God in Good Friday

April 2, 2010

Today, Christians remember the death of Jesus of Nazareth.  He died at the hands of Romans, under the order of Pontius Pilate, through crucifixion on a cross.  Before being nailed and hung to the beams, naked, he was severely beaten.  The Roman charge against him was insurrection; but many Jews were upset because Jesus claimed he was God.  It was for this claim that others worshiped him.  It is for this reason that I worship him.

The physical end of Jesus' life was not any more spectacular than that of the thousands of other people that Romans killed on crosses.  In fact, two of them were hung next to Jesus.  Certainly men and woman have endured greater physical torture than Jesus did, many of them in his name.  Paul, one of Jesus' followers claimed in his second letter to the Corinthians to have received the 39 lashes (like the punishment Jesus received) five times.  Three times he was beaten with rods.  Once he was even stoned and left for dead.  (2 Cor 11:23-28).  In 1527 Michael Sattler, a man professing a faith in Jesus, had his tongue cut out so he could no longer proclaim Christ.  Then he was drug through town behind a mule cart with occasional stops to have his flesh pierced and torn off with hot pokers.  After this, he was attached to a pole and lowered into flames.  But at the point when most people being burned at the stake are about to die from suffocation and smoke inhalation, Sattler would be pulled out long enough to take a breath or two and then dropped back into the fire until he eventually died.

Could this day's importance be because Jesus was innocent of the Roman charge?  He was indeed innocent, but no, the significance has little to do with Roman law.  No doubt the Romans got it wrong on more than this occasion; it's highly likely that other innocent men and women found their end on a cross.

What then makes Jesus' crucifixion worth honoring on a day like Good Friday?

It was not merely the physical death of Jesus.  If that were all, we've already seen that there are probably more spectacular deaths worth talking about.  No, it's about more, much more.

It is not just that Jesus was innocent of the Roman charges or falsely accused by the Jewish religious leaders; it's that he was innocent of sin.  He had never once committed a crime against God.  He had never acted in a way that went against God's desire.  Nothing in the life of Christ would require exclusion from God's presence.  He was not like you or me; he was perfect.  However, for the salvation of man, Jesus bore all the sins of all people.  The wages of sin is death, physical and spiritual.  God, being just, must pour out his wrath upon sin and Jesus took that wrath on behalf of you and me and all people.  However, there is no way any created person could endure such wrath.  We can't even endure the punishment of our own sins, let alone those of others.  So God, being love, entered the world as a man, Jesus, lived a perfect life, and bore the wrath in our place.  Therefore, it is not just the physical death of Christ being remembered today; but instead it is that our loving God would intervene for us to take the punishment we rightly deserve.  This is why we celebrate.   

But it does not end here because if Jesus had simply died he would not have overcome the eternally destructive power of sin and death.  However, Jesus lives!  On Sunday, we will celebrate Easter, the day Jesus Christ rose from the grave, alive.  Forty days after his resurrection, he ascended into heaven, never again having tasted death, to sit at the right had of God.  Scripture tells us that if we turn from our sin and surrender our lives to the authority of Jesus, we too can live with Christ forever.  And that is worth celebration!

Will you celebrate with me?

I am more than happy to answer any questions you may have about Good Friday and Easter, or tell you more about Jesus, or share how you can become a follower of Christ.  Please feel free to contact me.

In Christ,
Bryan Catherman


*The image used in this post is licensed under a creative commons license: http://www.flickr.com/photos/kyz/ / CC BY 2.0

Augustine of Hippo by Peter Brown

CRITIQUE OF
Brown, Peter. Augustine of Hippo: A Biography. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1969.

INTRODUCTION
Born in Thagaste in 354 and buried in Carthage in 430, Augustine of Hippo’s life was more than the “rich thought” he put to paper or the theological legacy present-day Christians still seek to understand; his life, as Peter Brown attempts to capture, was a life of constant flux in an “age of rapid and dramatic change.”[1] In his work, Augustine of Hippo, Brown attempts to “seize that crucial area where external and internal changes touch each other.”[2] His initial efforts received the attention of New York Review of Books, American Historical Review, London Times Literary Supplement, and New York Times Book Review. Today, most of the many reviews of Augustine of Hippo identify Brown’s work as some of the best on the man called Augustine. Brown—presently Philip and Beulah Rollins Professor of History at Princeton University—specializes in the medieval and late antiquity periods.[3] Some of his other books include The World of Late Antiquity (1971), The Cult of the Saints (1982), The Body and Society (1988), Power and Persuasion in Late Antiquity: towards a Christian Empire (1992), Authority and the Sacred: Aspects of the Christianization of the Roman World (1995), The Rise of Western Christendom (1996, 2003), and Poverty and Leadership in the Later Roman Empire (2002).[4]

BRIEF SUMMARY
            Where most summaries start at the beginning, this one will start at the end. Turn to the bibliography and one will find a commanding list of references including books written in English, Latin, German, and French. Brown supports his findings and ideas with the strong frame work of previous scholarship; and he informs his readers, “that many authors to whom I constantly refer, are for me far more than names, whose views support or complement my own: they are the giants on whose shoulders I have been honored (sic) to perch.”[5] Brown organizes his book into five periods of Augustine’s life and within each period he addresses themes of the period rather than dredging along a strict time line. For example, in Part I he discusses Monica, Augustine’s mother, and her influence upon him, which can been seen in his later life. In Part II one thematic focus is upon Augustine’s effort to write Confessions; and in Part IV an engaging investigation of Augustine’s conflict with Pelagianism. Life to death is still covered, but Brown, through this method, is able to capture the subtlety of change and the causing factors rather than simply reporting the dry facts, from one to the next, as many other biographers are so tempted.  
CRITICAL INTERACTION OF THE AUTHOR’S WORK
            Having been this reviewer’s first biography of the life of Augustine, the format of dealing within themes initially was challenging. The lack of a typical overarching view of the time line and a solid understanding of where Brown was going next meant that certain aspects of the theme are lost on the reader. For example in the chapter titled “Monica” (found in Part I), Brown writes, “Whenever one of her sons went astray, ‘She acted as if she was undergoing again the pangs of child-birth.’”[6] And a little later, the reader learns that young Augustine slipped out in the middle of the night to avoid facing his mother’s guilt.[7] However, not understanding the time line or what their future might look like left many unanswered questions on the matter of the mother-son relationship, only some of which are answered in subsequent chapters.
            Although the lack of strict adherence to a typical time line seems challenging at first, the advantages are quickly realized. By working in themes, Brown is able to provide a deeper look at the aspects of life that brought about change, and how that shaped Augustine’s behavior and thought. It is extremely easy to imagine Augustine writing by candlelight in a high tower isolated from the world, but as Brown’s work demonstrates, Augustine lived in a volatile world, full of physical and theological hostilities and hardships. Through this vantage point, it becomes easier to understand the influences of Manichaeism or friends or growing wiser through change or moving through self-reflection.
            A final point of strength found in Brown’s work is his many references and citation style. To allow for a smoother reading, Brown removed the clunky format so readily found in academic work. The referenced data blends with Brown’s own words like a woodcrafter’s dovetail joint. At one point for example, Brown seamlessly writes, “For the first time in his life, Augustine was acclaimed as a truly international figure by another: conditorem antiquae rursus fidie. He had ‘set up anew the ancient faith.’”[8] With only a simple superscript and a highly abbreviated footnote, each page reads like one found a novel, one page after another.

CONCLUSION
            Augustine of Hippo is an interesting work capturing the life of Augustine instead of just a chronological list if facts and happenings. Brown’s expertise rises to the surface through what he chooses to spend pages addressing and what he leaves to the shelves of other Augustine biographies. While this was only my first biography on Augustine, other reviews have left me with the thought that few (if any) biographies have captured Augustine in such a way as to come alive in the mind of the reader. After reading Brown’s book, I am now driven to learn more about the Forth Century the man I felt I met reading Augustine of Hippo.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Brown, Peter. Augustine of Hippo: A Biography. Berkeley, Calf: University of California Press, 1969.
Princeton University, “Department of History: Peter Brown,” http://www.princeton.edu/history/people/display_person.xml?netid=prbrown (accessed February 27, 2010).




[1] Peter Brown, Augustine of Hippo: A Biography (Berkeley, Calf: University of California Press, 1969), 9.
[2] Ibid, 9.
[3] Princeton University, “Department of History: Peter Brown,” http://www.princeton.edu/history/people/display_person.xml?netid=prbrown (accessed February 27, 2010).
[4] Ibid.
[5] Brown, 10.
[6] Ibid, 30.
[7] Ibid.
[8] Ibid, 363. 



*I have no material connection to this book.  This post was, in its entirety or in part, originally written in seminary in partial fulfillment of a M.Div. It may have been redacted or modified for this website.  

An Analysis of the Evidential Apologetic of Natural Theology

Introduction. Natural Theology, according to Walter Elwell, is the idea that “Truths about God [can] be learned from created things (nature, man, world) by reason alone.”[1] Thomas Aquinas championed this approach to recognize the existence of God as the Church encountered Jews, Muslims, and pagans that rejected the authority of Christian scripture.[2] John Calvin and other reformers, however, rejected Natural Theology in favor of initial enlightenment from the Holy Spirit.[3] In analyzing Natural Theology, this post will argue that a hybrid is necessary. While an evidential apologetic of Natural Theology creates a bridge from believers to unbelievers, it cannot be an effective method of apologetics or evangelism without a dependence upon both the Holy Spirit and Scripture.

Strength of Natural Theology: Its Necessity. Aquinas—potentially the father of Natural Theology—developed a process to argue in favor of the existence of God with the same scientific tools as Greek philosophy and logic; thereby, insisting that the Truths of God could be demonstrated by evidence found outside of Scripture.[4] Aquinas drew his support from Romans 1:20-21.[5] Of Natural Theology, Erickson writes, “It maintains not only that there is a valid revelation of God in such spheres as nature, history, and human personality, but that it is actually possible to gain some true knowledge of God from these spheres—in other words, to construct a natural theology apart from the Bible.”[6] The thrust, Erickson goes on to argue, is that it is possible to come to a knowledge of God without any authoritative writing or church body.[7]

Weakness of Natural Theology: No Dependence on the Holy Spirit and Scripture. While Aquinas used Romans 1:20-21 for support, many Protestant Reformers argue that the passage must be read in context, showing that “the pagan’s natural knowledge of God is distorted and turned only to his judgment.”[8] They find support in First Corinthians 2:14-16. Additionally, Erickson holds that Calvinists and Augustinians reject the assumption that, “Neither humanity’s natural limitations nor the effects of sin and the fall prevent humans from recognizing and correctly interpreting the Creator’s handiwork.”[9] Timothy Paul Jones, in summarizing John Calvin seems to agree with Erickson, arguing, “For Calvin, no one can, furthermore, begin to understand the Scriptures until the Holy Spirit enlightens him or her.”[10] Calvin, while not specifically arguing that the Scripture is a necessity for apologetics, demands that the Holy Spirit’s initial granting of faith most certainty is an essential requirement.[11]

Conclusion. No doubt, modern Natural Apologists like Norm Geisler, Ravi Zacharias, and Gary Habermas place their trust in the work of the Holy Spirit and in the authority of Scripture. Listening to and reading their work, one finds that Natural Theology is only the bridge to bring the unbeliever to hear the Word of God. Therefore, at the risk of oversimplification, a hybrid combination of both positions is reasonable when one accepts that Natural Theology is the tool used by the Holy Spirit. I do not believe than anyone can come to faith in Christ Jesus without the work of the Spirit and Scripture; however, any evidence suggesting otherwise is at least worth evaluating.

Bibliography
Calvin, John. Institutes of the Christian Religion. Peabody, Mass: Hendrickson Publishers, 2008.
Elwell, Walter A. Evangelical Dictionary of Theology. Baker reference library. Grand Rapids,
     Mich: Baker Academic, 2001.
Erickson, Millard J. Christian Theology. Grand Rapids, Mich: Baker Book House, 1998.
Jones, Timothy Paul.  “John Calvin and the Problem of Philosophical Apologetics.”  
     Perspectives in Religious Studies, 23 no 4 Wint 1996, p 387-403.


[1] Walter A. Elwell, Evangelical Dictionary of Theology (Baker reference library, Grand Rapids, Mich: Baker Academic, 2001), 815.
[2] Millard J. Erickson, Christian Theology (Grand Rapids, Mich: Baker Book House, 1998), 182.
[3] John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion (Peabody, Mass: Hendrickson Publishers, 2008), 12-14, 26-29.
[4] Elwell, 816.
[5] Elwell, 816.
[6] Erickson, 181.
[7] Erickson, 181.
[8] Ewell, 816.
[9] Erickson, 181.
[10] Paul Timothy Jones, “John Calvin and the Problem of Philosophical Apologetics” Perspectives in Religious Studies, 23 no 4 Wint 1996, p 387-403, 398. (Jones’ use of the word “Scripture” is in relation to understanding anything about God.)
[11] Calvin, 26-29. 
 
*This post was, in its entirety or in part, originally written in seminary in partial fulfillment of a M.Div. It may have been redacted or modified for this website.
** The painting depicting  Thomas Aquinas was painted by Carlo Crivelli
and is in the public domain.

Share Jesus Without Fear by William Fay


 Critical Book Review
Of
Share Jesus Without Fear by William Fay, with Linda Evans Shepherd


Bibliographical Entry
Fay, William, and Linda E. Shepherd. Share Jesus Without Fear. Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 1999.


Author Information
            Author of a series of products related to Share Jesus Without Fear, William (Bill) Fay is a graduate of Denver Seminary and talk show host of “Let’s Go,” an internationally syndicated radio program.  Prior to accepting Christ in to his life, Fay's father was a vice president with General Foods, successfully introducing a product of frozen foods called Birds Eye.  Fay was raised on a silver spoon.  Eventually, he had ties to the mafia and ran Fantasy Island, one of the largest houses of ill repute in the United States.  At sixteen, he fathered a child.  Fay admits he cheated his way through college and as a professional gambler he also cheated at cards. He is presently on his fourth marriage, three of which were before his confession of faith.  After accepting Jesus, his life was flipped for God’s Kingdom.  Today, he travels around the world, teaching and equipping Christians to be successful evangelists.  Share Jesus Without Fear has been translated into Spanish and Fay has created a selection of booklets, journals, workbooks, and CDs to accompany the book.  His website boasts that over five million copies of his booklet “How to Share Your Faith Without an Argument” are in print.  William Fay lives with his wife, Peggy, in Ft. Myers, Florida.
 

             Linda Evans Shepherd has authored over twenty books, mostly targeted at female audiences including The Potluck Club series.  She too travels around the nation publicly speaking in an effort to teach and encourage her audiences.  She is a frequent guest on both radio and television talk shows and she co-founded Jubilant Press.  Longmount, Colorado is the home of Shepherd and her family.

Content Summary
            Share Jesus Without Fear is Fay’s systematic method to more effective evangelism.  With scripture and his personal experience, Fay[1] encourages his readers to shed preconceived ideas of evangelism and utilize his method of sharing Jesus with those around them, loved ones and strangers alike. 
           Fay opens his work with an encouragement to his readers.  Success in evangelism, he argues, comes simply from sharing one’s faith, not, as most think, from seeing a person come to Christ (p. 2-3).  Then he shares his vision, specifically that saved people will return to the community of the unsaved to lead others to salvation rather than only finding comfort in their new community of believers.  In his vision he uses an analogy of people drowning in the ocean and those saved on an island.  Fay presents his concept of the “Sin of Silence” (p. 6-7), followed by statistics and information about how most come to salvation.  Because only ten to fifteen percentage of people come to Christ through an “event,” and only five percent of Christians share their faith with others, Fay argues that this “Sin of Silence” is a major problem.  After making his case for a need of all believers to also enjoy and active lifestyle of evangelism, Fay moves to addressing the root of most objections to sharing Jesus—fear.

            Once his foundation is in place, Fay begins outlining his “sharing” system starting with some probing questions designed to feel out what the Spirit is doing in the subject person.  The questions are,
1. Do you have any kind of spiritual beliefs? 2. To you, who is Jesus Christ? 3. Do you believe in heaven or hell? 4. If you died, where would you go? And, 5. If what you are believing is not true, would you want to know?
As instructed, when the witness gets a yes to question number five, Fay says it is time to get to the scriptures. Here, he argues that the scriptures do the convincing and the Spirit is working on the person.  It is not the work of the witness; the witness is merely in the business of turning pages (p. 45).  He also gives the reader some responses to work with objections to the Bible.

As he progresses through his program, Fay provides specific scriptures, questions, and things to mark a sharing Bible that help lead a person to Christ.  The suggested scriptures are Romans 3:23, Romans 6:23, John 3:3, John 14:6, Romans 10:9-11, 2 Corinthians 5:15, Revelations 3:20, although Fay suggest to use others if the participant has other preferred verses.  Trust in the power of the Scriptures is vital according to Fay, and generally, any scriptures will have convicting power if the Holy Spirit is working in the person's life.  
  
            After working through his evangelical system, Fay shares what do to in the event that his method is successful and the subject person is ready to make a decision for Christ.  A basic explanation of the Sinner’s Prayer is outlined along with some confessional questions for the subject person.  After sharing a couple personal stories about people coming to Christ, Fay offers a number of reactions to potential objections.  In addition to this chapter, an appendix is provided on the same objections, and nearly a third of the book consists of this chapter and appendix covering the same topic.  To conclude his work, Fay shares how to make and keep friends with non-believers, how to pray for those believers, and a challenge to his reader to put the contents of Sharing Jesus Without Fear to practice.  Fay dedicated many pages of appendixes—most of which are review and boiled down instructions—and his testimony. 

Evaluation
            William Fay set out to help readers shed the fear they carry when it comes to sharing their faith.  From the very first pages, he succeeded in this endeavor.  By first defining what evangelism successes and failures are, followed by some statistics designed to drive home his point through a little guilt, he is able to successfully convince his reader that the need is huge and there is little reason to be fearful to share Jesus.  However, if the reader has any doubts, Fay takes one more opportunity to address them by following up with a chapter set on overcoming the assumed objections of the reader.  This first section of his book is the strongest and most convincing portion of his work.  If all he set out to accomplish was to motivate his reader to action by eliminating fear, he has succeeded.  However, this is only one third of the book.

            The next portion of the book is on the sharing system itself.  Had Fay published his work twenty years ago, his suggested five probing questions might have been the best questions to ask in order to determine if a person was ripe for hearing the gospel; but as the world shifts into postmodernism, only the first question seems to address the non-believer today.  With some rewording, the second question might be more effective.  Question three and four come across like something said of a traveling salesperson, and question five could use some updating.  The concept behind the questions, that is to determine someone’s ripeness, is a sound and timeless concept, so the wording of these questions does not adversely affect Fay’s premise. 

            Keeping a special sharing Bible and writing specific notes is a valuable teaching to the evangelist that doesn’t have an arsenal of memorized verses at his or her disposal.  Fay’s idea has simplified the sharing process, and in turn, reduced fear even more.  However, he only offers two responses for objections to the authority of the Bible.  He assumes that the non-believer will accept the authority of the Scriptures once the issues of multiple translations and error are overcome.  Here again, the postmodern non-believer often is looking for more, be it background, feeling, or something else.  Fay does little to address the potential issues here.

            What follows the demonstration of the sharing program is to be expected.  Sections on what do to when a person objects and what do to when a person accepts.  An author writing on evangelism could hardly expect to be taken seriously if he or she neglected a “what now” section.  Fay’s book is no different.  There is little if anything outside of what would be found in any other book on this topic.
 
            While Fay’s definition of success is valuable and much needed in a time when most Christians are debilitated by it, he tends to oversimplify evangelism.  He is correct in saying God does the work and we are just page turners, but his system does not encourage the evangelist to continually prepare him or herself through study of the Bible, study of the people groups of the community, and prayer.  Nor does he encourage authenticity in his pre-programmed system.  This might be, in part, Fay’s effort to reduce fear but it potentially comes at a cost.  Should the reader fearlessly engage in a bold but unauthentic evangelistic effort that does not look like the picture Fay painted, he or she may be more discouraged than before.  On the other hand, there is a reasonable chance that the activity will look exactly like Fay’s understanding of evangelism and the reader will be even more encouraged.  Either way, the reader has engaged in Fay’s primary purpose of evangelism even if he or she is ineffective.  According to Fay, rightly, he or she has been successful in obeying God’s call to evangelism. 

            Christians who are inexperienced in evangelism techniques should read this book and use it to build a foundation of experience upon, modifying as they go.             

By this book on Amazon.com by clicking here.

[1] While Share Jesus Without Fear is authored by both William Fay and Linda Evans Shepherd, it is clear that this method and idea predominantly belongs to Fay. For this reason, authorship of the ideas will be attributed only to Fay.

*This post was, in its entirety or in part, originally written in seminary in partial fulfillment of a M.Div. It may have been redacted or modified for this website.  Any purchases through this website help support the ministry of Saltybeliever.com 


One Christian on Capital Punishment and Abortion (Part II)

In an earlier post, I introduced a  question:  How can a Christian be against abortion but in favor of capital punishment?  In Part I, I explained that I am against both, and I discussed what the Bible has to say about the issue of capital punishment.  In this post, I am shifting to the topic of abortion.  I admit that neither Part I or Part II are exhaustive discussions on the matter, but hopefully they contribute to the conversation and offer some food for thought and encouragement toward further study.

Before I get started, I should offer my bias and position right up front.  I am against abortion.  I'm against the practice and I do not approve of the US government supporting or funding the practice.  In addition, my wife and I tried to conceive a child for many years.  The one time we did conceive resulted in a miscarriage, which greatly shaped the way I think about life and children prior to birth.  We have since adopted two boys who I love very much.  Although I do not have biological children and really can't know for sure, there is no way I could love children who share my DNA any differently then I do these two boys. 

My wife's miscarriage was extremely hard on she and I, but the reality is that miscarriages have been around almost as long as pregnancies.  Sadly, miscarriages were not a foreign concept in the Old Testament (see Job 3:10-11 or Exodus 22:26 for examples). I believe the miscarriage might be a part of the curse of sin that came with the fall of man in Genesis 3.  In verse 16, God said to Eve, the woman, "I will surely multiply your  pain in childbearing; in pain shall you bring forth children" (ESV).  It is often thought that this in reference to the birth process itself, which it probably is, but it can also be all the other pain women feel for children, born or unborn.  But what about the intentional termination of a viable pregnancy?  (For the purposes of this post, I will use this as the definition of 'abortion.')  It seems that this idea--although not appearing as a medical service preformed by people in scrubs and white lab coats--was not foreign either.  In the book of Jeremiah, the author's lament seems to suggest that his life could have been intentionally ended in the womb.  Jeremiah 20:14-18 reads,
[14] Cursed be the day on which I was born! The day when my mother bore me, let it not be blessed!   [15] Cursed by the man who brought the news to my father, 'A son is born to you,'  making him very glad. [16] Let that man be like the cities that the LORD overthrew without pity; let him hear a cry in the morning and an alarm at noon, [17] because he did not kill me in the womb; so my mother would have been my grave, and her womb forever great. [18] Why did I come out from the womb to see toil and sorrow, and spend my days in shame?
In Exodus 20:22-25, the legal code made provision for the event of a pregnant woman getting hit in such a way that labor is induced or the baby is lost.  The punishment for the loss of the unborn child's life would result in a penalty of death for the person who struck the woman.   (It's interesting to note that verse 23 reads, "But if there is harm, then you shall pay life for life," indicating that the unborn child was a life.)  Now, in fairness, it could be argued that this passage assumes that the mother and father want the baby opposed to the idea that the mother desiring to terminate the pregnancy.  In response, we should start not with the desires of the mother and father to have a child, but instead ask what is life and when does it begin? 

What is life? This is a fairly large discussion, but I'll boil it down to some simple points.  First, God  is the source and creator of life.  We can see this in the creation account of Genesis 1 and 2; but another example is found in 1 Samuel 2:6 that says, "The LORD kills and brings to life" (ESV), and Deuteronomy 32:39 in part says "I kill and make alive" (ESV).  Job 1:21 quotes Job saying, "Naked I came from my mother's womb, and naked I shall return.  The LORD gave, and the LORD has taken away; blessed be the name of the LORD" (ESV).  Job, in 10:8 says to God, "Your hands fashioned me." Isaiah 68:8 says, "But now O Lord, you are our Father; we are the clay, and you are the potter; we are all the work of your hand" (ESV).

Second, we have a general understanding of what is alive and what is not.  Plants--alive.  Rocks--not alive.  Dinosaur  bones--once living tissue, but now, not alive. Of course we can draw a distinction between living tissue and 'life.'  Skin is made of living tissue but we are more likely to see it as part of a system that requires other tissues.  We can look at skin cells under a microscope and see that there's some kind of life activity there, but we don't tend to think of skin as a stand-alone life. However, there is a difference between a single skin cell and a single-cell organism.  That single-cell organism is life.  If we find it on Mars, we will declare that there is life on Mars; but if we find a skin cell we will say we've found evidence of life (and then declare there is life on Mars anyway).  So life, it seems, is a living system, be it one cell, a plant, an animal, a human. Where this gets really interesting is when we think of a seed.  It might be dry and appear dead, but in the right conditions it shifts from that dead-looking thing to life.  If I crushed a seed nobody would say I killed it, but if it had a little white or green shoot growing from it and I failed to give it water or if I put it out in too much sun and it dried up and withered, you would say I killed it. To kill it, it must have had life.

In the debate on the legality of abortion, one issue of contention is the parents' right (specifically the woman's right) to terminate life, if indeed there is any agreement that an unborn child is life, that is, a thing in the womb that can be killed.  I will deal with this more in a moment.  

When does life begin? This is the other issue where a difficulty of the abortion debate resides. This, like the right to terminate life, is the other big question item where differences are found.

Luke, a first-century doctor and writer of one of the four gospel accounts, made a detailed investigation in order to write his Gospel.  In the opening of the book, he records a fascinating event. When Elizabeth greeted Mary (both of whom were pregnant), the baby in Elizabeth's womb leaped.  Elizabeth, being filled with the Spirit, understood this to be caused by the presence of the baby in Mary's womb and proclaimed,
Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb!  And why is this granted to me that the mother of my Lord should come to me? For behold, when the sound of your greeting came to my ears, the baby in my womb leaped for joy." Luke 1:42-43, ESV.
While we don't know exactly how far along either of these women were in their pregnancies, this passage suggests that it was more than just developing cells void of life in their wombs.  The Greek word used for these babies in utereo is berphos, which we is translated 'child.' Twice Luke uses the same word for the baby Jesus (post birth) in chapter 2.  I think in today's society, we would be hard pressed to find anyone who would argue that life starts at the point of the doctor's spanking that gets the baby to cry.  I can think of nobody that would say a baby that has been in the womb for 9 months and is making his or her way down the birth canal is not life. Anyone, myself included, that's seen and heard the heartbeat on the monitor is overwhelmed by the awe of life there in the womb.  Where the challenge comes is in answering the question, when (maybe even before the heartbeat) does life begin? 

If we back up to the point of a sperm cell and an egg, we see that we have cells that seem to be more a part of a system than a single-celled, stand-alone organism.  After these to come together, an interesting thing starts to happen.  The little glob of sperm and egg create a cell that can divide and multiply.  Soon, there's an 8 celled organism, then 16, then 32, and so-on.  Is this life?  Maybe.  Is this like the little plant shoot that I killed earlier in this discussion?

God had us in mind before the creation of the world (but do not confuse this with the idea that we were all created and stored in some "pre-existence" before the creation of the universe), but this doctrine does not give us a practical answer as to the moment life begins in the womb.  Some argue at conception, some at the first heartbeat, and some even at viability outside the womb.  The first two arguments bear weight, but the viability argument is greatly flawed.  Here's why:  What is viability?  A full-term baby cannot survive, free of help and care, outside the womb for long on his or her birthday.  If we start looking at 'viability' being earlier and earlier in the pregnancy we have to start looking at the technology that aids in keeping the baby alive.  Therefore, our definition of the beginning of life under the viability definition seems dependent upon outside technology.  This would mean that we define the start of life by our advancements in medicine.

The other two arguments, that is, at conception or at the first heartbeat seem compelling.  No matter how much I think about it, I struggle with the idea of life beginning at the moment of conception.  It seems a little like the seed. There's  something there, but it doesn't seem like life. . . but I am willing to be wrong.  And I'll admit, it is spectacular that something (or more rightly, someone) gets the heart pumping.  That first beat seems like a magic moment for an organism that requires a heartbeat as a sign of life.  The reality however, is that it could be at either of these moments or at some point in between.  The Bible does not clearly identify at what moment  life begins, so I argue it is probably better to lean on the side of caution, closer, much closer to conception.

So, what about the practice of abortion?

We have two issues in tension when it comes to abortion: when life begins and the right, as an individual, to terminate life.  I would like to argue that in practice, the point when life begins is almost irrelevant with the exception of specific types of birth control such as the morning after pill.  To the best of our ability, we should err on the side of caution.  The real issue at hand is the attitude the leads one to have an abortion.

If we can agree that at some point, either at conception or at the heartbeat, life has begun, it seems that terminating that life is killing the life; it's murdering another human being.  "But wait, what about capital punishment?" you might ask.  There are two differences.  The first is that capital punishment is administered by the state, not an individual.  The second is that the life in the womb has not violated a law of the state.  (If for some reason being conceived was against the law, this law would be unjust in that the violator, in his or her very creation, would have absolutely no ability to not violate the law.  The violation and punishment should really fall upon the man and woman who conceive the child.)       

When a woman learns that she is pregnant, time has already passed.  We are now flirting with the very real reality that was is growing in the womb is life, more specifically, a human being.  So to think that one has the ability and right to terminate this life, especially out of mere convenience, is a serious act of self-worship, placing oneself in the position of God.  It says "my rights are more important that the rights and sanctity of the life I'm carrying."  1 Corinthians 6:19-20 reminds us (especially those who are in Christ) that we are not our own; our bodies are not ours because we were bought with a price.  We, to include our bodies, belong to Christ.  This runs into direct conflict with the argument that a pregnant woman has the right to terminate a life simply because she is not ready to care for an image barer of God.  

The truth is we do not clearly know the exact moment life begins, so there is the very real potential that an abortion at any point after conception is killing a life.  Abortion is wrong.  The attitude that typically drives abortion is wrong.  And to celebrate abortion as some kind of family planning tool is akin to spitting on the very face of God's creation.

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* Photo/drawing by Leonardo da Vinci is in the public domain.

One Christian on Capital Punishment and Abortion (Part I)

I was recently asked how Christians can take a position against abortion and stand in favor of capital punishment.  I found this question rather interesting considering that I’m a Christian and I’m against both abortion and capital punishment.  However, I thought this would be a good opportunity to look at these issues in light of what the Bible has to say. 

This is a large subject so I’ll be dealing with it in two parts.   Let’s start with capital punishment.

There are three key issues that I’d like to address.  The first issue is the government’s right to administer capital punishment—and I do believe governments have the authority to administer a death penalty.  The next issue is how this right fits within the 6th commandment found in Exodus 20:13, “thou shall not kill” (KJV). And the final issue is the citizen’s responsibility within his or her government, specifically in the United States.

Paul, writing during a time of Roman oppression (and possibly great persecution) tells the Christians in Rome that they are to submit to the civil authorities because God installed those authorities to this position.  In Romans 13:1-7, he writes,
“Let every person be subject to the governing authorities.  For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been instituted by God.  [2] Therefore whoever resists the authorities resists what God has appointed, and those who resist will incur judgment.  [3] For rulers are not a terror to good conduct, but to bad.  Would you have no fear of the one who is in authority?  Then do what is good, and you will receive his approval, [4] for his is God’s servant for your good.  But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword in vain.  For he is the servant of God, and avenger who carries out God’s wrath on the wrongdoer.  [5] Therefore one must be in subjection, not only to avoid God’s wrath but also for the sake of conscience.  [6] For the same reason you also pay taxes, for the authorities are ministers of God, attending to this very thing.  [7] Pay to all what is owed to them: taxes to whom taxes are owed, revenue to who revenue is owed, respect to whom respect is owed, honor to whom honor is owed” (Romans 13:1-7, ESV).
His readers probably didn’t like taxes or oppression or the political opinions of the dictator in charge, and they lived under harsh and corrupt circumstances the like we Americans have never known.  Much can be said here, but my point is that God installs the civil governments of the world and expects that we will submit to them.  (Now, there are exceptions.  For more on the exceptions read the book of Daniel.)

Civil governments, it seems, are given the ability to create laws and keep order.  Even Jesus was subject to these laws when he was tried under Pilot, the Roman official who ordered his crucifixion.  We never see Jesus argue that the law that sentenced him and the two criminals next to him to death was unjust.  Jesus was innocent of the charges but the authority of Pilot to order his execution is never challenged.  In addition, we find many instances where God’s law for the Hebrews includes a physical death penalty.  It is part of the covenant with Noah in Genesis 9:6.  In Exodus 21 (the chapter after God gives the 10 Commandments), God lays out some laws for the Hebrew people, giving a number of crimes that will result in a penalty of death (see Exodus 21:12-28).  This is seen throughout the Books of the Law (that is, the first 5 books of the Old Testament, also known as the Pentateuch).  Therefore, given that God installs governments and gives them the right to administer laws, and even that in the laws God gave to the Hebrews capital punishment existed, and considering that the New Testament doesn’t challenge the existing civil laws of the day, I believe that governments today have the right to administer capital punishment.  Now, you might be asking why I’m opposed to capital punishment considering what I’ve just presented.  I’ll get to that in a moment. 

But first let’s deal with Exodus 20:13, the 6th Commandment. 

The translation of the Bible called the King James Version, translates Exodus 20:13 like this: “Thou shall not kill.”  This translation has filled our vernacular to the point that some people take this to mean not to kill in battle, and still others understand it as not to kill even animals for food.  But the problem is the word “kill.”  Our English meaning of this word is something to the effect of, ‘to cause the death of’ or, ‘to terminate the life function of.’  But that is not the meaning of the Hebrew word that the KJV translated.  In the Hebrew—the original language of the Old Testament—the word is ratsach, which is to murder.  In other uses of this word, including non-biblical uses found in ancient literature, this word is most used for intentional or negligent murder much like we would use the words murder or manslaughter today.  The Septuagint (LXX), which was the translation of the Hebrew Scriptures into Greek a couple hundred years before the incarnation of Christ, translated this word as phoneuo, which in the Greek also means murder or more specifically ‘to murder.’  This is the word used by Jesus when quoting the Old Testament when he gave is famous Sermon on the Mount.  Looking through many other translations, I’ve found Exodus 20:13 is almost always translated, “You shall not murder,” some simply say, “Do not murder.”

But just for a moment, let’s say all we have is the King James Version.  How can we understand what God is meaning by his command not to kill?  If we continue reading the conversation between God and Moses, we find that in just a few hundred words later, God gets into some specifics about this killing stuff.  In Exodus 21:12-28 (which I also mentioned above), God outlines when a person should be put to death for killing another and when that is not okay.  For example, if a man does not lie in wait, that is, he plans to kill another, but instead it is something of a fight gone bad, the killer should be allowed to live.  “But if a man willfully attacks another to kill him by cunning” says Exodus 21:14, “you shall take him from my alter, that he may die” (ESV).  Simply striking your parents was enough of a reason to face the death penalty, as was being in possession of an illegally gained (or kidnapped) slave.  And surely killing in battle must not be the same because thought out the Old Testament God orders his people to attack other nations.  He gives the faithful boy, David, the ability to kill the warrior, Goliath (1 Samuel 17), and David is highly honored and loved by God.  And if you were thinking about becoming a vegan based on the 6th Commandment, you should probably read the book of Leviticus first.  Leviticus outlines just how animals were to be slaughtered for sacrifices and feasts.  Obviously, even if we have a bad translation of the word ratsach (thank you KJV), we can see that this does not mean every form of the word ‘kill.’  Therefore, we must ask ourselves if capital punishment falls inside or outside the idea of the biblical discussion of murder.  It seems to me, that capital punishment, that is, execution administered by the state and regulated by the law, is not the same as murder.  The Bible is not against capital punishment. 

Yet, I am against capital punishment.  Why?

After working in the American legal system, I am concerned that we could get it wrong. Our society is such that we would rather let a guilty person go free than punish an innocent person.  This  idea echoes Exodus 23:7, which reads, "Be sure never to charge anyone falsely with evil.  Never sentence an innocent or blameless person to death, for I never declare a guilty person to be innocent" (ESV).  At times, I feel capital punishment does not reside in the spirit of this attitude, especially considering that we have seen new evidence overturn incorrect rulings.  Death is final.  There is no overturning capital punishment. 

But if the Bible is not against capital punishment and I feel God gives governments the right to administer the death penalty, how can I be against it? 

As Americans, we are a part of our government.  Actually, we are the government.  Our collective voice is intended to be what grants our various local, state, and federal governments the ability to make laws (This right is ultimately granted to us and other nations by God, as discussed above, and we should be thankful).  As citizens of the USA, our opinions matter and we vote to make our opinions known.  We can be opposed to, or in support of laws because our government system allows us to take part.  The Bible doesn’t say governments must to have capital punishment.  The governments of the Bible did, but while this punishment is allowable, it is not required. This is how I can say the Bible allows governments to engage in capital punishment but I don't want our government to do so.

In Part II, I will address the topic of abortion. Continue to Part II.

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* Photo of "Old Sparky" is in the public domain. Photo of protesters is registered under a creative commons license: http://www.flickr.com/photos/28544227@N08/ / CC BY-SA 2.0

The Setting of the Early Church

         After the Old Testament book called Malachi closed, it seems that God was quiet for 400 years—nothing of God's revelation of himself was recorded until the books collected into what we call the New Testament.[1]  However, these 400 years were not inactive or unimportant.  It is in these years that the setting of the early Christian Church was forming.  Elements of geography, language, politics, and religion collided, making way for the explosive growth of Christ’s Church.
 
            The first key aspect is geography.  Justo Gonzalez states that Palestine was “at the crossroads of the great trade routes that joined Egypt with Mesopotamia, and Asia Minor with Arabia.”[2]  The land of the Jews was seen as a strategic key for any concurring empire.  Avenues of approach into any other empire required travel through Palestine.  Trade traversed this area by land and sea.  But while this plot of real estate was the subject of wars, hostilities, and invasions, its connection to the trade routes and well-paved roads afforded the early Church opportunities like never before.[3]  As armies of soldiers and trade merchants moved through the area, the Gospel hitched a ride.

            Language, specifically a common language introduced by Alexander’s efforts to Hellenize the lands, and the loss of language by the Jews in Diaspora, is the second significant aspect of the setting of the early Church.  Alexander sought to unite the lands he conquered through culture and language, and as a result, many people started speaking the similar language of Koine Greek.[4]  Somewhat like English today, this was the common second language among business people, that is, if it wasn’t their first language.  In addition, the Jews living away from Jerusalem slowly lost their native Hebrew language and needed the Scriptures translated into a language they could read.  While there was likely a diversity of native languages, the common language of the day—Greek—was the translation language of choice in the West.  The Septuagint (also called the LXX, meaning “seventy”) became a common translation used by the dispersed people and was regularly quoted by the Apostles.  Gonzalez calls it “a ready-made means of communicating their message to the Gentiles.”[5]  William Mounce takes it a step further stating, “God used the common language to communicate the Gospel.”[6]


           In an effort to maintain political unity the Roman Empire kept the unnecessary violence to a minimum, and this is the third significant aspect of the setting of early Church.  “The political unity wrought by the Roman Empire,” writes Gonzalez, “allowed the early Christians to travel without having to fear bandits or local wars.”[7]  And the fourth aspect—closely associated with the political landscape—was the aspect of religion.  The Romans incorporated the religion of the locals into their own religious system, something that allowed the early Church to function with little problem.[8]  The early Church was seen as simply a Jewish sect, and the Jewish religion was already accepted as an acceptable (all though somewhat rebellious) religion.  However, this was not to last and eventually the Romans took issue with Christianity’s exclusive views and failure to worship the Roman emperor.[9]
  
            Many, including this author, argue that these aspects were brought together through God’s providence.  The 400 silent years were not inactive years; instead, they were the foundation building that allowed a small group of common people to take the gospel of Jesus to the world. The location in respect to major cities and trade routes, the common language, the relative safety on the roads, the politics, and the synthetic religion of the Roman Empire came together in just such a way that the early Church could get a foothold that might have been impossible at any earlier time.
          
BIBLIOGRAPHY
González, Justo L. The Story of Christianity. San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1984.

Mounce, William D. Greek for the Rest of Us: Using Greek Tools Without Mastering 
     Biblical Languages. Grand Rapids, Mich: Zondervan, 2003.


     [1] The Apocrypha and other writings of the period record the historical events of the period but the Church has no canonical documents from this time that carry the authority of God.  
     [2] Justo L. González, The Story of Christianity (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1984), 7.
     [3] Ibid, 14.   
     [4] Ibid, 8, 14.
     [5] Ibid, 12. 
     [6] William D. Mounce, Greek for the Rest of Us: Using Greek Tools Without Mastering Biblical Languages (Grand Rapids, Mich: Zondervan, 2003), 3.  
     [7] Gonzalez, 14.
     [8] Ibid, 15.
     [9] Ibid.  

*This post was, in its entirety or in part, originally written in seminary in partial fulfillment of a M.Div. It may have been redacted or modified for this website. 

** Photo is in the public domain, photographer is unknown. 

Tongues: A Spiritual Gift for Today?


INTRODUCTION
            Since Christ’s ascension, theological differences tend to weaken the unity of the Church.  However, through the differences intense study is birthed, debate and discussion flow, and Christians come together to find solid ground.  Historically, councils have been called to determine which view would stand as orthodox and which would be deemed heretical.  In some cases, the differing views were decidedly nonessential and allowed to co-exist.  While present-day Christians rarely see ecumenical councils called to rule upon new theological ideas, we do find that differences thrive still to this day.  Often, these differences are weighed out in the court of common practice.  At present, the North American Church is divided on its stance regarding miraculous spiritual gifts, most notably, the activity commonly referred to as ‘speaking in tongues’ or simply just ‘tongues.’  After an examination of this gift of the Spirit, this post will argue against both the cessationist viewpoint and the hyper-Spirit-filled stance in favor of the adoption of an open, but still cautious approach to tongues.[1]  In making this argument, attempts will be made to answer some important questions on this matter: Were tongues of the New Testament a known language, an unknown language, both, or not a language at all?  If indeed tongues exist today, can it be expected that today’s tongues should look like the examples found in Acts, or like the teaching in Corinthians (if indeed they are different), or like something else?  Is speaking in tongues a necessary proof that one is born again or filled with the Holy Spirit?  Does this gift come through a second conversion experience, commonly referred by hyper-Spirit-filled Christians to as a ‘baptism of/in the Holy Spirit’?  Have these miraculous spiritual gifts (specifically tongues) ceased, or is it possible that they might be manifested today?

GLOSSOLALIA: WHAT IS IT?
Before examining the various experiences of tongues that appear to be from a source other than the Holy Spirit, those from Christians of the early Church, and the tongues experiences as recorded in the New Testament, an understanding from where the word and activity are derived, and what it means, is necessary. 
‘Tongues’ commonly comes from the Greek word, glossa, meaning either ‘tongue’ or ‘language,’ although Strong suggests that it “sometimes refers to the supernatural gift of tongues.”[2]  Perschbacher expands on this meaning, adding that in reference to Acts 2:11, 1 Corinthians 13:1, and elsewhere, glossa might be thought of as, “a language not proper to a speaker, a gift or faculty of such language.”[3]  On the other hand, Samarin, a linguist, defines glossa as “a single continuous act of glossolalia,” compounding the simple definition previously provided.[4]  Under this definition, what then is glossolalia?  It is worth noting that a cursory search of the Greek New Testament for the Greek word glossolalia—the combination of the Greek words glossa and lalia, meaning “speech” or “way of speaking”—turns up no usage.[5]  Glossolalia, as defined by Samarin, is first, “a vocal act believed by the speaker to be a language showing rudimentary language-like structure but no consistent word-meaning correspondences recognizable by either the speaker or hearers; (in Christianity) speech attributed to the Holy Spirit in languages unknown to the speaker and incomprehensible without divinely inspired interpretation”; and second, “(loosely) unintelligible speech, gibberish.”[6]  While glossa is the word most often used in association of the Spirit gift of tongues recorded in the Bible, glossolalia is the activity generally thought of when understanding ‘speaking in tongues’ today. 
In seeking to define ‘speaking in tongues,’ Grudem states, “Speaking in tongues is prayer or praise in syllables not understood by the speaker.”[7]  Grudem’s definition however, does not leave room for the other activities spoken in tongues as seen in Acts and Corinthians, such as actual communication to foreign listeners.  It also raises a question of control of the audible message if the speaker does not understand what is being vocalized.  Neither Grudem’s definition, nor Samarin’s first definition, address whether true speaking in tongues as gifted by the Holy Spirit is only a practice of Christians and not any other form of religious nor non-religious exercise.


TONGUES IN THE FIRST CENTURY, BEFORE, AND AFTER
Tongues Not Associated With The Holy Spirit.  The practice of speaking in unintelligible utterances is not proprietary to Christianity.  As Osborne explains, “In the ancient world, ecstatic utterances, trances, and frenzied behaviors were commonly associated with pagan prophets.”[8]  Examples are numerous.  In the Eleventh-century B.C., Egypt documented ecstatic speech resembling speaking in tongues.[9]  This behavior was “believed to be revelations from the gods, made up of foreign words and senseless noises,” states May.  “The more mysterious and incomprehensible these formulas were, the greater their power was thought to be.”[10]  May also holds that it is probable (but not entirely convincing) that India may also have had instances of ecstatic speech or glossolalia at that same time.[11]  Both the Prophetess of Delphi and the Sibylline Priestess of the Hellenistic era spoke in unknown utterances.[12]  A trance-like state and speaking in tongues were part of the Dionysian rituals.[13]  In South America, there are illustrations of rudimentary glossolalia suggesting that Incans, Toltecs, and Aztecs may also have practiced speaking in tongues in their ceremonies.[14]
            The Taisho Tripitaka records the 196 A.D. an instance of the wife of Ting-in who would become ill and speak in foreign languages she had not previously known.  Asking for a writing instrument, she would write down what she had spoken, only later to learn from a monk that she had written a sutra.[15]  In 1892, an American woman given the pseudonym case-name “Helene Smith,” apparently would fall into trances and speak what those around her called “Martian language.”  When studied by Flournoy, it was determined that her speech was grammatically dependent upon the French language and showed a connection to Sanskrit.[16]  In the 1840s, the Quakers spoke in tongues.[17]  According to May, “Joseph Smith instructed the early Mormons to rise upon their feet and to speak in tongues.”[18]  The Doctrine and Covenants records that Joseph Smith received a revelation on March 8, 1831 giving instruction for the unified patterns for the conducting of church services.[19]  Part of this instruction includes that the members ask for spiritual gifts, of which the subsequent list features “speaking in tongues.”[20]  The shaman of the Semang pygmies speaks in what they call “celestial spirits.”[21]  The Gusi cult in North Borneo prays in a language they believe is only known by the spirits.[22]  And the Eskimo spiritual leaders of the Hudson Bay, Chukchee, Koryak, Asiatic, Lapps, Yakuts, Tangus, and Samoyeds all adhere to the use of a spirit language.[23]
            While this non-exhaustive survey demonstrates that the behavior of speaking in tongues is not exclusive to the New Testament Christian Church, it is important for one to realize that the existence of these other glossolalia experiences does not discredit tongues in the Church, nor does it lend greater support for biblical tongues.  To use these examples in any argument other than to show that glossolalia has been (and still is) practiced outside the Christian faith is spurious and akin to comparing the consumption of bread and wine during a business meeting to the practice of celebrating of Holy Communion.  Indeed, the specific nature of these examples is difficult to determine, and the large scope of experiences does little to help define the biblical understanding of tongues that are causing division in the Church.  To narrow the focus, I will now briefly examine some historical use of tongues in the post-New Testament Church.


Tongues After The New Testament.  Around 172 A.D., a prophetic movement surfaced in Phrygia, what is now Turkey.  It was lead and named after Montanus, a new convert to Christianity, and featured prophecies spoken in Spirit led utterances.[24]  Other leaders of the group included two prophetesses—Pricilla and Maximilla—who presumably also spoke in tongues.[25]  The group’s most noteworthy adherent was Tertullian, who also spoke favorable of the practice of speaking in tongues.[26]  Although the Montanism lasted well into the Third Century, the synods of bishops in Asia, as well as church leaders in other areas, condemned it.[27] 
            The topic of tongues, especially in his later years, also appears in the work of Origen.  He held that glossa is a reference to known world languages (often drawing references back to the Tower of Babel in Genesis 11), and Paul, Origen believed, through the gifting of the Spirit, spoke nearly all the languages of the world.[28]  Irenaeus also spoke highly of tongues.[29]  But despite the positions of some early Church Fathers, the practice in the Western Church was nearly non-existent by the Fourth Century.[30]  According to Osborne, “Chrysotom was quite negative, and Augustine declared it had been given only for the NT times.”[31]  However, the practice may have continued in the Eastern Church well into the Middle Ages.[32]  “Luther and Calvin both spoke positively of the gift,” writes Osborne, “and some believe Luther actually had had such experiences.”[33]  However, Mill (rightly) suggests that this is highly debatable.[34]  For over a decade in the 1730s, a group known as the Huguenots on Southern France experienced speaking in tongues, as did a group of Catholic pietists around the same time.[35]  In the 1830s, the Methodists experienced glossolalia.[36]  And in 1850s Russia, a Pentecostal-type movement was born and is reported to have lasted almost 100 years.[37]
            The opening of the Twentieth-Century saw the origin of what is dividing the Church today.  In 1901 at the Bethel Bible School in Topeka, Kansas, it is reported that Charles Parham laid hands on a woman named Agnes Ozman and prayed that she receive the “baptism of the Holy Spirit.”  Ozman then spoke Chinese for three days, unable to speak in English.  Twelve other students are also reported to have received this second experience baptism.[38]  Parham concluded that this gift was a sign that the end-time was at hand.  He also believed glossolalia was a gift of known world languages.  “Spirit-filled believers,” records Burgess, “could fan out and preach the gospel message without the painstaking process of learning a new language.”[39]  The students held that their experiences were the same as that seen in Acts 2 and served as “indisputable proof of the end-time Holy Spirit baptism.”[40]  While this was the start of the Pentecostal movement, it did not pick up steam until 1906 when W. J. Seymour lead a glossolalia movement now named the “Azusa Street Revival” in Los Angeles, California.  The fervor lasted two years and brought much attention to the Pentecostal movement.[41]  Similar outbreaks of revival glossolalia have occurred throughout the Twentieth-Century, such as the ‘Toronto Blessing’ in 1994, but the one most worth noting occurred in 1967.  Laurentin reports that in a variety of locations across America, Catholics—mainly professors and laymen, but also some priests—experienced speaking in tongues.  Many of the occurrences were separate from the others and hardly any were aware of each other.[42]
            While these speaking in tongues experiences are thought provoking, Christians should follow the advice of Paul: “test everything; hold fast to what is good.”[43]  It is at this point that my examination of the gift of tongues will turn to the New Testament.


Tongues in the New Testament.  Luke records biblical examples of speaking in tongues in the second, tenth, and nineteenth chapters of the book of Acts.  These are descriptive stories that might prove helpful in understanding this behavior.  In addition, Paul teaches on this topic in his first letter to the Corinthians.  Chapters 12 through 14 cover a wide breadth of material but are primarily focused on the gifts of the Spirit.  However, it is important to note that Paul is specifically addressing the church in Corinth.  It may very well be that the experiences recorded in Acts and the experiences addressed in First Corinthians are historical events and do not serve as a normative instruction for the gift of tongues today.  On the other hand, if we are to treat both Acts and Paul’s letter to the Corinthians as nothing but historical documents, what value are they for the Church today? 
            Because Luke records the first instance of speaking in tongues, we will begin with the narrative found in the second chapter of Acts.  In verses 1-3, Luke records that on the day of Pentecost, 120 people were together in the Upper Room when the sound like rushing wind filled the house.  What looked like fiery tongues came down and rested on them.  Calvin suggests that the wind and visible tongues served as a way to “stir up the disciples” (and for us, “awake all our senses”) so there would be no mistake that the Spirit had come as Christ promised.[44]  Of the three accounts recorded in Acts where people speak in tongues, this is the only occurrence that is preceded by noise or a visual sign.  Verse 4 reads, “And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance.”[45]  Here, we see that “all” were filled; and Lea and Black argue that in this instance, “The filling of the Holy Spirit appears to be a state in which a person is controlled by the Holy Spirit for service.”[46]  It is also seen that before the word ‘tongues,’ is the word ‘other,’ in the Greek, heteros, meaning “other” but also “another’s,” “altered,” or “strange.”[47]  As the passage continues it becomes apparent that these “other tongues” can be understood (with out the need for an interpreter) by a large variety of foreigners, each hearing in his native language.[48]  Most were perplexed but some accused the speakers of being drunk.[49]  While it is clear that tongues in this event were a known language, it is unclear why some in the crowd would mockingly say that the speakers were drunk.  To what aspect of this event were the mockers addressing?  Bruce does not clear up this question, but he does draw a parallel between these mockers and Paul’s idea of visitors to the church in Corinth.  He writes, “Paul, who had the gift of glossolalia himself, had to warn the Corinthian Christians that a stranger entering one of their meetings when they were all ‘speaking with tongues’ would certainly conclude that they were mad (1 Cor. 14:23).  So on this occasion there were some in the crowd who dismissed the strange event with a jibe.”[50]  The event at Pentecost was not only the first experience where speaking in tongues is recorded, it served to signal that the Spirit was now with the people as Jesus had promised.  Duffield and Van Cleave write, “The manifestation of the Spirit of the Day of Pentecost was the original outpouring of the empowerment of the Church.”[51]  But given that Acts records other instances of the falling of the Holy Spirit on people groups, and subsequently those people speaking in tongues (which will be examined shortly), how should the other events be seen if this event at Pentecost was merely a sign?  Are the other events also signs of specific occurrences or are they an explanation of a normative experience for all believers?  Only after more of the biblical material is examined can an attempt be made to answer this question.
            The next event comes in Chapter ten.  Acts 10:44-48 records Peter’s experience as he preached to Cornelius, a Gentile, and Cornelius’ household.  In this case, the Holy Spirit fell upon people who were not previously believers or baptized with water, so it was not a second experience, but a first.[52]  Verse 46 records that they (meaning Peter and the circumcised believers that came with him) witnessed the new believers speaking in tongues.  This time there is no mention of ‘other,’ and nothing is recorded to indicate that the speakers could be understood or that the language they were speaking was a known world language.  As previously stated, there is no mention of the sound of wind or tongues of fire coming down.  However, when Peter explained this event to the church in Jerusalem, he said, “As I began to speak, the Holy Spirit fell on them just as on us at the beginning.”[53]  Therefore, it is safe to assume that these two events were alike in at least some very important ways that Peter and the others understood.  If the purpose of the event at Pentecost was to ring in a new area of the Holy Spirit, what then was the purpose for this event at Cornelius’ house?  In speaking first about Pentecost, Wade writes,
The purpose of this miracle seems to have been to serve as credentials for the message they were about to bring.  The miracle in the house of Cornelius served a similar purpose.  It convinced Cornelius and his household that the message brought by Peter was indeed from God.  But, more importantly, it convinced Peter and his Jewish companions that the gospel should also be made available to the Gentiles.”[54]



Wade, it seems, believes this event was specifically for Peter and Cornelius, and not much of an instruction for us today.
            Acts 19:1-7 is the final recorded tongues event in Luke’s book; but it is significant because it involves Paul, who outlines instructions about the gift of tongues to the church in Corinth.  Here, Paul finds twelve disciples who were baptized into John’s baptism (that is, the baptism of repentance) but had not received the Holy Spirit when they believed.[55]  Considering John baptized them, they had to have been baptized before Pentecost.  It seems that these believers might not have known much of Christ or the gospel at all.  Verse 5 tells us they were baptized in the name of Jesus, but were unaware of the Holy Spirit.  When Paul laid his hands on them, “the Holy Spirit came on them, and they began speaking in tongues and prophesying.”[56]  Like the event in Chapter 10, there is no mention of noise or visible tongues of fire.  There is also no way to know if what they were speaking was an earthly language or not.  While this passage is frequently used in support of second experiences after Pentecost, note that Paul asks if they received the Spirit “when you believed?”[57]  It is as if Paul is suggesting that is when it should have happened.  However, Maclaren argues, “this question suggests that the possession of the Holy Spirit is the normal condition of all believers”; however, “the outer methods of His bestowment vary: sometimes He is given after baptism, and sometimes, as to Cornelius before it; sometimes by laying on of Apostolic hands, sometimes without it.”[58]
            If the instances recorded in Acts were the only instances of speaking in tongues available to us, some clear conclusions could be drawn.  First, because in all of Acts there is only examples of  132 people plus all those at Cornelius’ home speaking in tongues, it might be thought that speaking in tongues was not such a significant event that it served as proof of being filled with the Spirit.  Paul is never recorded in the book of Acts speaking in tongues even though in his letter to the Corinthians he speaks in tongues more than all of them.  Second, it is clear enough from the first recorded event that the tongues were a known language (but previously unknown to the speaker).  It is likely that at the second event, being just like the first, known languages were also spoken.  And there is really no way to tell from what is recorded about the third event.  And third, it would seem that receiving the Spirit can, and most likely, happens for us today when we believe, but only if what is recorded in Acts is normative.  However, Acts is not the only New Testament source for information on tongues.
            Carson and Moo explain that the church in Corinth was experiencing some problems.  It was not as if they were going back to their pagan faith, instead, they were learning what it was to be Christian.  Not fully grasping the meaning of salvation, or how to live in the shadow of the cross, they engaged in one-upmanship.  Those with more knowledge began to use it to crush the weaker Christians.  And in this environment, according to Carson and Moo, “Which charismatic gift they have becomes far more important than whether or not they love brothers and sisters in Christ.”[59]  Therefore, the letter to the Corinthians should be recognized, in part, as a letter of instruction to a church that is grossly misusing the spiritual gift of tongues, rather than one that serves as a model for all the Church for all time.
            Starting in Chapter 12 of First Corinthians, Paul explains to the church the proper attitude and use of the spiritual gifts.  He teaches that they, including tongues, are given to each person for the common good.[60]  But although all gifts are needed in the body, all do not receive the same gift, including the gift of “various kinds of tongues.”[61]  Specifically, Paul writes rhetorically, “Do all speak with tongues?”[62]  And Paul calls this church to “earnestly desire the higher gifts” so he can show them a “better way.”[63]  At this point, it would seem obvious that at least some in the church might have the gift of tongues, but that is merely speculation. 
            Chapter 13 opens with a rather complex statement.  Paul says whether he “speaks in tongues of men and of angels” but is without love, his is a noisy gong.[64]  What does Paul mean by ‘tongues of angles’?  Barclay argues it is just poetic language and the greater point is that no matter how amazing a person might be, he is still nothing without love.[65]  On the other hand, Thrall contends that Paul is referring to “the inspired outpouring of ecstatic but unintelligible speech.”[66]  Duffield and Van Cleave argue that some tongues, like what was seen at Pentecost, are earthly languages, used for the benefit of spreading the Gospel; but, as Paul indicates, the language of angles is the “new tongue” referenced in Mark 16:17, which is used for praise and prayer through love.  They call this a “prayer language.”[67]  I believes it is this passage, more than any of the others on tongues, that has caused such a division in today’s Church.  Too often this passage is used (potentially incorrectly) as a lens of interpretation for all the other related passages.
             After encouraging the church to love one another, Paul moves to some instruction on prophecy, tongues, and orderly worship.  The meaning of these instructions generally require an understanding of the nature of New Testament tongues; however, Paul does provide some valuable guidelines.  Unlike what was seen in Acts, the idea of an interpreter of tongues is present.  If there is not an interpreter, a person speaking in tongues has no benefit to the congregation, but only to himself.  Paul does indicate however, that the speaker is still speaking to God.[68]  But this is not presented in a bad light because Paul still wants his readers to speak in tongues (and even more so, prophesy).[69]  There is an indication that Paul believes these tongues are language, not just meaningless utterances, but this does not eliminate the possibility of an angle language.[70]  If one does speak in a tongue but there is nobody to interpret, Paul suggests that person prays for the gift of interpretation, clearly indicating that the speaker does not know what is being said by his own mouth.[71]  This is made more apparent as Paul argues about praying in a tongue and praying in his mind.  While one has the ability to be silent if there are already two people speaking in a tongue, there is a hint that the speaker has no control over the message.[72]  Finally, Paul says,
In the Law it is written, “By people of strange tongues and by the lips of foreigners will I speak to this people, and even then they will not listen to me, says the Lord.”  Thus tongues are a sign not for believers but for unbelievers, while prophecy is a sign not for unbelievers but for believers.  If, therefore, the whole church comes together and all speak in tongues, and outsiders or unbelievers enter, will they not say that you are out of your minds?  But if all prophesy and an unbeliever or outsider enters, he is convicted by all, he is called to account by all, the secrets of his heart are disclosed, and so, falling on his face, he will worship God and declare that God is really among you.[73]


By this passage, it would seem that the tongues in Corinth did not serve as a sign like those at Pentecost, possibly because there was no foreign unbelievers in Corinth to hear the message spoken though the tongue.


WHO IS RIGHT?
            As the church looks at tongues today, a spectrum of ideas is generated.  On the one side, is a group that not only is practicing some form of glossolalia, but also holds that it is proof of a second experience of conversion and, in fact, is the initial evidence that the Holy Spirit has taken up residents within the believer.  On the other side is the idea that tongues are not to be practiced because the gift ceased in, or shortly after, the First Century.  These ideas, from one side of the spectrum to the other (and everything in between) often appear in doctrinal statements of belief, some times articulated plainly, sometimes coded.  In the North American Church, various positions are hotly debated, sometimes splitting churches, often dividing unity.  Who is right?   


The Hyper-Spirit-Filled Position.  While charismatic church groups are often called Pentecostal, this is not their technical name unless they follow their history back to the Bethel School events in 1901, according to Gundry.  He argues that in addition to the historical connection, Pentecostals hold to “the following doctrines: (1) All the gifts of the Holy Spirit mentioned in the New Testament are intended for today; (2) baptism in the Holy Spirit is an empowering experience subsequent to conversion and should be sought by Christians today; and (3) when baptism in the Holy Spirit occurs, people will speak in tongues as a ‘sign’ that they have received this experience.”[74]  Charismatic groups are very much like Pentecostals except for the unshared history.  They tie their history to the charismatic renewal movement of the 1960 and 1970s; however, they do not all hold to the same unified doctrines like the Pentecostals.[75]  The Third Wave’s historical roots go back only to the 1980s.  They contend that tongues do exist and that rather than serving as a second experience, the baptism of the Spirit occurs at conversion; the subsequent signs are merely “fillings.”[76]  For the purposes of this paper, these three groups have been collectively assigned the name ‘hyper-Spirit-filled.’
            Referring to Acts 2:19, Oss, a hyper-Spirit-filled Christian, says, “the last days are characterized by ‘wonders in the heavens above and signs on the earth below.”[77]  He and many other hyper-Spirit-filled Christians believe that speaking in tongues (and the other miraculous gifts) are these very signs.  Oss also argues that receiving the baptism of Holy Spirit is a “necessary empowerment” to witness and to be of service. [78]  He does not go so far as to say it is necessary for salvation; although, it is a second and distinct experience, whether it happens at the same time as conversion or later.[79]  Duffield and Van Cleave state that giving utterances as directed by the Spirit is the initial and immediate evidence that one is filled with the Spirit.  They claim that this experience will always be accompanied by glossolalia.[80]  When challenged with the conversion events that do not record evidences of speaking in tongues, Duffield and Van Cleave argue, “It is true that three accounts say nothing of tongues, but the omission is due to the brevity of those accounts.”[81]


 The Cessationist Position.  The cessationist holds that the miraculous gifts, including speaking in tongues, ended either at the death of the apostles or after the canonization of Scripture.[82]  The gifts were used to establish the church but are no longer needed today.[83]  Many cessationists look for support in First Corinthians 13:8-13.[84]  In part, Paul writes, “Love never ends.  As for prophecies, they will pass away; as for tongues, they will cease, as for knowledge, it will pass away.  For we know in part and we prophesy in part, but when the perfect comes, the partial will pass away.”[85]  But rather than turning to this argument, Graffin instead suggests that these signs were the “mark of the apostles” and if we can agree that there are no apostles today, then we should be able to accept that there are also no tongues.[86]  He argues that the apostles made a “deposit,” that is the cannon, at which point there was no longer a need of the signs to establish their credibility.[87]  He further contends that having any revelation from tongues or prophecy would allow the church to place them above the authority of scripture.[88]  And most cessationists would agree with Gaffin’s statement, “Pentecost belongs to the history of salvation, not the order of salvation.”[89] Cessationists, it would seem, feel the passages on tongues in Acts and First Corinthians are descriptive, not normative.


CONCLUSION
            As both the biblical and extra-biblical evidence surrounding speaking in tongues is examined, one thing is clear.  Neither the hyper-Spirit-fill nor the cessationist position is correct.  The hyper-Spirit-filled position seems to run into problems on numerous levels.  While the claims of the 1901 Bethel School event indicated that the recipients were speaking earthly languages (I am not arguing that this was not the case here), the present-day hyper-Spirit-filled churches seek a “prayer language,” or as Paul put it, tongues of angels.  This prayer language does not appear to be supported in the book of Acts, leaving only a small selection of scripture—potentially only part of one verse—among the body of evidence from which to find support.  Paul’s letter to the Corinthians makes it clear that not all will receive the gift of tongues, yet the hyper-Spirit-filled position demands that speaking in tongues is the immediate indicator that one has the Spirit dwelling within, and has had a second and “necessary” baptism experience.  To the issue of initial evidence, Synan writes, “In reading the New Testament, one cannot find a statement which specifically names glossolalia as the one ‘initial evidence’ of the baptism in the Holy Spirit.”[90]  And to the idea of two separate baptism events, Erickson says, “Baptism by the Spirit appears to be, if not the equivalent to conversion and new birth, at least simultaneous with them.”[91]  He further argues that the cases in Acts where the events were not simultaneous were because that time was a transition period between Christ and the Holy Spirit.[92]
            The cessationist position is not as complicated.  Where they argue that the hyper-Spirit-filled position has built up the Scriptures to mean more than they say, the cessationist has stripped away too much meaning from the Scriptures.  It seems they are unwilling to allow for the miraculous sovereign power of God to manifest itself today.  In addressing the cessationist position, Saucy writes, “The New Testament does not explicitly teach the cessation of certain gifts at a particular point in the experience of the church.  It is therefore impossible to say on the basis of biblical teaching, that certain gifts cannot occur at any given time according to God’s sovereign purpose.”[93]  And in light of Mark 3:22-30, one should approach the cessationist view cautiously.  Erickson says, “One cannot rule in a priori and categorical fashion that a claim of glossolalia is spurious.  In fact, it may be downright dangerous, in the light of Jesus’ warnings regarding blasphemy against the Holy Spirit, to attribute specific phenomena to demonic activity.”[94]  What than are we to do? 
I am arguing that we must remain open to the possibility of the gift of tongues as given by the Holy Spirit, but also remain cautious. It is not the exercise of tongues that raises concern; it is the teaching that tongues is somehow a requirement of a faithful Christian life. Also alarming is the excessive over-emotional use of glossolalia in some churches and the absolute silence of any working of the Holy Spirit in others.  To react by saying that tongues cannot happen today, as do the cessationists, nearly rejects the power and wonder of God.  I find both of these positions unacceptable.  As a community, and as individuals, we must constantly test what we see against the Scriptures, and we should commit this specific theological difficulty to prayer.  In time, God may reveal concrete answers to his people.  Is this a cop-out?  No, it is responsible approach to Scripture.
The issue of tongues is a difficult one in the Church today.  By no means has this post resolved the issue, given that most of the problem comes from the interpretation of the same pool of scriptures and this is but one interpretation.  Certainty, more exegesis is needed; more conversation is necessary; more prayer required, so that one at some point, the Church will no longer be divided by tongues, but instead united in love.  This should be our prayer; it is mine. 


BIBLIOGRAPHY
Barclay, William. The Letters to the Corinthians. The Daily study Bible series. Philadelphia:
     Westminster Press, 1975.
Bruce, F. F. Commentary on the Book of the Acts. The New international commentary on the
     New Testament. Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1973.
Burgess, Stanley M., Gary B. McGee, and Patrick H. Alexander. Dictionary of Pentecostal and
     Charismatic Movements. Grand Rapids, Mich: Regency Reference Library, 1988.
Calvin, John. Calvin’s Commentaries, vol. 18. Grand Rapids, Mich: Baker Books, 2009.
Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Salt Lake City, Utah:
     The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1981.
Duffield, Guy P., and Nathaniel M. Van Cleave. Foundations of Pentecostal Theology. Los
     Angles, Calif: Foursquare Media, 2008.
Elwell, Walter A., ed. Evangelical Dictionary of Theology. Baker reference library. Grand
     Rapids, Mich: Baker Academic, 2001.
Grudem, Wayne A. Systematic Theology: An Introduction to Biblical Doctrine. Grand Rapids:
     Mich, Zondervan, 1994.
Gundry, Stanley N., ed. Are Miraculous Gifts for Today?: Four Views. Grand Rapids, Mich:
     Zondervan Pub, 1996.
Lea, Thomas D., and David Alan Black. The New Testament: Its Background and Message.
     Nashville, Tenn: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 2003.
Maclaren, Alexander. Expositions of Holy Scripture, vol. 12. Grand Rapids: Baker Book House,
     1974.
Mills, Watson E., ed. Speaking in Tongues: A Guide to Research on Glossolalia. Grand Rapids,
     Mich: W.B. Eerdmans Pub. Co, 1986.
Perschbacher, Wesley J., and George V. Wigram. The New Analytical Greek Lexicon. Peabody,
     Mass: Hendrickson, 1990.
Robeck, Cecil M. Charismatic Experiences in History. Peabody, Mass: Hendrickson Publishers,
     1985.
Samarin, William J. Tongues of Men and Angels: The Religious Language of Pentecostalism.
     New York: Macmillan, 1972.
Strong, James, John R. Kohlenberger, and James A. Swanson. The Strongest Strong's Exhaustive
     Concordance of the Bible. Grand Rapids, Mich: Zondervan, 2001.
Wilson, Mark W, ed. Spirit and Renewal: Essays in Honor of J. Rodman Williams. Journal of
     Pentecostal Theology, 5. Sheffield, England: Sheffield Academic Press, 1994.




     [1] Gundry argues that there is not a solidified name behind the large group of Evangelicals that take this position and has opted to name the group “open but caution.”  This paper will follow this example.  Stanley N. Gundry, ed, Are Miraculous Gifts for Today?: Four Views (Grand Rapids, Mich: Zondervan Pub, 1996), 13.   
     [2] James Strong, John R. Kohlenberger, and James A. Swanson, The Strongest Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible (Grand Rapids, Mich: Zondervan, 2001), 1599.
     [3] Wesley J. Perschbacher, and George V. Wigram, The New Analytical Greek Lexicon (Peabody, Mass: Hendrickson, 1990), 81.
     [4] William J. Samarin, Tongues of Men and Angles: The Religious Language of Pentecostalism (New York: Macmillan, 1972), xvii.  
     [5] Strong, 1623.
     [6] Samarin, xvii.
      [7] Wayne A. Grudem, Systematic Theology: An Introduction to Biblical Doctrine (Grand Rapids: Mich, Zondervan, 1994), 1070.
     [8] Walter A. Elwell, ed., Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, Baker reference library (Grand Rapids, Mich: Baker Academic, 2001), 1206.
     [9] Elwell, 1206.
     [10] Watson E. Mills, ed., Speaking in Tongues: A Guide to Research on Glossolalia (Grand Rapids, Mich: W.B. Eerdmans Pub. Co, 1986), 54.
     [11] Mills, 54.
     [12] Elwell, 1206. 
     [13] Elwell, 1206. 
     [14] Mills, 64.
     [15] Mills, 66.
     [16] Mills, 55. 
     [17] Mills, 54.  While it is not this author’s intention to engage in a debate weather Quakers are Christian, some hold to a universalism that is in conflicts of some of the general doctrines of Christianity. 
     [18] Mills, 54.  Many Mormons argue that they are Christians; however, the Mormons of the 1800s just as the LDS today, do not subscribe to many of the doctrines of Christianity that orthodox Christianity hold as essential. 
     [19] This author is unsure if this practice is still a part of the LDS church services or in the private lives of Mormons today.
     [20] Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Salt Lake City, Utah: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1981), Sec 46:13-26. 
     [21] Mills, 59. 
     [22] Mills, 59-60. 
     [23] Mills, 59. 
     [24] Elwell, 790.
     [25] Colin Brown, The New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology, vol. 2 (Grand Rapids, Mich: Zondervan Pub. House, 1975), 89.
     [26] Elwell, 1207.
     [27] Elwell, 790.
     [28] Cecil M. Robeck, Charismatic Experiences in History (Peabody, Mass: Hendrickson Publishers, 1985), 119-122.  
     [29] Elwell, 2017
     [30] Elwell, 2017.
     [31] Elwell, 1208.
     [32] Elwell, 1208.
     [33] Elwell, 1208. 
     [34] Mills, 184-186.
     [35] Mills, 184-186. 
     [36] Mills, 184-186. 
     [37] Mills, 184-186. 
     [38] Stanley M. Burgess, Gary B. McGee, and Patrick H. Alexander, Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements (Grand Rapids, Mich: Regency Reference Library, 1988), 850.
     [39] Burgess, 850. 
     [40] Burgess, 850. 
     [41] Mills, 244-259. 
     [42] Mills, 235-242.
     [43] 1Thes 5:21 (ESV).
     [44] John Calvin, Calvin’s Commentaries, vol. 18 (Grand Rapids, Mich: Baker Books, 2009), 74.
     [45] Acts 2:4 (ESV).
     [46] Thomas D. Lea, Thomas and David Alan Black, The New Testament: Its Background and Message (Nashville, Tenn: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 2003), 292.  
     [47] Strong, 1612. 
     [48] Acts 2:5-11.
     [49] Acts 2:12-13. 
     [50] F. F. Bruce, Commentary on the Book of the Acts, The New international commentary on the New Testament (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1973), 65.  
     [51] Guy P. Duffield and Nathaniel M. Van Cleave, Foundations of Pentecostal Theology (Los Angles, Calif: Foursquare Media, 2008), 324.  
     [52] Acts 10:47-48.
     [53] Acts 11:15 (ESV).
     [54] John William Wade, Acts: Unlocking the Scriptures for You, Standard Bible studies (Cincinnati, Ohio: Standard Pub, 1987), 23.
     [55] Acts 19:1-7. 
     [56] Acts 19:6 (ESV).
     [57] Acts 19:2 (ESV). 
     [58] Alexander Maclaren, Expositions of Holy Scripture, vol. 12 (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1974), 170.
     [59] D. A. Carson and Douglas J. Moo, An Introduction to the New Testament (Grand Rapids, Mich: Zondervan, 2005), 428.      
     [60] I Cor 12:7.
     [61] 1 Cor 12:8-11.
     [62] 1 Cor 12:30 (ESV). 
     [63] 1 Cor 12:31 (ESV).
     [64] 1 Cor 13:1 (ESV). 
     [65] William Barclay, The Letters to the Corinthians, The Daily study Bible series. (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1975), 119-119.
     [66] Margaret Eleanor Thrall, The First and the Second Letters of Paul to the Corinthians, The Cambridge Bible commentary (Cambridge: Univ. Press, 1965), 92.  
     [67] Duffield, 341-344.
     [68] 1 Cor 14:2, 6-10. 
     [69] 1 Cor 14:5.
     [70] 1 Cor 14:10-11. 
     [71] 1 Cor 14:13.
     [72] 1 Cor 14:13-19, 27-28.
     [73] 1 Cor 14:21-25 (ESV).
     [74] Gundry, 11.
     [75] Gundry, 11. 
     [76] Gundry, 11. 
     [77] Gundry, 266. 
     [78] Gundry, 242.
     [79] Gundry, 240-244.
     [80] Duffield, 324-325. 
     [81] Duffield, 325. 
     [82] Grudem, 1031-1037.
     [83] Gundry, 10.
     [84] Grudem, 1032. 
     [85] 1 Cor 13:8-10 (ESV). 
     [86] Gundry, 25-60.
     [87] Gundry, 61.
     [88] Gundry, 47. 
     [89] Gundry, 31.
     [90] Mark W. Wilson, ed, Spirit and Renewal: Essays in Honor of J. Rodman Williams (Journal of Pentecostal Theology, 5. Sheffield, England: Sheffield Academic Press, 1994), 69.
     [91] Millard J. Erickson, Christian Theology (Grand Rapids, Mich: Baker Book House, 1998), 895.  
     [92] Erickson, 895-896.
     [93] Gundry, 100. 
     [94] Erickson, 896.

 *This post was, in its entirety or in part, originally written in seminary in partial fulfillment of a M.Div. It may have been redacted or modified for this website.  

** Photo of ~1810 Greek painting found in the Greek Catholic Cathedral of Hajdúdorog, Hungary, is licensed under a Creative Commons License and a GNU Free Documentation License.  It is available for review at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pentecost_on_Icon_from_Hajdudorog.JPG, taken and uploaded by "jojojoe," a user and contributor of Wikimedia Commons.

From a Seed

He put another parable before them, saying, "The kingdom of heaven is like a grain of mustard seed that a man took and sowed in his field.  It is the smallest of all seeds, but when it has grown it is larger than all the garden plants and becomes a tree, so that the birds of of the air come and make nests in its branches. -- Matthew 13:31-32

Yesterday I had to cut down a tree that a previous owner planted too close to my house.  Each Spring its branches have to be cut back because they find their way under the eave, often working to pull the gutter away.  But it was the roots that were causing the the most trouble having grown up against the foundation.   So after I fell the tree, I dug around the base and started working to remove the stump and root ball.

Last year I planted two new trees (much further away from the house, but still in a place to cast a shadow our our home during the late afternoon).  These two trees are very small and need support until they can establish a strong root system.  As I was digging, I realized that the tree close to our house, which took me all day to remove, started just as one of these little trees did.  Had I wanted to remove this tree when it was first planted, I could have pulled it up from the ground with little to no effort.  But now however, the roots were so great that most of them were left in the ground even as I had removed the tree.

At one point, Matthew records Jesus sharing parables.  In one of those parables, Jesus shows how from just a small mustard seed, a giant tree can spring up and grow, eventually providing shade and shelter for birds.  This tree will become strong and sturdy, but it all started from something small, humble.  Jesus is using this parable to show what the Church looks like, starting small (from just a few disciples) but eventually becoming large, established, and strong.  But the parable also offers a nice image for our own growing faith.

When we talk about aging with the Lord, we call it growing.  When we first become believers we are much like that little tree that needs support to survive the wind gusts and heavy winters.  Our roots are not well established.  But as we walk with Christ, reading Scriptures, praying, and learning through living life with other believers, the network of roots finds strength.  We grow and eventually the little sticks and wire that help prop us up can come away.  Over time, we provide shade; we become something that can give shelter to others.  It starts with something small, a little seed deposit of faith. 

And something else to consider, Luke 17: 5-6 says, "The apostles said to the Lord, 'Increase our faith!'  And the Lord said, 'If you had faith like a grain of mustard seed, you could say to this mulberry tree, 'Be uprooted and planted in the sea,' and it would obey you" (ESV).  

*The photo was taken by Stefan Wernli and is registered under a Creative Commons License. 

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The Effective Invitation by R. Alan Streett

Critical Book Review
Of
The Effective Invitation by R. Alan Streett


Bibliographical Entry
Streett, R. Alan. Effective Invitation: A Practical Guide for the Pastor. Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Pubns, 2004.


Author Information
            R. Alan Streett is an accomplished author, having published many articles and contributing to many books, including writing all 60 “Twisted Scripture” entries in The Apologetics Bible edited by Ted Cabal and Chapters 7-9 in Lifestyle Witnessing, a Bible study series supported by Billy Graham.  In addition to his articles and contributions, Streett has authored many books, including Unlocking New-Age Mysteries, How do you Plead?, and the subject of this review, The Effective Invitation.  The back cover of The Effective Invitation states that R. Alan Streett “has served as a pastor and church planter and is chairman and professor of evangelism at The Criswell College, Dallas, Texas.  He also serves as the editor of the Criswell Theological Review.”  He earned his M.Div. in 1972 from Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington D.C., his Ph.D. with a focus on Practical Theology from California Graduate School of Theology (1982), and is presently working on another Ph.D. in the field of Biblical Theology from the University of Wales, Lampeter, UK.[1]     


Content Summary
Streett offers the following thought in the preface of his work, The Effective Invitation: A Practical Guide for the Pastor: “The public invitation is an important tool which can aid in leading people to Christ at the end of a gospel sermon.  The ability to use this tool effectively cannot be discovered at a conference on evangelism, by reading a book on soul winning or attending weekly classes on new evangelistic techniques.  It can only be gained through experience” (p 17).  He then sets himself to the task of attempting to teach the reader—through the use of a “book on soul winning”—how to invite people to Christ at the end of a sermon.  It is the preacher’s job, suggests Streett, to preach the Gospel (pp 21-22).  He asks, “What ingredients make up an effective gospel presentation?” (p 22).  To answer this question, Streett moves into a lengthy argument—even turning to Greek key words—that includes an explanation of the meaning of preaching, proclaim, preacher, Gospel, evangelize, and evangelist.  At the completion of this discussion, Streett shifts to the theological support for the public invitation.  “The invitation,” writes Streett, “is that act by which the preacher of the gospel exhorts his hearers and instructs them how to appropriate the context of the kerygma in their individual lives” (p 37).  Chapter 2 is then loaded with Streett’s stance on repentance, the preacher’s responsibility to call sinners to repentance, and faith.  Chapter 3, in the same fashion as Chapter 2, provides biblical support for the public invitation, potentially introducing the reader to a debate that he or she was previously unaware of. 
Eighty-one pages into the book, Streett provides examples, methods, and styles of many other evangelists throughout Christian history.  Chapter 5 is dedicated to Billy Graham and his experiences with the public invitation.  Chapters 6 and 7 return to the polemic for the public invitation.  Finally, at Chapter 8, the reader comes to what he or she has likely seeking from the book—the material and guidance to assist the pastor in preparing the invitation.  The process starts with prayer.  Streett explains, “Prayer is the key.  The pastor or evangelist who wishes to be successful in drawing the net must first pray until God gives him a passion and burden for souls” (p 153).  Next, the preacher needs to work on a transition from his message to the invitation.   Once the transition is made, instructions must be given to the listeners.  After a discussion on the proper use of persuasion, Streett stresses that a call to public commitment is made.  And as an extra measure, Streett addresses the delivery itself.  Chapter 9 addresses the various invitation models, both the immediate and delayed response.  This section is especially helpful for readers that may come from a tradition where these different invitation methods are not utilized.  Chapter 10 addresses music leading up to and during the invitation.  “When used evangelistically,” writes Streett, “music has a strong influence in bringing people to Christ” (p 187).   Streett concludes with a discussion on inviting children to Christ, when it is appropriate and how to do it. 
In what might be more valuable than the first seven chapters, Streett includes a series of appendices.  The first is a series of illustrations dealing mostly with repentance (although some of the illustrations are a bit of a stretch).  Following these illustrations is a list of scriptures on the topic of repentance.  The next appendix is like the first, only it is on the topic of faith.  Appendix C, while a valuable list of topics to preach, departs from the idea of solid expository preaching and shifts to topical preaching.  Appendix D is an engaging response to the Reformed objections to the public invitation, most specifically the alter call.  And Appendix E is a list of hymns that strongly support the public invitation. 

Evaluation
             I am aware that the summary provide above has resonated a negative tone; however, I do not make apology.  The greater part of The Effective Invitation is a defense of the public invitation rather than a training manual on how to go about making the public invitation.  In addition, the most challenging part of making a public invitation, if indeed an invitation must conclude all preaching, is how to transition out of texts that do not naturally lead to an invitation.  Streett’s approach to this appears to either make an awkward shift (which is says not to do) or not preach on any topic that does not naturally lead to an invitation (which is what is implied by Appendix C.)  Additionally, Streett makes such an issue of the debate between offering a public invitation or not, that I, having not ever through much about not making at least some kind of invitation, researched this debate.  After reading Appendix D, I almost agree with the position Streett is arguing against!
            A new preacher or student wanting to better understand how to make a public invitation, would be well served to read Chapters 5, 8 (with the understanding that little is offered to assist the verse-by-verse expository preacher unless the text naturally lends itself to offering an invitation), 9, 10 if the worship leader still uses hymns, and 11.  The rest can be ignored if the reader has no interest in the opposing or supporting argument for making the public invitation. 


     [1] Criswell College, “R. Alan Streett,” http://www.criswell.edu/academics/faculty/r-alan-streett/ [accessed October 18, 2009].

*I have no material connection to this book.  This post was, in its entirety or in part, originally written in seminary in partial fulfillment of a M.Div. It may have been redacted or modified for this website.  

Works vs. Grace: Pelagius vs. Augustine

Approach a typical church-going Christian and ask her about, “works vs. grace” and chances are, she will have a position on this debate. Ask her about “original sin” or “the fall” or the “sin nature” and she will have more to say. But ask her about Pelagianism or how Augustine argued against it, and she will probably just shrug her shoulders. The works vs. grace argument started with Paul and James’ writings, but a hotter argument was kindled some 1,600 years ago by a man named Pelagius and his student, Coelestius.

Pelagius, believed to be a devout and pious British monk, left his home, traveling to Rome in our around AD 400, eventually coming to Carthage, North Africa, in AD 409. Through his travels, he grew discouraged with how people were living their lives. “It seemed to him,” writes Erickson, “that an unduly negative view of human nature was having an unfortunate effect upon human behavior. Coupled with an emphasis upon God’s sovereignty, the estimation of human sinfulness seemed to remove all motivation to attempt to live a good life.”[1] His observations led to Pelagius’ position now known as Pelagianism.

Although most of Pelagius’ teachings were actually advanced by his student, Coelestius, Pelagius seems to have believed that Adam, a mortal, would have died had he sinned or not. He also believed that Adam’s sin was only for Adam and has no effect on the human race; salvation can be obtained by following the Law; there were sin-free people before Christ’s incarnation; newborn babies are as Adam was before his first sin; and it is not through Adam that the world has a sin-nature, nor it is through Jesus Christ that we have resurrection.[2] In the simplest summary, Pelagius believed that man can choose to be without sin.[3]
“It was, however, against the Pelagians,” writes Gonzalez, “that Augustine wrote his most important theological works.”[4] Augustine had much to say on this issue, but maybe his simplest statement is found in Confessions. He writes, “I have no hope at all but in thy great mercy.”[5] Augustine wrote on irresistible grace, the sin nature, the effects of the fall on all humanity, predestination, and Adam’s death. Much of what we understand as right theology today comes from the corner of Augustine. (It should however be noted, that Augustine argued for infant baptism as a sacrament while Pelagius said infant baptism is meaningless.)

Summarizing the driving element of Augustine's position encourages us to look at children and their sin (or lack there of). First, Augustine claimed (as most of us would) that he didn't remember feeling like he had a choice to sin as a small child because he (like most of us) couldn't remember the earliest parts of his life. However, when he observed children, he could clearly identify what could be described as sin. His observation was that of the jealousy of a mother's baby when the mother held another baby (although his illustration was slightly more graphic). If we were to follow Augustine's observations today, we could probably observe similar behaviors in small children. To test this, put two toddlers in the same room with one very exciting toy. If they sin, which they likely will, the question that should be asked is if either of these children had the capacity to first recognize a specific behavior as a sin against God, and second, to what extent they could or would choose (throughout their entire lives) not to sin.

Pelagius argued that a person could choose not to sin; however, in order to be perfect under the Law, a person would have to be sinless from the first day of his creation. Psalm 51:5 seems to suggest that David was a sinner from conception. A number of arguments exists today--one very good one made by Dr. Wayne Grudem--is that sin is not something we do, but instead, it is something we are. Although I would only be speculating, I find it reasonable to think that Augustine would agree.

Eventually the Council of Carthage (417) condemned Pelagianism. Sadly, this was not the end of it. A concept of semi-Pelagianism surfaced and was addressed in the Synod of Arles (around 473) and the Council of Orange in 529. On occasion, the ideas of the Pelagians and Semi-Pelagians still surface today.



[1] Millard J. Erickson, Christian Theology (Grand Rapids, Mich: Baker Book House, 1998), 649.
[2] Henry Scowcroft Bettenson and Chris Maunder, editors, Documents of the Christian Church (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999), 58-59.
[3] Ibid.
[4] Justo L. González, The Story of Christianity: The Early Church to the Dawn of the Reformation (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1984), 214.
[5] Bettenson and Maunder, 59.


*This post was, in its entirety or in part, originally written in seminary in partial fulfillment of a M.Div. It may have been redacted or modified for this website.  
** The photo/painting is in the public domain.

Four Views of Hell edited by William Crockett and Stanley Gundry

 Critical Review
of
FOUR VIEWS OF HELL, edited by William Crockett and Stanley N. Gundry

Introduction
Four Views on Hell, of the Bible & Theology Counterpoints series, offers the arguments and counterarguments of four scholars on the topic of hell.  The question is not whether hell exists, but what the Bible says about it.  Is hell literal or metaphorical; everlasting or does it have an end?  John F. Walvoord argues for the literal view, William V. Crockett for the metaphorical view, Zachary J. Hayes for the purgatorial view, and Clark H. Pinnock for the conditional immortality, or annihilationist view.  Subsequently, Walvoord and Crockett subscribe to an eternal position of their respective views; whereas, Hayes and Pinnock’s views have an end although for different reasons.  Although certainly some more than others, each view point is supported by scriptural references.  Therefore, it is not a matter of arguing for what the Bible teaches, but rather, each author attempts to present compelling arguments for his understanding and interpretation of the biblical teaching.  This critique will examine each argument, at times contrasting them against one, two or all three positions of the other writers in an effort to identify the most compelling of the four views. 
Brief Summary
            In contending for the literal view of hell, Walvoord implies an argument for a strictly literal interpretation of all material in the Bible.  Laying the foundation of his position, he says, “For those who believe in the genuineness of biblical revelation and accept the inerrancy of Scripture, the problem is one of understanding of what Scripture teaches.”[1]  He then hints that those who feel eternal punishment does not exist—as Hayes and Pinnock believe—have no problem with this belief if they also deny the inerrancy of Scripture.[2]  Walvord points to both Old and New Testament Scripture to argue that hell is everlasting and that it is a literal place of fire.  While much of his argument is spent advancing the idea of an eternal hell, he does state, “There is sufficient evidence that the fire is literal.”[3]  His primary evidence is the “frequent mention of fire in connection with eternal punishment.”[4]

            Crockett takes little issue with Walvord’s position that hell is eternal, but he sharply disagrees with the Walvord’s view of a literal hell made of an everlasting fire and smoke.[5]  “And herein lies the problem of the literal view:” writes Crockett, “In its desire to be faithful to the Bible, it makes the Bible say too much.  The truth is we do not know what kind of punishment will be meted out to the wicked.”[6]  Instead, Crockett suggests that much of the biblical language is “rabbinic hyperbole” and should be read as such.[7]  Crockett then argues that the literal language seems to contradict itself, and therefore should be seen as a metaphorical representation of hell—not necessarily any less horrific than the literal view, just not actually fire, smoke, and darkness.[8] 

            Hayes, on the other hand, takes an entirely different approach, describing an intermediate place between heaven and hell called purgatory.  It is not that Hayes believes purgatory is hell, but a temporary place of purification in preparation of an eternal life in the presence of God.  At the time of judgment, purgatory will cease to exist, leaving only heaven and hell.[9]  However, in no way is purgatory hell, nor will it become hell.  Hayes’ Roman Catholic argument is well written; however, Hayes dedicates his chapter to purgatory and not hell, so (as Pinnock rightly articulates), Hayes’ argument is not in line with the topic of the book, that is the biblical view of hell.[10]

            Pinnock, being one who supports an emphasis for the profitability of Scripture over inerrancy,[11] suggests that an alternative interpretation of hell is needed, one that does not paint God as one who would condemn the wicked to an everlasting torment.  Pinnock argues the case of the conditional immortality view, which is often referred to as annihilation.  Annihilation, as Pinnock describes, is the idea that those in hell do not suffer forever but instead eventually go out of existence.[12]  He writes, “Being unable to discount the possibility of hell as a final irreversible condition, I am forced to choose between two interpretations of hell: Do the finally impenitent suffer everlasting, conscious punishment (in body and soul, either literally or metaphorically), or do they go out of existence in the second death?  I contend that God does not grant immortality to the wicked to inflict endless pain but will allow them to finally perish.”[13]  Although not necessary for his view, Pinnock appears to find favor with a metaphorical view like that of Crockett; except that in Pinnock’s idea of hell, there is an end and the suffers are snuffed out completely, potentially by fire or some other metaphorical punishment.

Critical interaction with the authors’ work
            As the reader delves into the four views presented in Four Views on Hell, it becomes apparent that it is not the view of hell that is most significant, but instead how each writer treats Scripture.  At stake for Walvoord, is the idea that anything in the Bible could potentially be seen as metaphorical.  He starts by identifying how the people of the Old Testament, inter testamental period, and the New Testament understood words and concepts such as shoel, and hades.  However, to use these descriptions to support a literal view, one must also accept the earlier understanding of shoel and hades as literal.  Crockett challenges this thinking saying, “. . . in ancient times teachers often used words symbolically to underscore their points (rabbinic hyperbole, as we now call it.)”[14] Crockett sites the biblical examples of Luke 14:26 were Jesus calls his disciples to hate their mothers and fathers, Matthew 5:29 were Jesus tells his followers to gouge out their eyes if they cause them to sin, and Luke 9:60 explaining that the dead should bury their own dead.[15]  If indeed these statements were to be taken literally, it would stand to reason that either the disciples recorded in the remainder of the Bible were sinless or they had gouged their eyes out.  Yet, we do not see anything written about the disciples’ self-inflicted blindness, lending support to Crockett’s point.  Crockett also argues (against Walvoord) that the Jewish writers were seeking vivid images that were mostly symbolic.  He writes, “The object was to paint the most awful picture possible, no matter how incompatible the images.”[16] 

            In countering Crockett and the metaphorical view of Scripture, Walvoord suggests, “If prophecy cannot be interpreted literally, as they believe, it raises important questions about the literalness of hell itself and, in large measure, determines the view of eternal punishment that the individual may take.”[17]  He further states that those who do not view prophecy literally, take this position because they do not want to accept what the Bible teaches about the future, especially about hell and punishment.[18]  Walvoord offers support for a literal view of prophecy and by extension, hell, stating that over fifty percent of all prophecies have been fulfilled.  “In fact, it is difficult to find a single fulfilled prophecy that was fulfilled in other than a literal fashion.”[19]  However, a survey of the symbolic dreams of Genesis 40 and 41, which were interpreted by Joseph, lend more support for Crockett’s view over Walvoord’s. [20]  Despite his potential overstatement, Walvoord raises a valid question: What should be treated literally and what metaphorically? Walvoord’s approach removes the questions all together by treating everything literally.

            Crockett, who incidentally also edited the book, treats the specific scriptures that call for an eternal punishment as literal but the ones that suggest a fiery and black hell as figurative.  He suggests that the literal view is an embarrassment to Christian doctrine,[21] hinting that this may be the motivating factor for his interpretation.  (Pinnock also holds that this doctrine is troubling for Christianity, although he does not use the word ‘embarrassment.’)  Most of Crockett’s argument hinges two issues.  First, is the idea that other biblical passages are metaphorical, or “rabbinic hyperbole,” and therefore it stands to reason that the same is true regarding the passages explaining hell.  And second, is that the idea that the described fire does not conform to the physical attributes of fire on earth, therefore it must be symbolic and not actual fire.  To support his first point, Crockett uses much of Jesus’ words including examples previously mentioned as well as Matthew 7:5, 19:24, and Mark 6:23 among many others.  In support of rabbinic hyperbole, Crockett cites a number of extra-biblical documents written around the same period.  The Old Testament is used to make the same point of fire, showing that God is a “consuming fire” (Deut. 4:24), sitting on a throne “flaming with fire,” from which a “river of fire” flows (Dan. 7:9-10).[22]  Crockett also uses the New Testament’s use of fire.  But the most telling argument is Crockett’s use of hell’s opposite—heaven.  Discussing what the Bible says about heaven and why it is reasonable to think that it is metaphorical (but still great) he implies that the description of hell is also metaphorical (but still horrific.)[23]  To make his second major point, Crockett writes, “The strongest reason for taking them as metaphors is the conflicting language used in the New Testament to describe hell.”[24]  He takes issues with the idea that hell could be a place of fire and darkness when fire produces light.[25]  He cannot understand how spiritual beings could feel the pain without nerve endings.[26]  His first point is rather convincing; his second requires that one accept that hell conforms to the earthly rules of physics.

            Because Hayes placed his focus on the Roman Catholic view of purgatory rather than hell, his view does not fit within the scope of the book’s objective.  Hayes, like Pinnock, has the deepest desire to believe that the previous two arguments—both of which stand on the interpretation of eternal punishment—is too harsh of a loving God.  However, unlike Pinnock’s view of annihilation, purgatory is where those who die with unfinished lives can be purified.[27]  Hayes still argues that this purification is by no means pleasant but not eternal, and his Roman Catholic theology dictates that it is not the final destination.  Unfortunately, much support for his stance must come from Apocryphal writings and Catholic tradition rather than the Cannon accepted by the protestant faith.
  
            Pinnock’s argument, while interesting and compassionate, offers the greatest threat to the traditional view of hell and, more significantly, the approach to scriptural interpretation and generally accepted theological methods.  He seems ready to look for the most acceptable view rather than the one most fully supported by Scripture.  At one point, he writes, “Unfortunately, according to these doughty Princetonians, millions still get tortured forever even under their generous scenario.  We need something better than that.”[28]  At another point, Pinnock says, “Theology sometimes needs reforming; maybe it needs reforming in the matter that lies before us.  I believe it does and invite the reader to consider the possibility as a thought experiment.”[29]  He even asks, “Why do evangelicals who freely changed old traditions in the name of the Bible refuse to adamantly even to consider changing this one?”[30]  Pinnock’s concern is that people are not reading their Bibles because of the doctrine of hell, and therefore the doctrine is becoming a stumbling block.[31] He sees a non-profitable doctrine that needs an overhaul to regain a comfortable position again.  He writes,
 It is conceivable that the position I am advancing on the nature of hell is most adequate not only in terms of exegesis and theological, rational coherence, as I hope to prove, but also better in its potential actually to preserve the doctrine of hell for Christian eschatology.  For given the silence attending the traditional view today even among its supporters, the whole idea of hell may be about to disappear unless a better interpretation can be offered about its nature.[32]
       So, if given the opportunity to revise the doctrine of hell, what is it that Pinnock is proposing?  Using a short-supply of biblical passages, some extra-biblical religious writing, and the work of a number of church fathers, Pinnock argues for a hell where people suffer and are punished but eventually are extinguished.  This, he contends, is more in line with a god of love.[33]  While the counterarguments of the three other positions hold a great deal of respect for Pinnock’s view, they still content that it fails to take into consideration the larger body of biblical evidence.

Conclusion
            While Hayes and Pinnock hold a deep desire to see mercy and love in God’s justice (a desire we should all hold), their views are the farthest from the mainline and evangelical Christian views.  This alone is not a sufficient reason to discredit their views; however, of the four views, these two rely the least on the Bible, utilizing extra-biblical texts, reason, or simply their desire to see something other than biblical teaching.  However, this author believes the Bible, not tradition or desire to see something better should be used to determine the truth.  Walvoord and Crockett draw their ideas from the Bible and yet they come to different conclusions.  Walvoord holds to a literal view of hell and takes a literal view to the entire Bible.  Crockett’s argument does a nice job of demonstrating the error in Walvoord’s approach in laying out what turns out to be the most convincing of the four views.  However, Crockett’s view, that is, that hell is everlasting and awful but not necessarily fire and smoke, must be approached with great caution as well.  Surely not every item in the Bible can be seen as metaphorical, but from his approach, Crockett does not identify a method to determine what is literal and what is rabbinic hyperbole.  He only holds that hell is not literal.

Bibliography
Crockett, William V. and Stanley N. Gundry. Four Views on Hell. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan Publishing, 1996.

Elwell, Walter A. Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology. Baker reference library. Grand Rapids, Mich: Baker Books, 2001.
 

     [1] William V. Crockett and Stanley N. Gundry, Four Views on Hell (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan Publishing, 1996), 12.
     [2] Ibid.
     [3] Ibid., 28.
     [4] Ibid.
     [5] Ibid., 29-31, 43-76.
     [6] Ibid., 54.
     [7] Ibid., 50.
     [8] Ibid., 30-31, 49-50.
     [9] Ibid., 93.
     [10] Ibid., 127.
     [11] Walter A. Elwell, Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology, Baker reference library (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Books, 2001), 927.
     [12] Crockett, 142.
     [13] Ibid., 142-143.
     [14] Ibid., 30.
     [15] Ibid.
     [16] Ibid., 30-31.
     [17] Ibid., 78-79.
     [18] Ibid. 79.
     [19] Crockett, 79.
     [20] Walvoord states that he has written an exposition on every prophecy of the Bible although he does not state whether that includes the dreams of Genesis 40 and 41.
     [21] Crockett, 43-44.
     [22] Ibid., 53.
     [23] Ibid., 55-61.
     [24] Ibid., 59.
     [25] Ibid.
     [26] Ibid., 30.
     [27] Ibid., 96-97.
     [28] Ibid., 150.
     [29] Ibid., 143.
     [30] Ibid., 160.
     [31] Ibid., 136,  148.
     [32] Ibid., 137.
     [33] Ibid., 151-153, 165.


 *I have no material connection to this book.  This post was, in its entirety or in part, originally written in seminary in partial fulfillment of a M.Div. It may have been redacted or modified for this website. 

An Interview with Tom Davis

[The following conversation between me and Tom Davis was originally published by Burnside Writer's Collective, on September 29, 2009.]

I met Tom Davis a few years ago at K2 Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. I was there to check out the cool warehouse-church with the beach sandal billboard; Tom was there to tell the church about suffering orphans, young girls entering the sex-trade, and a generation decimated by HIV/Aids. Three minutes into Tom’s story, the billboard became insignificant.

Tom Davis is the author of Red Letters: Living a Faith That Bleeds, Fields of the Fatherless: Discover the Joy of Compassionate Living, Confessions of a Good Christian Guy: The Secrets Men Keep and the Grace that Saves Them, and his latest book is a work of fiction titled, Scared: A Novel on the Edge of the World. He’s the CEO of Children’s HopeChest, encourages us all to drink Saint’s Coffee, and daily lives James 1:27.



Bryan: Tom, you went from a post-modern church planter in Texas to an advocate for orphans all over the world. What sparked the change?

Tom: In the mid-’90s I started making trips to Russian orphanages. The kids I met in those places changed my life forever. These orphans stopped being statistics and became human beings. They were beautiful kids filled with hopes and dreams for their futures but without help, there was no way to fulfill them. Most of them were forced to leave the orphanage at fifteen to sixteen years of age. 15% of those kids would end up committing suicide in two years, 70% of the girls would end up as prostitutes and 80% of the boys would end up on the streets or in jail. Those statistics shot an arrow through my heart. I couldn’t walk away and do nothing.

Bryan: What has been the most rewarding moment of your ministry?

Tom: Only one?! I met this little girl named Valya in Russia. She had a terrible story about being severely abused by her father who was later killed. Her mother was an alcoholic and blamed her for her father’s death. She was so upset with her she beat her incessantly until one day she couldn’t stand to look at her anymore and dropped her off at an orphanage. Valya never heard from her mother again.

This little girl was so amazing. Talent and beauty radiated from her life. Her dream was to enter college and play the flute. This was impossible because she could never afford it. We were able to buy her a flute, help her with her education, and take her to St. Petersburg to see the symphony and a ballet!

Bryan: What do you find most challenging about your ministry for orphans?


Tom: The need is always greater than our ability to meet it. We go into villages in Uganda and people are eating cow dung and boiling grass to survive. That kind of desperation is overwhelming. With the help of our partners, we meet those needs only to find out there are fifty villages within a few hundred miles just like it. We keep going, by God’s grace, helping as many as we can.

Bryan: It has been said that America is becoming more homogenized, often influenced by our media and entertainment outlets rather than the circumstances of our neighbors. If you think this might be true, what does it mean for orphans around the world? Has this hurt or helped? (What are the effects of say, Bono’s One Campaign or the movie, “Orphan”—no matter how bizarre the twisted ending might be?)

Tom: I hate making blanket statements, so forgive me in advance. Media has numbed most of us into thinking that people starving in Africa and girls in the sex-trade industry are just stories made up in Hollywood. The sensory overload causes people to shut down because they hear it all the time and many people think others are handling the issues.

Every single Christ-follower, has a biblical obligation to get involved in helping the poor. There are over two thousand versus in the Bible talking about poverty and many are commands for us to help those in need.

Bryan: Where do your see your ministry for the orphans in five years? Ten? Twenty?

Tom: I’ll do this the rest of my life. The goal I’ve set for myself and Children’s HopeChest is to care for one million orphans over the next thirty years. There are over one hundred and fifty million orphans in the world and trying to reach them is a daunting task. But if we can reach a million, a generation, then that generation will reach themselves. One million will reach one hundred and fifty million.

Bryan: When given the opportunity, what do you tell the churches you visit?

Tom: I tell them about how passionate God is about them caring for widows and orphans. If “pure and undefiled religion is caring for widows and orphans,” (James 1:27), then every single church on the planet must to be involved in orphan ministry.

Bryan: What lessons do you feel the American Church should learn from your ministry and experiences overseas working with orphans?

Tom: Every time I go overseas I fool myself into thinking it’s about me helping them. Although that’s true, I end up receiving way more from them then I’m able to give. Being with the poor is one of the greatest activities on earth. As Mother Theresa said, “When I’m with the poor, I’m with Jesus.”

Bryan: In what ways can someone get involved, from the lowest level to the highest?

Tom: Contact me at tdavis@hopechest.org or check out the Children’s HopeChest webpage at www.hopechest.org. We’re all about involvement. We’ll take you overseas, get you connected with orphans and entire orphan villages. We’ll even show you how you can help a child for the rest of their life, for less than you spend on coffee each month. You can even buy coffee that fights poverty at www.saintscoffee.com. For every pound you buy, you feed an orphan for a month.

Bryan: Is there anything else you’d like to add?

Tom: Helping the poor, the widow, or the orphan changes your life forever. There isn’t a better way to connect with the heart of God. In Matthew 25 Jesus talked about how significant these acts are in the kingdom of heaven. God turns to the righteous in eternity and says, “Well done, good and faithful servant. I was hungry, and you gave me something to eat. I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink. I was naked and you clothed me, sick and you came to me, in prison and you visited me.” Those are the words I want to hear.

Twitter users, follow Tom Davis @cthomasdavis.

*I have no material connection to the books mentioned in this interview. 

How the Gospel Moves

The early church suffered persecution; in that, there is no dispute.  The effort of the persecution was to stop the grown of the Church, mostly through the elimination of the spread of the gospel.  Initially, the persecution was sporadic, raising up in only one area at a time and then settling for a time.  Then the persecution became organized, meaning it was planned and systematic, and then universal—that is, it was everywhere.  The reaction of the Church grew with the persecution, as did the Church.  As the persecution changed and adapted, so did the Jesus’ people.  

The persecutions shaped how the believers gathered and worshiped.  In many ways, the collection of the believers became secretive and private, which is not a good way to grow a church body.  But if it were not, the meetings would draw negative and unwanted attention.  (Sometimes these meeting were even held in the catacombs next to the decomposing bodies of Christians who were killed for their faith.)

In his book The Story of Christianity: The Early Church to the Dawn of the Reformation, Gonzalez says, “It is clear that the enormous spread of the Gospel in those first few centuries was not due to the full-time missionaries, but rather to the many Christians who traveled for other reasons—slaves, merchants, exiles condemned to work in the mines, and the like” (1984, p. 99).   But only 85 pages earlier, Gonzalez writes, “The political unity wrought by the Roman Empire allowed the early Christians to travel without having to fear bandits or local wars” (p. 14).  In Paul’s day (as we find in the book of Acts), Paul and his companions were able to travel from city to city sharing the gospel.  They could freely preach in the open and the only people they had to fear were their fellow Jews or the trinket merchants of other religious systems.  It was not the government that gave Paul grief, but the religious types, trying to protect their religious ways.  

However, a couple centuries later, the great persecutions seem to have removed the ability for “professional” missionaries and church planters to work as they did.  The persecution brought the Great Commission right into the lives of everyday believers.  The very thing trying to stop the growth of the Church was also the thing that birthed an evangelical flame within the individuals of the body.  Now, taking out one person had very little impact upon the mission to move the gospel to the darker places, as the traders, slaves, soldiers, and exiles did.  

And if I may, I would like to look at the present through a lens from history.  In nations where Christianity is being greatly persecuted, the gospel still moves.  Yes, I believe it is in part due to brave missionaries; however, history might suggest it is through the simple movement of faithful believers, submitting to the direction of the Holy Spirit.  If we can learn anything from history, it is that not only do the brave missionaries deserve our support, but also the believers, already in the nation, who can take the gospel where it needs to go. And we should also realize that even in our comfortable little unpersecuted bubbles, we should not rely on the "professional missionaries," the books, tracts, music, TV shows, preachers, etc, we should carry the gospel wherever we go.

González, Justo L. The story of Christianity: The early Church to the dawn of the Reformation. Vol 1. San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1984.


Systematic Theology by Wayne Grudem

In the Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, B. Demarest defines systematic theology as, "The attempt to reduce religious truth to a coherent and relevant whole for the church."[1] This definition is okay, but I think Grudem boils it down to a practical explanation when he repeats the definition of his former professor, John Frame, writing, "Systematic theology is any study that answers the question, 'What does the whole Bible teach us today?' about any given topic."[2]  And then Grudem, a seminary professor at Phoenix Seminary,  sets out to cover a wide breath of topics in his book, Systematic Theology.

There are many books on systematic theology, some even with the same title, but few are as popular today as Grudem's.  In simple writing that is easy to understand and laid out in a logical format, Grudem explores the issues of biblical doctrine.  Taking them on one-by-one, a student of the Bible can gain a good grasp of the larger doctrines and teaching of the Bible.

Systematic theology generally asks, "What does the entire Bible say about this?"  In addition to his own scholarship, Grudem offers plenty of Scripture in his attempt to answer many questions about doctrine.  In my systematic theology courses, I was not required to purchase Grudem's book, but I often found it offered insight that the other texts didn't seem to shed light upon.  It also serves as a great starting point when diving into the study of a particular doctrine, issue, or question, but if I am going to be fair, I don't think it should be the only theology book on your shelf.  (I do however, believe it will be the one most used.)   

Not too long ago, I stumbled across a podcast from Scottsdale Bible Church in Arizona, where Dr. Grudem taught doctrine to a Sunday school class.  In 118 one-hour sessions, Grudem teaches classes that follow the table of contents of his book.  Together with the book, I don't think there is a better free education on systematic theology available today.  I highly recommend it.   

To subscribe to or download Wayne Grudem's 118 audio lectures he uses to walk through his book, Systematic Theology: An Introduction to Biblical Doctrine, click here


1. Walter Elwell, Evangelical Dictionary of Theology (Baker reference library. Grand Rapids, Mich: Baker Academic, 2001), 1162.  

2. Wayne A. Grudem, Systematic Theology: An Introduction to Biblical Doctrine (Leicester, England: Inter-Varsity Press, 1994), 21.

*I have no material connection to this book or the Scottsdale Bible Church Podcast.

Army Chaplain: Worship, Counseling, Visitation, and Wartime Readiness

             Just before entering the Promised Land, Moses preached to the Israelites in Arabah.  Among Moses’ many directives were instructional laws for warfare.  He said, “And when you draw near to battle, the priest shall come forward and speak to the people and shall say to them, ‘Hear, O Israel, today you are drawing near for battle against your enemies: Let not your heart faint.  Do not fear or panic or be in dread of them, for the LORD your God is he who goes with you to fight for you against your enemies, to give you victory” (Deut. 20:2-5, ESV).  Priests spoke first, then the commanders.  At Jericho, the priests blew the trumpets that led the people to shout and bring the wall down (Josh. 6).  These are but two examples of how God used priests among the Israelite warriors.  The chaplains of the modern American Army are not used in the same manner as the Israelite priests, but they still play a vital role to the force through offering worship services, counseling, visitation, and wartime readiness preparedness.  

            The mission of the Army Chaplaincy, in part, is to “Provide religious support to America’s Army across the full spectrum of operations” (U. S. Chaplaincy Corp 2009, Sec 2:1).  It is for this reason that the chaplain prepares worship services in both peace and wartime, in the garrison and on the battlefield.  On occasion, the chaplain must work outside what would be considered typical for clergy.  Rabbi Max Wall serves as a great example, having provided an Easter service in Bavaria at the conclusion of World War II (Bergen 2004, 210-211).  Indeed, in an Army rapidly growing more religiously diverse and serving in atypical missions throughout the world, the ability for a chaplain to remain flexible without violating his or her own religious tenants is paramount. 

            In recent years, counseling has moved up to a top priority of the chaplain corp.  Army Chief of Staff, General George Casey Jr. says,
After seven years of continuous combat however, our Army is out-of-balance.  The stress on Soldiers and Families has had an impact across the force.  Yet our Values remain non-negotiable.  Precisely for this reason, the Chaplain Corps’ mission of providing spiritual, moral, and ethical counseling is critically important (U. S. Chaplaincy Corp 2009, Sec 1:i).
In an effort to keep “spiritual, moral, and ethical counseling” in a position of high importance, the Army Chaplaincy Strategic Plan 2009-2014 requires the strengthening of existing support programs and the creation of more of them; in addition to recruiting higher caliber chaplains and opening more opportunities for soldier and family counseling.  Chaplains regularly find themselves counseling wounded warriors and their families, soldiers transitioning out of the Army, and career soldiers enduring multiple extended deployments.  Suicide rates are higher among soldiers than the rest of the population, and chaplains are serving on the forward front in efforts to prevent future suicides as well as other physical, mental, and spiritual hardships of the suffering soldier.

            Finally, to accomplish the first two primary areas of the Army chaplaincy—worship and counseling—the chaplain must put a greater effort into visitation.  It is the ministry of presence that allows the chaplain to serve the soldier’s needs, psychically, morally, and spiritually.   Hospital visits are just as important as meeting each solider on the battlefield as is time with the troops in garrison and training.  Presently, the chaplain must go to the soldier, no matter where his or she is, because it is becoming increasingly unlikely that the soldier will come to the chaplain.

            And through out all of the chaplain’s efforts, the reality of war must remain in the forefront of planning and training.  Not only must Army chaplains help prepare soldiers and their families for wartime, they themselves must be ready.  The Army Chaplaincy Strategic Plan 2009-2014 has come to realize that chaplains too must be ready to go anywhere in the world at a moment’s notice, at any time.  Without a doubt, in the face of a changing world, the Army chaplaincy must be changing too.



Reference List
Bergen, Doris L. The Sword of the Lord: Military Chaplain from the First to the Twenty-First Century.  Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame, 2004.


U. S. Army, Chaplain Corp. 2009.  The Army Chaplaincy Strategic Plan 2009-2014. http://www.chapnet.army.mil/ (Accessed February 28, 2009)


*This post was, in its entirety or in part, originally written in seminary in partial fulfillment of a M.Div. It may have been redacted or modified for this website. 


Holy Bible: Mosaic (NLT)

A couple of years ago, I was approached about contributing to a project that wanted to create something the editors were calling a "meditative Bible."  The idea, if I understood it correctly, was to produce (or find) a series of content that on it's own would be interesting, but when collected with other related material would point to a theme and offer something the reader could ponder, pray on, and contemplate throughout the week.  Each piece would be like the single stone or pottery shard of a mosaic, but when collected together, would create a picture of the Divine.  The result of this project is Holy Bible: Mosaic, published by Tyndale House and bound together with the New Living Translation (NLT) of the Holy Bible.

Holy Bible: Mosaic is really two books with one binding.  The front section is the meditative material, which I'll get to in a moment.  The remainder of the book, over 1,300 pages is the Bible.  It's the New Living Translation and free of intrusive notes (other than an occasional footnote), study material, or factoids as are found in other devotional Bibles.  There are however, markers and a page number in the side margins to indicate additional material in the front section of the book that is related to or inspired the mosaic work.  The last portion of this section of Holy Bible: Mosaic includes a basic Hebrew/Greek dictionary and an index, along with a concordance.  It's also worth noting that the pages are a different type of paper so there is no confusion as to what is the duel-authored Word of God and what is the material we assembled for the meditations.

The other section, which is bound in the front portion of the book, has a page numbering system distinct from the biblical material and is printed on a different color page-- more of a cream color, heaver paper.  It is this material that makes Mosaic different from other study or devotional Bibles.  This section is organized by weeks, with themes following the Church calendar (it is not strictly Church calendar material; the calendar simply servers as a way of selecting themes).  Each week includes a colorful selection of art, a suggested Bible reading, quotes, poems, hymns, and a contemporary essay written by a living Christian.  Within the front section, every century of Christianity from every naturally inhabited continent is represented.

The incredible thing about Mosaic is the diversity of Christ followers that can be found with its pages. Some names are more recognizable early classics like Clement I, Ignatius, Irenaeus, Justin Martyr, Tertullian, Ambrose, and Augustine.  And of course there are quotes from guys like Martin Luther, John Calvin, Ulrich Zwingli, William Tyndale, John Owen, and John Wesley.  Some of the more recent writers include E. M. Bounds, Nathaniel Hawthorne, John Charles Ryle, Karl Barth, C.S. Lewis, Martin Luther King Jr., A. W. Tozer, and even Mark Driscoll, Dan Kimball, and Donald Miller.  And then some of the contemporary contributors, with names you might not recognize, include Jay Blevens, Jordan Green, Beyth Hogue, Tom Fuller, Sarah Cunningham, Ruth Tuttle Conrad, Mark Miller, and Derek Williams.

This book is full of poetry, art, and thoughtful prose, and all of it is inspired by Scripture and the magnitude of God.   If you'd like to learn more about Holy Bible: Mosaic, please visit www.HolyBibleMosaic.com.

*Amazon purchases from this site help support the ministry of SaltyBeliever.com.  Purchase Holy Bible: Mosaic here.  

Planning Your Preaching by Stephen Nelson Rummage

Critical Book Review
Of
Planning Your Preaching by Stephen Nelson Rummage

Bibliographical Entry
 Rummage, Stephen Nelson. Planning Your Preaching: A Step-by-Step Guide for Developing a One-Year Preaching Calendar.  Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications, 2002.

Author Information
            Stephen Nelson Rummage is the author of two books—Praying With a Purpose: a 28-Day Journey into an Empowered Prayer Life, which he co-authored with his wife, and Planning Your Preaching: a Step-by-Step Guide for Developing a One-Year Preaching Calendar, which is the subject of this review.  Rummage was ordained to the ministry in 1991 and has served as Senior Pastor of First Baptist Church in Cary, North Carolina, Hickory Baptist Church in Charlotte, North Carolina, and most recently at Bell Shoals Baptist Church in Brandon, Florida.  His undergraduate degree was granted from University of North Carolina in Greensboro and he holds a Masters of Divinity from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and a Doctorate in Philosophy in Preaching from New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.  In addition, Professor Rummage has held teaching positions at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, and presently at Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary.  He and Michelle—his wife of 18-years—have one son.[1]   

Content Summary
             Stephen Rummage has not set out to write a ‘how to develop a single sermon’ book; but instead, he shares, “how all of your preaching can fit together into one cohesive plan so that your pulpit ministry can grow in its effectiveness” (p 13).  Because Rummage believes that great sermons are not single events, but a collection of many planned events, he writes Planning your Preaching with the purpose to “help pastors put together a quarterly, six-month, or yearly schedule for what they will preach” (p 14).  He writes to a reader who is presently serving in the pastorate and planning a Sunday morning, Sunday evening, and a mid-week sermon; however, the material is easily adaptable to fit a different combination of service planning.

Sadly, it is necessary that Rummage must open his book with an argument for advanced planning on what one will preach, and even how a preacher should preach.  Preaches are, according to Rummage, to preach biblically, consistently, persuasively, and patiently (pp 18-21).  And using Scriptures, examples, illustrations, and logical arguments, Rummage lays out a convincing argument for the advance planning of sermons and sermon series.  Finally, he is able to move on to the next chapter, where any preacher who has picked up this book wants to start—determining a preaching strategy.  Covering the foundation of the planning process, subjects such as style of sermon delivery (notes vs. no notes, for example), understanding the needs and demographics of the congregation, and determining the objectives of the preaching are handled in the second chapter.  Once this is understood, Rummage instructs preachers to pack up their calendars, some reading materials, and study Bibles and go somewhere, alone, to construct a preaching plan for a year.  At this planning retreat the preacher will determine which series he will work though, with a distinction being made between thematic series and book series (p 66).  Rummage makes a strong case for expository preaching, be it verse-by-verse through an entire book, parts of a book, or even selected passages from each chapter of the book.  In any case, work must be done to determine how that will look and Chapter 4 provides the nuts-and-bolts of this kind of preparation.
Chapters 5 and 6 deal with the Ordinances and special days, respectively; and Chapter 7 addresses planning for doctrinal preaching.  Chapter 8 opens the door for pastoral preaching, that is, on a topic rather than what is customarily understood as expository (although Rummage argues that pastoral preaching can be expository preaching with the right motives (pp 169-171)); but, Rummage warns, “If a pastor plans his preaching around addressing personal problems in his congregation, he will have a tendency to preach on what people want to hear rather than what God wants to say” (177).

In what this author believes is the most fascinating chapter, Chapter 9, Rummage addresses the use of the Christian Year and the lectionary.  While this chapter is not necessary to the main theme of the book, and many preachers might be tempted to pass over it, Rummage provides some material that if used in sermon planning, can infuse interesting ideas that are not well known or understood in today’s Evangelical churches.  “During the past several decades,” argues Rummage, “a new interest in the Christian Year has developed, even among churches that had once eschewed its use” (p185).  This being the case, Rummage provides some tools to successfully using the Christian Year and a lectionary.  And Chapter 10 closes the book with how to put the preaching plan into action.   


Evaluation
             Generally being overly critical of how-to books that lay out a specific plan for doing anything in the ministry, I actually found this book extremely helpful.  Planning your Preaching, served as the guide to my first attempt to plan a year of sermons.  I am extremely happy with that plan and Rummage’s guidance deserves the bulk of the earthly credit.   The book is well written and Rummage provides enough explanation to make his points but does not overwork the obvious.  His experience pours from the pages, yet, he does not simply fall back to it; rather, he provides logical information that is not depended upon the experience of only one preacher.  If there were any change that might improve the work, it would be the removal of the first chapter.  Much of the first chapter serves to argue and support the idea of planning expository preaching; however, anyone taking Planning Your Preaching up to the counter and shelling out cash for it, does not likely need to hear these arguments.  On the other hand, as an assigned reading, the chapter does make for a nice opener for any student that may not agree with Rummage or planning a one-year preaching calendar.


              Planning Your Preaching is not only a helpful tool for preachers, novice and experienced alike, it is valuable for the soon-to-be preacher.  In fact, those just entering the pastorate would be well served to get started on the right foot.  Keeping a copy of Planning Your Preaching on a nearby shelf in the office is a great start.  Taking it with them on a planning retreat is even better!



     [1] Bell Shoals Baptist Church, “In Transition: From the Search Committee” PDF brochure attachment, http://66.132.241.194/pages/page.asp?page_id=57582 [accessed October 18, 2009].


*I have no material connection to this book.  This post was, in its entirety or in part, originally written in seminary in partial fulfillment of a M.Div. It may have been redacted or modified for this website. 


Morality: The Chaplain is On Point

             As I'm getting closer to raising my right hand and re-entering the Army as a chaplain candidate, friends and family with little military background or understanding have asked what a chaplain does.  As I share my understanding of the answer with them, there is a bit of a surprise.  It seems many people feel the chaplain is just in the Army for the Sunday service and funerals.  It's much more.  I wrote a brief discussion on this for a chaplain course in seminary and felt it might be insightful.  
 
          The United States Army has every expectation that its personnel will act with high integrity and moral fortitude.  However, both of these terms are ambiguous and somewhat undefined by the military.  How then is a soldier, noncommissioned officer, or commander to know what is required of him, her, or the unit?  To assist in this area, the Army has placed some of the responsibility with the chaplain.

            Of the seven Army Values, two specifically deal with morality: Integrity and Personal Courage.  The definition of integrity, according to the Army, is, “Do what’s right, legally and morally” (GoArmy.com 2009); personal courage means to, “Face fear, danger or adversity (physical or moral)” (GoArmy.com 2009).  A third Army Value is Respect, instructing soldiers to “treat people as they should be treated” (GoArmy.com 2009).  Another example of the need for interpretation of morality includes the Noncommissioned Officer’s Creed, which states in part, “I will not compromise my integrity, nor my moral courage” (NCOCorps.net 2009).  Yet, these values and creeds don’t go into any further detail as to what is morality.  Because most people believe that morality find its roots in religion, it only make sense that the chaplain would be the person to teach the soldiers and advise command on it. 

            The chaplain is a staff officer, and as such, has “direct access to the commander” (AR 165-1, 4-5a 2004, 8).  In addition, Army Regulation dictates that, “Chaplains will advise the commander and staff on matters of religion, morals, and morale” (AR 165-1, 4-5a 2004, 8).   Therefore, it is safe to assume that the chaplain is expected to be the interpreter of situational events dealing with morality.  Commanders and soldiers alike should be able to approach the chaplain for moral advise, but in order for the individual to trust the chaplain, the chaplain must be credible, him or herself living a life of example in the areas of morality, integrity, and respect.

            In addition to being an advisor, the chaplain is also a watchdog.  Anne C. Loveland explains the chaplain’s moral and humanitarian responsibilities:
The chaplain manuals issued in 1984 and 1989 extend the chaplain’s purview to include illegal, immoral, or inhumane practices during combat.  Not only was he supposed to aid the commander in preventing such practices, but he also was specifically directed to report to him possible violations of the laws of war, as well as such practices as ‘dehumanizing treatment of friendly troops, enemy prisoners of war (EPW), or civilians; violations of codes of morality; illegal acts, desecrations of sacred places, and disrespect for human life (Bergen 2004, 242-243).
Anne Loveland’s statement clearly points out that the chaplain is not simply a provider of Sunday services or an administer of the sacraments.  The chaplain is also expected to provide advice to soldiers and commanders regarding the morality of their actions and behaviors.  And when soldiers and commanders exercise behavior that does not demonstrate the moral strength expected of them, regulation requires that the chaplain report the violations.

            War has a tendency to bring about some of the world’s worst atrocities.  When America commits these atrocities—such as the My Lai massacre or the torture and inhumane treatment at Abu Ghraib Prison—America looses credibility among the other nations of the world.  In addition, American soldiers could live the rest of their lives with the guilt of their behavior brought about from war.  For some, this proves too unbearable and they resort to drugs, alcohol, or even suicide.   And often the quality of life for the surviving victims of war crimes is greatly reduced.  The chaplain is not only responsible for the spiritual wellbeing of individual soldiers of his unit (or parish), he or she is also responsible for providing sound advice to the commander and seeing that the unit performs its mission with high moral standards.  When the chaplain fails in this particular role, little good can come from the remainder of his or her religious duties.           

Reference List
Bergen, Doris L. The Sword of the Lord: Military Chaplain from the First to the Twenty-First Century.  Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame, 2004. 
GoArmy.com. Soldier Live: Living the Army Values. http://www.goarmy.com/life/living_the_army_values.jsp (accessed February 19, 2009).
Headquarters of the Department of the Army. 2004. Army Regulation 165-1: Chaplain Activities in the United States Army (March, 25). By Order of the Secretary of the Army, Peter J. Schoomaker.
NCOCorps.net. U.S. Army NCO Creed. http://www.ncocorps.net/more/us_army_nco_creed.htm (accessed February 19, 2009).

*This post was, in its entirety or in part, originally written in seminary in partial fulfillment of a M.Div. It may have been redacted or modified for this website.
**Photo Info: "Staff Sgt. Miguel A. Martinez-Velazquez, chaplain's assistant noncommissioned officer in charge, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, shelters 3rd BCT Brigade Chaplain Maj. Paul Jaedicke from incoming fire during the role play training for chaplain and chaplain's assistants Aug. 3rd at the Joint Readiness Training Center. The chaplains and thier assistants are training for an upcoming deployment in support of the war on terror. (U.S. Army Photo by Pfc. Kimberly Cole, 40th Public Affairs Office) This photo is registered under a Creative Commons license: http://www.flickr.com/photos/soldiersmediacenter/ / CC BY 2.0


Like a Child, Matthew 18:1-4

  [1] At that time the disciples came to Jesus, saying, “Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?” [2] And calling to him a child, he put him in the midst of them [3] and said, “Truly, I say to you, unless you turn and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. [4] Whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.  [Matthew 18:1-4, ESV]

While Jesus and his disciples were in Capernaum, some of his disciples approached Jesus and asked him who was going to be the most important person in heaven.  It's possible that they wanted to understand how people would be ranked in heaven, or maybe they wanted to hear some kind of self-conformation because they were early, devoted followers of Jesus, or maybe they were feeling insecure because Jesus had recently asked Simon Peter to go fishing for the miraculous fish with a shekel in its mouth.  Measuring their motives resides mostly in the realm of speculation, but it's not much of a stretch to see where they were going with a question like this.

The disciples might have thought that Jesus would think about it and then point at one of them, maybe Peter, maybe John, maybe the person who brought forward the question.  Instead, Jesus sees a child nearby and calls him or her over.  The disciples were probably confused.  "This child is going to be the most important person in heaven?" they might have murmured to one another, "What!?!"

And Jesus says to them, "Truly, I say to you, unless you turn and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven" (Matt 18:3).  He was not telling them they needed to turn around the aging process or that only little kids go to heaven.  No, Jesus wasn't talking about anything physical; he was calling them to change (or turn around) their thinking or not only would they not be the greatest in heaven, they wouldn't even get in.  This must have been a little shocking for the disciples, maybe a little humiliating.  They were probably thinking, what do you me like a little child; what traits of a child should I try to emulate?

Then Jesus told them, "Whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven" (Matt 18:4).  Humility, a common theme of Jesus' ministry and preaching, comes forward again.  Here the disciples are desiring to be the greatest in heaven and again, Jesus calls them to humility.  

I have two boys and at times I don't see humility in my 4-year-old.  However, when I take a few minutes, it's there and it's amazing.  When we think of a humble adult, we have a picture in our mind;  but if that picture is not the same as a humble child, than the picture is not the humility Jesus calls us to.

In the video, I take a few moments to reflect on Matthew 18:1-4 through the examples of my sons.


Are you striving for the humility of a child?   



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