- Donate
- Subscribe
My Account
- View Issue
- Subscribe
- Give a Gift
- Archives
SILENTIUM
Retinium has not been added to eyewash as I once proposed, but the added ingredient specialists have just come up with silentium. This remarkable additive is compounded with cough syrup to muzzle the sufferer’s bark. I am engaged in a consumer’s research project to determine whether silentium stops coughing altogether, or enables one to cough silently, after the fashion of a genteel sneeze.
Many other applications suggest themselves. What effect does silentium have on squealing automobile tires? Can silentium be prescribed for infant formulas? Will high-octane silentium make mufflers obsolete? Is there a market for silentium lipstick? What about candy bars with silentium for free distribution to neighborhood children? “Silentium in the Sunday School” is a promising topic for a master’s degree in religious education.
Since silence is golden, its dollar value has soared of late. If the developers of silentium appreciate this, they may revolutionize television with commercials of profound silence, presenting scenes of gentle showers to suggest the quiet of the nasal drip when silentium reigns.
Silence seems so desirable in the din of our lives that it may require an effort to remember that silence in itself is neither good nor bad. Carlyle once wrote, “Speech is human, silence is divine, yet also brutish and dead: therefore we must learn both arts.”
In the Bible, silence appears more often as a judgment than as a blessing. A wasted land has the silence of the grave; the enemies of God are silenced by his wrath. Afflicted saints cry that God should not be silent. The Bible puts too much emphasis on the word of God to make silence the supreme blessing. The climax of worship is not to be dumb with awe but to cry hallelujah. As God awakes to judgment all flesh is silent before him, but Zion sings to the Lord who comes to dwell in her midst (Zech. 2:10–13).
As a recent magazine article put it, clams are not my dish. There are too many silent saints these days. They have clammed up the pearl of great price in a hard shell of silence. The apostles, in a situation where stoical silence was a golden virtue found a more excellent way. They sang praise in the stocks at midnight.
I have suggested to Pastor Peterson that he trade in those SILENCE! signs on the church stairway for new ones: PRAY! SING!
Silentium may quiet coughs during the sermon, but many dour saints need a shot of Amenium.
EUTYCHUS
LETTERSFROMMISSOURI
“A Letter to Missouri” (Nov. 21 issue) does not appear to most of us loyal Missourians to merit the space you gave it.
Actually, “A Letter to Missouri” is what it almost purports to be, a rehash of views recently circulated to the clergy of The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod by William M. Oesch, dozent of the theological school of Lutheran Free Churches at Oberursel, Germany. Dr. Oesch’s observations are more penetrating than those of your correspondent, frankly representing, as they do, the traditional views of a hitherto extremely static church, which itself is beginning to wonder whether it has not almost totally neglected its mission to the indifferent and unbelieving. This misgiving came to the Missouri Synod three or four decades ago and resulted in a mission outreach for Christ which is somewhat perplexing and puzzling to our orthodox Lutheran brethren across the seas.
Has your correspondent considered the fact that he may have completely misunderstood the theological professors he castigates? I know for a fact that no theological professor of our church has ever denied the resurrection of the body, but one did point out that Platonic ideas regarding immortality of the soul detract from the glory of this New Testament doctrine. I have no knowledge of one of our five thousand pastors who supposedly advocated “modal monarchism” (usually called “modalistic monarchianism” in our histories of dogma). Could he have been misunderstood, too?
The theory, termed smartly in this imposing “letter” the Lex Missouriensis, that numbers are our prime interest or objective, has practically no currency in the Missouri Synod. We publish statistics, of course, and try to keep them as accurately as we can. But we do not put much stock in numbers, and are somewhat embarrassed by the fact that for each of the last fifteen years the Missouri Synod has contributed the largest number of new members to the Lutheran total in America. We still continue to instruct our new members in the Christian faith as we understand it before admitting them to the privilege of membership, and to educate our children in the verities of the Scriptures with a system of Lutheran elementary schools which, I am not ashamed to say, is constantly growing in size and effectiveness.
We are aware of the fact that “error is not static.” We are also aware of the fact that truth is not static when it is God’s truth as revealed in the Scriptures.
The Holy Spirit of God does His work when the Word of God is laid on the hearts of hearers, whether in our congregations or in the listenerships of our extensive radio and television programs. We do not believe that reading a “popular magazine” will necessarily “distract us from the Greek New Testament” or that television will necessarily “beguile us from Pieper’s Dogmatics.” We do believe in bringing the Word of God, as we find it in the Greek New Testament and as it is formulated in Pieper’s Dogmatics, to bear upon the fermenting secularism and frequently fluid Christendom of this age.
We preach Christ, the Savior atoning for sin, the Righteousness of God for a world lost in its own unrighteousness and work-righteousness—Christ the Power of God and the Wisdom of God. We find Christ only in the authoritative Word of God, the Holy Scriptures, which we accept from cover to cover as verbally inspired. If there are serious discussions within our church body regarding the nature of the Word of God, they are a sign that the Word is taken seriously among us rather than indifferently, with the purpose not of discarding it or rendering it ineffective, but of keeping it as the two-edged sword of the Spirit it really is.
Your correspondent drops deep dark hints about “unionism” and “clamor for church union with those who do not hold our historic confessional position.” What is he referring to? The talks now going on between leaders of the Missouri Synod and the National Lutheran Council regarding the theological basis for limited cooperation (without altar and pulpit fellowship) or for refusal of such cooperation? If there is any “clamor” in the Missouri Synod for “church union,” it is muffled to the point where it is inaudible. “Church union,” pray, with whom? As far as I know, no doctrinal talks to that end are going on with anybody. For a Missourian, no matter how “liberal” he can be made out to be, doctrinal agreement is an indispensable sine qua non to “church union.”
Serious discussions are going on regarding the nature and extent of “doctrinal agreement” required for Lutheran cooperation and Lutheran union. Is this bad? Or is it the mark of a church that must continually ask itself, “What does God’s Word have to say to us?”
OSWALD C. J. HOFFMAN
Director
Dept, of Public Relations
The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod
New York, N. Y.
A real service, not only to the Missouri Synod but to all Christendom, for it brought into the open a subject which has long been overdue for a healthy airing.…
It occurs to me that many of CHRISTIANITY TODAY’S one hundred and seventy-five thousand readers would like to have for themselves a copy of Dr. William Oesch’s profound study of the “Present State of American Lutheranism of the Synodical Conference.” It can be had by sending one dollar to the author’s American address: 1638 Main St., Highland, Ill.
B. W. TEIGEN
President
Bethany Lutheran College
Mankato, Minn.
You paint in broad indistinct strokes. These broad strokes leave you and your denomination all white while you paint all others in opposites in one sweep of the brush.
F. C. ST. JOHN
First Methodist Church
Middlefield, Ohio
Pastor Schulze correctly states that certain individuals (and they are few in number!) have been “accused” of some of these heresies. However, there is a difference between accusation and fact.
K. L. FRERKING
University Lutheran Chapel
Columbus, Ohio
I would think others, as for instance, J. Pelikan or M. Marty, could speak if not “for” Missouri at least “as” Missourians in good standing!
J. T. KEEKLEY
St. Timothy Lutheran Church
Hyde Park, N. Y.
As an answer to Pastor Schulze’s statement on truth and union, I wish to say that Lutherans of all synods did accept and always have accepted the Book of Concord.
J. W. VON SCHMELING
St. Paul’s Evangelical Lutheran Church
Langenburg, Saskatchewan
It is my observation that the leaders of our church are fully aware of these developments and are doing something about them.
H. F. SCHWEIGERT
St. Peter’s Lutheran Church and School
Minneapolis, Minn.
One would hope that those who see “Missouri” as David to Jonathan, or Aaron to Moses in the Lutheran family of America, rather than Samson to the Philistines, may be free to search for clearer ways to speak the Gospel to the ears of listening brethren rather than shout it in the sleep of strangers.
DONALD H. LARSEN
St. Andrew-Redeemer Lutheran Church
Detroit, Mich.
By what stretch of editorial right do you presume to print such opinion?
A. KARL BOEHMKE
Lutheran Church of The Shepherd King Birmingham, Mich.
My deepest appreciation for publishing Brother Schulze’s “A Letter to Missouri.” You have the courage our Lutheran Witness lost some twenty odd years ago.
LUTHER P. J. STEINER
Redeemer Lutheran Church
Perris, Calif.
It is my appraisal that if we continue the practice of following first of all Missourism, Methodism, Presbyterianism, the next generation clergymen will not find time to turn to Pieper’s Dogmatics nor to be branch office managers but will be fighting to find a place in which to gather a few faithful to proclaim to them the word of God—in short, the church will again be faced with a catacomb existence within a hostile world because the ministers of the 60’s were more interested in their own “ism” than being “of Christ.”
ROBERT L. BILL
Wray, Colo.
This so interested me, from the standpoint of a concerned Missouri Synod layman, that I couldn’t help but send you a note a appreciation for publishing it.…
THEODORE SMITHEY
Taylor, Mich.
MISSIONARY ACHIEVEMENT
A few miles from where the United Church of Canada General Council was held in Alberta (Oct. 24 issue) is one of the greatest examples of union to spread the Gospel … “The Prairie Bible Institute.”
The United Church may be great as far as wealth and numbers go, but they are very, very small as far as missionary achievement is concerned.… It is quite possible that a former Methodist Church of Bloor Street, Toronto, whose [Missionary] Pastor is the well-known Oswald J. Smith, is doing more so-called foreign missionary work than the whole United Church of Canada.
MALCOLM PELLY
Smith Sound, Newfoundland
CALL FOR PROTEST
I’ve just seen a film of the San Francisco student riots against the un-American Activities Committee.
… A wave of Red student riots is generating in this country. For opposition, it would be more than all the billies in the world if there were a wave of heaven-anointed Christian Open Air Protest meetings.
SAMUEL WOLFE
Santa Barbara, Calif.
JERUSALEM HEIGHTS
Dr. Hughes’ thought-provoking article (Oct. 24 issue).… says “… excepting in the Temple on Mount Zion.”
When I was in Jerusalem last summer I visited the former site of the Temple and it was on Mount Moriah, about three-fifths of a mile northeast of Mount Zion. Today it contains the Moslem structure, the Dome of the Rock.…
LESTER C. HARLOW
Alexandria, Va.
CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY
You should put a halt to the emphasis on “high class” and degrees in your magazine and face up to reality.
“For there are certain men crept in unawares, who were before of old ordained to this condemnation, ungodly men, turning the grace of our God into lasciviousness, and denying the only Lord God, and our Lord Jesus Christ” (Jude 4).
These men, who were before of old ordained, have crept in unawares into the churches, National Council of Churches, National Education Association, labor unions, Farmers Union, and other “slightly tinged” organizations and … are causing the trouble in America, in Europe, and in the rest of the world.
There would be no need to establish new Christian universities and colleges. The universities and colleges would once again become Christian, and the public schools would become purified again, if these men were purged from the N.E.A., churches, etc.
“And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free” (John 8:32). Chinook, Mont.
JACOB H. RITTERBUSH
Let’s take a long hard look at the dangers … of a Christian university … and then plan a strong careful campaign to meet them, rather than retreat.
HELEN R. COATES
San Diego, Calif.
BIBLE TRANSLATION
Dr. Steele’s standards [for translation are] “unduly rigid” (Sept. 26 issue).… A “word for word transfer” of the text would violate every principle of good translation in the secular field; surely such a principle goes far beyond what those of us who accept verbal inspiration would ever demand of a translation of God’s inspired Word.
LESLIE R. KEYLOCK
Dept. of Foreign Languages
Wheaton College
Wheaton, Ill.
MENNONITE DOCTRINE
It is unfortunate and regrettable that Mr. Bonebrake should have brought the Mennonite Church into his false assertion that since the Lord is already here we do not look for His coming again (Eutychus, Sept. 26 issue).
In the official statement of our church appears these words, “We believe in the personal and imminent coming of our Lord Jesus Christ as the blessed hope of the believers.”
ARCHIE KAUFFMAN
The Mennonite Church Lebanon, Ore.
FROM THE SENATE
CHRISTIANITY TODAY is a must in the understanding of our times.
FREDERICK BROWN HARRIS
Chaplain
United States Senate
Washington, D. C.
You may be interested in a comment I rather frequently hear these days, that it is now necessary to read CHRISTIANITY TODAY, even though grudgingly.
WILLIS E. ELLIOTT
Office of Evangelism
The United Church of Christ
Cleveland, Ohio
- View Issue
- Subscribe
- Give a Gift
- Archives
SHIFTING VALUES
We are witnessing a growing extra-Christian philosophy which contends that the current explosion of knowledge calls for an accompanying “broadening” of the base of moral values and spiritual concepts.
For many centuries there were two worlds, the pagan and the Christian: pagan beliefs and practices varied with peoples, cultures and the centuries, while Christian beliefs and practices were fixed, having their basis in the biblical revelation.
No such clear delineation is possible today, for while paganism has been consistently inconsistent, the image of Christianity has been blurred by a gradual equating of human opinions and deductions with divine revelation.
This downgrading of the Scriptures has been effected from without by cultured paganistic philosophy, and from within the theological liberalism built on philosophical presuppositions having to do with the supernatural facets of the Christian faith.
In this context startling scientific breakthroughs have confused Christian thinking because of restricted concepts of God on the one hand and magnified views of man on the other. We live in an age of glorification of human achievements, whether it be on the gridiron or in the laboratory, and the result is that the “humanizing of God and deification of man” is no longer a cliché but a sobering fact.
A contributing factor in the change in moral and spiritual values has been the bold assertion of educators and others that “there are no absolutes.” The absurdity of this statement is found in that it is itself an absolute. But where men have undertaken to live by the philosophy that all things are relative—even the basic values of life itself—the result has been disastrous for the individual and for society.
If adultery is a relative matter, the rightness or wrongness of the act depending on the accepted mores of a given time and place in society, it is immediately evident that the Judeo-Christian concept of marital fidelity has given place to paganism.
If honesty is relative, so that it becomes a matter of expediency built on a foundation of anything other than the rights of ownership, then the law of the jungle has prevailed.
It might prove tedious to examine the Ten Commandments and to affirm their relevancy for today, but the world has found nothing better and it ignores these principles to its eternal undoing.
That God’s moral law is the code for human behavior in the Christian era should be a self-evident fact. Recognizing that the basis of salvation rests solely in the redeeming work of Calvary, the Christian knows his responsibility to God and to man is summed up in the demand to put God first in everything and to love his neighbor as himself.
Even within the Christian community moral and spiritual values have deteriorated to a level little separated from those prevalent in the pagan world.
Realism, relativism, and a rational approach have in such measure supplanted Christian restraints that we find growing around us a confused and beat generation, frustrated by an older generation which pitched its tent towards Sodom and settled for a regimented mediocrity. We deplore the antics of the juvenile delinquent, but we need to confess the sins of the men and women who made such delinquency inevitable.
Ours is not the only age when evil has multiplied on every hand. History tells of many times when moral and spiritual values were at a low ebb. The one outstanding difference between the past eras of decay and our own is that no generation has been blessed of God as has ours. The Gospel has been preached. The Church has borne her witness. On every hand we have evidence of God’s work in the midst of his people.
But despite the Christian witness, we find ourselves caught up in a spreading maze of iniquity. This has not happened overnight. Standards have been lowered gradually, step by step—here a concession, there a concession. Sex has been stressed and exploited until we have lost both the impulse and the ability to blush.
That these are days of lowered moral and spiritual ideals does not need documentation. What does need a new affirmation is that the gospel of Jesus Christ has the answer to all of these problems. The unchanging Christ for an ever-changing world is the message which needs to be preached from the housetops. The Church has become so concerned with secondary and peripheral matters that those which are of basic and eternal import find themselves only too often crowded out of their rightful place.
Let us be perfectly candid—in many churches today the message of salvation through the Cross with all of its implications (blood, atonement, substitution, propitiation, and so forth) is never preached. In other churches, the Gospel is so diluted and changed as to have no recognizable connection with the affirmations of Christ or Paul.
Many of the churches are not to blame. They have never known faith in a completely trustworthy and authoritative Bible. They have never had the opportunity to experience the simplicity of God’s offer of forgiveness of sin through repentance, confession, and faith in the redeeming death of his Son.
America’s greatest need today is not in the field of further scientific breakthroughs. What is needed is a revival within the Church—twice-born men teaching in our seminaries and preaching in our pulpits; men with an overwhelming sense of the sinfulness of sin and the righteousness of a holy God; men who, through the Holy Spirit, go out to preach Christ crucified, dead and buried and risen again; men who reject the suppositions of men for the affirmations of God; and men who realize that the Church is in the world, not to reform but to preach the One who came to redeem lost sinners.
We need such a conviction of sin that men will fall on their faces crying out to God for forgiveness and cleansing.
We need a vision of God which comes only to those who are willing to subordinate everything—mind, will, life—to Christ and to experience the joy which proceeds therefrom.
No one can accurately pinpoint God’s timetable. The hour may be very late. Unquestionably we live in a day when iniquity abounds and flourishes on every hand, and when the love of many waxes cold.
On the one hand, Christians must endure by God’s grace and, in these days of the world’s need, use every means at hand to witness to the saving and keeping power of Christ.
A sovereign God may yet pour out his Spirit in a refreshing stream of spiritual awakening. As at Pentecost, the prophecy of Joel may once more be fulfilled.
For this the Church should pray and to this end she should work.
L. NELSON BELL
Hugh Auchinloss
- View Issue
- Subscribe
- Give a Gift
- Archives
Half a century ago, as a mere stripling out of college, it was my good fortune to become associated with the beginnings of a manufacturing company which now sells its products around the world. Although I have risen through the ranks to major responsibility, the nature of my work has remained essentially the same. For ten months of each year I have traveled among the main cities of the United States from the Atlantic to the Pacific and north of the Mason and Dixon Line. For only two months of each year have I ever had the chance to worship in my home church. On the majority of Sundays (some two thousand across the long span of time), I have attended Protestant public worship somewhere in the northern section of our country, always once, sometimes twice and, on occasion, three times. Out of what may well be a unique experience as a layman, I submit certain observations as I retire from active business.
If there has been a penalty in having spent such limited time in my own local church, there has been much advantage in worshipping with fellow Christians in different parts of our land. Never shall I forget, during the first year of my pilgrimage, the time I was in a suburban church listening to a young preacher who had been highly recommended to me by a friend. It was an electrifying experience. There have been many other inspiring experiences, sometimes in very unlikely areas, in which the power of the Christian fellowship has taken on light and meaning for the worshipper.
Sorting out the notes which I have preserved in my visitation of Protestant churches in the northern states across the years, I find five impressions, the first independent and the remaining four related to each other.
RISE OF THE FRINGE SECTS
The first impression concerns the rise of the fringe sects, those worshiping groups which have broken away or originated apart from the traditional churches in search for a greater simplicity of faith and worship. A half century ago these groups were hardly noticeable in the scene of the small, medium-sized, or large American city. Now they are conspicuous in the cities, and are purchasing and displacing churches of more familiar Christian tradition which have yielded to the suburban appeal. Members gather by the hundreds Sunday mornings, afternoons, and evenings, each frequently carrying a Bible. I was astonished recently to find this condition in a city of less than one hundred thousand and known for its world-famous university. These groups have little sense of formal worship. The leader is apt to wear a light grey suit and a loud tie: there are chatty announcements in the service, dance tune hymns, a crude sermon—all offensive to good taste. Yet in such groups of people, obviously comprising the lower income class, the atmosphere of devotion is very real, the sense of joyous faith highly apparent, and a radiancy of spirit unmistakable—much more so than in many of the historic denominational churches. In proportion to their means, the congregations of the sects provide generous offerings. They are “given to hospitality,” they surround the stranger with friendly greetings and ask him home to Sunday dinner. Furthermore, they faithfully send missionaries to many parts of the world.
It is difficult to measure the significance of the rapid rise of these sects in the last few decades. Does it imply more than a search for security in a century that has known terror and destruction in such a frightful degree? Or are these groups finding and expressing for everyday living a doctrine of our faith which organized Christianity as a whole has allowed to lapse?
LARGE LOCAL CHURCHES
The second significant development in the last half century has been the remarkable multiplication of local churches with large memberships. In 1910 the denomination in which I am enrolled had less than half a dozen churches with a membership of or above two thousand. In 1960 the same denomination contained more than one hundred such churches while the churches with a membership of around fifteen hundred had multiplied even faster. All the chief Protestant denominations have experienced the same speedy development of the large parish, particularly in suburban areas. There are, of course, obvious advantages in the larger units of membership, namely, more plentiful budgets, more widespread programs, and more adequate equipment. But there is one decided disadvantage: how can any preacher act as a pastor to a multitude?
In our Protestant tradition, it has been established as sound principle that the pastoral office and the preaching office are best expressed when blended in one individual. There are exceptions, as in the case of a gifted preacher who seldom calls and a gifted pastor who has obvious pulpit deficiencies; but, in general, the history of the local parish indicates that these exceptions prove the rule. With the swift increase in membership, a preacher becomes engulfed as a pastor. What is the answer? Have a multiple staff? That is doubtful. Just as the staff of a college or bank or business enterprise must have someone at the top to assume chief responsibility, so must the staff of the large parish. The man at the top has to be the preacher and when he cannot be the pastor also the whole parish loses. Indeed a good case can be made out for the relative ineffectiveness of the large church. It is better by far, and it means more active workers, more sacrificial giving, more adequate pastoral care, and no less effective preaching, when a church will found other churches rather than gather members to its own ranks. Four churches of 800 members each can offer a more significant witness than one church of 3,200 members. The fetish of size has damaged Protestantism because it has lessened the possibility of adequate pastoral work.
DEVELOPMENT OF FORMAL WORSHIP
Another noticeable change across the decades has been the extensive development of formal, ritualistic worship. Today the village church has its vested choir, even its lighted candles. So far has this process been carried that here, there, and everywhere in the American scene, at least north of the Mason and Dixon Line, it is often difficult for occasional visitors like myself to tell whether he is worshiping in a Presbyterian, Congregational, Methodist or Episcopalian church. The architecture, chancel, lectern, pulpit, prayers, responses, order of service, robed choirs, stained glass, and all else are very much alike in all four. Whether this represents gain, one cannot be sure. Back of any ritual is the one who conducts it. The sons and daughters of John Calvin, John Robinson, and John Wesley inherited and passed on to us a freedom of thought and form which provide a constant challenge in expression. There are no prayers like the prayers that come out of a deep spiritual experience. In many a church I have received the blessing of such utterance. Ritual, too, is a challenge, when its words are read as though for the first time in mingled awe and gratitude, those wonderful words of the Gospel. But too often, alas, the one who reads the prayers does not invest them with any note of reality and authority. So I am not completely reconciled to the trend which has engulfed us.
ENLARGEMENT OF PARISH PROGRAMS
Parallel with the rise of size and ritual among our Protestant churches is the development of programs. In the early period of my itinerant worship across the country, a church with a seven-day program was so rare that it was almost unknown, and well-equipped church buildings now found by the hundred had scarcely appeared. Morning and evening worship services, the Sunday School, and young peoples’ societies—that was Sunday’s program, and the remaining days of the week seldom included more than Wednesday night prayer meeting and the meeting of the women’s organization. The preacher-pastor was supposed to produce two sermons a week, consecrate his mornings to study and preparation, his afternoons and evenings to calling on parish families in a steady annual round which included all the sick and shut-ins. His occasional committee meetings did not take up much of his time. One never heard of nervous breakdowns among the clergy in 1910. How the picture has changed! Consider the printed program the ushers distribute to those who enter for worship at any well-organized church today! What a list of activities through the week! What an appeal for every age group! The beginnings of this can be traced to the period immediately after World War I which revealed on a convincing scale the power of mass appeal based on psychological principles. Ecclesiastical chieftains swiftly learned from the advertising experts, and blueprints began to flow to the parish minister’s desk in increasing volume. Quotas and pamphlets for membership gain, benevolence budgets, more modern teaching methods in the church school, this approach and that approach in the community, youth work, men’s work, women’s work, work among the sick, the preaching of sermons and the offering of prayers—all present a confusing multitude of directions and suggestions from central headquarters to the preacher-pastor of today. If the large parish prevents a pastor from being a pastor because of the sheer weight of numbers, I submit that this deluge prevents a preacher from being a preacher for the same reason. How can a preacher find time for proper sermon preparation when he must carry so many duties?
DECLINE OF EXPOSITORY PREACHING
The multiplicity of demand upon the minister of the local church, be it small or large, means that there is not sufficient time for preparation of sermons that are fruitful and edifying. In the decades of listening to thousands of sermons, I have detected several strata of influence much like the various civilizations an archaeologist uncovers in his excavating. The first decade was dominated by the denunciations of the so-called social gospel. Having read my Bible daily through a lifetime, I am aware of the messages of the prophets; but through those opening years I rarely heard a pulpit message based upon them which ministered to my own need. I was gaining promotion after promotion until I was supervising the work of several thousand men and women of varied creed and color. But there was little that I heard from any pulpit which helped me in my terrific responsibility. During the last decade I have had to listen to many sermons which assure me that if I think enough about success I will be a success, I will rid myself of my tensions, I will overcome my fears, and I will achieve self-mastery. The source of this frightful travesty of the Christian Gospel can be easily traced.
However, every now and then, and sometimes in inconspicuous pulpits, I have heard messages that meant much to me and my need. Invariably they were of the expository type. The preacher selected a text or passage from the Bible, related it to a fundamental human need in his opening sentences, and enlarged upon it in all its helpful suggestions throughout his sermon. Always I left such a church on Sunday wearing seven-league boots. Is that not the test of effective preaching! Why are such sermons so rarely heard? Sooner or later they cover the whole range of human need. But why are they neglected? I believe the reason lies in the multiplied demands made upon the present-day minister which rob him of time for adequate pastoral visitation and uninterrupted sermon preparation.
From time to time some veteran of the cloth will assert that the average level of preaching today is higher than it was yesterday. I would challenge that verdict. There were few mighty men in the pulpit a half a century ago, and there are few mighty men today. Such preachers are exceptional in any decade. The Christian fellowship is obliged to depend upon preachers of ordinary rather than extraordinary capacity. Were those preachers granted the time to become acquainted with human nature in their parish calling and learn the message of the Bible in their study and apply one to the other, there would be great reward for those who worship and listen. It is good to know that there are preachers who, in spite of the obstacles in their way, have achieved this combination. Across the last 50 years, two of them have never failed me whenever I have heard them. The first preacher served a small church just off one of the main highways of our largest city. There, Sunday after Sunday, he gave marvelously uplifting expositions of the Bible to a tiny congregation. Why was his church never crowded? I could never solve that mystery, for it seemed to me that the whole world should have been seeking him out. Now he has passed away. The other preacher served for almost three decades in a famous suburb in the Middle West. His church was always crowded. Today he lives in retirement in a university town and still carries on his ministry as a supply. It happens that one of my business associates was a member of his congregation for many years, and as we left the church together one Sunday morning he turned to me and said, “I have never needed a psychiatrist when I can hear such messages once a week.” As a Christian layman who has faced many problems in our industrial order, I understood and agreed with my associate’s remark.
SALESMANSHIP LAY AND CLERICAL
Throughout my lengthy career in industry, my work has had to do mainly with salesmen, sales methods, and sales conventions. Week by week and month by month, for over half a century, I have had the responsibility of directing an enterprise which now has vast proportions. In the earlier days when I compared the salesmanship that I listened to on Sundays with the salesmanship I dealt with on weekdays, I was able to mediate many hints and suggestions for the latter from the former. Preachers of an earlier period had learned how to present the claims of the Christian Gospel in simple, effective style, relate that Gospel to the needs and problems of human experience, and strive for a verdict. Indeed I gladly admit that what professional success I have had in directing salesmanship I owe mainly to studying the techniques of the preachers of my youth. Today I would say that the situation is reversed. Most preachers, particularly men younger than 50 years of age, would benefit if they studied the techniques of the speakers at a sales convention.
INFLUENCE ON THE FUTURE
The late John Foster Dulles, addressing a graduating class at a leading theological seminary in 1944, put this question: ‘What can the churches do to influence the pattern of the future?” His reply was, “My judgment is that their influence can be decisive.” These were the words of the most powerful and prominent Christian layman of our time. His judgment will be echoed by anyone who has had the chance, as I have had, to study the local Protestant churches across the areas of our own land. Now, as I cease my rather extensive itineracy and sit Sunday by Sunday in my home church, I give thanks for the countless fellowships of faith across our land and for those who guide and minister unto them. If I have written in criticism I write also in affection. Even in the world of the atom bomb, the message of Christianity abides. The influence of the churches can be decisive.
Samuel M. Shoemaker is the author of a number of popular books and the gifted Rector of Calvary Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh. He is known for his effective leadership of laymen and his deeply spiritual approach to all vital issues.
- More fromHugh Auchinloss
The Editor
- View Issue
- Subscribe
- Give a Gift
- Archives
Third in a Series
The broken grip of both Barth and Brunner on the theological mood of many German ministers and divinity students is due only in part to Bultmann’s neoliberal counterthrust. The stress and sting of World War II created a distinctive religious atmosphere, one which indelibly marked the spirit of the younger clergy.
Between the appearance of Barth’s Roemerbrief (1919) and the 1960s stand two generations of Protestant ministers. Those of the first generation, who were steeped and submerged in liberalism, heard Barth’s plea for special divine revelation sounding like a thunderbolt from above. Soon divinity students and young pastors told of their revolt against liberalism. “Barth saved us for the ministry,” they confessed, and they dedicated themselves to proclaim “the theology of the Word of God.”
When the second ministerial generation arose, in an era soon to be differentiated by its own peculiar outlook, the theological complex of the Continent had already largely embraced the “theology of crisis.” The tense struggle with National Socialism and the tragic events of World War II secretly shaped a harsh fate for Gennan Protestantism. Nazi antipathy toward outspokenly critical churchmen soon mounted to persecution and punishment of those who resisted government policy. The long tradition of a German Church enjoying special state privilege and public prestige was shattered. A national Lutheran and Reformed mind-set reaching back to the days of the Protestant Reformation was interrupted. These extraordinary developments distinctly colored the heritage and outlook of this later generation of German Protestant leaders in the twentieth century.
THE SHADOW OF HITLER
The “second generation” vividly recalls the anxious decades of Nazi hostility. When Hitler assumed power in 1933, National Socialist propaganda helped the “German Christians” (a scattering of extremists who were both theologically liberal and anti-Semitic) to control a number of churches in the newly-formed German Evangelical Church. Besides distorting the Gospel, these pro-Nazi leaders sought to make the Church a political instrument. Hitler Youth groups soon alienated young people from the churches. Faithful pastors were suspended from office, being reinstated only after congregational pressures. Martin Niemoeller, who had entered the ministry after a submarine command in World War I, sparked the resistance. Leading the newly-formed Pastors’ Emergency Fellowship, he helped to create and then presided over the Confessing Church. The Confessing Church was not only Lutheran. Many of its great leaders were Reformed (among them Karl Barth, Herman Hesse, Paul Humburg, and Ludwig Steil who later died in concentration camp), while others like Otto Dibelius represented a unionist theology. In the face of threats by National Socialists and the “German Christians,” the Confessing Church’s first Synod met in a Reformed church in Barmen in May, 1934, and in a theological declaration rejected any other source than divine revelation for church proclamation. When the subordination of the territorial churches to the German Evangelical Church was attempted, the protest of territorial bishops against subjection to an imperial bishop led to temporary arrest of Bishop Theophil Wurm of Württemberg and Bishop Hans Meiser of Bavaria for opposition to the “German Christians.” Deposed by an illegally-called Synod, Bishop Wurm was interned in his home by police until Hitler several weeks later was persuaded to restore him to office.
By 1935 the National Socialist State was intervening more directly in church affairs, exercising greater financial control, and bringing ecclesiastical cases under government determination. Anti-ecclesiastical propaganda became sharper in 1936. The Gestapo prevented leading churchmen from preaching, and forbade dispatching of delegates to ecumenical conferences. Niemoeller was arrested in July, 1937, remaining until 1945 a personal prisoner of Hitler in the concentration camps at Sachsenhausen and Dachau. The National Socialist State now was determined to harass and then to destroy the Church. Arrests, deportations, and attacks followed in 1938 and 1939. Training divinity students and collecting offerings became increasingly difficult. When World War II began, about 45 per cent of the clergy were called to military service, leaving parish work only to the old and weak. After 1940, no paper was allotted for Bibles, and after 1941 most religious publications ceased and the work of chaplains in the armed forces was impeded and systematically sabotaged.
A BROKEN STATUS
In West Germany, persecution of the Church is, of course, now a thing of the past. The 1950 census disclosed that 96.3 per cent of the Germany people, despite the methodical Nazi hostility to Christianity, still regard themselves as Christians. But Protestantism at mid-century held remarkably different status than it held earlier in the century. No longer did it exist in the favored form of a State Church. Almost everywhere it was confronted with indifference on the part of the multitudes whose acknowledged membership in the churches now meant astonishingly little. In Hamburg on Pentecost Sunday, 1960, a pastor preached a moving sermon on Acts 2 and the work of the Holy Spirit. Then, turning to the scant 75 worshipers present at one of the church’s high festivals in a city where multitudes have been baptized and confirmed, he remarked: “Ich bin ratlos!” (“I’m at the end of my rope!”).
[Under the Weimar Republic in 1919, Church and State were first separated in Germany, thus bringing the State Church to an end. From 1919–1924 the churches adopted new constitutions providing self-government. But in 1922 the German Evangelical Church Federation was formed by the territorial churches (the indigenous “peoples’ church”) which represented 62.7 per cent of the population. During the Nazi era, the Confessing Church was organized on an emergency basis. After World War II, German religious leaders passed up an opportunity to shape a genuinely free church situation. (Already in the second half of the nineteenth century, there had emerged Lutheran free churches as a protest movement against the “Prussian Union,” and Reformed free churches influenced by trends in the Netherlands in 1834 and later.) The territorial churches were no longer a State Church, under state controls such as still exist in Sweden; yet neither were they wholly free, the state continuing to appoint theological professors along with other faculty members at the state universities, and still collecting taxes to support these churches (even from citizens who are not members). The German Evangelical Church was abandoned in 1945, and a new Evangelical Church in Germany (EKD) replaced the emergency government of the Confessing Church. In its 1948 constitution, EKD declared itself a federation of Lutheran, Reformed, and Union “territorial churches.” In more recent years VELKD (United Evangelical Lutheran Church of Germany) has emerged as a somewhat more tightly knit organization of territorial churches of confessional emphasis.
[In 1950, the Evangelical Churches (EKD) embraced 51 per cent of the population in West Germany, 80 per cent in East Germany. The independent (free) churches in Germany represent less than one per cent of the population. Some 70,000 members of Lutheran Free Churches came into this movement from territorial churches without any confessional change, as did 8,000 members of Reformed Free Churches. But American evangelization was mostly responsible for other related religious bodies: 62,000 Baptists, 60,000 Methodists, 12,000 Evangelical United Brethren. (Seventh-day Adventists, Christian Scientists, and Jehovah’s Witnesses also had made German cities an evangelistic objective.)
[In 1933, Roman Catholics had represented only 32.5 per cent of the German population. But the partitioning of Germany bulked the Catholic population largely in West Germany: in 1950, Catholics represented 45 per cent of the population in West Germany, 17 per cent in East Germany. One third of the total German population is Catholic, and there is doubtless more Protestant-Catholic dialogue and liaison than in America. But Roman Catholic concentration in West Germany forces Protestantism to contend disadvantageously against an aggressive Catholic thrust for power.]
The speculative deformities of liberalism and the modern spirit of secularism had already encouraged much of the public’s disregard and disrespect for the Church as a unique divine organism. Despite enthusiasm at the elite professional level over a “springtime in theology,” the Protestant pulpit seemed to the masses to be mostly engaged in private intellectual dialogue with itself. When pagan rulers openly defied and demeaned, and privately restrained and repressed the Church, attendance sagged to new depths. Subtle Nazi indoctrination of youth additionally widened the chasm between the younger generation and the churches.
Although remaining Germany’s territorial church (or “people’s” church), Lutheranism has seen attendance at services slip (except at Christmas and Easter) to as low as one per cent of the membership in many cities in West Germany. This spiritual decline is all the more conspicuous alongside the nation’s remarkable industrial and economic recovery.
A SPARK OF HOPE
Something more than anxiety and sympathy is involved, however, in the standing West German awareness of the ongoing Communist repression, if not persecution, of believers still in the East Zone (both in Lutheran and in Union churches as the Church of Saxony West [Magdeburg] and the Church of Berlin-Brandenburg and Pommeranis), and of the Christian task force elsewhere behind the Iron Curtain. For the post-war inheritance of the “second generation” of German ministers includes a firm conviction that the Church in the East Zone in some local situations has become spiritually stronger through trial and persecution. Small fellowships of believers meeting in many homes have found a new theological and evangelistic earnestness, and they refuse to be cowed by fear of Communist tyrants. Nor are they discouraged by the defection of nominal church members. In Saxony, the churches lost 600,000 members in a single year, yet this detachment of those of nominal affiliation gave the Christian remnant a dedication and vitality that shames the indifferent church memberships in large West German cities where multitudes of adults, once confirmed, are seldom seen again in church between their wedding and funeral ceremonies. In the East Zone some dedicated Christian leaders are exhorting others: “Don’t just stay with your people, but stay with them to witness. The Communists can be converted!” The temper of this bold witness is described in Johannes Hamel’s A Christian in East Germany.
THEOLOGY AND FIRE
After World War II, the divinity student-mind was gripped by the “living theology” represented in a professor like Peter Brunner of Heidelberg, who lost his position at the university and suffered persecution by the Gestapo; or Helmut Thielicke of Hamburg, who was forbidden to teach theology and deprived of his university post through political pressures; or Hermann Sasse (now of North Adelaide, Australia), who, while on the faculty at Erlangen, was thrown into prison by the Nazis and rescued by American troops. Divinity scholars eagerly read the literary fragments of Dietrich Bonhoeffer (Letters and Papers from Prison), and of Paul Schneider, put to death by political persecutors. Bishop Johannes Lilje, then general secretary of the Lutheran World Convention, was arrested in 1944 for “defeatism” because he anticipated the conquest of Germany, and when rescued by American troops in 1945 he had already penned the manuscript Luther, Anbruch und Krisis der Neuzeit (English translation, Luther Now) in expectation of execution. Writings of churchmen who had endured suffering at the hands of the tyrants now took top place on the study desks of the clergy. Americans are only now being introduced to the sermons of Helmut Gollwitzer (now professor at Bonn) in the Berlin suburbs as Niemoeller’s successor at Dahlem where, until the Gestapo removed him from his pulpit and expelled him, Gollwitzer interpreted the congregation’s conflict with Nazism through powerful messages on the trial, passion, and resurrection of Jesus Christ (English translation, The Dying and Living Lord). Niemoeller’s influence has been compromised in recent years because of disappointment over his doctrinal laxity and a feeling that he tends to underestimate political perils in East Germany. To this day in Hamburg, where church attendance generally dips as low as in other German cities, Thielicke’s presence in the pulpit fills St. Michaelis Church with 2500 worshippers who come early for a seat, many being university students. Some leaders trace this following in part to public discernment that Thielicke, as shown by his resistance of the Nazis, is obviously not also a pulpit “voice for the state.” And some of these church leaders ask privately whether perchance the evasion of a wholly free church in Germany may not have compromised Christian opportunities. The German masses today think more readily of the Beast-State than of the God-State, and they seem more open to the voice of God that obviously lacks a government accent.
While this later generation saw plainly that the old liberalism lacked power to stand against National Socialism and was itself rooted theologically in crisis-theology, it drew inspiration mainly from thinkers who belonged to the era after Barth. The resistance of the German Confessional Church to Hitler’s anti-Semitism was in part a consequence of the renewed interest in biblical theology stirred up by Barth’s teaching, which nourished spiritual resources to oppose totalitarian forces. Barth himself became a symbol of resistance to National Socialism and was a leader in the church struggle against Hitler. He influenced the Confessing Church’s theological formulations expressed in the Barmen Confession. But the loss of his chair at Bonn, through his expulsion by Hitler in 1935, meant his removal to Basel, Switzerland, where the Protestant world followed at greater distance his contributions to dogmatics. Bultmann, too, although drastically redefining the content of the Gospel, nonetheless strenuously resisted the pagan frontal attack against the Gospel as such, and throughout the Third Reich maintained his open identification with the Church alongside his professorship at the state-supported university. Bultmann’s co-worker, Von Sodon, went still further; at the beginning of World War II he confessed the unorthodoxy of his theological beliefs to both colleagues and students and took higher ground.
A CHANGED ROLE
More and more this new generation of ministers measured the fortunes of Christianity in the modern world in apostolic dimensions. They saw a Church without worldly prestige and, worse yet, downgraded by many of her own members. The real Christian task force was a remnant, an ignored if not despised minority. A specially formative influence was this changed role of the German Church—no longer a State Church although the people’s church; no longer a majority influence in national life but supported only by a scant minority of its own members; its plight in a totalitarian age dramatized by imprisoned or exiled theologians and by pastors who suffered at the whim of dictators. The “second generation” has a desire to prepare the laity to meet the Communistic dialectic, a concern for the renewal of the Church, and an eagerness to reflect the Christian witness in a socially hostile age. This special outlook, however, is determined by ecclesiastical reaction to historical factors and by existential awareness of the Church’s actual situation in life, somewhat more than by conscious reorientation in terms of biblical theology. Nor has it broken through the limitations of contemporary theology in a rededication to biblical evangelism.
Samuel M. Shoemaker is the author of a number of popular books and the gifted Rector of Calvary Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh. He is known for his effective leadership of laymen and his deeply spiritual approach to all vital issues.
- More fromThe Editor
H. C. Brown, Jr.
- View Issue
- Subscribe
- Give a Gift
- Archives
“If Protestantism ever dies with a dagger in its back, the dagger will be the Protestant sermon.” So quotes Donald Miller, a New Testament professor, from an unknown critic of preaching in The Way to Biblical Preaching (Abingdon Press, 1957, p. 7).
Why such critical words?
Miller finds in the contempt some preachers hold for the task of preaching one reason for its low fortune today. In his book Fire in Thy Mouth, he excerpts a letter written by a ministerial student: “I consider preaching as a necessary evil. I shall do as much of it as my position demands in order to qualify for the other more important tasks on which my heart is set. But I could well wish to avoid preaching almost entirely” (Fire in Thy Mouth, Abingdon Press, 1954, p. 14). The sad fact is that many otherwise capable preachers hold such convictions about preaching. The world’s disdain for the preaching of the pulpit is evidence of the modern evaluation of preaching.
The “clown complex” found in some ministers also tends to cheapen preaching. Because rhetoricians, statesmen, politicians, salesmen, and preachers have known for centuries that humor is a devastatingly effective weapon, some men have elevated humor to first importance among homiletical devices. Dr. Ellis A. Fuller, the late president of Southern Baptist Seminary, appealed to his students to refrain from playing the fool, the jester, and instead to live the role for which they were divinely commissioned.
The major question to be faced by some ministers, as they rise in the morning, is ‘who am I today?,” as Pierce Harris noted in the Atlanta Constitution:
The modern preacher has to make as many visits as a country doctor, shake as many hands as a politician, prepare as many briefs as a lawyer, see as many people as a specialist. He has to be as good an executive as the president of a University, and as good a financier as a bank president, and in the midst of it all, he has to be so good a diplomat that he could umpire a baseball game between the Knights of Columbus and the Ku Klux Klan [used by permission].
Dr. Samuel W. Blizzard during two years of research and investigation uncovered some interesting facts concerning ministers (see “The Roles of the Rural Parish Minister, the Protestant Seminaries and the Sciences of Social Behavior,” November, December, 1955, pp. 383–92). Dr. Blizzard attempted to find the preacher’s image of himself. He asked 1300 ministers to arrange six roles or functions—preacher, pastor, priest, teacher, organizer, and administrator—in the order of importance according to what they believed to be an ideal pattern. The more than 700 who replied felt the minister is: first, a preacher; second, a pastor; third, a priest; fourth, a teacher; fifth, an organizer; sixth, and last, an administrator.
Blizzard also asked them to arrange the same six roles functionally, according to the amount of time they spent performing these roles. The results were: first, administrator; second, pastor; third, priest; fourth, organizer; fifth, preacher; sixth, teacher.
During an average ten and one-half hour workday, these men spent an average of only thirty-eight and one-half minutes preparing to preach. The time spent on administration was seven times more than that spent on preaching. They declared that preaching ought to be their primary function, but they had reduced it to a very weak fifth-rate role by actual conduct and performance.
The drought in the content of preaching today should surprise nobody once we frankly admit our generation’s aversion to study, to work, and to creative thinking. Whether because of laziness, plagiarism, or lack of understanding, modern preachers show an alarming preoccupation with topical preaching and shallow content. Professor Luccock strongly urged, “If you have anything peculiarly Christian to say at this hour, for God’s sake, say it! But if you can do nothing but mouth over the slogans of the street corner, or the usual banalities of the chamber of commerce, for God’s sake, keep still!” (In the Minister’s Workshop, Abingdon-Cokesbury, 1944, p. 39).
SIGNS OF HOPE
In spite of the obvious decadence of preaching, signs of hope are apparent. It is encouraging to sense a quickening of interest in preaching in the seminaries throughout our land. An investigation on theological education in 1935 reported preaching to be one of five departments common to 25 seminaries. Dr. Richard Niebuhr found that in 1955 preaching was still one of the five departments common to the same 25 seminaries. Niebuhr’s conclusion was that “the ‘classical’ disciplines [of theological education], Bible, Church History, Theology, Pastoral Care, and Preaching, must certainly be included in any theological curriculum.…” (H. Richard Niebuhr, Daniel Day Williams, and James M. Gustafson, The Advancement of Theological Education, Harper, 1957, p. 86.)
A further hopeful sign is the practice of outstanding preachers who dare to lock the doors of their offices in order to pray, to study, and to prepare sermons. They are encouraged to believe that when they find messages from the Lord, people will rejoice to hear those messages. They dare to believe that people will excuse them from many aimless activities which plague the modern preacher provided they are busy finding God’s message.
An additional sign is evident in the heart-hunger of laymen for pastors who preach the Word. Again and again laymen have volunteered their convictions that ministers should pray more, study more, and rightly divide the Word of Truth. Jesse Johnson, an attorney from Richmond, Virginia, has written:
To my mind, the first and greatest work of the man in the pulpit is to preach the Word. If God has called him at all, He has called him to do just that. Nothing else should come before it. Nothing else can take its place. Almost every other work in the church can be accomplished by laymen or laywomen, but preaching is still the preacher’s job” (Messages for Men, ed. H. C. Brown, Jr., Zondervan, 1960, p. 88).
Moreover, we may take hope in some facts often overlooked in analyzing Blizzard’s report. While Blizzard has pointed up the alarming neglect of preaching by preachers, he has also presented documentary proof that all the combined pressures, programs, and problems of these preachers have been unable to convince them that preaching is not their primary task. Ministers still believe that they are first of all preachers, although other duties have usurped the place of preaching.
The most promising hope on the homiletic horizon is that theologians and biblical scholars have introduced three vital insights concerning the preaching ministry.
First, they are saying again, as it has not been said for some time, though often said in days past, that “preaching is vitally important in Kingdom affairs.” One of the first to emphasize the supreme importance of preaching was P. T. Forsyth, whose Positive Preaching and the Modern Mind rises like Mount Everest among the literature of homiletics. He said: “With preaching Christianity stands or falls because it is the declaration of a gospel. Nay more—far more—it is the Gospel prolonging and declaring itself” (Positive Preaching and the Modern Mind, A. C. Armstrong and Son, 1907, p. 5).
The second vital insight of leading scholars pertains to the content of preaching. Those who have attempted to make a sharp distinction between preaching and teaching in the New Testament and in the ministry of Jesus lack valid reasons for doing so. The record of the Synoptics is such that preaching and teaching overlap and complement each other in concept, function, and terminology. There is not so much a sharp distinction between gospel content and teaching content as there is a vital dependent relationship. The Gospel is the missionary evangelistic message, and upon this basic message is built the proper theological interpretation and proper ethical application.
The third significant contribution pertains to the importance of communication. Rules and principles of homiletics are vital. Since preaching is God’s way of telling man that he is lost and needs salvation, since preaching is God’s way of instructing his children, it logically follows that the way the preacher prepares and speaks God’s message is important.
The preacher has many functions. But “the primacy of preaching” means that the most important thing a preacher can do in the course of his week’s work is to preach, to speak for God Almighty. As he prepares and preaches, so will he become qualified to perform his other major functions. Only when a minister is first of all God’s spokesman does he truly become an effective administrator, a loving pastor, a wise teacher, a sympathetic counsellor, and an able denominational leader. The North Star of the ministry is the task of preaching.
Samuel M. Shoemaker is the author of a number of popular books and the gifted Rector of Calvary Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh. He is known for his effective leadership of laymen and his deeply spiritual approach to all vital issues.
- More fromH. C. Brown, Jr.
Dr. Charles W. Koller
- View Issue
- Subscribe
- Give a Gift
- Archives
2 Corinthians 5:14–20
The Preacher:
Long one of the American Baptist Convention’s outstanding preachers, Dr. Charles W. Koller became third president of Northern Baptist Theological Seminary, Chicago, in 1938. He is presently on leave. A native of Texas, he served in World War I. Dr. Koller holds the A.B. degree from Baylor University, Th.M. and Th.D. from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, and the honorary D.D. from Eastern Baptist Theological Seminary. During the eleven years (1927–38) he ministered to Clinton Hill Baptist Church in Newark, its membership doubled and led Baptist churches in New Jersey in numerical net growth. Dr. Koller’s sermon is based on his favorite passage of Scripture (2 Cor. 5:14–20) and unfolds his favorite theme, the Cross.
The Text:
For the love of Christ constraineth us; because we thus judge, that if one died for all, then were all dead: And that he died for all that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto him which died for them, and rose again. Wherefore henceforth know we no man after the flesh: yea, though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now henceforth know we him no more. Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new. And all things are of God, who hath reconciled us to himself by Jesus Christ, and hath given to us the ministry of reconciliation; to wit, that God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them; and hath committed unto us the word of reconciliation.
Now then we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God did beseech you by us: we pray you in Christ’s stead, be ye reconciled to God.
On a hill far away stood an old rugged cross,
The emblem of suffering and shame.
But I love that old cross, where the dearest and best
For a world of lost sinners was slain.
We have not really seen the cross of Christ until we have seen it as a great plus sign by which God and man are drawn together in holy reconciliation.
Above that cross, a loving Heavenly Father bends down from his throne and offers the hand of reconciliation to an estranged human family. Beneath that cross is the great, confused mass of blundering, sinning, suffering humanity, alienated from God, lost in ways of its own choosing, and divided by those innumerable barriers which sin sets up. Upon that cross, in the form of a Living Plus Sign, is the quivering, bleeding body of the Son of God, the Great Reconciler, who has “broken down the middle wall of partition between us … that he might reconcile both unto God in one body by the cross” (Eph. 2:14, 16).
We have not really seen Christ until we have seen him as the Christ of the cross. Thus we see him through the eyes of Peter who knew him so well and so devotedly, and who emphasizes not his prepossessing personality, superior mind, magnificent character, lofty ethics, or flawless life, but his atoning death (1 Pet. 1:18f.). We see him through the eyes of Paul who emphasizes not the Christ of the wayside, of the seaside, the synagogue, or the market place but the Christ of the cross (1 Cor. 2:2). It is in the cross, primarily, that Christ himself desires to be remembered. How did he spend the last evening with his disciples before his death? Did he devote those brief and precious moments to a review of his life, or to the Sermon on the Mount? On the contrary, he gave a preview of his death, of the Sacrifice on the Mount.
“This is my body which is given for you: this do in remembrance of me … This cup is the new testament in my blood, which is shed for you” (Luke 22:19–20). Thus it is the Christ of the cross, primarily, whom we memorialize in the Lord’s Supper “till he come.”
We have not really seen our earthly mission or our heavenly destiny until we have seen it in the light of the cross, that great plus sign on the sky line of Calvary. There, suspended between heaven and earth, is the Living Plus Sign, the throbbing, outstretched form of the Son of God with hands uplifted in a holy prayer of reconciliation: “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do” (Luke 23:34). Beyond the cross, we behold the gates of Paradise swung open, and the angels singing their welcome to the returning, crucified, yet resurrected and glorified Son of God! And who are those that follow in his train? Are they not sinners, cleansed, forgiven, reconciled? We as the people of God move toward a high destiny, but all around us are the lost, the unreconciled, in whom we have a great uncompleted mission to fulfill. Nowhere is the earthly mission of God’s people more perfectly expressed than in the words of the apostle, “Now then we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God did beseech you by us; we pray you in Christ’s stead, be ye reconciled to God” (2 Cor. 5:20). To the reconciled and unreconciled alike, the great plus sign speaks.
TO THE UNRECONCILED
1. The atoning work of Christ is finished. The chasm between the sinfulness of man and the holiness of God has been bridged. The way is thrown open for the lowliest of sinners to come to the throne of grace and receive cleansing and forgiveness.
It was a great day in American history when the first transcontinental railway was completed. A memorable occasion was planned for the laying of the last rail and last tie, and the driving of the last spike along the border between Colorado and New Mexico. A laurel wood tie had been provided, and two silver spikes which represented the two adjoining states. At the appointed moment the two governors stepped forward, and each in turn drove one of the silver spikes into the laurel wood tie. When the last spike had been driven, the assembled crowd broke into applause, while reporters who had tapped the telegraph wires flashed the good news to the world. The great feat had been accomplished which spanned the continent from coast to coast! It was indeed a great day. But it was a far greater day when the reconciling Christ, with spikes driven through his hands and feet, cried out from the cross, “It is finished!” Now angels could flash the news to the ends of the earth, and sinners could forever rejoice, “It is finished!”
2. The great plus sign is still adding! It continues to add souls to the household of God. It makes men brothers through the only means by which the brotherhood of man is ever to be achieved, namely, through the fatherhood of God. There is a sense in which all the sons of men are the sons of God; but in the prevailing New Testament sense not all the sons of men are sons of God by any means. Only “as many as received Him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God” (John 1:12). And when, through the new birth, two men have become sons of God, they have by the same token become brothers to one another. To a mixed company of believers, Jesus said, “all ye are brethren … one is your Father, which is in heaven” (Matt. 23:8–9). To a group of unbelievers, Jesus said, “Ye are of your father, the devil” (John 8:44).
The Living Plus Sign unites hostile elements by the only tie that truly binds. After World War I, the Arabs in Palestine and the British soldiers of the army of occupation generally regarded one another as mortal enemies. One of the British soldiers, a devout Christian, visited the reputed tomb of Jesus. As he approached the tomb he was startled to note, just inside the opening, a tall, swarthy Arab warrior with hands folded in deep meditation. The British soldier waited, not wishing to intrude, and not knowing what might happen next. When finally the Arab warrior turned to leave the tomb, their eyes met. The Englishman extended his hand and uttered one word, “Jesus!” The Arab took his hand and responded with the Arabic equivalent of “Jesus.” It was a warm, lingering handshake. Not one further word was spoken, but both men realized that they were brothers, sons of the same Father, servants of the same Master.
3. The reconciling Christ is still at work. The ancient invitation still stands: “Be ye reconciled to God!” He purifies as he reconciles. The sinner could never, in the filthiness of his unforgiven state, be lifted to the holy bosom of the Heavenly Father. Helpless and hopeless, he must look to the reconciling Christ. Dr. Samuel Chadwick of Leeds, England, once announced a service for infidels only. A large crowd came. They would not sing or join in prayer, and the preaching was under constant heckling. After the service, Dr. Chadwick invited any who were interested in further discussion to meet him in the vestry. Nineteen men followed. After long and apparently fruitless discussion, Dr. Chadwick said, “Suppose we grant your philosophy to be sufficient for the man who has moral character, social position, economic sufficiency, and domestic happiness; what will you do for the man who has none of these, whose life has been wrecked by the ravages of wrong living, and from whom all hope has departed?” The lawyer who had become spokesman for the group arose, offered his hand to the minister, and said, “I would bring him to you, Dr. Chadwick, for you have his only hope.” What a tribute to the redeeming, reconciling Christ!
He pays as he reconciles. What the sinner in his bankrupt state could never do for himself, Christ does on his behalf. He gave his life “a ransom for many” (Mark 10:45). A pastor came to a new realization of this fact through an almost fatal illness. When he had recovered to the point where he could walk again, he became concerned about the staggering bills that had accumulated. There had been two nurses and two or three doctors, costly prescriptions, and other extraordinary expenses. But in all those weeks of illness he had of course paid nothing. He walked to the nearby business district of his little town and stopped first at the druggist. When he asked about his account, the druggist opened the old fashioned ledger and showed him a long list of items. “You see, it’s a big bill,” said the druggist. “Yes,” said the preacher, weakly, “I was afraid of that. I can’t pay now, but I will pay just as soon as I can.” Then the druggist removed his hand from the bottom of the page, and the preacher saw in big, red letters the word PAID. His deacons had paid the bill. He went to two other places where huge bills had been accumulating. Every debt had been paid. As he walked home, overwhelmed with gratitude, he began to sing in his heart, “Jesus paid it all, all to Him I owe; sin had left a crimson stain, He washed it white as snow.”
The great plus sign on the sky line of Calvary speaks again.
TO THE RECONCILED
1. “He hath reconciled us,” says the text. We are “redeemed,” says the apostle Peter, not with “corruptible things, as silver and gold … but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot” (1 Pet. 1:18–19). We are “cleansed,” says the apostle John, not by the exemplary life of Christ, but by his sacrificial death, not by his lofty teachings, but by “the blood of Jesus Christ” (1 John 1:7).
In speaking of our redemption, the apostle Paul borrows from the vocabulary of the slave market of his day. Some of us have vivid memories of the old market place of horse and buggy days. The first Monday of each month was the traditional “Trade Day,” when every farmer with livestock to sell or trade would bring it to the public square in the county seat. Here, a mule offered for sale would be tied to the hitching rail, where he might stand for hours in the broiling sun. Prospective purchasers might open his mouth to determine his age, prod him in the flanks, drive him around in a gallop to make sure that he was sound of wind, and then perhaps decide that he would not do. This might be done repeatedly before a purchaser was found, and next year the mule might be returned to the same place, and subjected to the same experience. In the slave traffic of Paul’s day, the usual word for such a purchase was “agoradzo” (from “agora,” meaning “market place”). But, in speaking of our redemption, Paul uses the much stronger term “ex-agoradzo,” which suggests the finality of our redemption, our permanent removal out of the market place (Gal. 3:13).
2. He hath committed unto us the word of reconciliation. Our supreme task is to interpret the Living Plus Sign and to introduce our unreconciled, unforgiven friends to the reconciling Christ. Our motivation is that of the first century: “We cannot but speak the things which we have seen and heard” (Acts 4:20). The great divine embarrassment is the prevailing shortage of dedicated men and women to bear witness. How shamefully casual we are! “I don’t want to be tied down.” How familiar that sounds! Our Lord was willing not only to be tied down but to be nailed to a cross for our redemption. “Love so amazing, so divine, demands my soul, my life, my all!” The most rewarding of all human endeavors is that of introducing others to the reconciling Christ. “He that winneth souls is wise” (Prov. 11:30), and “they that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament, and they that turn many to righteousness, as the stars for ever and ever” (Dan. 12:3). Without a doubt, the sweetest music in heaven will be reserved for those who have directed others into the great heavenly chorus of the redeemed. There is something intensely personal about the Cross. From each of us, it calls for a response. To the unreconciled, it says, “Come, be reconciled!” To the reconciled, it says, “Go, tell others!” There are said to be 31,102 verses in the Bible, but not one could be more important than this: “Now then we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God did beseech you by us; we pray you in Christ’s stead, be ye reconciled to God” (2 Cor. 5:20). For the unreconciled, nothing could be more urgent than to heed this invitation. For the reconciled, nothing could be more urgent than to convey the invitation to others. It is the world’s only hope.
Comment On The Sermon
The sermon “The Living Plus Sign” was nominated forCHRISTIANITY TODAY’SSelect Sermon Series by Dr. Faris D. Whitesell, Professor of Homiletics in Northern Baptist Theological Seminary. Dr. Whitesell’s overcomment follows:
A perfectionist in all he does, Dr. Koller’s homiletical work is virtually flawless. Having taught senior preaching in his seminary for some twenty years, he has perfected a plan of untold blessing to hundreds of his students now out in the preaching ministry. His homiletical principles clearly appear in this sermon.
Along with its major virtues of being expository, evangelical, and evangelistic, this message reveals unity, order, proportion and mastery of details in its organization; thoughtfulness, urgency and warmth in its spirit; and clarity, precision, energy and elegance in its style.
The title captures the reader’s interest by painting a unique picture, “The Living Plus Sign.” The introduction holds that interest by three powerful affirmations concerning the centrality of the cross in Christianity and in life. The introduction moves to its climax in a controlling statement or thesis, “To all alike, the reconciled and the unreconciled, the great plus sign speaks.” The rest of the sermon develops the thesis.
Following the two-point sermon pattern of F. W. Robertson, Dr. Koller’s message has two main points each in the form of a question: 1. What does the cross say to the unreconciled? 2. What does it say to the reconciled? To the first question he furnishes three answers which constitute his subpoints: 1). The atoning work of Christ is finished; 2). The great plus sign is still adding; 3). The reconciling Christ is still at work. To his second main question, he suggests two answers: 1). Christ has reconciled us; 2). Christ has committed unto us the word of reconciliation. Thus the outline for this sermon cuts a deep and straight channel for the flow of the preacher’s vigorous thoughts.
This sermon speaks to the average American congregation for it addresses both professing Christians and those who make no profession.
Its five major illustrations do their work of changing the pace of thought, illuminating truth, arousing the emotions, and appealing for response. This message leads the hearer to encounter God and creates the mood for decision, whether he be a Christian who should witness to the good news of reconciliation, or whether he be a lost sinner needing reconciliation with God. This is the supreme test of any sermon.
F. D. W.
Samuel M. Shoemaker is the author of a number of popular books and the gifted Rector of Calvary Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh. He is known for his effective leadership of laymen and his deeply spiritual approach to all vital issues.
- More fromDr. Charles W. Koller
- View Issue
- Subscribe
- Give a Gift
- Archives
In a day when everyone’s cause is a “holy crusade,” when a cacophony of voices shrills the latest “ism” continually through the mass media, when no one can finish a sentence without being interrupted, and when false christs appear on five continents at once, there remains a constraining and compelling need for one more voice. It is the voice of God which, Scripture tells us, is as the voice of thunder and of many waters.
“So long as the Church pretends or assumes to preach absolute values, but actually preaches relative and secondary values, it will merely hasten the process of disintegration (of our civilization). We are asked to turn to the Church for our enlightenment, but when we do so we find that the voice of the Church is not inspired. The voice of the Church today we find is the echo of our own voices.… When we consult the Church we hear only what we ourselves have said.… There is only one way out of the spiral and the way out is the sound of a voice, not our voice, but a voice coming from something beyond ourselves, in the existence of which we cannot disbelieve. It is the duty of the pastors to hear this voice, to cause us to hear it, and to tell us what it says.” This comment is from one of the most provocative editorials ever published in Fortune magazine (gauged by reader response), appearing in January, 1940. It dealt with the churches and the tensions of peace and war, and the basic tenet of the editorial is as valid today as it was at the beginning of World War II. When all maxims of Christian education, techniques, of visitation evangelism, skills of linguistics and other forms of outreach have been exhausted, the truth remains that it is by “the foolishness of preaching” that men believe and the Church is built. The hearing of man’s word will not transform but only deform, as our century bears eloquent testimony. If a life-changing Word is to be heard, it must be a supernatural Word, the Word that was in the beginning and that will outlast the universe. Nothing else is powerful enough to shake man loose from sin and self-obsession.
It is not easy to preach the Gospel in America in the year A.D. 1961. Problems of communication are mounting. How, to put it in the idiom of some of the younger set, does a “square” reach a “cat”? How is the Gospel made relevant to the modern issue, then attuned to the modern ear? Many a day has passed since the United States government was concerned about the moral turpitude of the Countess of Cathcart; and Mrs. Grundy’s ghost seems to have been laid forever. So completely have the mores of society been tipped upside down that, as Dean Robert E. Fitch suggests, more sympathy exists for the murdered than for his victim, and more for the adulterer than for the one whose love is betrayed.
Who speaks for God in such a time? Who points the way to Christ and his cross? Confident that the apostolic preaching of the Word of God is the Church’s paramount commission, CHRISTIANITY TODAY presents in this issue the first of a series of sermons, chosen by outstanding homileticians throughout the nation for brilliant effectiveness in proclaiming the message of Jesus Christ, and here published for the first time. Dr. Andrew W. Blackwood, many years professor of homiletics at Princeton Theological Seminary and author of many books on preaching, heads the list of able teachers of homiletics in seminaries and Bible schools engaged in this effort. The others will analyze sermons they themselves have nominated; Dr. Blackwood will comment on the analysts and their analyses.
Faithful preaching is one of the high and holy traditions of the Church. From the apostles Peter and Paul down through John Chrysostom, Ambrose, Savonarola, Knox, Whitefield, Wesley, and on into our own time, God has raised up voices to speak his truth. May the series to follow plant seeds that will reap rich harvests for the Lord of glory in 1961.
Turn the page for the first of the sermons nominated for CHRISTIANITY TODAY’SSelect Sermon Series by a dozen professors of preaching in American seminaries. Each month CHRISTIANITY TODAY will print a sermon representative of evangelical preaching in America, with comments by a leading homiletician.
Turn to the News Section for a feature on “the pursuit of good preaching”—and discover the practical difficulties faced by the divinity professors CHRISTIANITY TODAY assigned to make these nominations.
Next month: A sermon chosen from the preaching tradition of the Reformed Church in America.
Paul S. Rees
- View Issue
- Subscribe
- Give a Gift
- Archives
If the season of Advent holds cheer that delights and dazzles a child’s heart, it holds challenge also that probes and haunts the most scintillant of learned minds. In his Cambridge Lectures on Christian Doctrine, Professor J. S. Whale makes the observation that “the Christological debates of nineteen centuries are a monument to the uniqueness of Him whom Christians know as the Incarnate Son of God.” A moment later he goes on to say that Jesus is inexplicable just because He cannot be put into a class. His uniqueness constitutes the problem to be explained. It is impossible to describe Him without becoming entangled in paradoxes. The great merit of the Creeds is that they left the paradox as such.
It is this uniqueness, in which the event of the atoning Cross is linked with the event of the incarnational Birth, that gives to us what Professor H. R. Mackintosh long ago called The Originality of the Christian Message. (The phrase is actually finer and firmer than the too subjectivistic theology with which the author supports it.) The fitness of the phrase is due partly to the telling appropriateness of the word “message.” No theology, least of all a Christology, is worthy of the New Testament that is merely treatise or discourse: it must be message.
For this reason I find particular stimulus in the theological writings of such contemporaries as Lutheran T. A. Kantonen, Presbyterian John A. Mackay, Methodist Edwin Lewis, and Anglican Stephen Neill. Their Christological concern is acute and their evangelical commitment at this point is unambiguous.
Consider Bishop Stephen Neill’s recent books, The Unfinished Task and Creative Tension. They are skillful attempts to bring into fresh focus the redemptive solitariness of Christ the Lord. Neill’s concern is not that of the theologian per se but of the missioner: he would insist (like Kantonen) that the theology of the New Testament is beyond all else kerygmatic. As a doctrinal commentator, therefore, he has always before him the missionary perspective.
In The Unfinished Task he “debunks” the myth that “each great World Christian Conference marks an advance on the one that has gone before.” As between “Edinburgh” in 1910 and “Jerusalem” in 1928 Neill holds that the direction was down rather than up. “A case could be made out,” he says, “for regarding the Jerusalem meeting in 1928 as the nadir of the modern missionary movement. This was the moment when liberal theology exercised its most fatal influence on missionary thinking, the lowest valley out of which the missionary movement has ever since been trying to make its way” (p. 151).
What Bishop Neill has in mind becomes abundantly clear to anyone who will acquaint himself with Re-Thinking Missions, produced under the editorship of Professor Hocking in 1932. An attentuated Christology evolved from an emasculated New Testament had so distracted, if not dominated, the Jerusalem Conference that the so-called “Laymen’s Inquiry” took the Hocking group around the world and crystalized its findings in the “Re-Thinking” volume. Here it was stated that “The relation between religions must take increasingly hereafter the form of a common search for truth” (p. 47). It was the crowning hour for the “comparative religion” school of thought. Christianity was still superior but it was not incomparable.
This influence, stemming from Jerusalem, has led Professor Wilhelm Andersen, a German Lutheran, to say in his recent Towards a Theology of Mission that what the dominant voices of the Conference were really asking was: “Is Christian faith, perhaps, only one particular form of the mystical experience of the divine which is the common groundwork of all religions? Should not Jesus, Buddha, Confucius, Mohammed and the rest be considered simply as different branches on the single tree of the religious experience of mankind? Are the differences between the various religions perhaps only relative differences between a more perfect or a less perfect stage of evolution?” (p. 23).
How this way of construing, and thereby betraying, the Gospel has played into the hands of the now resurgent non-Christian faiths may be illustrated from the opening paragraph of D. T. Niles’ The Preacher’s Task and the Stone of Stumbling. Niles quotes a Hindu friend of his who one day said to him, “We shall put an image of Christ into every Hindu temple and then no Hindu will see the point of becoming a Christian.” On which Niles makes the observation, “It was a remark perfectly revealing the Hindu mind. For the Hindu attitude to Jesus Christ is to accept him and make him at home in Hinduism. It is also an attitude which refuses to accept either the validity or the necessity of a Hindu becoming a Christian.”
Since the Jerusalem Conference many a theological voice has been raised in protest against the erosion of the Church’s Christology and the dilution of the Church’s message. It was in protest against the viewpoint of Re-Thinking Missions that Robert E. Speer wrote his glorious book on The Finality of Jesus Christ. It was in connection with the Madras Conference of 1938 that Hendrik Kraemer wrote his The Christian Message in a Non-Christian World, with its rejection of the “comparative religion” approach and its insistence on the uniqueness of the person of Christ and of the saving action of God in His birth, death, and resurrection on behalf of all men. It is to reaffirm, albeit with fresh and constructive relevance, the sovereignty of Christ over all of life that Stephen Neill now tells us, in Creative Tension, that even religious systems represent those human aspirations and pretentions which the Cross must first reduce to ashes that so, from the rubble of human pride, might arise the new man of faith to whom Jesus Christ is Saviour indeed.
The issue is not now, nor ever has been, one religion in comparison with another, one philosophy as against another: the issue is Christ—God incarnate, God on a Cross.
- More fromPaul S. Rees
- View Issue
- Subscribe
- Give a Gift
- Archives
Background Of The Reformation
Erasmus and the Humanist Experiment, by Louis Bouyer (Geoffrey Chapman, 1959, 220 pp., 18s.), is reviewed by Gervase E. Duffield, Secretary to the Tyndale Fellowship for Biblical Research, Tyndale House, Cambridge.
Few people today know much about the humanism of the Renaissance but a knowledge of it is an essential prerequisite for grasping the background and context of the Reformation. To most, humanism has come to mean a system of morality and thought based solely on man’s ideas to the exclusion of everything divine. In the Renaissance era it had an element of this, but it was more a realization of man’s potentiality, his wonder and his achievements. The age was everywhere one of discovery, with Vasco da Gama and Christopher Columbus finding new lands, and Galileo and Copernicus exploring the mysteries of the universe; but though these were part of the whole movement, the main impact of humanism was in art and literature. The fall of Constantinople in 1453 had driven the Greek scholars westward and sparked off the Renaissance in Italy. Its artistic aspect, the paintings of Raphael and the sculptures of Michelangelo, and so on, are well enough known, so Bouyer concentrates on its literary side. He shows us the changing attitudes of the Popes to the new learning, as it began with the classical studies of Petrarch and the speculative mysticism of Nicholas of Cusa. The author traces it through the education reforms of Vittorino da Feltre, and the brilliant but eccentric cabalism of Pico della Mirandola and so on to Erasmus, the central figure.
There were in fact two humanisms, related but yet distinct. The writer at times seems aware of this, but it is not brought out with sufficient clarity. The Alps were the dividing line intellectually as well as geographically. To the south the emphasis was more secular, more artistic, and permeated by a greater scepticism. To the north it was more religious and educational, and linked with a pietism that had grown weary of scholastic dogma. The chief reason for the difference lay in the Brethren of the Common Life, who originated in the Low Countries.
Bouyer gives us much useful information about Erasmus, going through his Method of True Theology and his Colloquies. In the process he expounds his way of writing, his patristic interests, and his commentating, together with some of his political and moral ideas. The author takes issue with the French scholar Renaudet, who explained Erasmus in terms of the undogmatic approach of the 19th century Liberalism, and made him the virtual founder of the Renan type of Modernism. This is fair criticism, but we must ask if Bouyer himself is not guilty of some preconceptions in his analysis of the great Rotterdamer. Renaudet is accused of vagueness and lack of supporting references on p. 139, but what of Bouyer? Can we explain away The Praise of Folly as a mere verbal pleasantry from a select group and the result of a long chat with Sir Thomas More (p. 99)? Did Erasmus never attack monasticism as such? Did he not say some very strong things about the Pope? Later on, when he saw the way the Lutherans were moving, he drew in his horns, and, wishing to stay within the Roman fold, he claimed he had been misinterpreted, but all this does not mean he never made the attacks in the first place.
What, then, was the historical Erasmus like? His roots were in northern humanism, and he shared its concern for moral improvement and the pietist’s unconcern with dogma. He had more faults than Bouyer mentions, for he loved flattery and was too ambitious for the uninfluential circles of his monastery at Steyn. He advocated a conciliatory policy towards the Lutherans till he was coerced into attacking Luther. Our book passes lightly over this contest and total victory for Luther in The Bondage of the Will, and mentions only Erasmus’ moderation and Luther’s violence (p. 132). It is clear Erasmus was at best a poor theologian, and that his real milieu was the literary world where he could edit texts and write satires. In fact he used the same flippancy in attacking Luther’s view of predestination as he had earlier in his Praise of Folly, and we imagine Bouyer would not deny he really meant to attack Luther. The author places Erasmus between the ultra-conservative Catholics and the Protestant innovators (p. 98), and while this is very convenient, we must note that Trent later decided what Romanism was, and the Tridentine Fathers were certainly ultra-conservative. Further it would be more accurate to say that Erasmus, like his great hero Origen before him who tried to be a Platonist and a Christian, sought to be an orthodox Roman and a Humanist. Formally he was always a Roman, for it hardly occurred to him to be anything else: he hated division and strife of any sort, and though he had inherited the methods of historical and literary criticism from Lorenzo Valla, he was not a critical theologian and did not think theologically. His method of assailing the decadence around him was that of satire, but it breathed a different spirit from the Council of Trent.
Bouyer’s uneasiness with humanism appears towards the end of the book, when he discusses Pope Paul Ill’s three humanist cardinals: Contarini the Italian reformer, Sadoleto the commentator who sought to steal Geneva back from the Protestants, and Pole the Archbishop of Canterbury who so nearly became Pope. “The Christian spirit in these dedicated Churchmen still retained and embraced the humanist spirit, but could not penetrate it” (p. 218). The pietistic humanism of the north had some influence on the Counter-Reformation, but much of it was rejected by Tridentine rigidity. The Reformers had set aside the general man-centred view of life with its Pelagian tendencies and took up the literary tools of humanism, the study of philology, texts, grammar and syntax, historical criticism exposing frauds, and linguistic, classical, and patristic research. When these things ceased to be the domain of satirists and literary dilettantes—well, we know what Bucer, Melanchthon, Calvin, Zwingli, and Peter Martyr did, and they all came from humanist backgrounds.
The book is well written and printed in a large type which helps the reader. An index would have been an improvement, but the work is packed with valuable information, even if the Roman Catholic viewpoint is in evidence at times.
In expressing his opinion of the work of Renaudet Bouyer says that, though his “judgment seems untenable, his book is a valuable guide through a maze of events” (p. 251). We venture to suggest that this appraisal may be applied with equal appropriateness to the work of Bouyer himself.
GERVASE E. DUFFIELD
A Living Faith
The Royal Route to Heaven: A Study in First Corinthians, by Alan Redpath (Revell, 1960, 256 pp., $3.50), is reviewed by Richard C. Halverson, pastor Fourth Presbyterian Church, Washington, D. C.
Alan Redpath accomplished his purpose, to provide “both food and fire for the hungry heart to which God has revealed the shallowness and ineffectiveness of the church in the world today.” In language notably free from the stereotypes so deadening to familiar truth, he writes as though First Corinthians was meant for twentieth century Christians. Fundamental ideas such as peace, perishing, salvation, mystery, carnality, separation are redefined in a way that stimulates new appreciation for the relevance of ancient truth to contemporary life. Difficult matters like schism, judgment, Tongues are handled with great care and delicate matters such as immorality, sex, marital relations, chastity bear the touch of reverence and wisdom. Discussions on the centrality of the Cross and the ministry of the Spirit commend this book to every reader who seeks to be all he believes Christ intends him to be.
RICHARD C. HALVERSON
Russian Christianity
The Russian Religious Mind, by George P. Fedotov (Harper, 1960, 431 pp., $1.95), is reviewed by Georges Florovsky, Professor of Eastern Church History, Harvard Divinity School.
The standing value of this volume is in its rich documentation. The author surveys in turn all basic writings of the early Russian literature up to the Mongol invasion, in the first quarter of the thirteenth century, and endeavors to discern behind the documents living persons, with their beliefs and convictions, their hopes and achievements, their disappointments and failures. He seeks to show, by a kind of case analysis, the variety and the growth of Russian Christianity, in its first formative age. This task is accomplished superbly.
The author has an unusual insight into the human soul. According to his own admission, Professor Fedotov was interested mainly in the “subjective side” of religion. Not only does he distinguish between the “subjective” and “objective” sides, but he opposes them. He writes as an historian, not as a theologian. This approach has its advantages, but also grave inconveniences. The author is actually interested in the “religious man,” not in the “objective” values to which this man is committed and dedicated. Yet, in the last resort, he does not, because he cannot, abstain from judgment, and this takes him beyond psychology.
The book is a kind of special pleading for a particular type of Christianity, which, according to the author, was characteristic of the Russian mind. He labels it as “Kenotic” (from the Greek word kenosis—self-humbling, humiliation). He contrasts it with the Byzantine pattern, dominated, as he believes, by the attitude of dread and fear. This section of the book is not only the weakest, but is a complete failure. The author does not know Byzantium well enough, and utterly dislikes its religion. The book should be widely read as an introduction to Russian religious psychology, but the reader must be cautious in adopting Professor Fedotov’s theological conclusions. In any case, the Christ of the Russian faith was not only “the Humiliated Christ,” but also the Risen Lord, and the Judge to come. This was also the Christ of the Byzantine.
GEORGES FLOROVSKY
Refined Wellhausenism
A Christian Theology of the Old Testament by George A. F. Knight (John Knox, 1959, 381 pp., $5), is reviewed by Earl S. Kalland, Dean and Professor of Old Testament, Conservative Baptist Theological Seminary, Denver, Colorado.
G. A. F. Knight, lecturer in Old Testament and Hebrew in St. Mary’s and St. Salvator’s Colleges of St. Andrew’s University, in this work, has given to those interested in Biblical studies a positive, modern view of Old Testament theology.
Methodologically, the twin excellences of historic-grammatical analysis and positive presentation grace the book even though many of the historical and grammatical judgments might not be accepted as true.
With almost unfaltering consistency the alleged writers or editors of every section of the Old Testament are chronologically fitted into a somewhat refined and modernized Graf-Wellhausen scheme of authorship. Without a complete committal to this modern reconstruction of Old Testament formation the developmental order of Old Testament theology here espoused cannot be accepted.
An evolutionary historical approach leads Professor Knight to confuse the religion which Israel practiced with the religion which God revealed.
The ancient Near Eastern myths and the terminology which they have in common with the Old Testament have been taken much too seriously in this book.
While corporate Israel often stands out in the Old Testament, here corporate Israel becomes what the New Testament and what many writers since New Testament times interpreted as a prefigurement of Christ Himself. Extremely limited mention is made of the prophecy of an individual Messiah.
For one who is equipped to read it critically, this “theology” should afford some interesting reading but it is not a book for beginners.
EARL S. KALLAND
Backgrounds Of Freedom
Christian History of the Constitution, Volume I, a compilation by Verna M. Hall, edited by Joseph Allan Montgomery. Introduction by Felix Morley (American Christian History Press, 481 pp., no price given), reviewed by Stewart M. Robinson, pastor Second Presbyterian Church, Elizabeth, New Jersey.
It is like finding “pieces of eight” to be able to see some of the monuments of our Anglo-Saxon freedom through the photographic skill which brings the ancient page under our eye. The volume is an organized selection of some great chapters out of our national past, from original sources and later historians, indexed and illustrated by pictures of men and places of early days. Other volumes are promised. This is a book to read and ponder. Every portion of our history cost fortune, ease and even life itself to stalwart folk who scattered the seed of a free civil life under God.
Joseph Story, in his Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States, wrote: “The promulgation of the great doctrines of religion, the being, and attributes, and providence of one Almighty God; the responsibility to him for all our actions, founded upon moral freedom and accountability; a future state of rewards and punishments; the cultivation of all the personal, social, and benevolent virtues;—these never can be a matter of indifference in any well ordered community. It is indeed difficult to conceive how any civilized society can well exist without them. And at all events, it is impossible for those who believe in the truth of Christianity, as a divine revelation, to doubt, that it is the especial duty of government to foster and encourage it among its citizens and subjects,” (Paragraph 1871). This and many other quotations from historic documents make this volume eminently valuable to patriotic Americans.
STEWART M. ROBINSON
Study In Patristics
A Guide to the Teachings of the Early Church Fathers, by Robert R. Williams (Eerdmans, 1960, 224 pp., $4), is reviewed by Earle E. Cairns, Professor of History, Wheaton College.
Those who are interested in the theological, ecclesiastical, and political problems of the Old Catholic Church between A.D. 100 and 400 and the solutions suggested by the Fathers of the Church will find this book quite useful. The title seems to be slightly misleading because the book is really the historical theology of the era with emphasis upon the teachings of the Fathers. These teachings are set forth by pertinent, brief quotations from their writings. Helpful primary and secondary bibliography opens the way for further study. The author’s evangelical treatment of this subject is a welcome addition to the history of the early church.
EARLE E. CAIRNS
Faith And Science
Protestant Thought and Natural Science, by John Dillenberger (Doubleday, 1960, 300 pp., $4.50), is reviewed by Bernard Ramm, Professor of Systematic Theology, California Baptist Theological Seminary.
This work by a professor in Drew University who is already a recognized scholar in historical theology sketches the reactions of some of the more important theologians and scientists of Christian faith to the critical problems modern science has raised in its course through the past four hundred years. It is a book based upon considerable research in continental libraries and is carefully and clearly written. If there is any over-all thesis to be deciphered from the book it is this: it took the theologians four hundred years to learn to differentiate between a theological sentence and a scientific one. The principal blunder by those who defended the Scriptures and by those who attacked the Scriptures was that the statements in Genesis 1–3 were interpreted as literal statements of scientific facts instead of literary statements of theological truth.
The book has two great values: (1) it is a good history for any professor or preacher or student who wishes to inform himself of the subject, its historical roots, and the essential issues. (2) It can serve as an eye-opener to the person who thinks his own views on Scripture and science are impeccably orthodox. By reading Dillenberger’s work he will discover that some of the opinions held today as constituting orthodox faith are very heretical compared to those of his predecessors. For example, the immobility of the earth was once considered established by very sound exegesis and any view that the earth moved was judged as heretical and contrary to God’s truth!
On the other hand I would question two features of the book:
(1) Barth, Tillich, Niebuhr, and Bultmann are treated as if they are more or less on the same team—they just take “a different stance at bat.” Whatever Barth may have in common with the other men is dwarfed into insignificance when we note his differences from them. Barth, for example, devotes four huge volumes of his Dogmatik to the doctrine of creation and treats the creation account with a seriousness which is far beyond anything found in the works of the other theologians.
(2) The author states that his theological opinion is “neither to the right of Barth nor to the left of Tillich. This is another way of saying that no single interpretation is assumed, but that Protestant orthodoxy, forms of Protestant liberalism, and fundamentalism are rejected” (p. 15). Certainly from such a theological stance no great new interpretation or no great new synthesis can come. It is this standing in three places at once which cripples the concluding part of the book. Dillenberger does admit that the important part of the volume is the longer historical section and with this we concur. While not contributing anything new in the science-theology debate it nevertheless is a most substantial historical contribution which no person who wishes to be completely informed on the subject can afford to overlook.
BERNARD RAMM
- View Issue
- Subscribe
- Give a Gift
- Archives
Zephaniah stands in danger of being overshadowed by his great contemporaries. He shares with Jeremiah an intimate concern for the plight of his people but lacks both the pathos and the scope of the weeping Prophet. Like Nahum he pictures with prophetic foresight the collapse of Nineveh, but his poetic style is no match for the stirring cadences and striking metaphors of the Elkosite. With Habakkuk he declares the necessity of divine intervention in judgment, but the personal qualities of righteous indignation and cordial trust which characterize Habakkuk are not so prominent in Zephaniah. However, the lack of originality does not mean that the book is unimportant. Zephaniah has summed up in his brief book many of the dominant prophetic themes, and, above all, he has bound them together with the lucid eschatological insights for which he is justly honored by students of biblical prophecy.
PERSONAL BACKGROUND
Our knowledge of Zephaniah’s life and ministry is limited to those clues which can be detected in his writing. He is not to be identified with any of the several Old Testament men who bear his name (“the Lord had hidden” or “treasured”). The introductory verse carries his genealogy back four generations to Hezekiah. This unusually complete family history seems somewhat pointless unless this Hezekiah is the great king of Judah. If so, it is likely that Zephaniah began his prophetic ministry at an early age, perhaps 25. This suggestion is based on the fact that there are three generations between Hezekiah and Zephaniah and only two (Manasseh and Amon) between Hezekiah and Josiah.
Aage Bentzen (Introduction to the Old Testament, 2nd ed., II, p. 153) has linked Zephaniah with the temple prophets which have received considerable attention in recent Old Testament literature (e.g., A. R. Johnson, The Cultic Prophet in Ancient Israel, 1944). The possibility of such a connection cannot be denied, but the evidence adduced by Bentzen seems tenuous. E. J. Young’s evaluation of the relationship between prophet and priest is cautious but sound: “Johnson’s monograph serves as a wholesome corrective to the extravagant view of the older liberalism (which, following Wellhausen, pictured prophets and priests as militant opponents). It does cause us to see that there was indeed some connection between the prophets and the place of sacrifice. What this connection was, however, we … are unable to say” (My Servants the Prophets, Eerdmans, 1952, p. 103).
The only direct chronological statement (1:1) links Zephaniah’s ministry with the reign of Josiah (c. 640–609 B.C.). His descriptions of idolatrous practices in Judah and Jerusalem (1:4–6) point to a date before the extensive reforms brought about by the discovery of the book of the law (2 Kings 23) in about 622 B.C. In all probability our prophet’s ministry was brief, centering in the period around 625 B.C. J. Philip Hyatt’s argument for a date during the reign of Jehoiakim (c. 609–597 B.C.) has not gained general acceptance among biblical scholars (“Date and Background of Zephaniah” in Journal of Near Eastern Studies, 1948, pp. 25–29).
Zephaniah’s grave concern for Jerusalem, whose religious and social condition he criticizes severely (1:4–6; 3:1–7) and whose ultimate joy and restoration he predicts (3:14–20), seems to indicate that he was a resident of the capital. This verdict is substantiated by the somewhat detailed description of the city in 1:10–11: the Fish Gate was undoubtedly on the northern wall at or near the Tyropoeon Valley; the Second Quarter (Heb. mishneh) was probably the northern section just west of the temple area: the Mortar (Heb. maktesh) seemingly was a natural hollow (perhaps part of the Tyropoeon Valley) used for a marketplace. Zephaniah concentrates on the northern sector because the topography of Jerusalem rendered that side the most susceptible to siege. Of this description George Adam Smith says: “In the first few verses of Zephaniah we see almost as much of Jerusalem as in the whole book either of Isaiah or Jeremiah.”
HISTORICAL-RELIGIOUS BACKGROUND
If the prophetic books were placed in chronological order Zephaniah would probably fit between Isaiah and Jeremiah. He has been called “the harbinger of the renascence of prophecy after the barren half-century of Manasseh.” Indeed, some have suggested that his name hints at the suppression of prophetic activity during the reign of Hezekiah’s impious son: he had to be “hidden of the Lord” in order to escape Manasseh’s massacres. When the prophetic silence is broken, it is with the awful knell of threatening doom: “the great day of the Lord is near … a day of wrath is that day … of trumpet blast and battle cry” (1:14–16).
In these words some have heard the riotous waves of Scythian hordes who, according to Herodotus (I, 104–106), flooded western Asia and lapped at the shores of Egypt. Contemporary historians are more cautious, however, due to the lack of corroboration of Herodotus’ account. More likely Zephaniah’s words reflect the widespread restiveness brought on by the instability of Assyria, whose collapse was imminent, and by the ominous rumblings from the ancient kingdom of Babylon which was beginning to bestir itself after centuries of subjugation. Within a score of years after Zephaniah’s prophecy, splendid Nineveh had fallen (cf. 2:13–15), Josiah had been mortally wounded at Megiddo (2 Kings 23:29), and Nebuchadnezzar had routed the Egyptians at Carchemish to gain control of Syria and Palestine. For Judah the end was in sight.
The depraved religious legacy of Manasseh is described succinctly in Zephaniah 1:4–5. A fuller account of the syncretistic worship and the immorality which accompanied it is found in 2 Kings 23 where the reform of Josiah is depicted in detail. Though the immediate cause of the revival is the discovery of the book of the law, we may not go far astray in suggesting that the preaching of Zephaniah and Jeremiah (who began his ministry in Josiah’s thirteenth year, c. 627 B.C.) helped pave the way for the sweeping reforms.
MESSAGE
Zephaniah’s central theme is judgment. For almost two and a half of his three chapters the note of God’s burning wrath is sounded (the only relief being the call to repentance in 2:1–3). His somber message begins with a warning of universal judgment which will rival the flood in its cataclysmic effects (1:2–3). Judah and Jerusalem are the next objects of the prophet’s censure (1:4–2:3). He concentrates on their religious and social sins: worship of Baal, the host of heaven, and the Ammonite god Milcom; adopting of foreign fads and fashions and thus compromising of their distinctiveness as a nation; and ruthless looting of the goods of the poor. Leaping over the threshold (1:9) may reflect a pagan superstition (J. P. Hyatt, op. cit., pp. 25–6, suggests the translation “mount the podium” of an idol; cf. 1 Sam. 5:5) or, perhaps, the eagerness with which the servants of the rich entered the hovels of the poor to plunder their meager furnishings. The description of judgment in 1:7–20 is virtually unparalleled in biblical literature in sustained fury and awesome ire.
Foreign nations gain the prophet’s attention from 2:4–2:15: four of the key Philistine cities are singled out for judgment (2:4–7); Moab and Ammon will be repaid for their high-handed treatment of Judah (2:8–11); Ethiopia (2:12) and Assyria (2:13–15) will be desolated, with Nineveh, the proud capital of Assyria, earmarked for special judgment. Zephaniah’s God is the judge of all the earth, the absolute and ultimate sovereign of the destinies of all men.
In chapter three Zephaniah returns to the plight of Jerusalem (3:1–7) which, no less than Nineveh, has displeased God. In a passage reminiscent of Micah 3:9–12 he describes the total depravity of Judah’s religious and political leaders whose treachery is in marked contrast with the Lord’s faithfulness.
From 3:8 to 3:20, the theme of judgment gives way to a picture of deliverance and restoration. God’s judgment upon the nations and Judah is not only punitive but corrective. The chastened peoples will call on the name of the Lord with “a pure speech” (3:9) and a faithful remnant will dwell securely in Judah. The climax of God’s redemptive action is the double declaration that he himself will be in the midst of his people (3:15, 17) and will reverse their lot so that the humble attain prominence (3:12) and the lame and outcast achieve renown (3:19).
THEOLOGICAL INSIGHTS
Zephaniah fills in some details in Amos’ sketch of the Day of the Lord.Amos (5:18–20) had corrected a serious misinterpretation by showing that the wicked in Israel would not go unscathed on that day. The day of the Lord was not a vindication of the nation but of the righteousness of God. “A day of darkness not light,” said Amos, and Zephaniah, like Joel, shows the terrible extent of the darkness. He adds a startling figure: the Day is a banquet in which (after the fashion of Isaac) those who deem themselves guests turn out to be victims (1:7–8).
Another great emphasis of Zephaniah is his call to humility. He shares Isaiah’s vision of God’s greatness and recognizes that the only hope for his own people or the nations lies in an awareness of their own frailty. Judah is exhorted to seek humility (2:3) and the haughty hosts of Ammon, Moab (2:10), and Nineveh are rebuked for lack of it. Nineveh—the essence of insolence—says “I am and there is none else” (2:15). The most heinous of sins is declaring one’s independence of God. This pride-inspired rebellion is doomed for failure. Those who escape God’s wrath are those who in humility say “hangs my helpless soul on Thee” and “seek refuge in the name of the Lord” (3:12).
Like all the true prophets, Zephaniah was an interpreter of the covenant. As such, he saw that God’s judgment, though drastic, was not final. God’s covenant-love would triumph in and through the restoration of the remnant.Amos (3:12) had depicted this tattered group of survivors as two legs or a piece of an ear rescued by a shepherd from the lion’s mouth. Isaiah (4:2–3) predicted that with the survivors of Israel’s destruction God would do a new work. Micah (5:7–8) saw the remnant as an instrument of blessing and power among the nations. Zephaniah combined several of these emphases in his description of the remnant as the ruler of Israel’s enemies (2:7), humbly serving God in honesty and sincerity (3:12–13), winning victories for the nation in the strength of the Lord (3:17) not by military prowess.
Our prophet has a practical lesson to teach concerning the perils of complacency. With lamp in hand the Lord searches Jerusalem and finds mainly “men who are thickening upon their lees.” They are sluggish and lifeless like wine which has stood too long without being mixed (cf. Jer. 48:11–12). They are sedentary, relaxed, undisturbed by their own plight or that of their fellows. They share the punishment of those who had more actively rebelled against God, for they refused both to advance God’s program and to stem the tide of wickedness. George Adam Smith reminds us that such men are dangerous: “The great causes of God and Humanity are not defeated by the hot assaults of the devil, but by the slow, crushing, glacier-like mass of thousands and thousands of indifferent nobodies. God’s causes are never destroyed by being blown up, but by being sat upon.”
TOOLS FOR EXPOSITION
To the prophetic literature mentioned in the article on Joel(CHRISTIANITY TODAY, June 9, 1958) and the historical writings in the articles on I Kings (July 20, 1959) and II Kings (Apr. 25, 1960) the following should be added: J. M. P. Smith, “Zephaniah” in International Critical Commentary; Charles L. Taylor, Jr., in The Interpreter’s Bible; John Bright’s The Kingdom of God contains a helpful chapter on the concept of the remnant—“A Remnant Shall Repent” (Abingdon, 1953); both N. K. Gottwald’s A Light to the Nations (Harper, 1959) and B. W. Anderson’s Understanding the Old Testament (Prentice-Hall, 1957) contain brief but graphic discussions of Zephaniah’s message and times.
DAVID A. HUBBARD
Chairman
Division of Biblical Studies and Philosophy,
Westmont College