It was all rather bare and spartan and was clearly a place for work, not for taking one’s ease.

Huffmann had his own ideas of missionary strategy. He was convinced, for example, that the traditional methods of making the Gospel known were too leisurely, and that unless some speedier way was found the end would come long before the task was complete. He was also convinced that the printed Word should be put right in the forefront of the attack. He accordingly bought a second hand two-seater airplane, secured some thousands of copies of the Gospels from the World Gospels Crusade in Los Angeles, as well as a gift of Bibles from the Gideons in Chicago, all of them in the local vernacular.

The practice that he worked out was to load up the plane with copies of the Gospels, squeeze in with his Mexican mechanic, and take off. In an hour or so they would be over some of the less known parts of Mexico, straining their eyes to spot a village or a hamlet that had an open space suitable for dropping the booklets. Having found one he would fly as low and slow as he dared, and at the right moment he would give the word to the mechanic to open a tiny aperture in the base of the plane and drop out a thin stream of Gospels. The villagers would, of course, come rushing out to see what was happening and pick up this “airmail from God.” Some would even climb into the trees or on to the roofs of huts to recover copies that might be stuck. In 10 years, Huffmann had distributed—so it is said—something like two million copies of the Gospels.

But that was only the first wave of his attack. He followed it up by sending a couple of Mexican evangelists to the village a few months later. Their task was to contact those who had secured copies of the Gospels, find out if they had read and understood them, answer questions, and expound and press home the Christian message.

A month or so later there would be a third and final stage when a man would arrive in the village for a prolonged stay. His task was not to preach the Gospel or distribute the Scriptures, but to sit down with individuals and prepare them for leadership and responsibility in the little Christian group that was beginning to emerge in the village. All this was carefully recorded. Huffmann had his card index showing what progress had been made in this village and that hamlet and who were the likeliest leaders in each instance.

Today in scores of remote Mexican villages there are little groups of Christian people meeting regularly for worship and for the study of the booklets dropped by Nyles Huffmann, the man who found a new way of getting the Gospel to the people.

Ballard Glebe

Studland, Dorset, England

CASE OF IDENTITY

C. B. Underwood is committing a solecism in writing of “Nonconformists” outside England (Eutychus, July 21 issue). Presumably he means “non-Anglicans,” but in England Roman Catholics are “Nonconformists” to the Established Church no less than Methodists and Baptists. In Scotland, where the Established Church is Presbyterian, it is the Episcopalian who is a Nonconformist! Mr. Underwood is really betraying his theological and ecclesiastical prejudices in his use of a word which in the U.S.A. has had no meaning since colonial days.

C. P. M. Sharpe may also be interested to know that throughout Ireland, Protestant North and Roman Catholic South, “chapel” means a place of worship of the Roman Catholic church. Somehow, I doubt whether he would use the term “chapel people” to describe his brethren of the Roman obedience. Again an obsolete term is being used, a survival of English, Victorian, insular snobbery, and unworthy of use in an international religious magazine.

Scarva Rectory

Portadown, Co. Armagh, No. Ireland

THE NEW BIRTH

Your editorial “Evangelism and the New Birth” (July 7 issue) was a masterpiece which thrilled my soul! Such writing is much in need among us Lutherans and, no doubt, among others too.

Hauge Luther Inner Mission Federation

Minneapolis, Minn.

I understand that one cannot be a Christian unless the new birth or union with Christ has taken place—I also understand that this union is actually accomplished in immersion (commonly called baptism) as Romans 6 so clearly delineates. This event can be remembered and pointed to as the moment when one became a member of the Church of Christ Jesus. Your statement that the “great majority of Christians” would find it difficult to “determine either the time or place when they passed from death to life” punches holes in the foundation of Christianity.… I fear that your teaching and that of Billy Graham on the subject of the new birth—leaving out … immersion … is leaving thousands suffocating in ignorance and confusion.

Sunset Beach Church of Christ

Haleiwa, Hawaii

FACT AND IMPRESSION

Your searching review of the American Baptist Convention (July 7 issue) observed that we rejected by two to one a movement into the Interchurch Building in New York. The correspondent notes that this was shortly after “an address strongly advocating ecumenicity by Dr. Edwin T. Dahlberg, American Baptist pastor and current president of the National Council of Churches.” This is factual, but it might leave the impression that Dr. Dahlberg tried to influence the Convention toward the New York location. This would be incorrect; a year before, Dr. Dahlberg had spoken in behalf of a Midwest location and not for the Interchurch Building. He advocated a closer tie with other Baptist bodies as well as an interest in cooperation with different denominations.

Ex. Sec.

Nebrasba Baptist State Conv.

Omaha, Neb.

CHURCH AND STATE

In regard to “Religion and the Presidency” (June 23 issue) …, Pope Leo XIII declares, “The state must not only have care for religion, but must recognize the true religion.… It would be erroneous to draw the conclusion that in America is to be sought the type of the most desirable status of the Church, or that it would be universally lawful or expedient for State and Church to be as in America, dissevered and divorced.…”

“Again, it is not lawful for the State, any more than for the individual to hold in equal favor different kinds of religion: that the unrestrained freedom of thinking and of openly making known one’s thoughts is not inherent in the rights of citizens, and is by no means to be reckoned worthy of favor and supported.…” John A. Ryan and Francis J. Boland Catholic Principles of Politics, Macmillan, New York, 1947, pp. 315, 300.

Can … any American citizen reconcile the above quoted “Catholic” doctrine with the qualifications of a “loyal American president” who “shall be bound by oath or affirmation, to support this Constitution” wherein “no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office” and which also specifically states that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof?” Certainly not!

Oklahoma City, Okla.

Perhaps the most significant thing about the failure of Mr. Spivak to play the “gentleman” in his case is that it proves the existence of the very forces which Mr. Spivak seemed most anxious to deny existed.

Rector

Church of the Holy Nativity

Chicago, Ill.

I think you should become more liberal in your views about competing ideologies.… No doubt there are many things wrong with Roman Catholicism, secularism, Judaism, atheism, agnosticism, and so on, but I think the more advanced viewpoint is that we should be tolerant of others’ beliefs.

East Chicago, Ind.

Roman Catholicism … is definitely out to capture America. This unfortunate situation is developing fast as Protestantism becomes more and more tolerant of all religious dogma and less and less tolerant of sound doctrine.…

Washington, D. C.

THE REAL IMPERATIVE

Edward W. Greenfield made some criticism of the faith in public education expressed by the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, U.S.A. (May 12 issue). In general, however, Mr. Greenfield was far too favorable toward the Assembly’s pronouncement, and he failed to set forth the real educational imperative confronting Christian people today. The statement by the … Assembly had no time for the private Christian school.… This … is disgusting; for the U.S.A. church is theoretically committed to the Reformed Faith … which has historically stressed the relationship of all of life and of all aspects of education to the living, sovereign God of the Scriptures.

Pulaski, Pa.

Thanks for an exciting issue (July 21). Dr. Cullmann, Mr. Mahler and Mr. Bodey all speak convincingly and hearteningly. I should like to see Mr. Bodey’s thesis followed up with attention to Christian Day Schools. My experience in the past three years has pointed up an almost frightening lack of training in these grades which might give our children the means to grapple with matters of God in a right way. I do not believe our school has found a completely satisfactory way of doing: but I am convinced we are on the right track and that others can contribute independently once they reach out to do the job of training for Christian intellectual strength.

St. Thomas Epis. Ch. & Southwest School

Houston, Tex.

GREEK ORTHODOX MISSIONS

How can any well-informed Christian resent the lack of Eastern Orthodox enthusiasm for “Protestant Missions” in Greece where Orthodox churchmen are doing a great work for Christ?… Is the precious thing called “evangelical effort” a peculiar treasure of “Protestants”? I know of no church in Christendom more concerned with … “evangelical zeal” and “evangelical effort” than the Eastern Orthodox Church.…

Priest-Diocese of Erie (Episcopal)

Youngsville, Pa.

• In History of the Orthodox Church, Constantine Callinkos writes of the growing interest in union between Anglicanism and Eastern Orthodoxy. He attributes their friendship to “the recognition by the Orthodox Church of the validity of Anglican Orders, which has always been disputed by the Roman Church; secondly, to the abstention of the Anglican Church from efforts to convert the Orthodox; and thirdly, to the exchange of letters of peace on ceremonial occasions” (p. 132).—ED.

AN AFTERNOON IN WALES

On a beautiful Sunday afternoon in 1940 I was conducting evensong at a country church called Cwmcarvan, near Monmouth, Wales. No sooner had I started the service than I noticed a gentleman coming in, and who sat in a pew in front of the pulpit.… The visitor was none other than the famous philosopher, author, and professor, the late Dr. C. E. M. Joad, whom I knew had been an agnostic and rationalist for 40 years since his college days at Oxford.

The rest of the congregation consisted of ordinary country people and I began to wonder how Dr. Joad would react to the sermon, which strange to say, dealt with three challenging questions as if they were meant for him: Do you believe in God? Do you believe in Christ? Do you believe in immortality?

I did not have long to wait for his answer, because the following Sunday, Easter Day, with the rest of the parishioners, Dr. Joad walked up and knelt before the altar to receive Holy Communion for the first time in 40 years.

Mathern Vicarage

Chepstow, England

As a result of reading your scholarly and objective book reviews …, I have gained much guidance and inspiration.

Phoenixville, Pa.

VACATION FROM BINGO

In regard to the poor underpaid ministers (July 7 issue) …, do you recall the establishing of most of our churches by men who … worked six days on the farm and rode horseback for Saturday night and Sunday service with no pay?… In Kansas … I was told … if a sinner should die in August …, he would be a “goner” as all the pastors are on their vacations resting from their bingo parties, ice cream suppers and organizational programs.… No work today offers the leisure, benefits, and comforts as the ministry. Ask the average man … about the supposed watchman on the wall … grabbing every penny he can.

Evansville, Ind.

THE GREAT MIDDLE AREA

I have only one thing to ask concerning the magazine and that is, Can’t you make it a little more simple …?

Rockford, Ill.

Provided you keep the academic standing of your magazine high, it is destined to carry much weight in the religious world for many years to come.

Lookout Mountain Baptist Church

Lookout Mountain, Tenn.

Far and away, you have succeeded in one of the original intentions of the magazine—providing a responsible journal on the intellectual level of The Christian Century, from an evangelical standpoint.

Bethany Baptist Church

Philadelphia, Pa.

Your defense of ecumenism by compromise is, to use an understatement, extremely disheartening.… I would much rather have The Christian Century in the hands of my people than your paper. At least they could detect the open denial of biblical truth.

Johnstown, Pa.

I have found the articles to be thought-provoking, scholarly, sane, and intelligently tolerant—qualities lacking in much so-called conservative literature. This is the sort of publication a conservative may proudly commend to his liberal friends.

First Baptist

Washington, N. J.

We are praying that it will continue to meet the need for a religious magazine in that great middle area between the devotional or how-to-do-it magazines on one hand, and the theological and scholarly journals on the other.

Wheaton Coll.

Wheaton, Ill.

Your journal is the most inspiring reading and fundamentally meets my needs in teaching my Sabbath school class which I have been doing for the past 26 years.

Philadelphia, Pa.

Your publication is most stimulating, fresh, constructive and charitable. It is now a priority in my reading and I look forward eagerly to it.… I find that your paper helps to keep us together in the English-speaking world.

St. Paul’s Vicarage

Finchley, England

One cannot accept some articles inspired by the verbal inspiration of the Scriptures but they are so enlightened that they command respect and our differences become clear. They reveal our oneness in Christ rather than our different approach to the word of God. Its virile Protestantism and its advocacy of evangelism is most reassuring and a joy to read.

Bournemouth, England

I find it thought-provoking, and an excellent means of keeping in touch with current religious trends.

Australasian Missionary College

Cooranbong, N. S. W., Australia

Congratulations on a magnificent paper! Always stimulating, fruitful and appropriate to today’s conditions. It is much appreciated “down under.”

Ashfield Baptist Church

Ashfield, N.S.W. Australia

I find it very stimulating. I am the Vicar of a suburban parish in Cardiff with a big Council Housing Estate on it and it is very hard work with little opportunity for intellectual stimulus.

Cardiff, Wales

I read [it] with avidity.

Eccleshill Cong.

Bradford, England

Ideas

Man’s Glorious Destiny

Man has a destiny in glory. The wonder of that destiny has scarcely penetrated the fog of evolutionary speculations blanketing the past century.

Not a gradual ascent from an animal inheritance but vital union with Christ links man to the life abundant and his divinely intended spiritual heritage. God purposes for mankind a range of life and experience incomparably superior to that of the animal world.

Man by creation was fashioned for a life in society under God and for personal fellowship with God. Despite man’s forfeiture of his original inheritance through sin, the benefits of divine redemption are available to him. God’s grace calls “a new race of men” into being. Fallen men restored to spiritual life become the bearers of peace and joy and the purveyors of love and kindness in a world whose virtues are weary and worn. On this higher level life is incomparably superior to the day-to-day pursuit of selfish concerns in ignorance and disobedience of God; indeed, such a life of love for God and neighbor is fit for eternity. Its roots are already in the eternal order.

These great truths about the human predicament our disillusioned generation needs most to hear. Instead of detouring to carp at false theories of man, ought not the Church in this critical hour to rally its energies to the major positive exposition of the glories of God’s grace? Instead of preoccupation in debate over fossil remnants from which “manlike forms” may indeed have risen, ought not the Church to dedicate its devotion to the risen Christ who longs to restore the shattered image of God in men? Instead of absorption with the anatomical similarities of man and the anthropoids, is not consideration of the moral and spiritual dissimilarities of fallen man and Jesus Christ the Son of God more vital? Instead of the morphological reconstruction of fragmented animal bodies of an obscure past, should not the Church steep itself in the body of Christ to which reborn men belong, and whose risen and exalted Head yearns by the Spirit to instruct his followers in the benefits of man’s reconciliation with God accomplished by his death on the Cross. Instead of man’s at-one-ment with the bestial past, is not the prospect of his at-one-ment with God the more crucial problem? Instead of unraveling what preceds the First Adam, is not our prospect through the Last Adam (1 Cor. 15:45) more important?

The Church’s proclamation of the Gospel is never devoid of perils. There is the danger of making decision for Christ too easy, or even too hard. There is the peril of losing the personality of Christ in the personality of the pulpiteer. There are still other perils. One is the peril of distraction; contemporary alternatives (while essential to preaching if it is to bristle with relevance) absorb the center of interest, even if by way of critical analysis, while the realities of redemption and spiritual solutions struggle for the mere mention. That danger is particularly acute where clergymen minister to intellectuals, and where liberal emphasis on the social gospel has left its mark. Whatever the pressing problems of ancient philosophy and sociology, the New Testament everywhere gives centrality and precedence to the person and work of Christ. Even on Mars Hill the apostle Paul skillfully dethroned the false gods and proclaimed the living God as the agent of creation, redemption and judgment. This biblical example of centrality of the Lord of glory is profitable for preaching in our times.

Another danger haunts the congregations of evangelical churches eager to retain the Christian message as the center of reference. That is the danger of so overemphasizing the negative aspect of judgment upon sin that the positive message of the glories of the life of grace loses its place and power. The Church needs always to announce the conquest of darkness by Jesus’ resurrection from the grave. But schooling disciples in what to avoid for fear of judgment hardly supplies their best motivation for a life devoted to truth and goodness and therefore fit for eternity.

In his Republic, Plato complains against views that justify morality only because of the terrible future consequences of immorality. His follower, Socrates, believed that the good life needs justification totally apart from the question of a future judgment. The Christian will hardly consent to such unjustifiable removal of life from its total frame of reference; moreover, he recognizes that God himself defines the nature of the good. But the good life is good not simply because of its results; it is good even apart from those consequences, which crown the good life with eternity’s vindication.

In part, this neglect of the glory that halos the life of the believer results from overpreoccupation with the significance of Christ’s death and insufficient attention to his work as the risen and ascended Lord. Not only does he indwell his followers to comfort, guide and encourage them, but he seeks an identification whereby his life becomes their life, and their life becomes Christ living in them (Gal. 2:20). Literally hundreds of times the phrase “in Christ” or “in the Lord” occurs in the New Testament epistles. The believer lives and moves and has his being in the risen Lord. So decisive is the overthrow of the old self that, while his identity remains unchanged, the believer reflects the radiance of another personality, since his spirit is interpenetrated by Another. The life that resides in Christ is mediated to his followers; indeed, he is present in them as the living center of their new being. He animates their desires, purifies their joys, and enlivens their hopes. “Union with Christ” means that Christ is indeed the head, not of each simply in isolation and solitude, but within a society or fellowship, for the body Christ heads is the community of faith. Instead of “the lonely crowd” in which to seek a place of identification with one’s fellow man, Christ escorts the believer into the true solidarity of human life within a social existence of regenerate believers.

H. R. Mackintosh, that influential Scottish theologian of a recent era, pointedly declared: “All redeeming influences are streaming out from Christ’s risen power to fill the life of the believer. He is not to be separated, whether in thought or prayer, from God Himself” (The Doctrine of the Person of Jesus Christ, p. 55). Having personally displayed a dynamism more powerful than sin and death, Christ waits to vitalize our lives in relation to God and all else.

It would indeed be a great era in the history of the Church if in the century after Darwin the vision of our depleted generation could be fixed anew upon the risen and ascended Christ, and our spirits linked anew in spiritual life to the Lord of glory who by the Spirit transforms tangled lives to orderly service of God and fellow men. Perhaps the fact that scientific enterprise so largely focuses attention upon the unobservable past itself somewhat reflects the rebellion that shuns the invitation to man’s present encounter with the biblically-revealed God. It is an easy evasion to concentrate on pre-history, and thus to snub the incarnate God. It is easier still, and equally unfruitful, to utter visionary forcasts of a remote future when the zenith of the evolutionary process will lead finally to an absolute moral union of the human and the divine—because of our faith in man or nature rather than in God.

The incarnate and risen Christ already now clothes humanity with the glory of God. The new world to come already now holds the promise of a divine radiance for redeemed man. The One who is the goal of human perfection has already appeared within the sweep of history to live the life of peerless virtue. The prospect of new life in Christ exists already for those who avail themselves of the benefits and blessings of redemption. In a world of changing relationships and shifting perspectives such a union promises to outlast all others. It calls the lost sons of God back to their proper destiny and to the future heritage of the saints.

Maintaining the biblical perspective will preserve the Church from preoccupation with man at the anatomical or morphological level so central to contemporary evolutionary discussion. Man’s relation to nature is not simply that of the capstone of creation, although he is indeed to have dominion over the creatures. Man’s relation to God pictures him as intended by creation for a distinctive divine sonship, for personal communication and fellowship with God, and destined for life in the eternal order. The essential aspect of man’s existence is therefore his moral and religious destiny, although resurrection of the body as a doctrine of revealed religion cautions us also against indifference to the physical life. The whole personality, indeed, stands in a unique and decisive relationship to the Creator-Redeemer God. This fact lifts him to superiority over all other creatures of earth. Man is made for more than the laboratory and observatory, and the study of the secrets of nature. He is made for the closet of prayer to hear the heartbeat of God. He is to be a veritable temple of the Holy Spirit, and a participant in the promises of God.

In sharing Christian faith, he shares also the Christian hope that reaches beyond the conditions of earthly existence. The nature of a man’s hope, in fact, always reflects the inmost character of his spirit. How does he conceive of the eternity to come and his role in it? What relation does he postulate between the forgiveness of sins and ultimate victory over the power of sin? The twice-born man will be absorbed in the thought of the consummation of the kingdom of God. He will cherish the Lord’s return with an awareness of the present nearness of the Bestower of benefits. He knows that the resurrection of the dead is linked to that return, and the prospect of the Church made perfect. He will face death with simple readiness and meet it joyfully, knowing that he passes into an eternal order where the permanent significance of the Redeemer is assured. He is confident that righteousness will triumph and evil will be finally judged, that the fate of the godless will ultimately be sealed. He knows that while those who “have fallen asleep” in the Lord face new conditions of existence, they view the horizons of eternity with unblemished joy. Until he himself joins them he has one great passion: so to voice and to display the blessings of serving the one true God that the lost multitudes about him sense and turn from the emptiness of life outside the orbit of Christ’s grace, to share man’s glorious destiny.

Entrenched Criminals And The Christian Conscience

Far more powerful than ever recognized is the influence which Christian conscience has upon society. It is a guiding light and a preserving salt that must be exercised and maintained in the face of seemingly overwhelming odds.

In the affairs of the nation this has no reference to partisan politics or party affiliations. Rather it is an attitude of heart, mind and action by which men seek to know and articulate the mind of Christ in the affairs of personal and national life.

It is the conscience enlightened by Christ and empowered by the Holy Spirit; and it sees issues, not from the point of expediency, but in the light of righteousness, and therefore leads to effective action.

Not only is the welfare of society at stake but the very life of the nation is involved in issues of right and wrong. It is a repeated declaration of moral and spiritual principles that helps to clarify thinking and produce wise policies at national and personal levels.

The Christian citizen has a grave responsibility to society. But unfortunately his convictions too often stem from other than Christian principles so that the end result is not clarification but confusion. Yet when criminality takes the spotlight and then walks off unscathed, can there be question for the Christian?

Not only Christians but all citizens should be deeply concerned about the failure of Congress to enact needed labor legislation. This concern is a three-pronged affair composed of two parts indignation and one part fear.

There is justified and righteous indignation at the disclosures made before Senator McClellan investigating committee in which evidence was produced that some of the largest unions in the nation are controlled by men associated with hoodlums and gangsters.

The fact that James Hoffa successfully thumbed his nose at Congress, the United States government and the people as a whole, is something for which we should be ashamed. This was not democracy in action; it was triumph of the worst elements in society in a place where justice unhindered by personal or partisan considerations was to be expected. Entrenched criminals are making a laughing stock of our government.

Because of that which was disclosed and because nothing was done about it, prong number two of indignation can be leveled directly at Congress. The constitutionally elected and responsible representatives of the people were fully aware of the situation and its grave implications for the nation’s welfare; but for varying personal and political reasons, they failed to take remedial action.

Should there develop any of those aspects of potential national disaster that are inherent in this unbelievable situation, the blame will rest squarely upon the shoulders of those members of Congress who knowingly evaded their responsibility.

At this point we are confronted with the third prong of our dilemma, viz, the danger to national security.

The Teamster’s Union, headed by one drunk with power and defiant toward Congress and the people as a whole, is one of the vital cogs in national security. Add to this the fact that the East Coast Longshoremen’s Unions is controlled by out-and-out racketeers (for which cause they were expelled from the AFL), while Harry Bridges’ West Coast Longshoreman’s Union was expelled from the CIO because of Communist infiltration, and we are confronted with the actuality that our country’s transportation is being hazarded via the whims of criminals and Communists.

Failure on the part of Congress to pass remedial legislation has been attributed to several causes, the most frequently mentioned being the fear of loss of votes.

This we believe to be a fallacy of the first water. No matter how much labor leadership may bluster and threaten there is little evidence to show that labor leaders control the votes of labor as such. The average union member is a loyal American citizen and anxious to guard his own independence. Furthermore the volume of letters which Senator McClellan and other members of this committee have received would indicate that rank and file union members, and their families, long for legislation which will free them from the domination and exploitation of men using their positional power for personal gain and criminal purposes.

Punitive anti-labor legislation is not indicated, nor should it be contemplated; but there is desperate need for controls which will protect all of America—labor, capital and the average citizen. An anti-monopoly law for the unions would be no more anti-labor than the Sherman Act (anti-trust) is anti-business. What is important is that the sinister grip of criminals should be recognized and adequately legislated against, regardless of where those criminals are found.

There is an effective way to meet the present problem. For one thing, the American voter should voice his conscience clearly in the months to come. The 66th Congress will convene on January 7, 1959, and by that time those who compose that body should have no illusions either of the wishes of their constituencies or of their moral obligation in the question at hand.

Statesmen of which there are many, will make an honest effort to remedy this alarming situation in contemporary American life. And while politicians continue seesawing with indecision, righteous indignation may prove to be the tonic that will sharpen blunt consciences and help produce effective action.

Who but the Christian citizen can articulate such a voice for righteousness?

Relativity

When Einstein propounded his theory of relativity, the average mind was confused and baffled by the formulae developed and by their implications. But there were physicists, and others, who stepped out on these hypotheses, proved them to be true and came up with practical discoveries which not only opened up the atomic age but an era of yet other amazing discoveries—discoveries of things God created, of laws he established and most important of all, the interrelation and relativity to be found in all the universe.

Are there not vistas of supernatural truths available for the Christian, truths which have tremendous bearing on our concept of God and his infinite power? And is not even the theological world blind to many of these revelations?

To begin with we need to appropriate the implications of God in relationship to time. For him time, as we understand its meaning, does not exist. Let us illustrate: God in his infinite wisdom and power (something which man cannot comprehend) sees all of eternity at once. Speaking in terms we humans can understand, God sees all of the past, all of the present and all of the future at exactly the same time. Once grasp this and many of our intellectual problems and difficulties cease to exist.

In the second place, let us grasp the fact that the power and act, or acts, of Creation were in the hands of Christ, the eternal Son of God. We are told that “All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made” (John 1:3). How this was executed we do not know, but Genesis 1:1 and this statement must fit together for Paul writes to the Ephesian Christians, “… which from the beginning of the world hath been hid in God, who created all things by Jesus Christ” (Eph. 3:9). Writing to the Colossian Christians Paul says, “For by him were all things created, that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things were created by him and for him: and he is before all things, and by him all things consist.”

There is probably deep significance in the words “visible and invisible” and we will be wise to consider how very little we know about His creation. Wonderful are the works of God.

The writer to the Hebrews corroborates these affirmations having to do with Christ as Creator in these words (1:1, 2): “God, … hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son, whom he hath appointed heir of all things, by whom he also made the worlds”; while the aged apostle, John, saw in his vision the four and twenty elders falling down before Him “which is and which was and which is to come,” and saying, “Thou art worthy, O Lord, to receive glory and honour and power: for thou hast created all things, and for thy pleasure they are and were created” (Rev 4:11).

Once grasp the fact that Christ was pre-existent with the Father, that it was he who created the world, that it was he who came back to redeem the world; and that it is he who will come again; then we have immediately taken the intellectual step, also a step of faith, which can dissolve our human problems relative to time ad eternity and Christ’s place in it.

Only by faith can we grasp the fact that with God a day is as a thousand years and a thousand years as a day. In the same way we come to accept the paradoxes of Christianity; for instance, that a man may save his life and yet lose it or lose his life (by the standards of the world) only to find it.

For too long men have tried to rationalize the supernatural and in so doing have become ridiculous. When time merges into the eternity of which it is a part; when space as we know it merges into the new heaven and the new earth, how easy it is to believe that we shall see “the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband,” and to believe that, “the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and they shall be his people, and God himself shall be with them, and be their God” (Rev. 21:2, 3).

No longer do we laugh at the Buck Rogers-type concept of outer space. No longer do we look with amusement on the scientific prognostications of tomorrow. We have now seen enough to know that all of these things and many more will eventuate before our eyes.

Why then do we attempt to rationalize or explain away the miraculous and supernatural in Christianity? Not only should we accept the manifestations of a supernatural God in his dealings with men, but we should cry out for forgiveness for ever having doubted him.

The passage of the body of our risen Lord through closed doors is a phenomenon to be accepted without question. His miraculous acts were perfectly natural and easy reflections of his eternally majestic personality.

Einstein propounded theoretical formulae which were demonstrated to be correct and in some cases scientists have looked back and marveled that they themselves had not thought of them, because, after confirmation they seemed so normal and right.

How much more should the Christian, by faith, grasp the eternal and unchanging verities which are given by divine revelation! The tragic fact is that some day, as we look back from the vantage point of eternity, many of us will realize what fools we have been. Accepting that which man can accomplish, and glorying in his achievements, many who now ignore the eternal Son of God will gnash their teeth that His truth was placed in their hands—AND THEY REJECTED IT.

Liberal theology, so aware of and subservient to modern scientific achievement, will have much to answer for wherever and however it has rejected the supernatural and the miraculous in the Christian faith. The apostle Peter, speaking of his experience on the Mount of Transfiguration, and blending it with the glories of the future says: “For we have not followed cunningly devised fables, when we made known unto you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but were eyewitnesses of his majesty … We have also a more sure word of prophecy; whereunto ye do well that ye take heed, as unto a light that shineth in a dark place, until the day dawn, and the day star arise in your hearts” (2 Pet. 1:16, 19).

Einstein jolted science and led it into new fields of discovery. We will be more than wise if we take the Holy Bible and study it to see what God has to say about the relativity of man to his God. We all need a jolt—a realization of the bewildering and awe-inspiring fact that the God with whom we have to do is omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent.

The three disciples on the Mount of Transfiguration were bewildered and frightened by that which they saw and heard—supernatural manifestations of men long since dead, and they were moved to accord to them some form of equality with the transfigured Christ.

At that instant there came a voice from heaven saying: “This is my beloved Son … hear ye HIM.”

Nineteen centuries ago the apostle Peter, a rough, unlearned fisherman with a gloriously transforming experience with the living Christ, wrote under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit: “But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night; in the which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burned up. Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved, what manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and godliness, looking for and hasting unto the coming day of God, wherein the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat? Nevertheless we, according to his promise, look for new heavens and a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness” (2 Peter 3:10–12).

Einstein advanced a revolutionary hypothesis which science tested and acted upon with amazing results. Has not God opened up to us vistas of the lost dimension of man and God and eternity? Omitting the spiritual implications of Peter’s prophecy, it could well have been made in Los Alamos, or Oak Ridge—certainly the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki experienced its devastating reality on a limited scale.

In all of the bewildering achievements of science and the discoveries of laws and factors hitherto unsuspected, we must keep our perspectives straight. Some day we will see with our eyes, hear with our ears and experience in reality things but dimly revealed at the present time. Our constant attitude should be: WITH GOD ALL THINGS ARE POSSIBLE, and—we have many glimpses of this at hand in Holy Writ. Einstein was a scientific genius. The humblest Christian can become a Spirit-directed power if he will but accept the wisdom which cometh down from above.

L. NELSON BELL

Colonial Religious Awakenings

The New England Revival, 1734

During the last quarter of the 17th century, the church in New England was characterized by a laxity of doctrine and conduct that belied its earlier profession. Whereas only a few years earlier, in 1648, the Congregational Platform had insisted upon a public profession and evidence of conversion as conditions essential for participation in the Lord’s Supper, this requirement no longer prevailed. By 1662, the adoption of what was called a “Half-Way Covenant” repudiated this reasonable requirement and wrought havoc among New England Congregational churches. That covenant permitted children of unregenerate parents to be admitted to baptism and church membership without admission to the Lord’s Supper and without participation in church elections. They were therefore members not in “full communion” but under a Half-Way Covenant (Newman, A Manual of Church History, II, pp. 668–678; Sweet, Religion in Colonial America, p. 106; and Walker, The Congregationalists, p. 172).

As that Covenant gained acceptance, the number of church members not in full communion, making no profession of faith nor satisfactory evidence of conversion, increased. In general, churches became more and more lax until baptism was extended to children of notoriously irreligious and immoral persons. Some churches went so far as to admit to full membership and the Lord’s Supper all parents who were willing to have their children baptised.

From this position, the distance to heresy was short. About 1700, Solomon Stoddard, pastor at Northampton, Massachusetts, expressed the view that “the Lord’s Supper was instituted to be a means of regeneration” and therefore urged all, without discrimination, to partake of it. In time, any distinction between saint and sinner, the church and the world, almost disappeared (Newman, op. cit., p. 670).

Long before the end of the 17th century, however, the secularization of most Congregational churches was nearly complete. By the 18th century, immorality and irreligion was prevalent, so much so that Increase Mather asserted gloomily, “Prayer is necessary on this account that conversions have come to a stand … clear, sound conversions are not frequent in our congregation.… Many are profane, drunkards, lascivious, scoffers at the power of godliness, and disobedient.” Later he exclaimed, “Ah, degenerate New England! What art thou come to at this day? How are those sins become common that were once not even heard of?” Deep, personal religious experiences were not only scarce, but regarded as evidences of fanaticism. Preaching had become dull and lifeless, and church members lived in a state of “carnal security.” By 1733 Socinianized Arminianism and deistic thought, imported from England, had invaded the colonies (Belcher, George Whitefield, pp. 148–149, and Newman, op. cit., p. 643).

While Freylinghuysen and his Presbyterian associates were busy promoting the revival in central New Jersey, stirrings were beginning elsewhere. In 1727, a year after Gilbert Tennent became pastor at New Brunswick, 24-year-old Jonathan Edwards was ordained and installed as assistant to his grandfather, Solomon Stoddard, at Northampton. For 60 years Stoddard had preached there, and during that time, the little community of 200 families was blest with five awakenings.

“The time,” said Morgan Edwards, “was one of extraordinary dullness in religion. Licentiousness prevailed among the young people, who were addicted to night-walking, the frequenting of taverns, lewd practices, and frolics which continued almost all night.” Such a state of affairs was an opportunity to any young theologian, and Edwards seized it. He instructed the young people of his church to meet in various parts of the town on the evenings of lecture days and spend time in prayer and other duties of social religion. His success in guiding them proved so remarkable that the adults were soon following their examples (Sweet, op. cit., p. 283).

Stirring Of Spirit

Taking advantage of the awakened religious interest among the people of his town, Jonathan Edwards, in December of 1734, inaugurated a series of sermons on justification by faith. He denied the efficacy of good works on the part of the unconverted for any claim upon God’s grace or hope of salvation. Before many weeks had passed, “the minds of the people,” he wrote, “were wonderfully taken off from the world; the noise among the dry bones waxed louder and louder; and all other talk but about spiritual and eternal things was soon thrown by.” By the summer of 1735, “the town seemed to be full of the presence of God; it was never so full of love, nor so full of joy, and yet so full of distress as it was then” (Newman, op. cit., p. 674, and Sweet, The Story of Religion in America, p. 130).

Sinners Flee God’S Wrath

The preaching of Jonathan Edwards to the unconverted was without parallel. In his sermon, “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God,” one of the most celebrated sermons ever preached in America, he said, “The God that holds you over the pit of hell, much as anyone holds a spider or some loathsome insect over the fire, abhors you and is dreadfully provoked; his wrath toward you burns like fire.” From Northampton the rivival spread to other communities with Edwards frequently doing the preaching. Other ministers, some previously unconverted, joined in the work of evangelism.

As Frelinghuysen and the Log College Presbyterians prepared the way for George Whitefield in New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, and Delaware, so Jonathan Edwards and the Northampton revival also opened up his way in New England. In September of 1740, Whitefield arrived at Newport, Rhode Island and went on to Boston, preaching at various places on the way. Churches were crowded, and on the Boston Common he preached to crowds of as many as 15,000. Thereafter, preaching sometimes twice a day, he traveled on to Salem, Ipswich, Newbury, Portsmouth, and York, Maine. Returning to Boston he preached his farewell sermon, delivered on the Common and was heard by a throng estimated at 20,000 to 30,000.

Whitefield next visited Northampton and after meeting Jonathan Edwards there, pronounced him to be “a solid, excellent Christian.… I think I may say I have not seen his fellow in all New England” (Belcher, op. cit., pp. 180–181).

Evidences Of Revival

From Northampton he toured through Connecticut. Throughout New England he preached the doctrines of salvation by grace through faith and the inner, personal experience of a man’s heart with Christ. His audiences, deeply stirred by his impassioned eloquence, were often moved to tears, many crying aloud for God’s mercy, hundreds being converted, and multitudes of church members being revived.

Whitefield’s preaching stimulated revivalist ministers to vigorous activity. Jonathan Edwards, Eleazor Wheelock, Joseph Bellamy, and others became itinerant evangelists and made tours similar to those of Whitefield. Under all of their preaching, falling exercises, fainting, hysteria, and weeping were common. In July, 1741, at Enfield, Connecticut, Edwards chose as his text, “Their Foot Shall Slide in Due Time” (Deut. 32:35). When he reached the climax of his sermon, “there was such a breathing of distress, and weeping, that the preacher was obliged to speak to the people and desire silence that he might be heard.” Some unconsciously seized the sides of the pews and pillars as though they felt themselves slipping into hell.

Regenerate Church Additions

From 1740 to 1742 the people that were added to the churches of New England numbered between 25,000 and 50,000 out of a total population of 300,000. Concerning the effect of the revival, Jonathan Edwards said in 1743, “I suppose the town (Northampton) has never been in no measure so free from vice—for any long time together—for these 60 years, as it has this nine years past.” It must be recorded, however, that within four years interest in the revival, even in Northampton, had waned, and Edwards could not but admit that the church, with no new members in that length of time, was dead (Sweet, op. cit., p. 135).

Yet despite this decline, much good came of the movement. It reached into the middle colonies where conversions equaled in number those in New England About 150 new Congregational churches were formed, along with scores of Presbyterian churches in Delaware and New Jersey, and a redoubling of the number of Presbyterian ministers. Baptist churches multiplied, and their work was revitalized. Conversions once again became a requirement for church membership, and vital personal godliness was emphasized as never before. In its final results, ministerial education moved forward, as well as missionary work among the Indians, and the “Half-Way Covenant” was finally and thoroughly discredited.

WE QUOTE:

NATHAN M. PUSEY

President, Harvard University

Your college hopes that among all the untrammelled study you have done here, from your activity outside the classroom, in association with your friends, perhaps in part from experience in this or some other church—that in one way or another Harvard has helped you to find a meaning and a center for your life. If you have found this outside religion, so long as you have found it for yourself, there can be no fault in that. Agnosticism can be an honest and, at least in the face of false gods, an entirely healthy state of mind. But the experience of many seems to indicate that it is not one in which one can long dwell, for trust we must in someone or something, surely, for our spiritual and mental health, not merely in ourselves. The final answer must, we hope, be God.

At the end of your four years in college we come together in a service of thanksgiving as graduating classes have been doing at Harvard for more than three centuries. Secularization, like cultural variety, has had the effect of making worship increasingly difficult for us. But it has not in my judgment made it irrelevant. Indeed, it would seem to me to be a very superficial intellectual credo which would imply that the questions of religion can be ignored in or out of college. For this reason it is my very sincere wish, and my prayer, that with all the other goods which it is to be hoped Harvard has given you she will not have failed you at this most crucial point.—In an address to the senior class of Harvard University, June 8, 1958.

Donald M. C. Englert

Professor of Old Testament, Lancaster Theological Seminary

Barth is now 72, and would have retired at the usual age except for the fact that his name draws foreign theological students to Basel.… When a difference of opinion arises, the student is invited to his home for tea, where the class time will not be taken by the arguments back and forth.… There … we got on the question of a Christian’s relationship to those who differed from him: to Roman Catholics, Unitarians, and Jews. I told him that in Lancaster we have an active chapter of the National Conference of Christians and Jews, that a rabbi has spoken in our classrooms and Chapel on several occasions, that several ministers in town (myself included) preached in the Conservative synagogue, that several Seminary professors have preached in the Unitarian Church and that on each Thanksgiving Day a union service is held, shared by the congregations of St. Peter’s (United Church of Christ), the Unitarian Church, and the Reform synagogue. The great theologian was horrified by all this; he was extremely upset and called us “religious indifferentists”; he felt that because of our “outgoing” lines of communication to other faiths and cultures we must be especially careful not to dilute thereby the full flavor of the Christian witness.”—In an article, “Theologians I Met in Switzerland,” in Theology and Life, Vol. I, No. 2 (May, 1958), pp. 103 f.

Preacher In The Red

A WHALE OF A SLIP

Last year I preached on Old Testament texts. One Sunday I took for my subject the story of Jonah. My sermon topic read: “The Lord’s Call To Service.” In the first part of the sermon I pointed out how Jonah defied God’s call to go to Nineveh, and in the second part I showed how Jonah obeyed the call.

Going back to the first part of the sermon, I tried to become somewhat dramatic. I was heard to say: “There was Jonah in the welly of the bale.” I just felt that I had said something wrong so in the split second one has at his disposal in such situations, I quickly decided to correct myself. Only this time I made it worse. I said: “There was Jonah in a whale of a belly.”—REV. WALTER LUEBKEMAN, Hayward, Calif.

This is the second of two articles on Colonial awakenings in America by Raymond W. Settle, a student of frontier religion.

Cover Story

Our Demanding Laity

The Church of Jesus Christ demands the highest qualified leadership a man can give. Any minister of the Gospel will surely bear this in mind. The weaknesses and errors that have been displayed in the careless service of men of God occur only too frequently, and are rightfully exposed.

On the other hand, 30 years of observation and experience as a pastor, newspaperman, and educator have led me to view with some alarm the mounting demands which our church members make today on religious leaders. I speak here of the unjustified, ill-spirited criticism which people often thrust at their ministers. Where errors, wrongs, and failings are in evidence, of course, no leader has a right to expect to be immune from proper rebuke. But at the same time, there seems to be no activity doing more to hamper the work of the Church as a whole than this unquestionably intemperate, unloving attitude prevailing in churches and in their circles of acquaintanceship.

One reason for this, I believe, is the high-pressured pace of our times: we are all rushing around in a complex social situation. We tend to demand quicker and better execution of plans and to grow impatient with one who is slow and inefficient.

Another reason, I feel, lies in the fact that the activities of the church have grown so rapidly and cover so wide an area that a heavier than reasonable load is likely to be imposed upon all workers.

Realism Is Needed

This very growth of interests in our modern communities is a phenomenon which many a church has not as yet recognized in terms of adequate pastoral leadership. The average layman, it may well be said, has a seriously inadequate understanding of the demands made upon a parish minister’s time or that of an educational worker or youth leader. He is likely to be thinking of what pastors did in churches years ago. It is for this reason that the layman should revise his expectations of his pastor and be more realistic in what he believes the pastor ought to do. To begin with, church organizations would do well to keep members up-to-date on what their pastor has to do and how he does it. They ought to provide ways by which parishioners may be informed on all matters where misunderstandings are most likely to occur. Some churches publish a week in advance the pastor’s engagements and major calling schedule. Others make frequent verbal announcements of these activities.

One of the most important things a layman must realize is that the amount of work one man can do in one day is limited. He must adopt a fairer view of the pastor’s calling, and recognize that it is simply impossible for him to make the rounds of general calling as frequently as he did a few years ago. Calling ought to be purposive and linked with a definite spiritual objective. To keep a pastor harnessed to an unrelenting round of perfunctory visits, just because some demanding people insist on seeing him often, is manifestly unjust. This is most likely to take time which a pastor should devote to emergencies, sickness, and trouble.

Regardless of the merits of any of these proposals, what does the greatest damage is the unloving spirit with which many of these criticisms are made. People start rumors about neglect of calling, failure to do this or that, or some statement is made before any ascertaining of the actual facts. People will so often pass along gossipy information which hurts and which is entirely unjustified. If some word is said or hasty action taken, they quickly put the worst possible construction upon it. And they further allow groups, factions and subsurface loyalties to form which may cause mischief.

Our church people should soberly rethink their church conduct before they embark upon a policy of divisiveness, prejudice, dislike, and hostility. They should speak the truth in love, and they should learn to love their brother.

In my own experience there have been literally scores of people turned from the organized churches—even while loving their Lord and believing deeply in the Christian faith—because of the hypocrisy, the barrage of criticism, and the attitude of contention and strife on the part of members. Many have grown disgusted with the suspicion, prejudices, rivalries, and narrow policies in many of these churches, and have felt that there is nothing which they can gain by staying with them.

We must reckon with such actions. We may not believe them wise or justified. But this is the way many people are reacting today.

At one time it was the exclusiveness and class consciousness of churches that drove out many of the laborers and those of economically lower status. Now some of the actions in many churches are driving away the thinking people, those who are interested in progressive living and an educated response to life.

Sharing The Burdens

In addition, it must be recognized that the hopeless amount of work and burdens being placed upon pastors are driving many of them away from the parish ministry. Many of these are truly twice-born and consecrated men. We cannot attribute all this to loss of faith or poor witness or lack of consecration. A pastor reasonably gets tired of being harried and pressured to do what he cannot possibly do—and then be criticized unthinkingly by those who have no regard for the truth, for personal feelings or for the cause of the Church. He also may well tire of being expected, for a very modest salary, to be an expert in unrelated fields and be on call for many unreasonable, unnecessary services. Yet even all this he would bear more cheerfully if these burdens and duties were imposed upon him with loving consideration and a sharing of Christian concern.

Our beautiful buildings, our trained staffs, our broad programs, our consecrated witnessing—all of these will not avail if we destroy them with a spirit of criticism and contention.

All my life I have wondered why the churches I knew or served had people who seemed to live by criticism, and who seemed to be never so morally alert as when they felt obliged to speak against someone, regardless of whether the issue in question was sufficiently investigated.

My answer to the demands of the layman would be to ask him to make his requests in terms of love and sharing and understanding. He will be surprised how much more evident the Holy Spirit and his works are, and how much better a servant of Jesus Christ his pastor may prove to be.

Richard K. Morton is Dean of the Evening College and Chaplain of Jacksonville University, Florida. His plea for Christian understanding by the laity stems from “lifelong concern for the Church—as pastor’s son, pastor, religious worker and educator.” The Church’s witness, he writes, is impaired by criticism.

Cover Story

Dispensational Premillennialism

The objective of this limited discussion is to provide a brief definitive study of dispensationalism, to analyze its interpretative principles and schools of thought, and relate it as such to premillennialism. Obviously a defense of the doctrine cannot be undertaken here.

In the last decade, dispensationalism has attracted increasing attention as a major factor in theological interpretation. Though the distinctives of its system are not new, the contemporary theological scene seems to call for discussion of them. Most of the comment has been critical. Liberals have opposed dispensationalism because it is fundamentalist in approach. Amillenarians attack it because it is premillennial. Some premillenarians, under criticism anyway, have sought to escape opposition by disavowing dispensationalism.

Dispensationalists themselves, embarrassed by extremists in their ranks, have had difficulty clarifying the situation. Unfortunately, the critical literature produced has sought in too many cases to win an argument rather than present an objective study. The result is one of the most confusing spectacles found in contemporary theology.

Definitions

Premillennialism is generally recognized as the proper name for that system of biblical interpretation which places the second advent of Christ as preceding and introducing his future reign on earth for one thousand years. The relation of dispensationalism to premillennialism, however, is an area of some disagreement. A normative definition generally accepted by dispensationalists is that furnished by C. I. Scofield in the Scofield Reference edition of the Bible: “A dispensation is a period of time during which man is tested in respect of obedience to some specific revelation of the will of God” (p. 5).

As used in Scripture, the word dispensation is a translation of the noun oikonomia and is found in the following passages: Luke 16:2–4; 1 Corinthians 9:17; Ephesians 1:10; 3:2, 9; Colossians 1:2, 25; and 1 Timothy 1:4. It is variously translated dispensation or stewardship. The verb form oikonomeo is found in Luke 16:2 and the noun form referring to a person, oikonomos, is found in Luke 12:42; 16:1, 3, 8; Romans 16:23; 1 Corinthians 4:1, 2; Galatians 4:2; Titus 1:7; and 1 Peter 4:10. In most of these instances it is translated steward. In its biblical usage, the concept is not explicitly a time period and for this reason the Scofield definition has been questioned.

Objections to the definition of a dispensation as a time period are based on partial truth. The time element is a consequence rather than an explicit meaning of the word. Webster’s New International Dictionary defines dispensation as “a system of principles, promises, and rules ordained and administered; schemes; economy; as the patriarchal, Mosaic, and Christian dispensations.” As the definition indicates, a dispensation is not a time period, but is in the nature of a stewardship, the responsibility involved has a beginning in time and an ending in time and the period between is the period of stewardship. The Winston Dictionary defines dispensation in its theological meaning as “a system of principles and rules ascribed to divine inspiration in operation during a specific period.”

Though its biblical use embodies principally the idea of stewardship, theologians for generations have been using the word dispensation as a time period even though it is not a dispensation in the modern sense. The definition of dispensation as a time period in which a specific stewardship obtains is by no means a recent development (Cf. John Edwards, A Compleat Survey of all the Dispensations, 790 pp., published 1699). All theologians have some sort of a dispensational division if no more than to divide the Old and New Testaments. The principles involved in such divisions and their significance have caused the rise of modern dispensationalism in the post-Reformation period.

The principles involved in dispensationalism are as old as the history of biblical interpretation. Of these the most important is literal interpretation of prophecy which is, rightly considered, the guiding principle of dispensational premillennialism. Unlike Augustine who advocated a separate hermeneutics for prophetic interpretation, namely, the spiritual or figurative method, dispensationalists follow the more literal interpretation. The charge that dispensationalism demands that all Scripture be interpreted literally is false, however. All schools of interpretation necessarily regard some Scripture as not subject to literal interpretation. Premillennial dispensationalism, however, follows the principle that prophecy is not a special case and is to be treated like other forms of Scripture revelation, that is, that the literal interpretation should be followed unless the context indicates otherwise.

The second major principle is derived from the definition of dispensationalism itself. A dispensation is considered a divinely-given stewardship based on a particular rule of life revealed in the progressive unfolding of divine truth in Scripture. Each new major deposit of truth had its own demand for faith and obedience. Generally speaking, a dispensation is created by the revelation of a major system of truth sufficient to constitute a new rule of life and is often marked off from the preceding period by some spiritual crisis in the history of God’s people. Dispensationalism does not deny that revealed truth is cumulative and that new revelation is obviously built upon the old even though to some extent it replaces a former situation.

The third principle in dispensationalism is the time element. As indicated in the definition, a dispensation is, strictly speaking, a divine deposit of truth, not an age in itself. A stewardship by its nature, however, has a beginning and ending with the idea of a dispensation as an age coming into view. Hence, most theologians refer to a dispensation as a time period, even if they do not accept some dispensational distinctions.

The fourth principle is that a dispensation is specifically a rule of life, rather than a way of salvation. The frequent charge that dispensationalists teach more than one way of salvation is not sustained by their literature and is actually foreign to the true system. Though dispensationalists find faith manifested in obedience to a particular divine revelation in every dispensation, the way of salvation is always faith, the principle of salvation is always grace, and the ground of salvation is always the death of Christ, even if imperfectly understood prior to the full revelation in the New Testament.

A wide divergence of belief is found within the general designation of dispensationalism. This has frequently tended to confuse the issue as opponents of dispensationalism have resorted to citation of the most extreme statements they could find instead of trying to discover the normative position. In general, four attitudes exist in relation to dispensationalism:

Nondispensational view. This includes all points of view which oppose dispensationalism by emphasizing a central divine plan and purpose for human history as excluding any division into dispensations. This unity of purpose is usually supplied by making the salvation of the elect the central purpose of God, and if dispensations are included at all, they are regarded as successive phases of this one plan. Nondispensationalists usually regard Israel and the Church essentially as one, and kingdom truth is considered to be soteriological, or related to salvation, rather than culminating in an earthly political kingdom such as is normal in premillennialism.

Normative dispensationalism. Within this classification, the great majority of dispensationalists are properly placed. Characteristic of this school of thought is the view as illustrated in Scofield that there are seven dispensations revealed in Scripture: innocence, conscience, human government, promise, law, grace, and millennial kingdom. Each of these dispensations constituted a test of faith and obedience according to the rule of life provided, and under each dispensation man fails and is saved only by divine grace. This school of thought does not dispense with grace.

Major Dispensations

Some variations exists in the statement of these seven dispensations, but it is generally agreed that three major dispensations are the subject of extensive revelation in the Bible, namely, the dispensation of the law, the dispensation of grace, and the dispensation of the millennial kingdom. The law began with Moses and was the rule of life for Israel from Moses to the Church. The dispensation of grace, or the church period, was introduced by Christ, began at Pentecost, and will close with the translation of the Church. The millennium will begin with the second advent of Christ and the judgment of the world and will conclude with the creation of the eternal state. While dispensationalists regard the major dispensations as bound together by many common doctrines, such as the way of salvation, doctrine of God, and inspiration of Scripture, dispensationalism necessarily insists that as rules of life the three major dispensations differ extensively with each other and that each replaces the former dispensation.

Bullingerism. Numerically small but quiet vocal are those who go beyond the Scofield system. Most extreme is the position of E. W. Bullinger who found two dispensations within the church period, the first being the period of the Jewish church extending through Acts 28 and the second being the dispensation of the Gentile church as the body of Christ beginning after Acts. He rejected both water baptism and the Lord’s Supper. True followers of Bullinger, however, are almost extinct and practically all dispensationalists today deny that they are followers of his position.

Church as exclusively Pauline. Less extreme than the view of Bullinger, but considered ultradispensational by followers of Scofield, is the view of dispensationalism expressed by the Grace Gospel Fellowship and defined in the volume by Cornelius R. Stam, The Fundamentals of Dispensationalism. The key to their system is the belief that the truth of the Church as the body of Christ is exclusively taught in the epistles of Paul and that therefore the Church could not begin until Paul’s conversion in Acts 9 or later. In contrast to Bullinger who rejected both the ordinance of the Lord’s Supper and water baptism, the more moderate position excludes only water baptism which they regard as a Jewish rite not intended for the church today. The great majority of dispensationalists, however, consider this as an extreme view and insist that the Church as both the body and bride of Christ began with the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost when 3000 souls were saved.

Relation To Premillennialism

Contrast between Israel and the Church. As related to premillennial interpretation, normative dispensationalism tends to emphasize certain important distinctives. One of the most significant is the contrast provided between God’s program for Israel and God’s present program for the church. The church composed of Jew and Gentile is considered a separate program of God which does not advance nor fulfill any of the promises given to Israel. The present age is regarded as a period in which Israel is temporarily set aside as to its national program. When the Church is translated however, Israel’s program will then proceed to its consummation. Though dispensationaists have tended to contrast Israel and the church, it is false that they alone make this distinction, as is frequently alleged. Postmillenarians like Charles Hodge and amillenarians like William Hendriksen, though not dispensationalists, also believe that Israel has special promises that belong only to those who are in the racial seed of Jacob, and do not equate Israel and the Church.

The offer of the kingdom at the first advent. Dispensationalists usually consider that Christ at his first coming offered himself to Israel as their Messiah and King. His subsequent crucifixion was the occasion of their rejection of him. The hypothetical question as to what would have eventuated if Israel had accepted Christ as their king has led to the charge, which is entirely unjustified, that dispensational teaching tends to minimize the cross or declare it unnecessary.

Pretribulation rapture. The tendency to contrast Israel and the Church and to interpret prophecy literally has led most dispensationalists to accept a pretribulational rapture of the Church. Their point of view is that predictions of a future time of tribulation in both the Old and New Testaments are related to the divine program for Israel and for Gentiles, but that the Church is never explicitly in view. Though this relationship of dispensationalism to pretribulationism is indirect, it is significant that posttribulationists are seldom dispensationalists.

Reign On Earth

Literal earthly millennium. Dispensational premillennialism tends to emphasize the governmental and political character of the millennium itself. Christ will reign on the throne of David on earth over restored Israel as well as the Gentile world. Spiritual qualities such as righteousness and peace, spiritual power, and the visible glory of God will be evident. It will fulfill literally the glowing expectation of Old Testament prophets for a kingdom of God on earth embracing all nations. Satan will be bound and inactive. The curse upon the earth will be lifted and the desert will blossom. All will know the Lord from the least to the greatest. This final dispensation before the creation of the new heavens and new earth will in many respects be climactic in blessing and a demonstration of divine sovereignty and glory. Christ’s reign on earth will gloriously fulfill Old Testament prophecy.

Agree With Other Conservatives

On all major doctrines of Scripture, dispensationalists are in hearty agreement with other conservatives. Their distinctive doctrines result from the attempt to interpret prophecy with the same literal method as is used for other Scripture. This leads to sharper contrasts between the dispensation of law, the present dispensation of grace, and the future dispensation of the millennial kingdom following the second advent. Separate prophetic programs are traced in Scripture for Israel, for the Church, and for the Gentiles. These distinctives, however, are balanced by agreement that many unifying factors bind all dispensations together. The unity of Scripture is strongly maintained by those who hold the dispensational viewpoint.

Dispensationalists do not deny the unity of the divine plan of salvation as progressively revealed in Scripture and do not teach two ways of salvation. Every dispensation as a rule of life reveals failure on the part of man, but at the same time Scripture reaffirms unfailing faithfulness and grace on the part of God. Dispensationalism is a matter of degree. Lewis Sperry Chafer was wont to say: “Anyone is a dispensationalist who no longer offers lambs on brazen altars or who does not observe Saturday as the day of rest.” Modern usage indicates a more restricted meaning, but dispensationalism deserves more objective treatment, more normative definition than has characterized most contemporary discussion.

John F. Walvoord is President of Dallas Theological Seminary in Dallas, Texas. He holds the A.B. degree from Wheaton College, A.M. from Texas Christian University, Th.B., Th.M. and Th.D. from the Seminary he now serves. His published works include The Return of the Lord and The Rapture Question. In this series of articles on “The Christian Hope and the Millennium,” he represents the premillennial dispensational viewpoint. Articles from other points of view are as follow.

Cover Story

Christ’s Chief Competitor

On an outdoor bulletin board there appeared this sermon title: “Christ’s Chief Competitor.” Immediately below that title was the name of the minister. It appeared that inadvertently and unconsciously he was telling the community he was the competitor.

It is a serious problem today that too many of our sermons are Christless. They actually make competitors for Christ, leaving the man in the pew looking to the pulpit saying, “Sir, we would see Jesus.”

In the town in which I live, we have a weekly TV panel of ministers called “Pastors Face Your Questions.” Recently the panel received the following intelligent and disturbed letter:

As a member of one of Charlotte’s finest, largest, and richest churches, I am perfectly willing to uphold the dignity of so fine an edifice and an institution by going along with all of the preliminaries of the service on Sunday if, when we get down to the purpose of my being there, my minister would give me something to, shall I say, feed my soul, encourage that which is good in me and send me away with the assurance that God still cares and will look after me during the next week. Instead of this, he philosophizes, expresses himself in such lofty terms and grandiose manner that for the life of me, I cannot grasp his point nor appreciate his efforts. Maybe I’m wrong, maybe it wouldn’t be dignified or proper to just read God’s word from the Bible and tell me in good plain English what is going to become of me in the end if I don’t live by that word. Maybe I’m wrong in my thinking that one should be able to take home the meat of the sermon, mull over it, discuss it with one’s family over the dinner table. Maybe things have changed and no one has told me.

And so my question to you pastors is: Should Jesus Christ stand in your pulpit next Sunday and preach to your congregation, do you think he would preach your type of sermon?

This is no isolated case. This is not an instance of only one man in one city crying out for Christ-centered preaching. It is not a problem only in our day; it has been a problem throughout centuries. Preachers have always yielded to the temptation of preaching their own gospel instead of Christ’s. It is said that one Sunday Louis XVI heard a sermon full of politics and government. As he left the church, he said to the abbé: “It is a pity that you did not touch on religion. Then you would have told us something about everything.”

Not long ago, the churches of a certain denomination held daily Lenten noon services, and we ministers were urged to come and hear the leading preachers of that denomination. Desiring some good preaching and feeling the need for spiritual food, I went to hear three: two were bishops and one was a seminary professor.

One bishop preached on the subject, “What Do You Want?” He began by saying that people have many desires. The first point was, what we desire may not be what is good for us. Second, what we desire may not be what we need. There was no text. And Christ was barely mentioned. It was not a sermon; it was a moral discourse. I went away disillusioned for having received a stone when I had come for bread.

The professor preached on the text, “Whom do ye say that I am?” My hopes rose. Now, I would hear a Christ-centered sermon. His introduction dealt with the fact that people have various conceptions of Christ. Point one: Christ was at all times a gentleman; two: Christ was a man of courage. Nothing was said about Christ as the Son of God or Redeemer. He was just a courageous gentleman. I suppose a Jew, Unitarian, or a Mohammedan would be willing to say as much.

The third prominent clergyman spoke on the conscience. His first question was, whether conscience was the voice of God or one’s environment. His answer: it was both. The second part of his sermon was answering the question, what should we do about our conscience? His answer: recognize its voice, educate it, and obey it. For the third time Christ was left out. I had had enough; I did not go back to hear the remaining men publicized as among the best preachers of that denomination.

Instead of answering the letter on the program, the TV panelists decided that each would answer next Sunday with a sermon on “What Would Jesus Say if He Were Preaching Here Today?”

According to a news report, the Episcopalian said that if Jesus was standing in his pulpit that morning, he would give the Beatitudes. The Baptist said that Jesus would speak clearly, but uncomfortably, about the vices of the day. The Methodist declared that Jesus would urge members of the congregation to forgive each other. The Presbyterian minister would have Jesus preach three points: judgment, love, and joy.

We sadly note here that these ministers would have Jesus Christ giving “Christless preaching.” The ethics of Jesus was one-sidedly applied to personal and social needs and problems. But what is most subtle is the impression that Jesus would only speak from the pulpit the one Sunday that he was allowed. Is not Jesus to speak every Sunday? Should not each Sunday’s sermons be centered in and saturated with his truth? What does it mean to preach Christ Sunday after Sunday? First, it means that Christ should be lifted up that the congregation may see him. People would hear his words, see his deeds once again, and sense his spirit.

To preach Christ means to keep the cross in the center of our preaching. Jesus is much more than a man or a martyr; he is not a mere teacher of principles or a moral guide. It is his atoning death that is significant: he died for our sins; by and in him we have redemption; and through him God and man were made one. In each sermon there ought to be enough of the cross that a stranger in church for the first time would find the answer to the question: “What must I do to be saved?” Paul said, “We preach Christ crucified.”

In preaching Christ Sunday after Sunday there is a danger that we give the impression Jesus was merely an historical figure among many. He once lived and died on a cross. We neglect the resurrection except for Easter, and even then we use the occasion for assuring people of pagan ideas of immortality. But why is not the resurrection kept in every sermon throughout the year? It is assurance to our people that Christ is a contemporary Saviour, a present, living reality.

Fortifying Our Own Ideas

Why do we preachers remove Christ from our sermons? To be sure, we do not drop him completely; he is used as an illustration, and often we quote him to fortify our own ideas. We have Christless, crossless sermons because we fail to realize the true meaning of Christ. Christ above all is Redeemer and Saviour. He is the Lamb of God that takes away the sin of the world. His death and resurrection have opened up the gates of eternal life for all who accept him in faith. This is tragically left out of many sermons. Why?

Probably because we misunderstand and under-evaluate the importance of the sermon. To be popular with people and fill the pews every Sunday, we feel it necessary to entertain with humorous anecdotes and illustrations. On the other hand, we also have a sincere desire to make Christianity applicable to the needs and problems of the day. Consequently, we discuss from a Christian viewpoint politics and economics.

What is the place and significance of the sermon? This takes us to the heart of our Protestant faith. It lies in the doctrine of the Word. The means of grace are the Word and the Sacraments. The Sacraments are the Word with a visible sign. The Word comes to us every Sunday as it is preached from the pulpits of our land. The sermon is a sacramental aspect of worship, a means of grace. It is God making his appeal through the preacher. Through the sermon, God sends his grace upon his people by which they are saved and brought into a right relationship with Christ.

Where does Christ come in? A sermon is the declaration of the Word of God. What is the Word? According to John’s gospel, “the Word was God” and “the Word was flesh and dwelt among us.” Christ is the Word. To preach Christ is to preach the Word. But Christ is not preached fully except he is preached as the crucified and risen Saviour.

There is a painting of Luther preaching to a congregation. The people are not looking at Luther but at another spot in the church. A second look at the canvas shows the ethereal figure of Christ in a corner of the cathedral. The congregation is looking at Christ. The ideal situation for every preacher and congregation should be to preach Christ so fully and faithfully that the congregation will not see a master orator in the pulpit, but Jesus Christ, our Saviour and Redeemer.

As pastors go into their pulpits every Sunday, they should hear a plea from the pews: “Sir, we would see Jesus.” Are preachers today competitors or confessors of Christ?

On Friendship

What shall we say of friendship,

That timeless span of life

When mind meets mind

In selfless communion of the soul.

It is but a symbol, ’tis true

Of unsaid words, of songs

As yet unheard amid the noise

And tremor of earth-bound places.

It is not seen, nor is it found

In frenzied mind. It is only

In a quiet hour, when need

Rears its ugly head, that we

Turn, wordless, to find a hand

Within our own, warm and unafraid.

LOLA J. PEPLER

J. R. Brokhoff holds the A.B. degree from Muhlenberg College, the B.D. from Mt. Airy Lutheran Seminary, and the M.A. degree from University of Pennsylvania. From 1950–54 he was guest Professor of Homiletics at Emory University. In 1951 he became the youngest recipient of a D.D. from Muhlenberg. Since 1955 he has been pastor of St. Mark’s Lutheran Church of Charlotte, North Carolina, where he now is serving as President of the Charlotte Lutheran Pastors’ Association.

Cover Story

No Greater Love

For scarcely for a righteous man will one die: yet peradventure for a good man some would even dare to die. But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, which we were yet sinners, Christ died for us (Romans 5:7, 8).

The comparison that is here made between the love of man one to another and the dying love of God is a short digression from the main argument. The Apostle is treating of the good ground of the Christian’s hope of the glory of God. In the beginning of the chapter he describes the hope of a Christian by the greatness of the good that is the object of it and the joyfulness of it and the effectualness of it to enable the Christian to glory in tribulation. (The first three verses.) And shows how the tribulation of a true Christian is a means of increasing and establishing hope that, that a patient bearing of affliction gives that experience that greatly confirms hope. And that for the reason that the Apostle gives because in that way of enduring tribulation the love of God was shed abroad in their hearts by the Holy Ghost which was given to them. And then the Apostle proceeds to show what reason Christians have to be assured that their hope of future glory shall not be disappointed from this argument: that Christ died for them even while ungodly.

To show how unparalleled the love of Christ is the Apostle in the first place declares the utmost extent of the love of man. “Scarcely for a righteous man will one die: yet peradventure for a good man some would even dare to die.” By a righteous man must be understood a man of moral justice, one that is willing not to wrong any man but to give every one his due, and by a good man may be understood either a man with a qualification beyond righteousness, a bountiful man of a kind spirit. If we understand it in this sense the meaning of the Apostle is this that man will scarcely die for another though that other is a righteous man has always done fairly by him and never injured him. Yet possibly some would even die for one that has been good to them having received a great deal of kindness and being under special obligation. And this is the utmost that men’s love extends agreeable to what Christ says in John 15:13: “Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.”

Or else we may understand a righteous man and good in the text as synonymous terms and signifying the same thing and both in opposition to ungodly and sinners that it is here said that Christ died for. And so the word is changed from righteous to good only for the sake of elegance of speech. And then the sense of the Apostle is this that men’s love scarcely ever goes so far as to lay down their lives for good and righteous men let ’em be persons of never so good and excellent a disposition. Sometimes the love of men has gone so far. But Christ died for those that were the reverse of righteous and good. He died for the ungodly and sinners. The Apostle herein takes notice of an instance wherein the love of Christ transcends all the love of men one to another.

Doctrine: That there never was any love that could be paralleled with the dying love of Christ or the dying love of our Lord Jesus Christ is that to which no love is to be compared.

Never was any love of any other being or any creature to be compared with this love—the love of God in giving his Son to die. However great and wonderful the love of one creature to another has been in some instances yet there has been no instance that has been any way to be compared with this. There is often a very strong affection in parents towards their children. There was a great love in Jacob to Joseph. When he thought his son Joseph was dead he rent his clothes, and put sackcoth on his loins, and mourned for his son many days. And when all his sons and all his daughters rose up to comfort him he refused to be comforted, and said, “For I will go down into the grave unto my son mourning.”

So very wonderful was the love of David to his son Absalom though Absalom had been so wicked and rebellious. Yet when David heard the news of his death how was he affected by it? 2 Samuel 18:33: “And the king was much moved, and went up to the chamber over the gate, and wept: and as he went, thus he said, O my son Absalom, my son, my son Absalom! would God I had died for thee, O Absalom, my son, my son!”

This love of Christ is unparalleled by any instance of any other love in these following respects:

I

Never was there love that fixed upon an object so much below the lover. Love is more remarkable and wonderful when there is a very great distance between the lover and the beloved—when the lover is greatly above the beloved than when there is an equality. Amongst men generally those that are in condition greatly below them are neglected by them. They ben’t looked upon as worthy of their esteem or regard. Those that are little in comparison of them are little in their eyes and little in their thoughts. Men set their love upon this or that other object and seek their friendship because they conceive that they shall be added to by their friendship and therefore neglect those that are greatly below them as thinking that they are so little in comparison of them that they with them shall not be added to.

Those men that are great in the world in high estate ordinarily neglect the mean and low. If they take notice of them it is far from being in any such way as taking them into their friendship or setting their love upon them. Men may sometimes set their hearts upon an object that is much below them but then ’tis because they think they see something in them that is not so much below. There is some qualification in them they have respect to that they conceive would in their enjoyment of it be an addition to them. There is but one thing in any being that can influence him to set his love upon an object greatly below him and that is conceived of as such in all respects by the lover and that is goodness—a mere good disposition. If a great prince should love a poor man’s child under some calamity and should pity it and lay himself out greatly for its relief and there be all signs of its being only from mere goodness and compassion would not this be looked upon as wonderful?

But if it should be so that a noble prince should from goodness and benevolence exceedingly love and pity one so inferior what is the superiority of one man above another to the superiority of the Son of God to us? The difference that may be between men and men may be great as to outward circumstances. There may be many accidental differences but their nature is the same. A poor child has the same human nature as a prince. In many things there is an equality between a poor child and a prince. Yea, the child may be superior. But Jesus Christ is infinitely above us in nature he being of a divine nature. There is no distance of nature between man and man but between God and man there is an infinite distance of nature a greater distance than there is between the nature of man and the nature of worms. There is a greater distance between the Son of God and us than there is between the earth and the highest star in the heavens.

The Son of God was every way infinitely above us. Consider him with respect to his nature with respect to his duration. Consider him with respect to all the properties of his nature, natural or moral excellencies. Consider him with respect to honor and the respect of his Father. Consider him with respect to his dominion and sovereignty over the creature. Consider him with respect to his works. He it is that has made the world that has made sun, moon and stars; that made man and that made the highest heavens and made the angels of heaven. Consider him in his importance in the universality of things. He is the last end of all things. All things are made by him and for him and by him all things consist. Consider him with respect to the honor and respect of the creature. He is worshiped and adored by the angels of heaven and will be to all eternity. Therefore if we consider the dying love of Jesus Christ in this respect there never was any love like unto it. Never was there any instance of such a stoop made by any lover. What are we that one in such a height of glory and dignity should set his love upon us?

II

Secondly, never was there any instance of such love to those that were so far from being capable of benefiting the lover. There is amongst men but little disinterested love. In those instances of great friendship, self-interest has some influence in the matter. The lover looks upon the beloved as one capable and fitted to contribute to his benefit.

Love in men ordinarily is from want from the indigence of nature. It seeks that in others which it hath not in itself. The beloved is looked upon as fitted to supply the wants and satisfy the cravings of its nature. But Jesus Christ is and always was above want. ’Tis impossible he should stand in need of anything. He had a fullness incapable of any addition. He possessed a treasure that could not be enlarged. He was from eternity perfectly happy in the enjoyment of the Father. Nothing that the creature can do can in the least add to his happiness. His blessedness is infinite and invariable.

What need can one that infinitely enjoys God the Father and his love stand in need of us men? Or what good can we do him? Christ is not dependent for anything for any good upon us or any creature for he gives unto all life and breath and all things.

Men’s love generally is from want and because they ben’t sufficiently happy in themselves. But on the contrary Christ’s love is from fullness. Men’s love seeks an addition to fill up their emptiness but Christ’s love is from his fullness and because he is so full that he overflows. Man’s love seeks the reception of something to him but Christ’s love seeks communication.

III

Never was there any that set his love upon those in whom he saw so much filthiness and deformity. Never any that loved those in whom they saw so little to attract their love and so much to repel it and to procure hatred. Parents oftentimes have natural affection to those children that are very unworthy and may love those that they are sensible are undeserving from the natural propensity there is in men to love their own though ordinarily where there is a strong affection men imagine they see that which is lovely though indeed there be not anything.

There is such a fullness of love in the heart of Jesus Christ that it flows out toward those objects that have nothing to draw. The motive is within him. It seems it needs nothing to attract it. There is a sufficient spring in Christ’s own heart to set it going. There is an overflowing benevolence that it extends to those who have no beauty nor excellency.

Jesus Christ when he passed by us saw us naked and loathsome. He might justly have turned away from us with abhorrence have left us in our filth and stood at a distance from us as abominating to have anything to do with them that were so filthy. But it was otherwise. The time was a time of love. Instead of the lovely image of God there was the foul image of Satan that appeared upon us. That corruption was in our nature that was more odious in the eyes of Christ than the nature of a toad or serpent is to us. Natural men are like vipers. Their poison is the poison of a serpent and as the venom of asps. Man by sin became like a swine that delights to wallow in the mire, is like a filthy worm.

And Christ saw all this deformity that was in their hearts. Men may set their love upon those that are very hateful because they are ignorant of them. They don’t know what is in them. But Christ perfectly knew all our filthiness. The corruption of the heart of man was all naked and open to his view.

IV

Never was there any one that set his love upon those that were so far from loving him. Men in their fallen state are the enemies of God and Jesus Christ. Nothing is more the nature or natural disposition of man as he is in a natural condition than it is to hate God. He hates Christ and can do no other than hate him. Rom. 8:7: “The carnal mind is enmity against God: for it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be.” Every natural man has a mortal enmity against Christ as well as the Jews that crucified him. And this Christ knew when he was pleased to set his love upon them.

This enmity is the more provoking because it was so infinitely unreasonable. We had no reason to have a spirit of enmity against Christ. He never had done us any wrong. On the contrary all the blessings and benefits we receive are from him. Sinners have a spirit of enmity against him though he be infinitely excellent and amiable. Though he be the infinitely beloved of God yet he is hated of men. Sinners had no delight in the excellency of Christ that God the Father so delights in. Yea that very excellency is what he is hated for. He is hated for his holiness. Yea such is the enmity that was in them so rooted and fixed and strong that Christ’s dying love won’t change them. This Christ knew when he set his love upon them and undertook to die for them.

And he knew that they had a spirit of contempt towards him that they would slight and despise him. He knew that they had all such a spirit as the Jews and soldiers that spit upon him and mocked and derided him. He knew that they had such a spirit that when he was offered to them with all his benefits he should be slighted till their hearts were changed. But Christ loved sinners nothwithstanding this also.

V

There never was any love that appeared in so great and wonderful expressions. Expressions of love are of three kinds: declarations, doings and sufferings. The declarations of Christ’s love to his church in Scriptures are wonderful but deeds and sufferings are the principal expressions of love. And there is nothing in the declarations which Christ has made of his love in his Word but the same is evident in what he has done and suffered for his people and that more abundantly.

1. What Christ has done for his people and the love which he has shown them that way is very wonderful. Never was any that showed his love to another by doing so much for them as Christ has done. His love was such to his elect that he came down from heaven, he left the bosom of the Father, he laid aside his glory and came down to dwell on earth. He became incarnate. He took upon him another nature. It was a great thing for God to do to take upon him the nature of man. It was a great thing that Christ should come to dwell amongst men that he should so love us as to take up an abode amongst us for above 30 years as he did.

2. There was never in any other lover so great an expression of love as the sufferings of Christ. Expense and suffering for anyone is the greatest testimony of love. If one person bestows a great deal on another and does much for him, yet if it be without any kind of expense or suffering to himself, it is not so great an expression of love nor doth it show so great love.

To be at any great expense of money or goods for another especially so as considerably to suffer in estate by it is looked upon as a remarkable kindness. To go through many hardships and endure great fatigues of body for another, to redeem one out of captivity and from any great calamity would also be looked upon as a kindness that laid a great obligation on the beloved and ’tis a yet far greater expression of love if any should freely lose his life and be at the expense of his blood for them. Thus far also perhaps some earthly lovers have gone.

But there never was any that suffered so much for any earthly friend as Christ did, whether we consider what he suffered outwardly or in his soul.

His death besides the painfulness of it was attended with those circumstances that greatly aggravated the suffering. Christ suffered much outwardly just before his death. He was scourged and wounded with thorns and buffeted in the face by soldiers treated most ignominiously. He was spit upon and mocked and most contemptuously treated and his death was most disgraceful yea accursed.

And besides what he suffered in his body he suffered more in his soul. Sufferings of soul and body were united together. If he had suffered only in his body his spirit might have helped him to support his outward pains but he had darkness in his mind as well as pain in his body. He was smitten of God. God laid upon him the iniquities of us all. How great his inward sufferings were we may conclude by the greatness of them before his crucifixion in his agony in the garden. We are none of us acquainted with such a degree of sorrow and anguish of spirit as shall cause such an effect. The trouble and sorrows of his soul were as much of the nature of the torments of hell as an innocent holy person was capable of.

The sufferings of Christ were a greater expression and evidence of love for his being so great a person. If Christ had suffered no more than some other lovers have suffered for their friends yet his suffering would have been a more wonderful expression of love because ’tis a greater thing for a person of such glory and dignity to suffer than for a lesser. ’Tis a greater thing for a person that is God to die than for a mere worm of the dust to die and a more marvelous expression of love. For a divine person to lay down his life and spill his blood is a greater expense than for a man. A mere man has not so great a price to expend.

Who could have imagined that ever such a testimony should be given of God’s love to a creature? Without doubt it was surprising to the angels when it was first revealed to them. It was a thing unknown and never would have been conceived of had not God revealed it—that God, that a divine person should testify his love by suffering much less by such suffering.

VI

And lastly never was there any love that was so beneficial to the beloved. True love is fruitful. It always seeks the benefit and advantage of the beloved and will procure it if there be opportunity. But there is no other instance of love that in this respect is to be equaled as compared with this. The love of men one to another in many instances may have been greatly to the advantage. Parents’ love to their children may be very beneficial to them. Princes’ love to their favorites may be an occasion of their advancement to honor and wealth. Men through their love to others may have brought them out of low and miserable and distressed circumstances, redeemed them out of captivity, saved them from cruel bondage and tormenting death to honor wealth and pleasure. But no such instance can be compared with the benefits and advantages that the dying love of Christ is of to those who are the objects of his love.

For by means of his dying love they are rescued from eternal destruction. They are saved out of the furnace of fire. The deliverance of Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-nego out of Nebuchadnezzar’s burning fiery furnace by the love of Christ who himself came into that furnace to deliver them is a type of his dying love whereby he delivers sinners from the furnace of hell fire. Sinners by means of the dying love of Christ are rescued out of the paw of the devil that roaring lion that seeks to devour souls. And by the dying love of Christ those that are beloved by him are advanced to the greatest blessedness to the possession of a glorious kingdom to the wearing of a crown of glory to the seeing of God and fully enjoying of him to all eternity. By the dying love of Christ they are delivered from the foulest deformity and are now made and fashioned according to the image of God having the brightness of God’s holiness reflected from them.

And those whom he has purchased by his death the value of them is proportionable to the value of that price that was paid for them. The blood of Christ purchased things that can’t be purchased for gold. Neither shall silver be weighed for the price of them. And what makes the worth of them infinite is that they never will have an end. There will be no danger or possibility of losing them.

This is an abridged message from Jonathan Edwards’ Sermons on Romans, a forthcoming volume in the Works of Edwards currently being published by Yale University Press under the editorial direction of a committee headed by Perry Miller of Harvard University. This particular volume and sermon is edited by John H. Gerstner of Pittsburgh-Xenia Theological Seminary. Permission for the prior use of this hitherto unpublished sermon, in conjunction with the bi-centennial of Edwards’ death, has been granted toChristianity Todayby the Sterling Library of Yale and the Yale University Press.

Cover Story

Jonathan Edwards on Revival

Ever since Pentecost, there have been revivals, and there have been other Peters who have won multitudes to Christ. Occasionally and tragically, there have been revivalists who were interested first in the living they could make. As for laymen, too often the Christian experience became a matter of periodicity; in between the annual excitement of being “revived,” they lapsed into a corpse-like coma. Of the meaning of true revival, few seem to have an understanding.

This year, which marks the two hundredth anniversary of the death of Jonathan Edwards, evangelicals would do well to turn back to the writings of that remarkable man of God who was so notably used as an instrument of revival in New England. They would find of particular interest Edwards’ Faithful Narrative of Surprising Conversions, his Thoughts on the Revival of Religion in New England, and his Distinguishing Marks of a Work of the Spirit of God. Add to these the penetrating Treatise on Religious Affections, and you have a study of the subject of revival, its various aspects and operations, which for depth of perception and scriptural insight has never been surpassed, and is as relevant to our day as it was to his.

In approaching the discussion of this subject, Edwards has one overruling principle, namely, that “we are to take the Scriptures as our guide” and to resort to them as “an infallible and sufficient rule.” Doing this, we shall recognize that “the Holy Spirit is sovereign in his operation.” When the Holy Spirit is working powerfully in the hearts of men, it should not be thought offensive that there are strange and unusual outward manifestations—“such as tears, trembling, groans, loud outcries, agonies of body, or the failing of bodily strength”—even though in some cases these may appear excessive and exaggerated. No more should an admixture of errors in judgment or the lapse of some into scandalous practices be regarded as sufficient to condemn a work as not being in general of the Spirit of God. Otherwise the presence of Judas among the Twelve must be accounted a condemnation of the work of Christ himself. A good whole must not be condemned because of an unworthy part.

Again, the fact that the effects produced are associated with solemn warnings against the terrors of hell and judgment affords no argument against the work being of the Spirit of God. “If there really be a hell,” says Edwards, “… then why is it not proper for those who have the care of souls to take great pains to make men sensible of it?… If I am in danger of going to hell, I should be glad to know as much as possibly I can of the dreadfulness of it. If I am very prone to neglect due care to avoid it, he does me the best kindness, who does most to represent to me the truth of the case, that sets forth my misery and danger in the liveliest manner.”

In the twentieth century, however, it is out of fashion to preach about hell; the subject has been relegated to the level of a music hall joke. In those who profess to be loyal to the teaching of the New Testament, this argues not only an avoidance of biblical realism, but also a lack of candor, which surely is not unrelated to the impotence of so much Christian proclamation today. Warnings against hell are entirely scriptural—indeed, none uttered them with greater solemnity than our Lord himself. And so long as the Christian minister remembers that, as Edwards counsels, “the gospel is to be preached as well as the law, and the law is to be preached only to make way for the gospel, and in order that it may be preached more effectively,” grace will be grasped and preached as it should be—only against the background of judgment.

A Five-Fold Test

Edwards gives five marks whereby a work of the Spirit of God may be distinguished. 1. It should convince men of Christ and lead them to him in the assurance that he is the Son of God, sent to save sinners. 2. It should operate against the interests of Satan’s kingdom, causing men to forsake sin and to set their affections on the things that are above. 3. It should lead men to a greater regard for the Holy Scriptures as the Word of God. 4. It should awaken the ability to discern spiritually between truth and error, light and darkness. 5. It should manifest a spirit of love, both to God and to one’s fellow men. Although there had been some excesses in the course of the revival in New England, these five distinguishing marks of the work of the Spirit of God were clearly present, so that Edwards was able to conclude that what had taken place was “undoubtedly, in general, from the Spirit of God.”

Some, however, had complained that the gatherings at this time were marked by confusion and irregularity. But Edwards, while fully admitting the necessity for orderliness in the conduct of public worship under normal conditions, replied to this objection in the following way:

If God is pleased to convince the consciences of persons, so that they cannot avoid great outward manifestations, even to interrupting and breaking off those public means they were attending, I do not think this is confusion, or an unhappy interruption, any more than if a company should meet on the field to pray for rain, and should be broken off from their exercise by a plentiful shower. Would to God that all the public assemblies in the land were broken off from their public exercises with such confusion as this the next sabbath day! We need not be sorry for breaking the order of means, by obtaining the end to which that order is directed.

Necessity For Humility

He therefore warns us, where a work bears the marks of the activity of the Spirit of God, “by no means to oppose, or do anything in the least to clog or hinder, the work; but, on the contrary, do our utmost to promote it.” And those who are participating in the blessings and uplifting experience of such a work are warned against the great danger of spiritual pride, which is “the worst viper in the heart.” “The greatest privilege of the prophets and apostles,” says Edwards, “was not their being inspired and working miracles, but their eminent holiness. The grace that was in their hearts was a thousand times more their dignity and honour than their miraculous gifts.”

The necessity for humility is indicated by the fact that “God in this work has begun at the lower end, and he has made use of the weak and foolish things of the world to carry it on.” Some of the ministers chiefly employed were “mere babes in age and standing” and of little repute among their fellow ministers. Their weakness served to magnify the power and grace of God. Cold criticism of the human instruments used in this work and of the undesirable excesses which may be shown by those whose frail frames are visited by overwhelming and transforming experiences at such a time of revival springs from injured pride and from a failure to take the Holy Scriptures as the “sufficient and whole rule whereby to judge of this work.” Edwards observes significantly that “censuring others is the worst disease with which this affair has been attended.”

But the effects of a season of revival are not only to be seen in individual lives. They are apparent in the community as a whole. Thus Edwards describes how there was at the time of which he is speaking “a very uncommon influence upon the minds of a very great part of the inhabitants of New England, attended with the best effects.” Problems of juvenile delinquency and unruliness (so pressing in our day!) were largely solved: “In vain did ministers preach against those things before, in vain were laws made to restrain them, and in vain was all the vigilance of magistrates and civil officers; but now they have almost everywhere dropt them, as it were of themselves.”

Fruits Of Revival

It was also noticeable that in the greatest part of New England, the Bible was “in much greater esteem and use than before”; that the Lord’s day was “more religiously and strictly observed”; and that in a couple of years more was done in “making up differences, confessing faults one to another, and making restitution … than was done in thirty years before.” Large numbers were brought to “a deep sense of their own sinfulness and vileness,” and to a realization of “how unworthy in God’s regard were their prayers, praises, and all that they did in religion.” Many poor Indians and Negroes were converted and morally transformed, and very many little children led to love the Saviour. Multitudes, indeed, of all ages and classes of society, were brought to “a new and great conviction of the truth and certainty of the things of the Gospel.” Nor were these blessings confined to the new converts; they abounded also in the spiritual enrichment of the lives of great numbers of those who had been practicing Christians for years.

“And this,” writes Edwards, “has been attended with an abhorrence of sin, and self-loathing for it, and earnest longings of soul after more holiness and conformity to God, with a sense of the great need of God’s help in order to holiness of life; together they have had a most dear love to all that are supposed to be the children of God, and a love to mankind in general, and a most sensible and tender compassion for the souls of sinners, and earnest desires of the advancement of Christ’s kingdom in the world.”

Dignity And Depth

Here, we cannot but conclude, is the real thing. So much of the “revivalism” of our day seems to belong to a totally different category. We look in vain for the dignity, the depth, the solemnity, the self-abnegation, and the scripturalness that we find in Jonathan Edwards. Let us pray earnestly that Almighty God will turn us again, and bless us as in the days of old, and in his grace grant us to see the real thing once again in our day—a mighty, transforming work of the Sovereign Spirit!

Philip Edgcumbe Hughes is Lecturer of Mortlake Parish, London, and former Vice Principal of Tyndale Hall, Bristol. He holds the B.D. degree from London University, and the M.A. and Litt.D. degrees from Cape Town University, South Africa.

Review of Current Religious Thought: September 01, 1958

In 1859 appeared Charles Darwin’s Origin of Species. It has been called the most significant book of the nineteenth century. If so, it was not because it set forth the theory of organic evolution—this had been done before. Its importance was in Darwin’s explanation of the “how” of organic evolution—natural selection. As we shall note in the next article, evolution has well survived into the middle of the twentieth century, but Darwin’s explanation of it has been largely rejected by modern evolutionists. In other words, the feature of the Origin of Species most significant in 1859 (natural selection) seems to be least significant in 1959; while the feature least significant in 1859 (organic evolution) seems to be most significant in 1959.

The elements of Darwin’s system are the following. He posited God as the Creator of matter and of the original germs or “gemmules” from which other forms have evolved. The actual evolutionary process includes the following steps: overproduction, struggle for existence, survival of the fittest, inheritance and propagation. The entire process is under the direction of the principle of natural selection.

What was the reaction of the church to this new doctrine? A. D. White (A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom, p. 70) wrote: “Darwin’s Origin of the Species has come into the theological world like a plough into an anthill. Everywhere those thus rudely awakened from their old comfort and repose had swarmed forth angry and confused. Reviews, sermons, books, light and heavy, came flying at the new thinker from all sides.” But there was another part to the picture and it is brought out in the words of W. M. Agar (Catholicism and the Progress of Science, pp. 59, 60): “There were scientists who never did capitulate, just as there were theologians who were wise enough to see at once that Theism … was perfectly compatible with evolution.”

We propose in this brief article to confine our attention to the views of two of the most influential nineteenth century conservative theologians on this hotly debated subject. One was intransigently opposed to Darwinism; the other was an ardent advocate, if not of Darwinism, at least of evolution or as he called it, “development.” The two men were distinguished Princetonians: one, Charles Hodge, the great systematic theologian; the other, James McCosh, noted Scottish Realistic philosopher, educator, and president of the University (1868–1888).

In 1873 Hodge published his What is Darwinism? The book begins with the presentation of some of the different theories of the origin of the universe, after which Hodge turns his attention to Darwin’s theory. After a survey of this theory, he states its essentials thus: “Darwinism includes three distinct elements. First, evolution, or the assumption that all organic forms, vegetable and animal, have been evolved or developed from one, or a few, primordial germs; second, that this evolution has been affected by natural selection, or the survival of the fittest; and third, and by far the most important and distinctive element of his theory, that this natural selection is without design, being conducted by unintelligent physical causes” (p. 48).

“The Exclusion of Design in Nature, the Formative Idea of Darwin’s Theory” is the caption of the next section, the proof of which is Hodge’s most distinctive effort and occupies most of the remaining portion of the 178-page book. Proofs of the anti-teleological character of Darwinism are three in number: those drawn from Darwin’s own writings; those drawn from the expositions of Darwinism by its advocates; those drawn from the exposition by its opponents. “The whole book,” concludes Hodge, “is an argument against teleology.” “Darwinism is atheism.” (Hodge did not deny that Darwin professed a belief in God as the original creator, but he felt God was so remote from Darwin’s universe as to have no real significance and was, for all practical purposes, nonexistent.)

With James McCosh began what White calls “the inevitable compromise.” “Not one,” he continues, “can deny his [McCosh’s] great service in neutralizing the teachings of his predecessors and colleagues.” The reference is especially to Drs. Hodge and Duffield. But “compromise” is a misleading word if it gives the impression that McCosh was deliberately shading truth in the interest of reconciliation. McCosh was as convinced of the biblicality and rationality of his position as Hodge was of his.

To give a sample of McCosh’s appeal to the Bible, we cite this argument for the evolution of the human body: “There are two accounts of the creation of man. One is in Genesis, chapter 1:26. There is council and decision: ‘Let us make man in our image.’ This applies to his soul or higher nature. The other account is in chapter 2:7: ‘And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.’ This is man’s organic body” (Realistic Philosophy, Vol. I, pp. 186, 187). In this statement we have the manifesto of biblical evolutionists: God, by special fiat, created the immaterial, unevolvable soul, but by a natural, organic process, presumably the evolutionary process, the human body was formed. The soul is saved, the body cast to evolutionists.

The evolution of the body is also found by McCosh to be intimated in the sublimely mysterious words of Psalm 139:15, 16: “My substance was not hid from thee, when I was made in secret, and curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth. Thine eyes did see my substance, yet being unperfect; and in thy book all my members were written, which in continuance were fashioned, when as yet there was none of them.” Concerning these words, McCosh remarks, “There is a curious process hinted at; a process and a progression going on I know not how long, and all is the work of God, and written in God’s book.”

But what of natural selection and teleology? Hodge thought the two were mutually exclusive in Darwin’s system; McCosh did not see it that way. “We see some of the means by which God effects his infinitely grander ends. We see that one of these is the beneficent law of Natural Selection, whereby the weak, after enjoying their brief existence, expire without leaving seed, whereas the strong survive and leave a strong progeny” (Christianity and Positivism, p. 394). At this crucial point in the discussion on the nature of Darwin’s natural selection, we think that Hodge was right and McCosh was wrong. What McCosh did was give us his, rather than Darwin’s view of natural selection. He gave us a theistic, Christianized conception of this principle. Hodge gave us Darwin’s for what it was—not a mode of theistic teleology, but a substitute for it.

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