The Story of the (Dis)unity of the Church October 2016
The Story of
the (Dis)unity of the Church
Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1 The Origins of Church Unity and
Disunity
Chapter 2 Persecution
as an Ingredient of a Divine spiritual Recipe
Chapter 3 Jews First!
Chapter 4 Internal
Division as Demonic Strategy
Chapter 5 Some special Gospel Tools towards Unity
Chapter 6
Honour for the Despised
Chapter 7
Obstacles to Unity
Chapter 8 Antidotes
to Disunity
Chapter 9 The Word unites the
true Church
Chapter 10 Uniting Dynamite
Chapter 11 False
Alternatives
Chapter 12 Two special
Fore-runners of Church Unity
Chapter
13 The Herrnhut Moravians in Church Unity Endeavours
Chapter 14 Evolving
International Prayer for Unity
Chapter 15 Unifying
Movements and Events
Chapter 16 Fighting Discrimination
against People
Chapter
17 Prayer erupts in different Places
Chapter 18 The Road to the Global Day of Prayer
Chapter 19 Challenges at the Cape in Recent Years
Appendix: Some Autobiographical Background
Introduction
To unite
people in any situation is as much part of the nature of God as is the
opposite, namely that satan always wants to divide and destroy.
One
of the most difficult ‘pennies to drop’ in Church circles seems to be the fact
that Christians would not only recognize but also get serious about utilizing
the tremendous power which there is in the unity of the body of Christ. (I
endeavour to write ‘church’ with a capital C throughout when I refer to the body of Christ and not to a
local fellowship or church as an institution.) Why is it so difficult for
followers of Jesus to unite in prayer and action? This is the case in spite of
the history of the Church that was birthed on that memorable Pentecost in
Jerusalem, after the 120 believers had been united in prayer in the upper room!
The Holy Spirit joined the hearts together in love, which attracted people in their
thousands.
I
still have to meet a pastor, any Christian for that matter, who does not agree
that unity with believers with other spiritual persuasions is quite important.
Why then is it so difficult to implement this? Why is it so difficult to get
believers to come together for prayers outside the confines of their own
comfort zone? What is the possible cause of this malaise?
In
the history of revivals united prayer can be discerned as a common denominator.
It sometimes occurred after a season of serious strife and subsequent
reconciliation, e.g. in the run-up to the momentous revival in Saxony’s
Herrnhut on 13 August 1727.
One of the major issues is
that the Church has not honoured its Jewish roots although Jesus was a Jew. For
many centuries this fact was not even generally known. In respect of the ‘Old Testament’, Christians
have been misled, to regard the Hebrew
Scriptures as inferior and viewing
the ‘NT’ as superior! The Bible is a unit. The Hebrew Scriptures and
‘NT’ belong together, even though possibly well over 90% of sermons in churches
are still taken from the ‘NT’.
In the history of revivals united prayer can be
discerned as a common denominator. It sometimes occurred after a season of
serious strife and subsequent reconciliation, e.g. in the run-up to the
momentous revival in Saxony’s Herrnhut on 13 August 1727.
One of the major issues is that the Church has not honoured its Jewish roots
although Jesus was a Jew. For many centuries this fact was not even generally
known. In
respect of the ‘Old Testament’, Christians have been misled - to regard the Hebrew Scriptures as
inferior and viewing the ‘NT’ as superior! Furthermore, I propose in this
discourse that serious consideration be given to ‘Jews first…’ (Romans 1:16). I believe that a prominent place of
honour and respect needs to be given to Israel and the Jews’. Treating them with respect and repentance in
respect of the bad record of the Church, the ‘apple’ of God’s eye (Deuteronomy
32:10; Zechariah 2:8) may go a long way in unifying
the Body of Christ. This may just turn out to be a strategic step to expedite
the spread of the Gospel to the remaining unreached people groups, ultimately
ushering in the return of our Lord!
The Church world-wide will possibly only really come into its own if the
unity of the Body of Christ in all its diversity is restored across all
man-made barriers. Ephesians 3 and 4 give us an extraordinary glimpse of the
universal Body of Christ, the whole family in heaven and earth (3:14), rational beings in earth or heaven
united under one common fatherhood. Paul prayed for the
believers – together with all the saints - to be empowered by the
four-dimensional love of Christ (Ephesians 3:14-19). In his epistle to the
Ephesians Paul gives us powerful practical tips to implement unity in our walk
with the Lord and in general interaction with other believers.
We would like to
remind believers that the Bible teaches us that foreigners and folk at the
lowest side of our social spectrum could be a great blessing to any nation if
given the opportunity to do so.
On a personal note, I
included in the appendix how I was impacted already as a teenager to give the
unity of the Body of Christ a high priority. I highlighted there also how I
was encouraged by a multi-racial group of believers from different
denominations in Stellenbosch in 1981. I was not a good learner however in this
regard. Instead of recognizing that unless the Lord builds the house, I would
toil in vain (adapted from Psalm 127:2). All too often I laboured much too hard
in attempts to forge some semblance of unity among believers locally or
regionally.
Cape Town, October 2016
Chapter 1 The Origins of Church Unity and
Disunity
The unity of the body of true believers has been attacked already from
Creation. Taking the relevant Scripture in Genesis 3 on face value, without
debating whether it is mythical or not, we note that the arch enemy - called in
Scripture a murderer from the
beginning, a father of
lies and one whose native
language is lying (John 8:44) – has been causing estrangement already in the
Garden of Eden. He brought a rupture in the relationship between man and
his Maker, between the first human beings. Friction between man and nature was
caused simultaneously. God's original plan for the creation of man was intimate
relationship - communion of mankind with nature! Satan, the deceiver, the liar
and diabolos (separator),
robbed humanity in this way.
From a Christian point of view the Creator's reply to this onslaught was
redemption. The Bible explains redemption by using pictures or models such as
how God freed the Israelites from their slavery in Egypt. The Almighty thus
became their redeemer. This exodus event was however only a forerunner of the
great redemption still to come. Universally mankind needed redemption as well.
The 'salvation' of the small nation of Israel was a demonstration of God's
loving nature and care for man. What the arch enemy had stolen – sweet intimate
communion with the Almighty - had to be redeemed.
Redemption has been defined as 'to recover possession or ownership'. To do
this, God became flesh, coming to the earth in the form of His Son, Jesus
Christ, who reconciled the World with himself (2 Corinthians 5:20). Jesus shed
His precious blood to deliver mankind from the bondage of sin.
Pleading with the Corinthian believers to be reconciled to God, Paul, the
missionary apostle and author of this statement, challenges followers of Jesus to
consciously step into this tradition. As God’s ambassadors, we are requested to
invite men and women everywhere to get reconciled to God. In the extension of
this, every believer in Jesus Christ is invited to be or to become an agent of
reconciliation, consciously also addressing all visible and perceived rifts. On
the basis of the Calvary event, where Jesus died for our sins, the 'dividing
wall of hostility' between Jew and Gentile has been broken down (Ephesians
2:14). The Church is challenged to be a conduit
and instrument for the breaking down of man-made and demonically inspired
barriers.
The Church has not fulfilled its
biblical Role
The Church has unhappily not
fulfilled its biblical role in this regard. All too often people from the ranks
of churches did the opposite, causing rifts and separating themselves. Some
Christians have consciously chosen to be partisan or biased, even in cases
where the biblical message is clear enough. One of the most striking but tragic
examples in this regard is the situation in the Middle East. Church leaders
should be agents of reconciliation. Instead, some of them had been calling
Israel fallaciously an apartheid state and others supported the Jewish nation
to the hilt uncritically, as if Israelis never make a mistake.
The Bible teaches that a special blessing was given to both sons of Abraham separately.
If there had been some rift between Isaac and Ishmael – which would have been
natural after all that had transpired with Hagar and her son, this was probably
amicably resolved in their life-time. At the funeral of Abraham both sons
buried their father together (Genesis 25:9) - reconciled to all intents and
purposes. The notion that the descendants of Isaac and Ishmael have been
eternal enemies has only a very limited biblical basis. Instead of being an
agent of reconciliation, e.g. by bringing together Jews and Muslims who got
reconciled through common faith in Jesus and working with followers of Jesus
Christ from those backgrounds, Church leaders have all too often jumped on the
bandwagon of taking sides in the age-old tussle of Israel and ‘Palestine’.
Unity does not imply Uniformity
However, unity does not imply
uniformity. Unity in diversity, one-ness through our faith in Jesus Christ
demonstrates to the spiritual powers in the heavenlies ‘the manifold wisdom of God’ (Ephesians 3:10). William Barclay (New
Testament Words, 1973:234) noted that the original Greek word for the
adjective describing the divine wisdom, poikilos
(meaning literally multi-coloured), 'describes anything which is intricate
or complex.' The next verses and the following chapters of
Ephesians give us an extraordinary glimpse of the universal Body of Christ, the
whole family in heaven and earth (3:14) as Paul prayed for the believers – together
with all the saints - to be empowered by the four-dimensional love of Christ
(3:14-19). In his epistle to the Ephesians Paul gives us powerful practical
tips to implement unity in our walk with the Lord and in general interaction
with other believers.
In the honeymoon days of the Church following the
memorable Pentecost in Jerusalem described in Acts 2, the believers shared
their lives with each other in harmony and unity. The fruit of Psalm 133 was
visible, not only How good and
how pleasant it is, but it
was also evident that God commanded his blessing. Thousands were added to the
Church that was truly on fire! Many of the new believers took the Gospel with
them to the nations and places from where they had come. At this stage they
were all from Jewish stock, Jews and proselytes from far and wide, having come
from all directions to Jerusalem.
We may take for granted that the bulk of them returned in all directions to
places like Rome in Italy and Libya in Africa, as all pilgrims did. They
took the story of Pentecost along and what they had experienced, probably very
much ablaze and with excitement.
Normality and Carnality returned
In Jerusalem there were not only wonders. In fact,
normality and carnality returned. There was however soon enough also the
exposure of the ‘white lie’ of Ananias and Sapphira to deceive the Church and
its leaders. To the normality also belonged the opposition of the religious
leaders which included the imprisonment of John and Peter. But even this did
not stop the spreading of the Gospel. In fact, after the beatings they had
received at their discharge, the apostles rejoiced that they were counted
worthy to suffer shame for his name’ (Acts 5;41).
An unfortunate aspect of normality returned to the
Church life there in Jerusalem, viz. discord and factionalism. The Greek
contingent complained that their widows were being discriminated against (Acts
6)! The pristine Church learned through this event how to deal with
discrimination and complaints. The leaders addressed the problem with explosive
dynamite potential full on. They balanced necessary services and duties in the
church with the gifts among them present. A problem is solved by discussing
matters and putting structures in place that can lead to growth - without
reduction of essential matters like the teaching of the Word. Seven
spirit-filled deacons were chosen, including the one or other from Greek
stock.
Stephen, one of the seven deacons, ‘a man full of God’s grace and
power, performed great wonders and signs among the people.’ The arch enemy could never remain dormant to see
someone with those gifts operating in full flow. How could he allow the Church
to just grow and grow? The heat was turned on!
The arch fiend used religious
leaders to stop the expansion of the Gospel as he did in the days when the
Master himself was still around. ‘Opposition arose, however, from
members of the Synagogue of the Libertinians (as it was called) — Jews of
Cyrene and Alexandria as well as the provinces of Cilicia and
Asia — who began to argue with Stephen. Then they secretly persuaded some men to say, ‘We have heard Stephen speak blasphemous
words against Moses and against God.’
We should not be surprised when
opposition comes from a certain corner of the religious establishment.
So-called Free thinkers (Libertinians) have been agents of the arch enemy to
oppose the Gospel from the earliest days of the Church, often distorting the
truth and inciting rank and file people! ‘So they stirred up the people and
the elders and the teachers of the law. They seized Stephen and brought him
before the Sanhedrin. They produced false witnesses, who testified, “This
fellow never stops speaking against this holy place and against the law. For we have
heard him say that this Jesus of Nazareth will destroy this place and change the customs Moses
handed down to us.”
The heat was turned on more and more
until Stephen became the first martyr of the Church – stoned to death. An adage
was born, namely that ‘the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the
Church.’ North Africans from Alexandria and Cyrene were part of the
‘Synagogue of the Libertinians’. Yet, it gives some consolation that it was
someone from our continent, Tertullian (c. 155 – c. 240 AD, who coined the profound dictum.
Chapter 2 Persecution as an Ingredient of a Divine
spiritual Recipe
Chapter 8 of the Bible book called The Acts of the Apostles starts rather
ominously: ‘And Saul approved of their killing him (Stephen). The
death of Stephen was the starting shot of satan’s renewed vicious attack on the
Church. ‘On that day a great persecution broke out against the church in
Jerusalem, and all except the apostles were scattered throughout Judea and
Samaria... Saul began to
destroy the church. Going from house to house, he dragged off both men and
women and put them in prison.’
This however had the opposite effect to what
Saul and the religious leaders intended because ‘those who had been
scattered preached the word wherever they went.’
Saul caused carnage, breathing out murderous threats against the Lord’s
disciples/ He
went to the high priest and asked him for letters to the synagogues in
Damascus, so that if he found any there who belonged to the Way, whether men or women, he might
take them as prisoners to Jerusalem. (Acts 9:1ff).
Persecution became an ingredient of the divine recipe
for the spreading of the Gospel. The seed of the martyr Stephen started to
germinate. Saul, the wicked persecutor of the Church, was not only
supernaturally arrested but soon also powerfully converted. In due course he
would become the prime missionary of the fledgling Church.
Some of the thousands that had been in Jerusalem for
the Pentecost celebration – those from further afield might have been there
already since Passover and its run-up just over seven weeks earlier -
returned home, taking the Gospel with them.
The persecution gave wings to the dissemination of the
Gospel. Philip, another dynamic personality among the seven deacons of Acts 6, bore a Greek name and may have spoken
Greek. Philip possibly functioned as a link to the Greek community.
He operated powerfully as an evangelist in Samaria where a revival was soon
blazing. Rather suddenly, possibly supernaturally, he was taken to Gaza.
When the Holy Spirit nudged him to run, in order to catch up with the treasurer
of Queen Candice’s Ethiopia – he obeyed immediately to be at the perfect place
and on the spot to disciple the eunuch from the words of Isaiah 53. Joyfully
the new believer from East Africa took the Gospel with him, to be followed in
due course by Mark in Alexandria in Egypt. The fiery believers from Baghdad,
Babylon, Nineveh and other Assyrian fellowships had emissaries in places as far
as India and North West China by 61 AD.
In Antioch (Syria) the believers, who hailed from different nations and races,
formed a dynamic congregation with the Cypriot Barnabas and North Africans as a
significant part of the leadership (Acts 13). The Samaritans and the Assyrians,
the ancestors of many Muslims, were possibly part and parcel of the teams
spreading the Gospel from places in Assyria - the present-day Syria, Iraq and
parts of Turkey - together with Jews. Thomas and Peter (1 Peter 5:13) were
probably at the helm of the churches that took the Gospel to India and further
afield.
This phenomenal outreach was hardly discerned, let alone acclaimed in (Western)
Church History. The Assyrian-Nestorian Church,[1] that soon had its centre in Baghdad, stemmed from
believers who returned to Asia after the first Pentecost. John Stewart suggests
that Jewish believers, of whom many ancestors had once been exiled to the
rivers of Babylon, took the Gospel to Central Asia, for example to the Uyghur
people of North West China by 61 AD. Was it merely politically inexpedient to
highlight that the ancestors of Jewish Christians and Muslims worked together
to spread the Gospel? Or was the arch deceiver perhaps behind this move?
Some ancestors of
the Uyghur, a Muslim tribe that is still regarded as unreached in respect of
the Gospel, could thus have been among the first century followers of Jesus.
The Gospel Seed germinates
Christianity did not recognize the deities and
guardians of Rome. This was regarded not only as an attack on public
order and the pillars of Roman tradition, but as atheism to the vast majority.
To most people of that age, Christianity blasphemed their gods – which they
regarded as the protectors of homes, temples, and cities. Jews were known to be
even more meticulous in their rejection of all idolatry.
Tertullian, a North African Berber
Church
Father from Carthage, was dubbed ‘a master of the art of how to turn the
tables’ (Thiede, Jesus: Life or Legend (1990:117). Tertullian referred
pertinently to the sadder part of early Christianity, describing how Christians
were hated, persecuted and martyred. They responded with a message of kindness
and neighbourly love.
The blood of the Martyrs during the first
centuries indeed turned out to be the seed of the Church. Christians had fought
hard for the right to practice their religion in peace. Although there were
some persecutions in the first centuries AD, the worst persecutions against
Christians occurred in the third century under emperors Decius, Valerian,
Diocletian and Galerius. The persecution under first century Emperor Nero is
well known. However, the persecution of Christians in the first two centuries
does not come near to the scope or ruthlessness of that of the third
century.
When Emperors like Nero ‘merely’ expected
Christians to pay homage annually to the Caesar, offering them the liberty to
have their Jesus recognised as a god parallel to that expression of respect,
the Christians refused! They preferred to die for their faith that he is the
divine Son of God. Polycarp of Smyrna, a disciple of John, the apostle, was
martyred in 160 AD, testifying to his faith in the presence of his
executioners. That was the sort of pristine seed of the Church, which also
moved Justin, born in Palestine and later carrying the name Martyr, dying in
similar fashion in 165 AD.
Martyrdom of recent Decades
In recent decades the martyrdom of Philip
James "Jim" Elliot (1927 –1956) became well
known. He was one of five missionaries killed
while participating in Operation
Auca, an attempt
to evangelize the Huaorani people
of Ecuador. His
journal entry for October 28, 1949, expresses his belief that work dedicated to
Jesus was more important than his life (compare Luke 9:24 in the Bible).
"He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot
lose."
South Africa joined this elite club briefly in the pre-democratic era. The
killing and maiming of believers of the St
James Anglican Church of Kenilworth by terrorists in July 1993 were not
only followed by explosive growth of the fellowship itself, but also by a wave
of unprecedented countrywide prayer which helped to usher in the miracle
elections of 27 April 1994.
Another spectacular example of the Tertullian
adage took place in a North African village in the 1980s where God ‘sovereignly
descended upon this coastal township with gracious bounty... He did not rest
till every member of the Muslim community was properly introduced to His only
begotten Son, Jesus’ (Otis, The Last of the Giants:, 1991:157). A
massive conversion involving some 400 to 450 villagers ensued. Stunned by this
special divine visitation, mission workers sought for the reason. They
discovered that this took place at the site where Raymond Lull, a Spanish
missionary from Mallorca, had been stoned to death in June 1315. Lull wrote in
his book The tree of
Love, that Islamic
strongholds are best conquered by ‘love and prayers, and the pouring out of tears
and blood’ (Cited in Tucker, From Jerusalem
to Irian Jaya, 2004:58).
Subsequently, thousands have been coming to faith in Jesus in Algeria. In 2006
the Algerian government promulgated a law that prohibited evangelism of any
kind and commanded several churches to close down. The churches refused to obey
the government stating, “You had better build more prisons because we are not
going to do what you are commanding.” Since 2006, because of the persecution of
Christians, the Church there has grown faster than before and the Algerian
government came to understand that they will never
be able to stamp out the Church.
The Church in China grew phenomenally as a result of the persecution under Communist
Chairman Mao Zedong. In a similar way the Ayatollah Khomeini can be titled the
best ‘evangelist’ in Iran’s history. Of the first 150 Somalian believers only a
few survived.
The Denial of the Cross in Church Tradition
Various aspects of the application of the Cross - for
example the crucified life of believers -
were cancelled by church traditions. The evasion of persecution because of
one’s faith would be among the most important ones. Paul reprimanded the
Galatian Christians. Some of them tried to lure new believers, by avoiding persecution
and compelling new believers to be circumcised (Galatians 6:12).
In the 4th and 5th centuries, the Donatists of North
Africa despised Christians who had wilted under the pressures of persecution.
The Donatists were the followers of Donatus and those Christian theologians who
made suffering for Jesus' sake and for the cause of the Gospel such a virtue
that nobody who had wilted once under persecution was allowed to take an office
in the Church.
Nik Ripkin, a former missionary in East Africa among Somalians, as well as our
fellow South Africans Mike Burnard and Keith Strugnell, are Western missionary
leaders who have been used by God to teach the Church in recent times about the
normality of suffering for the sake of the Gospel. They have been highlighting
how followers of Jesus in Communist and Islamic countries have often had to pay
the ultimate price for their convictions.
The name Salah Farah got known in news bulletins in
many parts of the world in December, 2015. He was a passenger on a bus from
Mandera to Nairobi. He was celebrated in the news reports as a Muslim who saved
a group of Christians from being massacred by Al
Shabaab terrorists who
hijacked the bus. The terrorists wanted to separate the Christians from the
Muslims to slaughter the Christians, but Salah told the passengers to stick
together so that such a separation would not result in death for a single group
of passengers. Through this courageous gesture he attempted to shield the
Christians. Together with a few of the passengers Salah was caught in the
crossfire. On 17 January he died tragically as a result of his injuries. It
subsequently surfaced that he had actually been a secret Christian believer.
Bursa, a fellow passenger, who listened to his discovery of the belief in Jesus
as the Son of God and how he got to it via the book God’s Apprentice, subsequently
also became a follower of Jesus. But also he was murdered. The seed of
the martyrs started to germinate among Somalians around the world.
It is now Somalia’s day; yesterday it was that for Iran! A
Somalian MBB couple in the West have started teaching the new believers every
Thursday via Skype. In a bulletin of March 2016 the couple wrote that around 25
people join them every week. We are very much aware that the devil does not
appreciate the way that the Kingdom of God is gaining ground among the Somalis.
Persecution is very severe, notably in East Africa.
Satan had to come up with something else to stop
the conversion of Somalians. He drew some of his prime weapons from his
arsenal, lies and deception, competition and rivalry!
Chapter 3 Jews First!
For centuries a scriptural exposition of Romans 1:16, that argues for a
‘missional priority’ for Jewish evangelism, has been almost non-existent.
Evangelical Christianity has been using the first part of the verse quite a
lot. That the Gospel is a ‘power of God
that brings salvation’ has been emphasized in evangelism and quoted in
sermons. In many a Sunday School children memorized ‘For I am not ashamed of the gospel
of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to everyone that believes…’
That the verse proceeds with the words ‘to the
Jew first, and also to the Greek’, remained fairly unknown.
It can be argued that
Messianic Jewry only really came to the fore in 1973 when an organization was
founded in Los Angeles by Moishe Rosen (April 12, 1932 – May 19, 2010) that became known – in Jewish
circles notoriously – as Jews for Jesus.
Mitch Glaser, his Jews for Jesus
colleague, brought the message of Jews first in his Covenant Seminary lecture in
1984 trenchantly, giving it the title ‘To the Jew first: the starting Point for the Great
Commission’. Another
Messianic Jew, David Stern published the Messianic
Jewish Manifesto on the 40th anniversary of the birth of the
state of Israel on April 21, 1948. Rosen repeated this message forcefully on
the global stage at the Lausanne movement event in Manila the
following year. However,
the penny still did not drop. Outreach to Jews (and Muslims) remained the
Cinderella of all missionary work.
On the
fringes of mainstream Christianity groups like Messianic Testimony and Messiah’s
People prodded on patiently and perseveringly, attempting to reach out
lovingly to Jews, but seeing only very little fruit. Francis and Edith
Schaeffer broke away from the traditional ministry as Presbyterian missionaries
to start the l’Abri community in Switzerland. In her book Christianity
is Jewish (1977) Edith (the wife of L'Abri founder, Francis
Schaeffer), targeted a Jewish audience in the text of this fascinating work.
Exploring
the historical and spiritual significance of the Jewish race, this treatment
presents the Bible as a unified document in which God has progressively
unfolded the plan of salvation.
Concentration on the Jews
With regard to missionary
strategy we note that Jesus concentrated on Israel and the Jews. Although the
Lord praised the faith of the Gentile Roman centurion of Matthew 8:10 (‘Truly
I tell you, I have not found anyone in Israel with such great faith’), the Lord also inferred in His
reaction to the request of the Syro-Phoenician
woman (Matthew 15:21f) where He saw the priority in His healing ministry: ‘Let the children first be
fed, since it isn't good to take bread out of children's mouths and throw it to
the dogs!’ In the Gospel
according to Matthew, Jesus constantly refers to His ministry as fulfilment of
prophecy. It seems that our Lord’s concentration on the Jews has hardly been
taken seriously by theologians and the Church at large.
It is not clear why Jesus instructed the twelve disciples to stick to the house
of Israel in Matthew 10:5f, omitting this specific instruction to the seventy
(Matthew 11:20-24). Or is here already the expansion and spread of the Gospel -
ultimately to the ends of the earth - implied?[5] It is however very clear that Jesus
concentrated on the Jews in his ministry.
Paul followed Him
in this, by always starting his visits in a new town or city in the synagogue.
This could be a pointer to our careful and sensitive use of the Hebrew
Scriptures in interaction with Jews. Jesus quoted from the Scriptures time and
again. A deduction from our Lord’s last commission could be that the spreading
of the Gospel should start in Jerusalem, in the case of the Jews among the
Jewry (Acts 1:8, also Luke 24:47), and spread from there to the ends of the
earth. This may however not be interpreted in absolute terms, i.e. that
evangelistic outreach should occur in a concentric or spiraling way from one’s
home town or city. Conceding that some believers got a heart for missions on
short term outreach, it nevertheless puts a question mark however to a practice
whereby Christians who are eager to engage in missionary outreach far from home
make no effort to reach out lovingly with the Gospel to their neighbours and in
their home town.
It could be argued that our Lord’s involvement with the Jews was not
missionary, not border-crossing at all; that He concentrated on his home
culture. The first disciples initially appeared very reluctant to obey the
Great Commission, remaining in Jerusalem (Acts 8:1). Right from his very first
public appearance in Nazareth, Jesus however showed the way to the acceptance
of the other nations and the mission to them. In fact, this may have been one
of the main reasons why the Nazareth congregation rejected Him (Luke 4:29).
The Gospel to the Jews first
Instead of
recognizing the need to minister humbly and respectfully to the ‘apple’ of
God's eye (Deuteronomy 32:10; Zechariah 2:8), the
Church in general neglected the loving and compassionate outreach to Jews
completely. Starting with Justin Martyr in the second century, their rejection
was emphasized, overlooking that Paul clearly taught that the so-called rejection was merely temporarily,
that in the completion of God's perfect timing '...all Israel will be saved' (Romans 11:26; Jeremiah 31:1).
A few individuals down the centuries did stress the special eschatological role
of the Jews, and the need of the Church to provoke them in a loving and
positive way to fulfil their prophetic destiny. Not surprisingly, Count
Zinzendorf was prominent in this regard.
Paul practised what he preached, including the notion
that the Gospel should be brought to the Jews, his nation, first. That Paul
fought for the right to bring the Good News also to the Gentiles, perhaps
clouds this sense of priority to some extent. Paul advised in Romans 11:25 that
the Gentiles should not be conceited, reminding the Roman followers of Jesus
from Gentile stock that they are merely branches that had been grafted into the
true olive, Israel.
A Choice between Jews and
Muslims?
A notion has been circling in
some Christian circles that if one wants to reach out lovingly to people from
the two other Abrahamic religions, then one has to make a choice between Jews
and Muslims; that one should either support the Palestinians or the Jews in
Israel! That Christians could have a reconciling role to play, does not feature
in such thinking. Some Christians are even surprised to hear that the sons of
Abraham buried him together (Genesis 25:9). We stress that the widely accepted notion - that the descendants of
Isaac and Ishmael have been eternal enemies - has hardly any biblical basis. We
regret that many a Church leader have all too often compounded the age-old
problem of Israel and Palestine in an unreconciling way, instead of being an
agent of reconciliation. While I concede that this is very personal and
subjective, I contend that a good base for bringing together Jews and Muslims
is when we include those from their ranks who got reconciled with God through
faith in the atoning work of His Son. And yet, there are no quick fixes in such
reconciliation. A lot of patient waiting on the Lord in prayer is required.
Ultimately only God can really change hearts, prejudices and fixed mind-sets.
Some dialogue would be perfectly in place, but cheap proselytism is outlawed in
this field of outreach.
The Issue of Jews
and Race
The issue of Jews and race was terribly abused by
Adolph Hitler. It was and is essentially a spiritual issue, not a racial one.
Only the twelve tribes stemming from the patriarch Isaac via Jacob are counted
in the Bible as ‘proper’ Israelites. Thus one finds the Midianites mentioned as
Ishmaelites (Judges 8:24, Genesis 37:28), although Midian was a son of Abraham
with Ketura, not a son of Ishmael. Ishmaelite traders helped saving
Joseph from certain death when they bought (Genesis 37:28) and sold him as a
slave to Potiphar. Furthermore, Zipporah, the first wife of Moses, was the
daughter of Reuel or Jethro, a Midianite priest (Exodus 2:21). To all intents
and purposes Moses seems to have had a good relationship to his father-in-law,
possibly also learning a thing or two from him. Later he readily accepted
advice from Jethro to delegate his responsibility.
Three female ancestors of King David,
namely Tamar, Rahab, and Ruth, did not stem from one of the twelve tribes of
Israel. Genesis 25:18 e.g. refers to
hostility of Ishmael's sons to their brothers. However, Isaiah 60:7 mentions
Ishmael's two eldest sons positively in a Messianic prophetic context. I
propose that we should take that as our cue rather than the negative tradition
of strife and enmity.
Major Problems of Judaism and
Islam
The above does however not
address the major problems of Judaism and Islam, viz. to acknowledge the
divinity of Jesus and to accept Him to be regarded as the Son of God. Basically
only the Holy Spirit can illuminate to adherents of these religions the loving
Father-heart of God. If we practise sensitivity in our dealings with the
followers of Judaism and Islam, the Lord could use a loving approach to weaken
or even remove some of their prejudice against ‘offensive’ Christian doctrine.
To some of them it is only a matter of (mis)understanding. (Many Muslims e.g.
still have a literal comprehension of Jesus as the physical son of God.[6])
The sharpness of any hostility could be reduced or even removed by pointing out
for instance that the words ‘only begotten’ Son comes from the Greek monogenos. This word is more accurately
translated in the context of John 3 as the
unique Son. A parallel is found in Genesis 22:1 where Isaac was to be sacrificed
as such - a unique son. Furthermore, the use of son as a metaphor - in this case for the
divine character of Jesus - is not completely unknown. 'Son of the Road' and
similar expressions are well known in the Orient. Along the same lines a loving
non-confrontational approach could assist to open up Jews (and Muslims) to
discover why Yeshuah is indeed Ha Mashiach, the Messiah.
The Church universal needs the
Jews
The
Church universal needs the Jews for a proper understanding of the Hebrew
Scriptures. In recent decades Messianic Jews have helped tremendously in this
regard. Because of the guilt of the Church down the centuries, other Jews had
no interest to point to the links to Yeshuah
Ha Maschiach. No wonder that it has remained a ‘hidden secret’ for a long
time that the words of our Lord in the Bible book of Revelation that he is the
Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end, are of course also the first
and last letters of the Greek alphabet has quite a few forerunners in the
Hebrew Scriptures. Various explanations have been given for the combination of aleph and tav as the Hebrew equivalent. An example of how Yeshuah Ha Maschiach occurs fairy
clearly – without any need for allegorical explanations – is Zechariah 12:10 ‘They will see him, אּתּ (the
alef tav, the alpha and the omega), whom they have pierced…’
Chapter 4 Internal Division as Demonic Strategy
Lying and its accomplice
dishonesty are main contributors to disunity, also in the Church. Throughout
history people have always been used as vehicles to create and bring division. Scriptures show us that throughout
the early Church leaders had
to address this. James,
the apostle, attacks this spirit in his epistle, stating that if people have
fierce desires to promote their own ideas, if they have a spirit of competition
and rivalry, if they create division — then their minds and emotions have come
under the influence of demonic activity. In the context he supplies also some
remedies, viz. to resist the devil and submit to God (James 4:1-8). Satan often succeeds to add
misunderstanding and inappropriate ambition to the mixture. In the Garden of
Eden the arch enemy tempted the first human beings by the wish to be like God.
Competition and rivalry among the disciples was very
much around when the Master was still with them. The arch enemy attempted to
cause division among the disciples of Jesus through unhealthy rivalry. James
and John, two brothers, asked Jesus a question. Thinking that He would set up a
kingdom on earth soon, they wanted to sit one on each side of him. James and
John wanted power for themselves. It was like a request for an important job in
government. The other disciples were very angry. They also wanted these jobs!
This was a struggle for power. They asked, 'Who would be greatest?' (See
Matthew 18:1-3, Matthew 19:27-30, especially verse 27.)
We must recognize that division is the paramount
strategy of satan. He masqueraded as a serpent in the Garden of Eden
deceptively with distortion, causing disruption and disunity. Dealing or relating to others from a base of where we
want to enforce our opinion, twist things so that we can look better than
another person or attempt to win arguments by promoting our selfish agendas all
have demonic origins!
Restoration of the Harmony of the human Race
Restoration of the harmony and unity of the human race seems to be
part of the Messianic vision that was passed on by the prophet Isaiah in
chapter 2 of his book. But also in the here and now God commands his blessing
where we live and operate in love and harmony (Psalm 133). The 'New Testament'
offers a powerful potential equivalent through the unity of believers in Jesus
Christ as the Messiah. Jesus regarded the unity of His followers as something
of great importance. In the Gospel of John it is recorded that our Lord prayed
for all those who would follow Him, to be one (John 17:21). He proceeded to intercede fervently that
his followers 'may be brought to complete unity’ (John 17:23).
Networking as the biblical
Counterpart of Division
According to the Hebrew
Scriptures, the temple was constructed under King Solomon in an interesting
model of networking. When Solomon became king, he enlisted the aid of his ally
Hiram, the king of Tyre (980-946 BC), in the construction of the Temple. In return
for wheat, oil, and wine, Hiram supplied Solomon with cedar and cypress wood,
as well as gold. Hiram also sent Solomon artisans and craftsmen to aid him.
During Solomon's reign, the Temple was the focal point of all Jewish rituals
and pilgrims came from all the tribes of Israel. The worship of Yahweh was thus
an important element of unity. It became problematic though when pride got into
the mix and the Jews started to despise other nations that worshipped in
different ways.
The biblical modus operandi of Church Unity is networking, uniting
towards a common goal. One of the best biblical examples of the principle is
the building of the Jerusalem wall under the leadership of Nehemiah. Two
parallel 'NT' references are the 'networking' of the disciples of Jesus as
recorded in Luke 5 and Paul's teaching on unity in Ephesians 3 and 4.
In Luke 5:6ff, Peter and the fishermen colleagues in his boat hauled in a great
multitude of fish on the rhema,
the word of the Lord. Their net threatened to break when they had the presence
of mind to call their colleagues in the other boat to come and assist them. Had
they carried on independently, they probably would have lost the catch. When
they were ready to drop their independence, the big catch could be brought to
the shore. In spite of this obvious lesson in 'networking', the bulk of pastors
and churches still carry on building their own little kingdom, prodding on
independently!
The words of Jesus just prior to his ascension, respectively recorded in Matthew 28:19-20 and Acts 1:8, encouraged his disciples – and in
extension also us as his followers – to network in the spreading of the Gospel,
to make disciples far and wide. This could transpire in a concentric way, by gaining
experience locally with the own ‘Jerusalem’, and then moving further and
further through barriers of culture, ethnicity and nationality - ultimately
even to ‘the ends of the earth’.
In 1 Corinthians 3 Paul referred to different non-competitive functions of
leaders and believers. One person plants, another one waters but God gives the
growth. Mutual love and respect, along with the acceptance of any differences
in gifting and character, should be the bottom line. Thus Paul could put
forward the challenge and teaching that the ‘NT’ Church radiates the manifold
wisdom of God (Ephesians 3:10).
Jesus reconciled opposing
Factions
Even within the close circle of
the disciples Jesus had to reconcile opposing factions. We do not understand
fully why John always referred to himself as the disciple whom Jesus loved. Was
this because he was a relative, as it has often been surmised? Or was John
pushing himself to the front, like at the last supper? Even after the Lord’s
resurrection, the rivalry between him and Peter continued. Thus John, the
apostle, made a point of it to report twice that he outstripped Peter in the
‘race’ to the grave (John 20:4 and 8). The few verses which are recorded about
the meeting of Jesus with the eleven at Lake Tiberias likewise indicate the
mutual dislike of Peter and John clearly enough (Acts 21:20-22). The two could
have become bitter rivals for the leadership after the Lord’s ascension.
The Holy Spirit is powerful to reconcile people who would normally be at
loggerheads with each other. This was evidently the case with disciples who
were vastly different in temperament. In Acts 3:1ff it is reported how the two,
John and Peter, operated as a team. This example opposes the abuse of
incompatibility as an excuse for separation - to suggest that it is utterly
impossible to work together with a certain Christian. If both parties are open
to the work of the Holy Spirit, reconciliation would be the eventual result and
even teamwork is possible thereafter.
Peter and Paul as Rivals
In obedience to the nudging of
the Holy Spirit, Philip had no qualms to speak to a seeking foreigner, an
Ethiopian official, about his soul (Acts 8:26ff). But Peter had some
difficulties to step down from his pedestal of pride and condescension towards
Gentiles. A supernatural element is easily discerned as God used him to reach
out to the family of Cornelius, whom the Spirit had already prepared. When Paul
detected some hypocrisy with Peter, he criticized him to his face in the
presence of others. Jesus did this also in a stinging
attack on the religious establishment of his day, as we can read in Matthew 23. If the actions of fellow
brothers and sisters confuse young believers, it might thus be necessary to do
the unusual thing of reprimanding them publicly.
Amicable Parting of
Ways
God can also use an amicable parting of ways - albeit
that it is almost always painful - to multiply the evangelistic effort. That
Paul and Barnabas parted ways because of the inclusion of John Mark is fairly
well known, sometimes used as an example for amicable separation. I suggest
that some carnality was involved here – in this case Paul's unforgiving
attitude. (One of the very special examples of modern times along these lines
was when Brother Andrew had to leave WEC International for health
reasons, but pioneering Open Doors later.) All this is part and parcel of God's ‘mysterious ways’. How
often He has over-ruled obvious human mistakes. Thus God used a donkey to
reprimand Balaam. He can spank us quite well so to speak with a crooked rod.
Unintentional Division of the Body of Christ
Much of the fragmentation of the Body of Christ has
been unintentional. The first significant shift developed between Jewish
Christians and other strands of first century Jews after James, the leader of
the Church in Jerusalem and the brother of Jesus, had been executed by a group
of Jews that acted on the instructions of the High Priest Ananus. The stoning
of James, with the collaboration of the Sanhedrin and the High Priest, was a
bitter pill to those contemporary Jewish and Gentile Christians who still
attempted to engage in dialogue with the Synagogue.
On
two occasions Paul refers to believers as infants/children in the context of
petty bickering and a lack of unity (1 Corinthians 3:1-3; Ephesians 4:13-15). He
did not mince his words, calling those believers who hero-worship strong
personalities babies in the faith (1 Corinthians 3:1-5). So often Christians quote the
latter part of 1 Corinthians 11 in the context of the Lord’s Supper, completely
ignoring or forgetting that Paul used those words within the framework of the
disunity of the believers at Corinth and the discrimination of some of them
(see 1 Corinthians 11:17ff).
The Pattern for
doctrinal Bickering
The Samaritan woman
of John 4 evidently tried to use the common ancestry subtly to digress, to move
the discussion from the uncomfortable exposure of her immoral life-style. Her
intention was probably not to use the arch fathers as common ground, but rather
to emphasize the difference in the location, hoping perhaps that Jesus would
get engaged in a theological argument.
The
reference to the local mountain set the pattern for a doctrinal argument. The
possibility of a doctrinal quarrel about places of worship highlights an
age-old problem. Soon after the apostles and other believers had spread the
Gospel far and wide, the humanity of Jesus became a problem to some of those
who believed that Jesus was only divine.
Introduction of Greek Thought
Patterns
The introduction of Greek thought
patterns which divided the Church started probably with Philo (c. 25 BC – c. 50 AD), a Hellenistic
Jewish philosopher who lived in Alexandria. Africa has in this respect incurred some historical
guilt. It has been suggested that Philo poisoned all theology with Greek thought
patterns. He
used philosophical allegory in an attempt to fuse
and harmonize Greek philosophy with Jewish philosophy. His use of allegorical exegesis was
important for several Christian Church Fathers. The one or other however went overboard in the
process, making overdrawn claims of how almost everything in the Hebrew
Scriptures points to Jesus.
The Church Father Origen (184 -254 AD) was a giant amongst the early Christian
thinkers. He tried to interpret Christian concepts in language familiar to the
Platonic tradition, 'mingling philosophical
discussion with expositions of biblical cruxes' (Chadwick, 1969:100). Possibly unwittingly, he undermined the Hebrew thought
pattern in this way. Hebrew thinking is more inclusive, wary of false
alternatives. A typical example of Origen's attempt is how he would play down
the dissention between Peter and Paul at Antioch, suggesting that is was merely
'edifying play-acting' (Chadwick, 1969:100). In Galatians 2:11 (Amplified version) Paul recorded a different story: ‘Now
when Cephas (Peter) came to Antioch, I opposed him face to face [about his
conduct there], because he stood condemned [by his own actions]. Most
notably, however, Origen described the Trinity as a hierarchy, not as an
equality of Father, Son, and Spirit. And though he attacked Gnostic beliefs,
like them, he rejected the goodness of material creation. In this way he was
supportive of Marcion, the arch heretic of their era.
Two opposing Views of God
The Ebionites were a first century
Christian Jewish sect with substantial influence. Unfortunately the Ebionite
Jewish believers who took the Gospel to the Arabian Peninsula apparently also
took with them the theological bickering. The essence of the biblical message, namely
the grace of God and the loving Father became completely clouded. The synagogue
theologians of the first century AD apparently did not discern that Yahweh is basically a loving parent, a Father
who simultaneously displayed motherly characteristics. Somehow the pagan
one-sided view of a punishing and aloof God prevailed. A religious variation
came via the Greek philosopher Plato and the Saducees. Plato taught that
God was unknowable and uninvolved in human affairs. As wealthy Jews the
Saducees were educated in Greek Philosophy and possibly derived thoughts and
beliefs like these from Plato.
Two almost diametrically opposing
views of God developed in the course of time. The first one occurred quite
early via Marcion, an intelligent theologian. Although he was quite early
regarded as a heretic, Marcion contributed to confusion among the Gentile
believers of his era. In his view Yahweh – the supreme deity of the Hebrew
Scriptures – was intrinsically evil. Quoting Isaiah 45:7 ‘It is I who send evil, I
the Lord does these things’, he
opined that Christ came to set mankind free from Yahweh. Thus Marcion highlights
how Elisha had children eaten by
bears. Jesus, representing a loving God, said ‘little children come unto me’.
In the dark and early Middle Ages the
former view - which filtered through to Islam – an unbiblical emphasis on a
punishing God prevailed, viz. that he is harsh, unbending and arbitrary.
Noting that Simon Magus (see
p.21) and Cerinthus, a
first century Christian heretic, who had been trained in the Egyptian
education, have
been discerned by the leaders of the Early Church as heresiarchs of the first
century, Marcion was even more dangerous in the middle of the second century.
His ideas were spread very widely geographically. So much of his teaching
contributed to replacement teaching, via various heretical avenues later also
to Islam.
The humanity of
Jesus as an Issue
Learned men argued that if
Jesus were God, he could not have become an infant. Cerinthus believed and taught that
Jesus was the son of Mary and Joseph, but not by virgin birth. Consequently, Cerinthus argued, Jesus could not
display human characteristics. This argument went so far that the Early Church
soon ran into trouble about Jesus’ deity. Arius, a 4th century Church elder,
deemed it necessary to state clearly that Jesus was made (i.e. created), not
supernaturally begotten.
At
the end of the third century Arius developed the heresy further, negating that
Jesus was of the same substance of God, but not equal to Him. Arius followed
Cerinthus in this teaching, which caused much confusion, ripping the heart out
of the Gospel. This is a
part of the Docetist-Gnostic background of Surah Nisaa (Women) 4:157, which intimates that God took Jesus away
before he could die. Arius believed that Jesus was created and that he was not
fully God, although more than a man. That
doctrine became possibly a part of the origin of the Islamic emphasis that
Allâh does not have a son. Arius was logically called by Arnold (1859:5)
another precursor of Islamism. He was an excellent communicator, putting his
doctrinal ideas into musical jingles, a practice copied centuries later in
Islam via an Arabic nursery rhyme that God does not have a son. Chronologically
between Cerinthus and Arius there was general consensus in the Church that they
would not compromise the divinity of Jesus. When Emperors like Nero ‘merely’
expected them to pay homage annually to the Caesar, offering them the liberty
to have their Jesus recognised as a god parallel to that expression of respect,
the Christians refused! They preferred to die for their faith that he is the
divine Son of God. Polycarp of Smyrna, a disciple of John, the apostle, was
martyred in 160 CE, testifying to his faith in the presence of his
executioners. That was the sort of pristine seed of the Church, which also
moved Justin, born in Palestine and later carrying the name Martyr, dying in
similar fashion in 165 CE.
Unity – at what a Cost!
In an attempt to unite the Church that was so divided,
Constantine convened a Council at Nicaea in 325 CE under the presidency of
Bishop Hosius of Cordovan and Bishop Alexander of Alexandria. For Constantine
it was essentially a political exercise. He did not care about the final points
of theology as long as it would unify his subjects. He attempted to bring this
about through the mandatory day of rest on Sun-day in 321 CE, by having people baptized
by force and ceasing the persecution of the followers of Jesus.
The
discussion at the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE was very heated - and not always
to the point. Arius was condemned, but the creed decided upon was a poor
compromise, basically an effort to contain the influence of Arius. This creed
was however far from unproblematic, including the words begotten from the
Father - the only begotten. In due course this was to lead to confusion
when Mary was described as theotokos,
the bearer of God.
The
misunderstanding with his bishop Alexander - who suggested that Arius
propagated two gods - set the pattern for doctrinal quarrelling in the Middle
East, which continued for centuries thereafter. Islam picked this tenet up,
with the Qur’an stressing that Jesus was created divinely - like Adam – by
the word ‘Be’ (Surah Imran 3:59). On the other
hand, the Qur’an mentions ambivalently in the same context
of Surah Imran 3, that Mary gave
birth to Jesus as a virgin.
Of course, Jesus had clearly taught ‘I and the Father are one’ (John 10:30). That
He displayed human qualities does not make him less divine. In fact, Jesus
invited His audience to get a glimpse of the Father by looking at him (John
14:9-11). It should have been clear - even from the oral traditions - that
Jesus did things like forgiving sins, which only God can do. Uncovering the
sinful life of the Samaritan woman was of course another divine quality - to
look right into the inner precincts of the heart of man!
Disunity stifles spiritual Renewal
Disunity often stifles spiritual renewal and biblical
revival. We cannot stress it enough: the spirit of separation and disunity is a
demonic principality. Disunity wielded in few parts of the world such power as
in South Africa. The apartheid practice was only one visible expression of this
division. The denominational disunity, rivalry and mutual distrust of churches
and pastors are two less visible ones. True unity is the sovereign work of the
Holy Spirit, but if denominational and racial disunity proceed unchecked, a
potential spiritual awakening will be given a major setback.
Disunity in the Church and competitiveness must never be regarded as minor
flaws, but recognized for what it really is in the light of the Bible: sin! Not
for nothing Jesus prayed for His disciples and for those who would believe in
their message (i.e. we, the spiritual off-spring): ...That all of them may be one (John 17:20f) and ‘that they may be
brought to complete unity’ (John
17:23).
Through the ages the enemy has succeeded to sow division in churches. The
blessing, which God could have used to bring millions to the Cross, has sadly
become a curse in many a case.
Chapter 5 Some special Gospel Tools towards
Unity
Our Lord had his priorities perfectly in place. From His intimate relationship
to his Father His behaviour flowed and followed. A life of commitment to Him,
the light, automatically
leads to conflict and confrontation with the forces of darkness. Because our
Lord is the truth, the tempter - who is the father of
the lie (John 8:44) - tried to catch Him out through a distortion of the
Word. As the only person who did not die again after having been
resurrected, Jesus is the way to eternal life – indeed the Way, the Truth and
the Life (John 14:6). He is the ladder on which angels go up and down, through
whom we can have constant communion with the Father (John 1:33 and 50, Genesis
28).
Getting the Priorities Straight
A good example of our Lord’s
complete mastery of priorities is given in John 4 where it is reported how a
rumour (instigated by Pharisees?) was brought to the Lord that He was baptising
more converts than John the Baptist. The motive of those people who came with
the rumour is not clear, but the explosive gun-powder contained in the question
is quite evident. In verses 1 and 2 of John 4 we discern at least three issues
in the rumour which could have drawn a negative response from anybody else.
There was the suggested number of people baptized, who performed it and there
was the comparison with John the Baptist. Instead of allowing himself to be
drawn into a petty, unproductive discussion, our Lord ‘left Judea’. A
possible inference that he walked away cowardly, has to be rejected.
The remarkable verse 4 of that chapter squashes any idea that the Master dodged
difficult issues: ‘He had to go through Samaria’. If our Lord had been
the type of person to circumvent problematic matters, here was a good
opportunity. Our Lord faced the issue of the despised Samaritans head-on. Not
only did He go to the town of Sychar, but He went to sit next to the cultic
explosive well of Jacob. Hardly any Jew of those days would have done a thing
like that. That was tantamount to looking for trouble! And thereafter he and
his disciples stayed with the Samaritans for two more days.
So many people got side-tracked from the centre of
God’s will for their lives. To be at the right place at the right time is all
important. Prayer to this effect is a good challenge.
Handling Conflict
In the enfolding narrative of
John 4 Jesus handled confrontation in such a skilful way that the Samaritan
woman was completely turned around in the process. When she used religion as a
cover-up after the Lord had cornered her on her lifestyle, He challenged her in
a respectful way. To this day His reply challenges religious people everywhere: The Father seeks true
worshippers... those who worship in Spirit and in truth. It is not so difficult to find
Christians in our day and age who adore the act of worship instead of
worshipping the complex Almighty God.
Another special lesson of our Lord is how He handled disputes. In almost
classical style He could unmask wrong alternatives; more correctly, we should
say He often radicalized false alternatives. When the Master was put on trial
on the issue of the paying of taxes - when His questioners tried to put Him in
a spot of bother - He coolly replied that both God and the Caesar had to get
the due of their respective allegiance (Matthew 22:21). When His disciples
became involved in petty bickering about rank, He challenged them with service
as the qualification for rank: whosoever perceives himself to be the greatest,
should be the servant of all (Luke 22:24ff). The servant way, the way of Jesus
to emulate is furthermore about the priority of relationships. Proverbs 16:7 offers a special challenge: When a man's ways are pleasing to the LORD, He makes even his enemies to be at peace with him.
How our Lord operated cross-culturally in a
loving way, should be our model, not shying away from confrontation. The word
tolerance has sometimes
been abused in this regard. Whilst this is a virtue which should generally be
the aim of every believer, we note from our Lord’s example that it is far from
absolute. God hates sin but He loves the sinner. In the same context in which
Jesus speaks about thieves who rob (John 10), He calls himself the door.
Whereas there might be different avenues to get to God, Jesus made it clear to
which highway these minor roads should lead to: ‘I am the way, the truth and
the life, no man comes unto the Father but by me’ (John 14:6). This might
sound intolerant to some ears. For the Christian this is nevertheless the only
way, the only door. It thus becomes a matter of take it or leave it. It would
be fruitless to debate about the matter.
Maintaining the Unity
In the
spiritual realm unity is so important for
the correct functioning of the Body of Christ at every level. But it can never
be taken for granted because the arch enemy will always attempt to course
disruption of unity. No wonder that Paul pleaded with the Ephesian believers in
the prime chapter on unity to “endeavour
to keep the unity of the Spirit” (Ephesians 4:2).
Anger is one of those demonic tools that
destroys any semblance of unity. Diversely we are taught to be slow to anger (e.g. Proverbs 14:29, 16:32). Everyone
should be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to get angry’ (James 1:19). We all get angry at one time or another. The
Lord was also angry, e.g. when He cleansed the Temple and when he confronted
the hypocrisy of the Jewish leaders (Mark 3:4-6). The big issue is whether we allow the arch enemy to
destroy the unity through our failures in this regard.
Next to maintaining the unity there is also the
restoration of it, optimally before the sun sets. Paul is very realistic in this context when he also
offers the remedy in handling anger and when we slipped in this regard: ‘Be
angry without sinning. Don't let the sun set on your anger (Ephesians 4:26).
Consultation with the Church
Leadership
An issue which was forcefully demonstrated in the life
of Paul, the apostle, was the relationship to the local church. Paul showed how
valuable a healthy relationship to the church leadership can be. Even though
God had already revealed it to him previously to bring the Gospel to the
heathen nations, Paul did his missionary work in consultation with the church
leaders (Galatians 2:2ff). Initially they did not share his vision and views.
The result of the consultation was a doubling of the outreach: They reached
consensus, agreeing that Peter should concentrate on ministering to Jews while
Paul would pioneer the work among the Gentiles (Galatians 2:8). Because he did
not do his own thing unilaterally, Paul and Barnabas eventually received the
right hand of fellowship from the leadership. Finally the couple were
commissioned and sent out by the body, the Church at Antioch (Acts 13:3).
With regard to ongoing consultation with the church leadership, this was part
and parcel of life in Herrnhut in East Germany. There the revival of 13 August
1727 led to the flowering of the missionary endeavour of the Moravians; in
fact, it was the laborious writing of diaries and reports, which have enabled
later generations to get such a good picture of church life there and of
Moravian missionary work in general.
The different Parts of the Body
Paul evidently deemed the unity
of the body of Christ as of prime importance. He taught not only about the
different parts of the body (Romans 12 and 1 Corinthians 12) but he also wrote ‘Make every effort to keep the
unity of the Spirit’ (Ephesians
4:3). Paul knew that unity
is something at which we must work unceasingly. Earnestly he appealed to the
bickering believers in Corinth where factions had developed. He reprimanded not
only the followers of Apollos and Peter, but also his own fans in the
fellowship for hero-worshipping him. God alone must be worshipped because he
alone can give growth. The flesh in us loves to get recognition, likes to build
the own kingdom. Paul’s letter to the Corinthian church included a moving plea:
‘I appeal to you brothers, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ... that
there may be no divisions among you and that you may be perfectly united in
mind and thought’ (1
Corinthians 1:10-13 and 3:1-6). Paul’s plea was obviously an extension of the teaching
of the Master himself: ‘If a
kingdom is divided against itself, that kingdom cannot stand. If a house
is divided against itself, that house cannot stand’ (Mark 3:24-25).
The Importance of building good
Relationships
Paul kept in touch with the
churches he had planted with letters of encouragement. But he also had the
courage to rebuke them where it was appropriate. He demonstrates in this way
the importance of good communication in maintaining good relationships. In our
day and age the ease of electronic communication can very easily lead to
shallow relationships. It can deteriorate so easily if for instance people only
communicate when there is a need of some sort. That is not good enough.
The Special Gifts of Women
The special gifts of women are still by and large not used properly and
sufficiently. It is fortunately no big debate generally whether females should
be in the pulpit or not. The discrimination of the 'weaker sex' in the Church,
the Synagogue and the Mosque has a long sad history. Talmudic Jewish writers
entrenched base discrimination against women. This even found its way into the
prayer for a Jewish man - thanking God every morning that he was not ‘a
Gentile, a slave or a woman.’ In Jewish law a woman became a thing. She had no legal rights
whatsoever; she was absolutely in her husband’s possession. He could do with
her as he willed. Islam seems to have drawn richly from this sad heritage, an
aberration of the creation model. It is sad to have to note that the Church by and large neglected the
revolutionary teachings of Jesus and the ‘New Testament’ with regard to women
(and youth). Only in the Assyrian (later Nestorian) Church women were treated
with exemplary dignity for some length of time. Research in recent decades
shows that widows had leadership roles in the first century or so in the
Assyrian Church. But in the rest of the Church women were pushed into
lesser roles of leadership and responsibility. Tertullian (and later Jerome)
verbalised sentiments with regard to women,[2]of which we as Christian men should be ashamed. Women have been silenced
in the Church. Expression of regret and remorseful confession by Global Church
leaders in this regard is long overdue.
Thumbs down to hierarchical
Church Structures
Lording and domineering has been
a big problem for new believers in Church structures. In the ‘NT' Church[3] plural non-hierarchical leadership
seems to have been the norm. Presbyters and deacons were not regarded as titles
but valued and used respectively as a gesture of respectful oversight/honour
and a function in serving. Apostles, prophets, pastors, teachers and
evangelists were in Paul's teaching functions as equals in the four- or
five-fold ministries. He took for granted that each one in the
church received grace[4] (Ephesians 4:7), from which flows one
or more of these functions. In his first letter to the Corinthians (14:26) Paul
states as a given that in the ekklesia,
the Church, each one should edify each other (oikodomeo, build each other up) whenever the
believers congregate.
The only permissible 'NT' 'hierarchy' would be to see Jesus Christ as the
capstone, the head of the Church. In various ways the image of a building is
used in Scripture. In Matthew 16 Jesus himself said that he will build (oikodomeo is the verb) his church. Paul intended
to operate like a master builder with Christ as the foundation stone. In
another picture the Gentiles and Jews form together God's house, built on the
foundation of the apostles and the prophets. The cornerstone is Christ himself
(Ephesians 2:20), holding together these two functions, the apostolic and the
prophetic dimensions.
These two functions have to complement each other with Jesus as the connecting
link. To be an apostle means throughout the fulfilling of a function, those
sent from the bosom of the church. From here the word missionary was derived
(via the Latin missio).
The ambassador of Rome is the model of the apostle/missionary. In a similar way
every follower of Jesus is an ambassador and emissary/missionary who has to
attempt to represent the culture of the Kingdom of God (2 Corinthians 5:20).
Chapter
6 Honour for the Despised
There is a tendency by fellowships in the more affluent parts of our country to
look down condescendingly upon township congregations and even more so on to
those churches from the refugee communities. I suggest a complete rethink on this,
to come in line with Scripture. We have such a lot to learn from those at the
bottom end of our social scale.
A tenet that runs through the Bible is that God honours the lowly and
despised who put their trust in Him. Jesus and Paul display the nature of God
on this issue.
Biblical Misfits
used by God
The Hebrew
Scriptures are full of examples of how God used despised/rejected people. What
distinguished the rejected and despised ones was their availability for God. Joseph
was initially rejected by his brothers; Moses was a fugitive and murderer when
he was called by God. Gideon. He suffered from a serious inferiority complex,
was raised by God to be a deliverer of his people (respectively in Judges 3 and
6).
Eli, the priest, was wise to discern that Samuel could be raised to become a
divine tool already as a boy and David, the shepherd boy, was clearly regarded
as an outsider of the family at first and overlooked as a potential future
king of Israel. God had to teach Samuel in the process not to look at the outer
looks and size, that God looks at the heart (1 Samuel 16:1-12). That David
roamed the country, staying in caves and at times living among the enemy with a
bunch of rogues, makes him the equivalent of a modern-day gangster. More than once someone from the ranks of the despised and rejected
groups - for example a gangster,
drug lord or prostitute - was exactly the one God used to make others
spiritually hungry, thirsty and inquisitive.
Rahab
and Ruth are specially mentioned in the lineage of Jesus, although they were
originally a pagan prostitute and a despised Moabite respectively (Matthew
1:5).
Paul refers to his own unimpressive stature and lack of luster in his public
speaking (2 Corinthians 10:10). In His divine wisdom God deemed it fit to save
those who believed through the preaching of the Cross, that was being regarded
in the world as stupidity (1 Corinthians 1:21). Furthermore, Paul also stated
clearly not only ‘when I am weak, I am strong’ (2 Corinthians 12:10), but also that
the foolishness of the Cross is actually God’s wisdom (1 Corinthians 1:18). It
looks as if this has generally been forgotten or overlooked. The jet-setting
big names are often the eloquent sought after speakers.
Here
the Jesus displayed the nature of God. The Lord entered Jerusalem on an
inexperienced colt, the foal of a donkey – not on a horse or a camel, the more
fancied transport animals of the day. Even today the animal is more known
because of its obstinacy and stupidity than in any other way.
Our Lord praised the faith of the centurion who came from the ranks of the
oppressing Romans. Groups usually looked down upon are refugees and vagrants.
That Jesus was a refugee as a baby and homeless as an adult, should at least
give us some food for thought.
A biblical
Condition
With the Moabite
Ruth, the biblical condition becomes clear: faith in the God of Israel is the
criterion. Rahab, the prostitute, is a very special case. She must have had
special revelation to declare to the spies: ‘I know that Yahweh has given
you the land’ (Joshua 2:8) and in Joshua 2:11 ‘Yahweh, your God is God
in heaven above and on the earth’ ...
To use scarlet - the dye which was known for colouring flax, was known for its
durability, a colour of permanence - was prophetic. A piece of scarlet cloth
that turned white on the Day of Atonement gave a similar prophetic message.
Centuries later the prophet Isaiah (1:18) would use that image for the divine
cleansing and forgiving of sins. No sin is too big for God to forgive!
When Philip interacted with the influential eunuch from Ethiopia, the
equivalent of a Finance Minister, this homosexual man was probably the vehicle
to bring the Gospel to our continent, next to Mark who evangelized in
Alexandria (Egypt) according to oral tradition. (Eunuchs were known to be 'gay', men who could be
entrusted to the private chambers of highly ranked females like queens).
It
is remarkable that God seems to have a special affinity for young people who
are ready to go all out for him. In fact, it has been generally overlooked that
Jesus drove out the religious establishment – with animals and all – so that
there could be place for despised, for those coming from the nations,[7]the
lame, the blind and the children (Matthew 21:14). All too often the religious
people need to be driven aside so that God can be worshiped in spirit and in
truth.
The Messianic Stone initially
rejected
Jesus is described as the
capstone in the picture of a dome, that holds the building together.
Simultaneously, Jesus is also the Messianic stone that was rejected by the
builders. It became the cornerstone of the divine edifice. That the nation of
Israel has been rejected – albeit as punishment for their non-recognition of Yeshuah (Jesus) as Messiah – contains some
Messianic trait as a precursor variously cited by the Lord himself. This
wisdom, appearing first in Psalm 118:22, recurs at Matthew 21:42, Mark 12:10,
Luke 20:17, Acts 4:11 and 1 Peter 2:7. Of course, also the Messianic
Isaiah 53:3 speaks about the same thing. He was despised and rejected by
men, a man of sorrows, and familiar with suffering. Like one from whom men hide
their faces he was despised, and we esteemed him not. The Gospel writer John summarised
the phenomenon thus: He
came to his own people, and even they rejected him (John 1:11).
Followers of Jesus are
living stones, a chosen people, a royal priesthood (1 Peter 2:9). To be a
priest is to be consecrated to God and fellow-man. This is the calling of every
Christian. If this functions well, the Church would automatically cease to be an
institution chiefly concerned with maintaining forms and traditions. It would then
be able face the outside world as a united, Spirit-empowered witnessing
fellowship.
Fellowship also for the Despised
Jesus offered
fellowship to people who were despised by their society. Seeing her deepest
need, He spoke to the Samaritan woman at the well (John 4) who was probably so
ashamed to be seen by others that she went to fetch water at a time when there
was the least chance to meet other villagers or be seen by them. In meeting her
deepest need, Jesus turned the social outcast into one of the first evangelists
of the Messiah of all time, causing a people movement among the inhabitants of
the little Samaritan town of Sychar. Breaking with all custom of the time, He
spoke with the woman in public. The Western rationally-inclined mind would
regard the speaking about ‘koeitjies en kalfies’ (trivialities) as
wasting of time. Jesus demonstrated how the opening up of a conversation with a
stranger about a mundane thing like water can break down walls of prejudice
(John 4:10).
Inclusion of the Outsider and
Fearful
Jesus led by example in His
loving ministry to the doubting, the outsider and the fearful. This is a divine
quality. The Master had an eye and a heart for the doubting Thomas. It seems as
if Western theological tradition has overlooked that Thomas was prepared to go
and die with Jesus (John 11:16). Many only see him as the ‘doubting Thomas’
or even ‘die ongelowige Thomas’ (the
unbelieving Thomas). In general, it has hardly been recognized that Thomas was
not the only one among the disciples to doubt. It has been reported that '...some
doubted' (Matthew 28:17). We note that this happened just before the
Ascension of our Lord, i.e. after some of them had been walking close to Him
for many months. The Master took doubts seriously, reassuring the hovering
disciple in this way. Jesus saw behind the impulsive Peter also his
qualities as a potential leader. The Bible teaches that God specifically uses
the fearful when they trust Him, even more so when they become completely
dependent on Him. This is wonderfully depicted in the life of Gideon (Judges
6-8). He could easily be described as a coward with a serious inferiority
complex. Coming from the poorest family of the half tribe of Manasse and
youngest of all, he thought he had ample reason to shy away from an awesome
task.
Foreigners and Strangers in the
Bible
In the Hebrew Scriptures the
Israelites are repeatedly admonished to be hospitable to strangers. The
Israelites were strangers in Egypt. Repeatedly they were reminded of this fact.
Exactly because they had been oppressed there, they were commanded to refrain
from oppressing foreigners. Leviticus 19:33,34 includes the astounding verse Love the stranger as you love
yourself. In fact, the Law
commands more than once to treat the stranger as an equal (for example
Leviticus 24:16, 24). If the foreigner/stranger is destitute, he should be
supported and afforded hospitality (Leviticus 25:35).
The Hebrew
Scriptures furthermore depict clearly how foreigners became a blessing to the
people of God. The prime example in this regard is Joseph who was an Egyptian
in the eyes of his brothers when he reminded them of the God of their
forefathers.
The Italian Cornelius is mentioned positively as someone used by God to
help Peter to recognize his religiously tainted prejudice and pride. This was
part and parcel of the divine move to bring the Gospel to Gentiles, God's
method to provoke the Jews.
But God also used other nations to chastise the ‘apple’ of His eye, the
Israelites, when they strayed from Him. God wanted His people to be a blessing
to the nations. The idea of the ‘New Testament’ Church as a replacement, a
spiritual Israel, is nowhere clearly taught in the Bible, but the inference is
nevertheless correct that Israel is the example to the Church. The body of
Christ - his Bride - should also bless the nations but there is a need for
correction in its other role. The commandments as tradition have been nullified, so that He could create the
two, Jewish and non-Jewish, into One New Man, establishing peace (Ephesians 2:15). All followers of our Lord are
challenged to willingly and gladly witness together with Messianic Jewish
believers, and perhaps also be ready to be led by them.
An honoured Place for Refugees
The Bible assigns an honoured
place to refugees. Moses became a refugee and fugitive because of his choice to
stand with the Israelites. The letter to the Hebrews 11:25 highlights how Moses
displayed the Spirit of our Lord to prefer suffering to share in the oppression
of his people, instead of enjoying the conveniences of an Egyptian prince. He
was in this way a pointer to Jesus who voluntarily left the Father's glory, not
counting it robbery to become man and ultimately experience the death of a
criminal on the cross (Philippians 2:5ff).
The refugee status of the baby Jesus should fill us with compassion towards all
refugees. During his earthly life Jesus was so to speak homeless, only at home
with his Father. In fact, already as a twelve year-old he referred to the
temple as ‘my Father’s house’ (Luke
2:49). As an adult the Master replied to someone who wanted to follow him: ‘Foxes
have holes and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to
lay his head’ (Luke 9:58). When traders defiled the Temple, Jesus jealously
guarded the sanctity of its precincts. It had to be a house of prayer. He drove
the traders out because ‘… you
are making it a den of robbers’ (Matthew 21:13).
An Eye for Down and Outs
Few groups in history had an eye
for the potential of down and outs, the outcasts like the homeless, refugees
and exiles as the compassion displayed by Count Zinzendorf and his Herrnhut
Moravians in the 18th century.
Abraham, Moses, Jacob, Joseph, and David, as well as many prominent figures in
Church History like Amos Comenius had all been out of their home country
against their will for one or another reason. The Herrnhut congregation was
banned from Saxony. The jealousy of other traders in the Wetteravia region of
Germany, caused them to be also driven from there. We should be quite aware
that God can turn seemingly difficult circumstances around, to His end. I
suggest that the presence of refugees should be regarded as a challenge and a
chance. At any rate, they should definitely not be seen as a threat to our jobs
and livelihood.
A special Place for
Inexperience, for Women and Youth
The divine creation gender model was equality between male and female.
The Hebrew Scriptures swam against the stream of ancient Oriental culture when
they depicted how individual women like Jochebed, the mother of Moses and
complete outsiders like Rahab, a pagan and a prostitute, played a special role
in Jewish history. At
a time when females counted for nothing, Deborah led the Israelite army (Judges
4 and 5). The teenagers Esther and Mary, the mother of Jesus,
are very special in God's wisdom. This goes against the grain of our human
ideas. At the same time, the wisdom of experience and age should be
appreciated and highly valued.
The Lord entered Jerusalem on an inexperienced colt, the foal of a donkey – not
on a horse or a camel, the more fancied transport animals of the day. It is
remarkable that God seems to have a special place for young people who are
ready to go all out for him.
Foreigners as a Blessing
A phenomenon is highlighted in
the Scriptures, viz. that foreigners can be a blessing to any nation if given
the opportunity to do so.
The persecuted French Huguenots of the late 17th century and the Moravian-Bohemian
refugees of the early 18th century
are well-documented examples of this phenomenon. God can turn around tragedy
into a massive blessing to those who give refuge to followers of Jesus who had
been persecuted for their faith. The Cape profited in a big way from the French
Protestants who came here from 1688. The Moravian-Bohemian refugees were
divinely used to usher in the modern missionary movement after Count Zinzendorf
gave them refuge on his estate in 1721. That became the village of Herrnhut.
In recent decades this also happened in the Netherlands. In the 1970s Holland
was heading for a spiritual precipice. The country was deteriorating from a
biblical point of view, fast resembling a spiritual desert because of liberal
teachings at their theological institutions. God used special foreigners profoundly,
notably the Switzerland-based American national Francis Schaeffer (via the TV)
and Floyd McClung, the well-known American Youth
with a Mission leader who
started ministering there in the 1970s. McClung linked up with a fringe
minority of Dutch evangelicals. A national impact followed the Campus Crusade-inspired Er is Hoop (There is Hope) campaign of the
early 1980s. The big conferences for evangelists in Amsterdam of 1983, 1986 and
2000 - sponsored by the Billy
Graham Evangelistic Association –
had a world-wide influence. Evangelists from all parts of the globe converged
on the Dutch capital. In some cases indigenous evangelists came from remote
villages which one would not even find on a map.
The converse also happened simultaneously. God used Hein Postma, a local
Dutchman, whom I met when he was the principal of the Moravian primary school
in Zeist. He challenged me when I was still very much a disgruntled
anti-apartheid activist and embittered exile in Holland. That laid the
foundation for the start of a local evangelistic agency, the Goed Nieuws Karavaan and the Regiogebed. This in turn had a
blessed effect on South Africa via a prayer meeting on 4 October 1989. The
impact of Hein Postma on me also served as a model to start Friends from Abroad at the Cape in 2006/7, a ministry to serve
and equip foreigners who have been coming to our shores.
Chapter 7 Obstacles to Unity
The
apostle Paul advised: "Every Scripture is ... useful for teaching,
rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness" (2 Timothy 3:16).
In the first letter to the Corinthians he wrote about the wisdom of the world,
which they should definitely not strive after. In the same context (1
Corinthians 1:18-21) Paul applies Isaiah 29:14, to stress how futile philosophy
is: 'Therefore once more I will astound these people with wonder upon
wonder; the wisdom of the wise will perish, the intelligence of the intelligent
will vanish.' God would ultimately baffle and
destroy the useless learning and wisdom of the Greeks.
Interaction between Jews and Samaritans
The rivalry between the Jews and Samaritans is found throughout the
Bible. The oppression of Samaritans by the Jews has a long history, which could
have been sparked or exacerbated by the refusal of Ezra, the priest, when their
leaders wanted to help build the second temple. Some negative reaction would
have been almost natural for any Samaritan in interaction with their
oppressors, the Jews.
There were possibly
also Samaritans among the new post-Pentecost believers. Some haughtiness
developed among the Gentile believers in respect of Judaism. The supposed
rejection of Jews by God – because of the crucifixion of Jesus - was spread in
due course. Paul, the apostle, deemed it necessary to react, admonishing the
Gentile believers in Rome 11, highlighting that this ‘rejection’ was only
temporary.
Simon Magus,
mentioned in Acts 8, was a Samaritan. He was disappointed when the apostles
rebuked him. He hoped to get monetary gain via the abuse of Jesus’ name. He
became what has been described as a heresiarch, the founder of the heretic
Simonians.[8] (The Simonians worshipped Simon Magus like Zeus. He was thus a sort of
god to them.) Simon Magus' successor, said to have been a certain Menander, was
also a Samaritan. The Gospel of Luke in particular highlights how Jesus
attempted to put things in perspective, giving the despised and rejected
Samaritans a special place in the sun, advocating in this way for their
inclusion.
Justin Martyr, a great Apologist?
Second century Justin, also called the Martyr (100-165 AD), has
generally been hailed in Christian circles as a great apologist. Few would
regard him as heretical. However, his attitude towards Jews possibly
contributed to the gradual side-lining of the nation that the Bible calls ‘the
apple’ of God’s eye (Deuteronomy 32:10; Zechariah 2:8). Justin
Martyr recorded material which contributed significantly – albeit probably
unintentionally - to what became known as 'Replacement Theology'. The learned
Samaritan Justin Martyr[9] possibly did not have their side-lining in mind when he suggested that
the Church had replaced Israel.
Justin was very
much a child of his day when he went overboard in his haughty intellectual arrogance.
He taught that the Greek philosophers and the ‘barbarians’ such as Abraham...
all who at any time ‘obeyed
the same guidance, were really Christians’ (Walker, 1976:47).[10] Paul, the epistle writer addressed the arrogance and haughtiness of
Gentiles in his letter to the Romans when he stressed that they were only
grafted into the true Olive Tree, Israel. In due course the Church was
nevertheless quite widely but fallaciously seen as the new Israel that replaced
the Jewish nation.
The Early Church Fathers unfortunately did
not always latch onto this advice. In fact, a few of them went overboard with
futile debate and discussion.Tertullian, a jurist who joined the Christians of
North Africa in 207 A.D., discerned very wisely that philosophy was a major
culprit: ‘heresies are themselves prompted by philosophy ... After Christ Jesus
we desire no subtle theories, no acute enquiries after the Gospel...’[11] Against the advice of Paul
not to get involved in futile philosophical arguments, the very same Tertullian
however brought the element of polemic bickering into the equation like few
others before or after him. In this chapter we will touch on issues which
divide the three Abrahamic religions. Theological squabbling has been a major
culprit in this regard.
Semantics as a Disservice to the Church
Tertullian rendered the Church a disservice when he
introduced the terms ‘trinitas’, ‘substantia’
and ‘personae’. These semantics, playing with words, was his effort to describe the
Trinity, the nature of Christ and the different manifestations of God in the
Son and the Holy Spirit. His terse descriptions ‘one substance but three
persons’ and ‘two natures, one person’ were nice-sounding, but they basically
ushered in theological polemics. It is clear that the early Christians
professed both Christ and the Spirit to be divine in nature. Tertullian’s
philosophical theologizing was not helpful however. After the heretic Marcion –
who was clearly outlawed by the Church – the lion’s share of the bickering that
led to the Arian controversy and later to the unfortunate quarrels around the
formulation of the Holy Trinity, has possibly to be attributed to Tertullian.
In contrast to other leaders of the first century
Christian church, Marcion declared that Christianity was in complete
discontinuity with Judaism and
entirely opposed to the Tanach (Hebrew
Bible). According to Marcion, the ‘god of the Greek Old Testament - the creator of
the material universe whom
he called the Demiurge
- was is a jealous tribal deity of the Jews. The Jewish law represents legalistic reciprocal justice, punishing mankind for
its sins through suffering and death. Contrastingly, the god that Jesus
professed is an altogether different being, a universal god of compassion and
love who looks upon humanity with benevolence and mercy. Marcion also produced
his Antitheses - contrasting the Demiurge of the Old Testament with the Heavenly
Father of the New Testament.
Development
of the Concept of the
Trinity
Judaism
has a problem to regard a human being to be the Lamb
of God. All the more it is interesting how the concept of
the Trinity developed in the Middle East. The
oral tradition of the audible voice at the baptism of Jesus and the dove
descending on Jesus circulated very widely. This could have contributed greatly
to the tenet of the Holy Trinity which has no clear proof in Scripture as such.
God, the Father, is generally taken to be the
voice speaking at Jesus' baptism. This was widely regarded as the crowning
occasion of Jesus as the Son of God and the Messiah. All four Gospels refer to
the dove as the visible demonstration of the Holy Spirit descending on the Son.
In the fourth Gospel we read how John the Baptist pointed to Jesus in the same
context as the Lamb of God that takes away the sins of the world (John
1:29,36). Attributes of multiple manifestations and functions of God like truth
(John 7:28, Revelation 3:7 and 1 John 5:6) and goodness (Romans 2:4, Nehemiah
9:20) can be found throughout the Bible. These attributes and traits can also
be traced in the behaviour of our Lord and the manifestations of people under
the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. All of this may have contributed to the
concept of the Trinity. On the other hand, the stressing of the number three in
the Trinity has led to some limitation of the infinite nature of God. He is
able to reveal himself in many more ways.
Scriptural Backing for the Trinity
Taken from a position of faith, the Trinitarian
formulae certainly have clout, but they have limited scriptural backing.
Ephesians 4: 4-6 speaks of ‘one Spirit… one Lord …one God and Father of all.’
In 1 Corinthians 12: 4-6 Paul writes of the same Spirit, the same Lord and the
same God. Peter, another apostle, chips in with his words ‘the foreknowledge
of God, the Father, through sanctification of the Spirit, unto obedience and
sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ’ (1 Peter 1:2). A little bit more
substance we find in 1 Corinthians 12:4-6 as evidence of the granting of
spiritual gifts, different kinds of service and different kinds of expression
and manifestation, noting that 'to
each one the manifestation of the Spirit is given for the common good' (1 Corinthians 12:7). 'There are
different kinds of gifts, but the same
Spirit distributes them.
There are different kinds of service, but the same
Lord. There are different kinds of working, but in all of them and in
everyone it is the same God at work'. Yet, that is rather meagre as a basis
upon which to build the doctrine of the Trinity. The Holy Spirit will reveal to
those people searching after truth that there are many characteristics of a
triune God in which He has revealed or manifested himself when we read and
study the Holy Scriptures.
It is surely true that the Holy Spirit is much more than merely a force like
electricity or the wind. In my view it is completely redundant to debate its
nature. Count Zinzendorf described all this as odium theologicum, the bad smell of theology. He may have suggested
rather hyperbolically however that ‘all the essential theology can be written with large characters on one
octavo sheet’ (Cited in Lewis, 1962:15), i.e. on the half of
an A4 page.
The Use of Latin
Another unwitting problematic
contribution of Tertullian was his use of Latin, moving away from the practice
in theological circles of using Coptic and Greek. Cyprian followed in the
footsteps of his master Tertullian. Their prior training in Law may have played
an important role, in contrast to the Church leaders of Egypt who wrote in
Coptic, thus indigenizing the national expression of the body of Christ. The
Berber Augustine also treaded the same treacherous path of Tertullian and
Cyprian, weakening the North
African Church tremendously. The Church Father Tertullian
apparently had little vision for the unity of the Body. Chadwick (1967:91)
notes that Tertullian’s Apology does not merely
include apologetic defence of the Christian doctrine, but also ‘militant and trenchant attack
on the corruption, irrationality and political injustice of polytheistic society.’ This statement could still get
wide approval, but Chadwick goes on to highlight that every page of
Tertullian’s work ‘is written with the
joy of inflicting discomfort on his adversaries for their error and
unreasonableness, but in such a manner as to embarrass his own friends and
supporters.’ The
doctrinal bickering of the leading North
African theologians had
catastrophic long term results.
The uncompromising attitude of Cyprian and Augustine led to the break with the
Donatist believers. These Church
Fathers can be said to have
introduced denominationalism and foreign cultural elements to the Church on the
African continent.
A strong Difference of Opinion
between Paul and Barnabas
The NT has no problem in mentioning
a strong difference of opinion between two other role players - Paul and
Barnabas’- that ultimately led to a doubling of the missionary effort. But Paul kept insisting that they
should not take him along who had deserted them in Pamphylia and had not gone
with them to the work. And there occurred
such a sharp disagreement that they separated from one another, and Barnabas
took Mark with him and sailed away to Cyprus. But
Paul chose Silas and left, being committed by the brethren to the grace of the
Lord.…’ (Acts 15:38-40).[12]
Rivalry between
Alexandria and Antioch
That Jews needed the Hebrew
Scriptures in Koine Greek, the lingua
franca of Alexandria, where so many of them had been living for centuries,
is quite clear. The traditional story is that Ptolemy II, the
king of Ptolemaic Egypt from 283 to 246 BC, sponsored the translation of the
Pentateuch, the five Books of
Moses. Subsequently, the Greek translation, the Septuagint, was in circulation
among the Alexandrian Jews who were fluent in Koine Greek
but not in Hebrew.
There however arose an unhealthy rivalry
in the Early Church between Alexandria
and Antioch. This is
most evident in the oldest Bible manuscripts. Tracing the biblical manuscripts
back to their origins, there are two geographical sources - Antioch and
Alexandria. Text types that represent a time period or location are
traceable back to one of two families of manuscripts - the majority text
and the minority text - the majority text originating in Antioch
(Syria) and the minority text originating in Alexandria (Egypt).
The majority text from a literal point of
view includes approximately 99% of the 5,000+ extant manuscripts (meaning
manuscripts that are in existence today). These manuscripts have a high
level of agreement with each other. The minority text includes the
remaining less than 1% of extant manuscripts. These manuscripts have a
high level of disagreement between each other (Thus Sinaiticus and Vaticanus,
by far the two principal Alexandrian manuscripts, disagree with each other in
many places in the four gospels).
Keeping in mind the rule of first mention, a principle wherein the
first mention of anything in the Bible generally sets the tone for the use of
that word throughout the whole Bible, one sees a significant difference.
There are four occurrences of Alexandria in the ‘NT, all with a negative
connotation: Two theologians who received theological training in Egypt,
caused big division in the Church. Cerinthus, is known to have been a
heresiarch. As we have seen, Tertullian, who is generally heralded, started
semantics around the nature of Jesus that resulted in a major doctrinal rift.
By contrast, Antioch in Syria is only
mentioned with a positive connotation in the ‘New Testament’. It is a place
from which a man of honest report, full of the Holy Ghost and wisdom came,
and who was appointed over church business (Acts 6:3-5). At Antioch, they also preached
to the Grecians and a great number of them believed and turned unto the
Lord (Acts 11:19-21). The Cypriot Barnabas was sent to Antioch and positive
things resulted (Acts 11:22-24). In Antioch the headquarters of the ‘New
Testament’ Church was established. Barnabas looked for Saul and brought him
back to Antioch (Acts 11:25,26).
Religious
Arrogance spread
Upon seeing
Gentiles enjoying a relationship with God, there aroused a sanctified envy
among the Jews. On the other hand, as we have seen, religious arrogance was
spread by the highly regarded Justin Martyr. He stressed that the nation of
Israel had been ‘rejected’ by God because of their disobedience. In
Romans 11, Paul clearly stated that God did not reject the Jews totally and
finally. Their limited temporary time of 'rejection' was intended to bring the
Gentiles to the Father. Although the first day of the week was called ‘the
Lord’s Day’, specially honoured as a day of special celebration of His
Resurrection, there was still real dialogue between Christians and Jews in the
second century. Justin’s record of his interaction with Trypho, a
Jew, testifies to this. The pinnacle was obviously the 321 AD decree
for the compulsory free day to commemorate the sun god.
Another
major schismatic group displaying religious arrogance – next to the Jewish
Ebionites - was those Christians who allied themselves with the doctrines of
Novatian. He was a Roman priest who elevated himself into a rival pope,
one of the first antipopes. He held that lapsed Christians, who had not
maintained their confession of faith under persecution, may not be received
again into communion with the Church. The
Novatians went so far as to re-baptise their converts.[13] They were labelled by Rome as
schismatics. Novatian was an advocate of the traditional view that to those
guilty of murder, adultery and apostasy the Church had no power to grant
remission, but only to intercede for divine mercy at the Last Judgment.
Theologians cause Confusion
The attempt to explain the deity of
Jesus spread confusion. In 431 AD, the Council of Ephesus condemned
Nestorianism, proclaiming the pregnant Mary as theotokos, the bearer of God.
After the birth of Jesus she became the ‘Mother of God’. The Council of
Chalcedon's dismissal of Monophysitism emphasized the dual nature of Jesus –
human and divine - in 451 AD. Simultaneously the effort to try and explain the
Holy Trinity disseminated the blasphemous idea that the Mother of God was the
third person of the Holy Trinity. Mary and her baby Jesus was equated with the
goddess Isis and her son Horus.
The Result of Semantics
The arch enemy of the Church abused
semantics, such as playing with words, to sow disunity. A single letter caused the Arian
controversy. Affirming the divinity of Jesus, the Council of Nicaea (325
AD) delegates turned their attention to the question of how Jesus relates to
the Father. This sparked petty semantic bickering. The historian Eusebius
suggested at that occasion that Jesus had a nature similar to that of the Father (homo-ousos).
Bishop Athanasius, who was not invited to the proceedings, had earlier already
stated that this would be a compromise which would minimize the full teaching
of Christ’s divinity. The Lord was homo-ousios,
of one and the same substance, not merely of similar substance. The whole
discussion boiled down to a debate over the difference between the Greek words
forsimilar and same, about the presence of the letter i of the Greek alphabet. In the extension of this debate the
doctrine of our Lord's divinity, the issue of Jesus’ Sonship (of God) and the
doctrine of the Holy Trinity were also drawn into the discussion. Furthermore,
the stressing of the Trinity as three persons operating in unity, was not
completely helpful for the understanding of the complex nature of God.
East-West Rift:
the Byzantine Collapse
The theological in-fighting of the 5th century continued right into the
present era. The semantic doctrinal bickering prepared the way for Islamic
expansion in North Africa. The peoples in Greece and Turkey have been in
conflict for millennia. About 1,500 years ago, the rivalry had a doctrinal
dimension.
At these councils, the chief
defenders of these theological off-shoots represented churches in the East,
ranging from Assyria and Persia (Nestorians) to North Africa and Armenia
(Monophysites). The situation only worsened when the Greeks attempted to
subjugate the Eastern churches by seizing their monasteries and churches.
The theological bickering of the Eastern churches coincided with on-going ethnic
infighting. The Persians warred with the Aramaeans, Egyptians, Armenians, and
Greeks, greatly destabilizing the Christian territories' frontier with the
newly Muslim land on the Arabian Peninsula. A struggle in the Byzantine capital
of Constantinople between Emperor Phocas (602-10) and his general Heraclius
instigated a military mutiny. Then in 632, Emperor Heraclius ordered the
conversion of the Jews, which resulted in mass murder and tremendous resentment
of his rule.
All in all, there was a great deal of resentment towards the Byzantines, even
among other Christians. Thus, when Islamic Bedouins began raiding Christian
territories, they allied with displaced Arabs and disaffected local Christians.
The Persians and Greeks dismissed these clashes as common, unsophisticated
nomadic activity. But they were wrong. The first wave of jihad was underway.
Abuse of Sound
Doctrine
Sound doctrine, however, has
sometimes also been abused to bind people denominationally. Even a virtue like
humility can become a negative tenet if someone becomes proud of it. The
follower of Jesus should display humility, but he is no door-mat. Humble
submission is a virtue, but slavish servility is sinful. The believer in Jesus
may assert his authority in humility, but he does not have to allow anybody to
abuse him as a slave (2 Corinthians 11:20). If we have been liberated by the
Son of God, we are free indeed (John 8:36). There is thus a subtle difference
between biblical submission and bondage due to servility. Under the guise of
submission expected by wives or congregants, Church leaders sometimes have
become guilty in this regard. Those who are trampled upon in this way are
however not blameless either, because a follower of Jesus should not allow
himself to be brought under a yoke of slavery, under a new bondage (Galatians
5:1). After all, believers may invoke the anointing of the Holy Spirit to break
every yoke of bondage (compare Isaiah 10:27).
Religious Leaders causing Splits
Religious leaders through the ages fell into the trap
of allowing themselves to be hero‑worshipped or causing
rifts (or both). Theologians would cause splits and division through a
strong emphasis on some doctrinal tenet. We bear in mind
that all great men have aroused the opposition of lesser minds. By way of a
strong emphasis on some special doctrinal teaching or distortion of the Word,
they however sometimes polarised believers, blurring the vision for the unity
of the Body of Christ and causing splits instead. Many denominations started in
this way. We lose out and miss the blessings God wants to give, because He is
eager to command His blessings when there is unity (compare Psalm
133:1,3).
It is sad to see the low morals that religious leaders can display when their
influence appears to be threatened. Instead of doing introspection, the
Pharisees of Jesus' day started a smear campaign. And because they could not
successfully hit at Jesus’ moral quality, they tried to play Him out against
John, the Baptist (John 4:1ff). The aim of their endeavours was evidently to
get Jesus out of the way. Is it too far-fetched to suggest that the beastly
intrigue, which preceded the death of John the Baptist, had its origin with the
religious leaders? From what we read in the gospels about the Baptist, he might
just as well have told Herodias or Herod to their face what he thought of their
incestuous marriage. But some incitement by certain leaders would also have
fitted perfectly into the picture. Let’s face it: some of the things that the
Master said to those Pharisees and Sadducees who came to him were not readily
palatable.[14]
In South Africa many a prominent Christian leader become a victim of
fame. In a subtle way the heresy of apartheid caused some believers to lose
their sense of biblical priorities. Quite a few Church leaders, who started off
as committed followers of Jesus, were side-tracked in the struggle against
apartheid.
Chapter 8 Antidotes
to Disunity
Right from the start of His ministry, Jesus was involved with conflict. The
narrative of the temptation in the desert in Matthew 4 is a high-powered
confrontation between the forces of darkness that wanted to woo the Lord into a
compromise, in an exchange for power.Jesus’ challenge to the fishermen to
follow Him was likewise conflict-laden. The report of the changing of wine into
water (John 2:1-11) contains a potential conflict of priorities between His
earthly mother and His heavenly Father. Jesus' respective response demonstrated
the authority, sovereignty and flexibility of Father and Son. Let us deduce
some lessons from our Lord’s handling of conflict.
Mediation in a Conflict
The Master gave practical and clear teaching for
mediation of a conflict. We refer especially to the prime example, Matthew 18.
Sometimes pastoral counsellors forget to check out the very basic step, viz.
whether the complainant had been attempting to resolve the matter by
approaching the other party, the purported offender, first. The Master gave us
an example how to handle such matters with the way he reprimanded Martha when
she complained about the inactivity of Mary when she was running around with
household chores of hospitality. He reprimanded her and commended Mary.
Of course, it is usually not easy to confront the person who has offended you -
unless one is of the type that likes to squabble and fight. Those who come to
us for counsel after a break in any relationship, have to be taught to check
out their assumptions. Instead of accepting any loaded or hurting information
passed on as truth, a good practice and principle is to ascertain if the spirit
in which the story has been conveyed, has not perhaps been distorted. How much
anger and hurt can be prevented in interaction among people – also in Christian
circles - if this teaching of Jesus is adhered to.
There is of course the very real situation where the opposing party reacts
indifferently or even aggressively upon personal confrontation. Jesus’ advice
to take one or two witnesses along for this eventuality makes such a lot of
sense. Yet, how often is this practised? The same thing applies to the next
step of church discipline, viz. the exclusion from the fellowship if anyone
persists with gross sinful behaviour and/or is not remorseful and refuses
bluntly to mend his/her ways.
I suggest that we take
our day to day interaction as human beings as a point of reference. How does
one handle conflict in a biblically responsible way? Jesus’ teaching in Matthew
18 is in my view the valid paradigm in this regard. An important lesson from
this teaching is that it is not wise to wait on the other party to offer an
apology. If you know there is some discord between you and a brother or a
sister, you should just make the start to get the air cleared, starting with an
apology if that is feasible and applicable. In pastoral counsel offering
forgiveness must be inculcated and taught. This is also the route to be taken,
even if one thinks that one's own part in the development of the rift is
minimal and the other party’s guilt is gross. The biblical way is always to be
the least, to serve rather than expect to be served. If there are things to be
set right, we have to do it promptly and generously. (Zacchaeus was ready to
return the fourfold of what he had taken from some people!! (Luke 19:8). Paul, the apostle taught along similar lines
If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at
peace with everyone’ (Romans
12:18).
Sanctified Anger
An important facet of conflict management is the
issue of anger. Fallaciously some Christians seem to believe that it is sinful
to become angry. On the contrary, there is definitely such a thing as holy
anger. Throughout the Hebrew Scriptures one can read how God reacted with wrath
and anger because of the idolatry and sins of His people. Similarly, Jesus got
really angry when He saw how the Temple was desecrated by traders. (He was
clearly very much angered that the lame and the blind (Matthew 21:14), the
foreigners and other proselytes that habitually visited that part of the temple
precincts, had been pushed out).
There are general cases and circumstances where we should fight the good fight (of faith) (Timothy
6.12). In Jude 1:3 we
are encouraged and advised to 'contend earnestly for the faith' and 2 Peter 3:17 warns us to 'be on
your guard so that you are not carried away by the error of unprincipled men
and fall from your own steadfastness'. However,
if we feel inclined to whip certain people with the tongue – we should take the
advice to heart that Dr David du Plessis passed on. Deducing that Jesus had
been totally distraught by what he had seen in the temple, Du Plessis
highlights that Jesus had wept before he went into the temple: ‘Don’t ever try to whip anybody – to reform them –
until you’ve wept’ (A
Man called Mr Pentecost, 1977:216).
In the verses 9 and10 of the short
epistle of 3 John, the apostle highlighted that evil people in the Church may
have to be exposed. John, the apostle and beloved disciple of the Lord, is generally
taken to be the author of the short epistle. He indicated that he wanted to
expose the arrogant behaviour of a certain Diotrephes when he would visit the
fellowship. The evil-minded brother engaged in bad-mouthing others and he was
refusing to welcome the brothers (the travelling missionaries). Diotrephes
hindered the others in the church who wished to help the missionaries and he
also expelled those church people who aided the missionaries. Church leaders –
in fact all of us - should keep in mind the lesson of weeping first before
attempting to whip anybody.
The nature of God is such that He is swift to forgive, but ‘slow to anger and rich in
steadfast love and truth’ (Exodus
34:7). In the Psalms it is repeated more than once that God is ‘slow to anger.’ At issue is
how we handle our anger, or better still, how we get our anger sanctified. In
fact, it would be a complete distortion of the Pauline verses (1 Corinthians
13:4-6) to say that love should cover up sinful behaviour. Paul takes it for
granted that we can get angry, but we should be careful not to sin when we are
angry. We are taught to rectify things and clear the air before the sun sets
(Ephesians 4:26). We should guard our temper, pray for a guard to be put before
our mouth (Psalm 141:3). Paul actually encourages us to actively oppose anger
in our midst by not only putting
off anger and other carnal
traits (Colossians 3:8), but ‘instead,
let the Spirit renew your thoughts and attitudes. put on your new nature,
created to be like God – truly righteous and holy’ (Ephesians 4:23,24), i.e. through the
sanctifying work of the indwelling Holy Spirit.
In his epistle James (1:19, 20) passed on some practical teaching in this
regard: be slow to get angry.
This ties in with Romans 12:2 which defines the renewing of our thoughts as a
transforming process that the Holy Spirit must perform in us. Rather than a
quick fix, it is a metamorphosis.[15]
Good
Listening
In the same
context James (1:19) taught
us ‘Let every man be
quick to hear, slow to speak’. In
all communication we have to learn to take responsibility for what we listen
to, what we tell others and for our behaviour afterwards. In order to hear what
someone is trying to communicate, we have to first stop talking! Anthony Lackay, a believer who was raised in the Cape
township Hanover Park wrote aptly in a devotional message:
‘To make sure
we've really heard the point being made, we should often stop and
repeat the conversation to the person speaking to us. Especially if it
is an important conversation and - a sharing of personal things and
experiences, maybe an instruction to be implemented - the person is seeking
counsel or a listening ear.
We need to ask
questions to ascertain whether we misunderstood or missed anything
important from the conversation or discussion. The person we are speaking
to will also be reassured in this way that he/she had our complete and total
attention. Another reason why listening to people is important for believers is
that it simply means that we might have an overall listening challenge. If we
struggle with listening to people, the chances are that we may be
struggling to hear what God is trying to tell us too.’
Apology instead of Defence
It sounds almost too mundane and so
down to earth to highlight that it is much better to offer an apology instead
of defending yourself when you are wrong or made a mistake. Yet, the flesh in
us does not like that. How much heat can be taken out of a conflict if the
guilty party apologises. Of course, apologies should not become cheap.
Nevertheless, one could rather err on this side than refuse to apologise in a
stubborn attitude of ‘What have I done wrong?’
Remorseful Confession as an
Important Biblical Mandate
It is my conviction that confession is one of the most important
biblical mandates in countering any guilt incurred in respect of Muslims (and
Jews). Next to that, forgiveness always plays an important role to set parties
free who have struggled under or are living through any form of strife or
conflict. Wherever restitution is needed, we should attempt to rectify our part
of the guilt as promptly as possible. Apologies without evidence of remorse and
serious attempts towards restitution are not good enough. It is even worse when
others are blamed.
Confession and repentance for our uncharitable and general judgemental damaging
attitude of sectors of the Body of Christ is surely called for in many places
all around the evangelical world. Apologies, remorseful confession and the
corollary of forgiveness are indeed important antidotes to disunity.
Chapter 9 The Word unites the
true Church
The Church of the Middle Ages remained in darkness because the Word was not
only obscured, but it was also hidden from the masses on purpose. Only priests
were allowed to read the Bible. This was a demonic ploy, also repeated in the Orthodox Church of Greece and in the East. It was
abused by the Roman Catholic
Church as well as by Islam,
keeping adherents in religious bondage. Judaism and its Rabbis succeeded to
make suspect anything that has to do with the 'blasphemer' Jesus. Quite early
in the Christian era Jewish adherents were told that the document that the
Christians call the 'New Testament', was a 'forgery'. No good Jew was supposed
to touch that book, let alone read it. Roman Catholicism and Islam followed
this pattern, suggesting that Protestants or Christians have changed the
scriptures – often without giving proper substantiation for the
accusation. (Some Catholics point to the apocryphal books that are not in
the Bibles used by Protestants. It is significant that the Roman Catholic Church includes apocryha almost lock stock and barrel although
Jerome, the translator responsible for the Vulgate, the Latin translation, had
serious reservations about some of these books.)
A Power of God unto Salvation
Paul wrote that the Gospel is a power of God unto salvation (Romans 1:16), but the Word had to
get to the people. Even the great apostle could only be at one place at any
moment. By way of contrast, in recent years we have seen how the mere translation
of (parts of) the Word into the spoken language of previously unreached people
groups - be it on paper or through tape cassettes, CDs and DVDs - have changed
the lives of thousands dramatically. Yet, it was hardly discerned that Paul
also wrote in the above verse, Romans 1:16, 'to Jews first and also to the
Gentiles.' It had been Paul's own practise to first go into
synagogues in every town he came. Jesus instructed his disciples in a similar
way (Compare Matthew 10 and Luke 10:1-24, if we take these events to have been
sequential.) The Church down the centuries succumbed to the temptation – with a
few individuals and the Moravians of the 1740s to 1770 as striking exceptions - to concentrate on easier targets than the difficult Jews
(and Muslims). This only changed to some extent after the Six Day War of 1973
in Israel. With regard to Muslims, significant change transpired after the
Desert Storm War in 1991. Ten years of prayer, initiated internationally by Open Doors, brought exceptional results. Muslims became
followers of Jesus in their thousands the last decade or so.
The Rediscovery of the Word
Any evangelism was opposed by
Church authorities in the Middle Ages. Only in the early 5th century Jerome finished his Latin
translation, the Vulgate. But ordinary Christians were not allowed to read the
Bible for themselves. It belongs to well-known Church History that it took
centuries for the Word to be translated into the vernacular of nations. Waraqah
bin Naufal, the cousin of Mohammad's first wife, could have been the next
person to attempt any translation at the end of the 6th century - into Arabic. There is no
known record of what he actually translated before he became blind.
The rediscovery of the Word through people like Wycliffe and Luther caused a
major wave of spiritual renewal in Europe. Britain's John Wycliffe was an early
advocate for translation of the Bible into the common tongue. He completed his
translation directly from the Latin Vulgate into vernacular English in 1384. Wycliffe
also gave oversight to a hand- written translation of 150 copies of the Wycliffe Bible.
The official Roman
Catholic and Holy Roman Empire abhorrence of seeing Bibles translated into the
vernacular can be derived from historic quotes: Thus Arundel, the Archbishop of
Canterbury declared: 'That pestilent and most wretched
John Wycliffe, of damnable memory, a child of the old devil, and himself a
child and pupil of the anti-Christ...crowned his wickedness by translating the
Scriptures into the mother tongue.' Henry
Knighton, a contemporary Catholic historian, wrote: 'John Wycliffe translated the Gospel from Latin into the English ...made
it the property of the masses and common to all and...even to women...and so
the pearl of the Gospel is thrown before swine and trodden under foot and what
is meant to be the jewel of the clergy has been turned into the jest of the
laity...'
The Council of Constance declared Wycliffe a stiff-necked
heretic, banning him on 4 May 1415. But Magister Jan Hus, teaching in Prague,
had already been deeply influenced by Wycliffe's writings. After the
martyr's death of Jan Hus two months later on the fire stake on 6 July 1415,
the great Hussite movement arose so to speak from the ashes, leading to the
Bible translation into the Bohemian vernacular and the first printed Bible. The
Hussite Reformist movement spread through Middle Europe like a simmering fire,
ultimately impacting Germany's Martin Luther long with John Calvin and Huldrych
Zwingli of Switzerland.
Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam
Desiderius Erasmus, a great
scholar of Rotterdam, was so moved to correct the flawed Latin Vulgate, that in 1516,
with the help of printer John Froben, he published a Greek-Latin Parallel 'New
Testament'. The Latin part was not the inferiorVulgate, but his own fresh
rendering of the text from the more accurate and reliable Greek, which he had
managed to collate from old Greek 'New Testament' manuscripts he had acquired.
This milestone was the first non-Latin Vulgate text of the scripture to be
produced in a millennium… and the first ever to come off a printing press. The
1516 Greek-Latin New Testament of Erasmus focused attention on just how corrupt
and inaccurate the Latin Vulgate had become, and how important it was to go
back and use the original Greek ('New Testament') and original Hebrew ('Old
Testament') languages to maintain accuracy… and to translate them faithfully
into the languages of the common people, whether that be English, German, or
any other tongue. No sympathy for this 'illegal activity' could be expected from
the Vatican of course.
Martin Luther, the great Reformer
Martin Luther (November 10, 1483 - February 18, 1546)
was a Christian theologian and Augustinian monk whose teachings inspired the
Protestant Reformation and deeply influenced the doctrines of Protestant and
other Christian traditions.
The very special
contribution of Luther to the Reformation was that he made the Word accessible
to the rank-and-file German Christian. The demands of study for academic degrees and
his preparation for delivering lectures drove Martin Luther to study the
Scriptures in depth. Luther immersed himself in the teachings of the Scripture
and the Early Church. Slowly, terms like penance and righteousness took on new meaning. The controversy
that broke loose with the publication of his 95 theses placed even more
pressure on the reformer to study the Bible. This study convinced him that the
Church had lost sight of several central truths. With joy,
Luther now believed and taught that salvation is a gift of God's grace,
received by faith and trust in God's promise to forgive sins for the sake of
Christ's death on the cross. This, he believed was God's work from beginning to
end.
He declared his intolerance
regarding the Roman Church’s corruption on 31 October 1517, by nailing his 95 Theses of
Contention to the Wittenberg church door. Luther was due to be exiled in the
months following the Diet of
Worms Council in 1521. This
event was designed to eliminate him.
Luther’s 95 Theses
When he
nailed his 95 theses to the church door at Wittenberg, Luther changed the
course of human history. He accused the Roman
Catholic Church of heresy upon heresy. Luther's action was basically a
response to the selling of indulgences by Johann Tetzel, a Dominican priest.
Luther's charges also directly challenged the position of the clergy regarding
individual salvation. Before long, Luther’s 95 Theses of Contention were copied
and published all over Europe.
Here I Stand
Luther's
Protestant views were condemned as heretical by Pope Leo X in the bull Exsurge Domine in 1520. Consequently Luther was
summoned to either renounce or reaffirm them at the Diet of Worms on 17 April
1521. When he appeared before the assembly, Johann von Eck, by then assistant
to the Archbishop of Trier, acted as spokesman for Emperor Charles the Fifth.
He presented Luther with a table filled with copies of the writings of the
reformer. Eck asked Luther if he still believed what these works taught. Luther
requested time to think about his answer. Granted an extension, he prayed,
consulted with friends and mediators and presented himself before the Diet the
next day.
When the counsellor put the same question
to Luther the next day, the reformer apologized for the harsh tone of many of
his writings, but said that he could not deny the majority of them or the
teachings in them. Luther respectfully but boldly stated, "Unless I am
convinced by proofs from Scriptures or by plain and clear reasons and
arguments, I can and will not retract, for it is neither safe nor wise to do
anything against conscience. Here I stand. I can do no other. God help me.
Amen."
On May 25,
the Emperor issued his Edict of Worms, declaring Martin Luther ‘vogelfrei’,
an outlaw. This ban implied that
persons sentenced thus were not to be granted any accommodation.
Martin
Luther's Reforms
In the secluded castle Wartburg Luther subsequently
translated the New Testament into German for the first time from the critical
Greek 1516 Greek-Latin New Testament of Erasmus, a text which was later called textus receptus. Luther published this in September1522. The translation of the ‘Old Testament’
followed, yielding an entire German language Bible in 1534.
Luther’s translation of the Bible helped to develop a standard version of the
German language and added several principles to the art of translation.
Luther's hymns sparked the development of congregational singing in
Christianity. His marriage, on June 13, 1525, to Katharina von Bora, a former
nun, began the tradition of the marriage of clergy within several Christian
traditions – in opposition to the celibate life-style that was taught and
practised by the Roman
Catholic Church.
Martin Luther was the
first person to translate and publish the Bible in the commonly-spoken dialect
of the German people. Luther also befriended William Tyndale, an academic from
Cambridge, giving him safe haven
and assistance when Tyndale fled from England.
God's Exile – a very special Martyr
The first Bible printed
in English was illegal and the Bible translator, William Tyndale, was burned
alive for the crime of translating God's Word into English. William Tyndale
produced the first English translation from the original Hebrew and Greek
Scriptures. (Wycliffe had translated from the Latin Vulgate.) Because of
the persecution and the determined campaign to burn these Bibles, few copies
remained. William Tyndale was introduced to the writings of Luther and Zwingli
at Cambridge University. Tyndale got
his M.A. at Oxford. Thereafter he was ordained into the ministry, serving as a
chaplain and tutor. He dedicated his life to the translation of the Scriptures
from the original Hebrew and Greek languages.
Tyndale was shocked by the ignorance of the Bible prevalent amongst the clergy.
To one such cleric he declared: 'I defy the Pope and all his laws. If God
spares my life, before many years pass I will make it possible for the boy who
drives the plough to know more of the Scriptures
than you do.' After he had failed to obtain any ecclesiastical approval for his
proposed translation, Tyndale went into exile to Germany. He noted that 'not
only was there no room in my lord of London's palace to translate the New
Testament, but also that there was no place to do it in all England.'
Supported by some London merchants, Tyndale sailed in 1524 for Germany, never
to return to his homeland. In Hamburg he worked on the 'New Testament', which
was ready for printing by the following year. As the pages began to roll from
the press in Cologne, soldiers of the Holy Roman Empire raided the printing
press. Tyndale fled with as many of the pages as had been printed. Tyndale moved to Worms where the complete 'New Testament' was published
the following year (1526).King Henry VIII sent out his agents to offer Tyndale a
high position in his court, a safe return to England and a great salary. However, Tyndale was not willing to surrender his work as a Bible
translator, theologian and preacher merely to become a propagandist for the
king!
He
became a new version of John the Baptist when he argued against divorce and
specifically dared to assert that the king should remain faithful to his first
wife! Tyndale maintained that Christians always have the duty to obey civil
authority, except where loyalty to God is concerned. King Henry VIII's initial
enthusiasm for Tyndale turned into rage. Tyndale was hereafter an outlaw both
to the Roman Catholic Church and its Holy Roman Empire - and to the English kingdom!
In 1535 Tyndale was betrayed by a
fellow Englishman, who gained his confidence only to treacherously arrange for
his arrest. Tyndale was taken to the state prison in the castle of Vilvorde,
near Brussels. For 500 days, he suffered in a cold, dark and damp dungeon and
then on 6 October, 1536, Tyndale was taken to a stake where he was burned. His
last reported words were: "Lord, open the king of England's eyes”.
Chapter 10 Uniting Dynamite
The role of the invention of
printing is paramount in the disseminating of the Word. Exactly this was the
motivation of the German Johan Gutenberg. When he saw that the Christian truths
were kept imprisoned in a few manuscripts, he wanted to give wings to the
truth.
The Cape has its own version of the same phenomenon. Arnoldus Pannevis, a Dutch
school teacher who came to the Mother City in 1866, noticed that the people at
the Cape were speaking a language which was quite distinct from Dutch. He was
driven by a passion to see the Bible translated into the language spoken by the
people. However, he was met with derision for his idea to have the Bible translated
into a patois, a kombuistaal.[16] Pannevis’ plea with the British and Foreign Bible Society was
flatly refused: ‘We are by no means inclined to
perpetuate jargons by printing them.’
On
the other hand, the move of the reformer Martin Luther in putting the bible
into the hand of the rank and file German has also been interpreted as the
cause of the first big denominational split of the body of Christ after the
schism that has resulted in the east-west divide when the orthodox church and
Rome parted ways in 1054 AD.
Only in the 1960s the Second
Vatican Council permitted
ordinary Roman Catholic Church members to read the Bible for
themselves. In the 1980s we saw a mighty turning to Christ in that denomination
in South America when all church members were encouraged to read the Bible.
This led to a substantial exit from the Roman
Catholic Church and the
simultaneous growth of Evangelicalism in South America.
A similar phenomenon has been occurring in the Middle East in recent years. Every Muslim who has access to
Internet can now read the Bible in his/her own language (This was preceded by ten years of prayer for the Muslim
world). Thousands from their ranks have become followers of Jesus and many more Muslims are still secret believers.
The Purpose of the Scriptures
The prophets knew
that God’s Word was the vehicle to bring His rebellious and back-slidden people
back to Himself. Repeatedly a promise is connected to obedience to the Word and
its teachings on the one hand and punishment for disobedience on the other.
Down the ages the preached Word was divinely used to call back-sliding
Christians back to God and His ways.
The purpose of the Scriptures should be stressed: guidance and correction.
David exclaimed: "Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light for my
path" (Psalm 119:105)
and Paul advised Timothy: "Every Scripture is ... useful for teaching,
rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness" (2 Timothy 3:16).
Paul emphasized that the Word should dwell richly in us (Colossians 3:16). Of
course, this does not mean that we have to imitate Ezekiel who literally seems
to have eaten the scrolls (Ezekiel 3:3). It does mean however that we may be
radical in our obedience to scriptural teaching. In fact, Paul encouraged us in
a similar way that Christ should dwell in us and from there we must be rooted[17] and
established in love (Ephesians 3:17). The Word in us has the quality of
purification. Therefore John can say that whosoever remains in Christ, sins not
(1 John 3:6). There is of course always the occasion of lapses, when one leaves
the close communion with Christ. This is the time when the enemy loves to
strike, when we are overcome by sin (Galatians 6:1). In this regard there is a
definite difference between wilful sinning and accidental sinning. However,
confession and the conscious refraining from sinful behaviour (Proverbs 28:13)
opens a clean slate for the road of victorious living in the footsteps of the
resurrected Son of God (1 John 1:9 ‘if we confess our sin … He … will purify us from
all unrighteousness’). Linked to this is the conscious communion with the
Lord, connected to Him as branches to the true vine (John 15:1ff).
Semper Reformanda
Although Martin Luther caused arguably the biggest
church split in history, he cannot be given the blame that Protestants later
made ashibolleth,[18] a test of orthodoxy, out of his
catechisms. They were intended for teaching young people the basics of the
Christian faith. Luther emphasized ecclesia
reformata semper reformanda est (literally
it means that a reforming church should always be ready to reform and adapt),
suggesting that we should never remain static in our church practices and
traditions. We should always continue the process of evaluation and we always
have to be ready for change and reformation. There he is on sound 'New
Testament' ground. No less than our Lord himself set the standard for treating
rules and regulations like traditions and rituals such as washing of hands, offerings
and fasting (e.g. Mark 7:13ff, 'Thus
you nullify the word of God by your tradition that you have handed down...) Matthew Henry comments aptly and
concisely on Mark 7:1ff, 'One great
design of Christ's coming was, to set aside the ceremonial law; and to make way
for this, he rejects the ceremonies men added to the Law... Those clean hands
and that pure heart which Christ bestows on his disciples, and requires of
them, are very different from the outward and superstitious forms of Pharisees
of every age. Jesus reproves them for rejecting the commandment of God.'
Be functional
without losing the Core
Our Lord attacked
long exhibitionist prayers. Even the Sabbath Law came under scrutiny. The
functionality of traditions should prevail, without losing the core. If
functionality becomes convenience, the Lord may deem it fit to drive us out of
our temples. How many churches got stuck in rigid formalism and
tradition! However, if we feel inclined to whip – we must keep in mind that
Jesus wept before he went into the temple (Luke 19:41).
Jesus also led the way in flexibility, getting his cue from the Father. The
communion with Him gave our Lord the liberty to change the water into wine,
although he initially deemed it inopportune to go public with miracles and
wonders (John 2). Although his stated strategy was to stick to the House of
Israel, the Lord broke his own rules by helping the Roman centurion and the
Syro-Phoenician woman when he discerned true faith. He challenged the norms of
the society of his day by dining with the despised chief tax collector
Zacchaeus and allowing a prostitute to anoint him and use her hair for drying
purposes. To command a female to take the message of his resurrection was
likewise surely very revolutionary for that day and age.
Chapter 11 False Alternatives
The example of the Greek philosophers to create alternatives would impact the
theology of the West deeply. One of its bad fruit was the stressing of a Bible
verse, taking it out of its context. Even before he started with his ministry,
the Lord was confronted with this phenomenon. When the arch fiend tempted him
in the desert Jesus responded not only to a potential playing out of worship
and service but he also gave the priority in His reply: ‘Away from me, Satan! For it is
written: 'Worship the Lord your God, and serve him only’ (Matthew 4:10). With this slight variation of Deuteronomy 6:13 (‘Fear the Lord … and serve
him only”) the Lord clearly gives the divine priority of the matter: first
worship and then service. Service for God should be flowing out of reverence
and worship and definitely not as a sense of duty.
The Danger
of Stressing of one Bible Verse
The stressing of one verse at the expense of the full
biblical revelation is not limited to the founders of sects. In a rather
debatable way Martin Luther for example did this as well. The highly respected
reformer possibly undermined the unity of the body of Christ through his
sectarian interpretation of Romans 1:17 “but the righteous man shall live by
faith.”
Tradition passed on that Martin Luther allegedly climbed ‘holy
stair steps’ on his knees in 1512. As he did so, suddenly a voice like thunder
seemed to say to him: ‘The just shall
live by faith’ (Romans 1:17. He sprang to his feet and hastened from the
place in shame and horror. That text never lost its power upon his soul. From
that time he saw more clearly than ever before the fallacy of trusting to human
works for salvation, and the necessity of constant faith in the merits of Christ.
His eyes had been opened, and were never again to be closed, to the delusions
of the papacy."[8] He believed that this recollection
was a prompting from the Holy Spirit admonishing him to rely on faith alone,
rather than works. This was later described as a turning point in his life. That
the veracity of this account is uncertain is one thing. He however emphasized the verse in an overdrawn way - sola fide, by faith alone -
putting works in a rather negative light.
Faith as Work or Works of Faith?
For many centuries the 'works of faith' teaching was
evidently not always understood properly. How else was it such a revolutionary
experience for Martin Luther to ‘discover in Romans 1:17 that ‘the righteous shall live by faith
alone’? We note that this Pauline verse was merely citing Habakkuk 2:4. The
esteemed Luther however possibly over-interpreted Paul. Martin Luther has possibly to
be given the bulk of the blame for making works of faith suspect in the
process. In the extension of this concept, grace and law came to be perceived
as opposites. The accusations of Jewish theologians against Paul – all too
often selectively and abusively emulated by Muslim scholars – have like-wise
been overdrawn. The prolific epistle writer possibly never intended to play
works out against faith as Martin Luther and other theologians since him have
been doing. In fact, in his beautiful song on love, 1 Corinthians 13, Paul ends
with ‘Faith, hope and love... and the greatest of these is love.’ Are
not love and works almost identical in this context, albeit that he attacked
works in that chapter which are not motivated by love?
From
the letter that the second century Church Father Policarp wrote to the
Philippians, it can be deduced that he must have known at least the bulk of the
writings of the 'New Testament'. It is evident that he picked up the gist of
Pauline teachings accurately when he described the relationship between faith
and love (works) as follows: ‘Faith is
the mother of all, it is followed by expectation (hope) whilst the love to God,
Christ and the neighbour leads the way.’
A Serious
Misconception
Some Christians have been led to believe that
according to the Hebrew Scriptures (‘OT’), salvation is accomplished only
through works. This is definitely a misconception. The Hebrew word most often
translated with ‘grace’ or ‘favour’ is chen. Chuck and Karen Cohen - two
Messianic Jews, i.e. followers of Jesus with a Jewish background, have clarified
the meaning of chen in biblical
context: ‘the stronger coming to the help of the weaker... (The
stronger) acts by a voluntary decision, though he is moved by the dependence or
the request of the weaker party’ (The Roots of our Faith, p 22). An excellent
example of how it works in practice is how Moses interceded for the idolatrous
Israelites after the experience of the golden calf in Exodus 32. In the
exchange between God and Moses the word chen is
used nine times. Moses knew that it was not by any merit on the part of the
Israelites that he could approach the Lord and intercede for them. It is
significant that God met him on that basis, even stating that it is His divine
nature to be ‘gracious’ (Exodus 34:6). Tragically, the Jewish Christians, already
excluded by their fellow-countrymen because of their faith in Jesus as their
Messiah, became isolated from their Gentile co-believers as they continued with
the observance of Sabbaths, circumcision and other Jewish feasts and thereby
unwittingly and unintentionally perpetuating the misleading perception that
they reduced Christ's sacrifice.
The flawed Grace versus Law
Dichotomy
Paul's distinction
between Isaac as the son of the promise and Ishmael as the son of the bondwoman
is unquestionably very valid, just as that between grace and law. It caused
however a tragic by-product, a haughty condescending attitude towards Islam and
Muslims, as well as a sickening arrogance of Western Protestants towards Roman
Catholics.[19] Many Protestant
theologians were taken on tow by the overdrawn teaching of Martin Luther. He
created the impression that grace and law are mutually exclusive. Subsequently,
some theologians have been suggesting that Torah (Law) belongs to
the ‘Old Testament’ and charis (grace) to the new
covenant. In Galatians 5:4 Paul did of course warn against those who believed
that they could be justified by faith - those legalists have fallen away from
grace. That was the closest he came to propagate a so-called contradiction
between law and grace.
The flawed legal and forensic interpretation of Torah – preferably only with
negative connotations and in contrast to the Jewish understanding of loving and
protective teaching - led to a caricature. The sad part of this is that this
construction even found its way into Bible translations. The King James version
– generally regarded as one of the best English translations - fell into the
trap by translating John 1:17 incorrectly. The word but is used, thereby
indirectly implying that there is a contradiction between the law given by
Moses and the grace and truth which came through Christ. (In the original Greek
the word used is the conjunction kai; it should thus be
translated as the law AND grace.
In spite of Paul's warning against a lackadaisical attitude towards sin – he
actually said in Romans 8 'far from it', licentiousness and even grave
sin cannot be tolerated with excuses such as 'grace abounds' or 'die liefde
bedek alles', (love covers everything). In so many churches remorse because
of sinful practices and a clear evidence of breaking with sinful and immoral
practice are nowadays hardly required or expected. In Reformed churches the
dichotomy is weakened to some extent when the law is read every Sunday in their
liturgy in some form. Following Paul, the apostle, this is followed up by a
pronouncement of grace. All too often, however, this amounts to an empty
ritual. As a result, the perception grew in many a congregant to regard the
‘NT’ as superior to the ‘OT’.
Torah merely an
Educator to Faith in
Christ?
In more than one
instance the Hellenist upbringing of the prodigious Paul comes through. Greek
philosophic thinking loved the either/or combination. Coming from his personal
experience of a legalist interpretation of the Torah - against which our
Lord protested strongly - Paul proclaimed the law to be an educator to bring
one to faith in Christ. Hebrew thinking is more inclusive, wary of false
alternatives. Under this influence Paul wrote to the Galatians (3:5) along
similar lines with regard to the gift of the Holy Spirit: ‘... by the works
of the law or by the hearing of faith.’ (Earlier we looked at the false
assumption of works and faith as alternatives.) This verse, along with
Galatians 3:2 could be abused to support the grace versus law argument.
Paul basically argues indeed that the gift of the Holy Spirit was not imparted
to them in consequence of the observance of the Law of Moses, but in connection
with a faith response to the preaching of the gospel. Evangelicals will
generally have no problem with this. In his later letters to the Ephesians and
the Philippians he made quite clear what is at issue: “For by grace are you saved through faith; and that
not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: not of works, lest any man should
boast” (Ephesians 2:8,9). Faith is not of yourselves but it is instrumental
to salvation. It is not your own human achievement or effort. It is
the gift of God. To the Philippians (2:13) Paul
wrote “…for it is GOD which
works in you both to will and to do His good pleasure”. God provides Christians with the willpower and
motivation to please Him. The real issue here is thus not grace OR works. Neither is it
grace OPPOSED to
works. Nor is it grace in place of works. It is simply Grace FOLLOWED BY works.
Be it as it may, already in the first century Ignatius, an early Bishop of
Antioch, said fallaciously in The Epistle of Ignatius to the Magnesians (ca. 110 A.D.): ‘…For if we continue to live in accordance with Judaism,
we admit that we have not received grace. For the most Godly prophets lived in
accordance with Christ Jesus.’
Paul versus James
The rivalry between the respective followers of James
and Paul have often been inappropriately blown up and exaggerated. Some authors
have tried to suggest animosity between James and the Nazorean Christian
community on the one hand and the Pauline followers of Jesus on the other
hand. This is highly artificial because in his epistle James speaks twice about
Jesus as the Lord and the Messiah (Christ) and in James 5:7, the author awaits
the coming of the Lord. The wording is no different than Pauline equivalents.
Martin Luther also blew erringly into
that horn. He even went to the extreme of calling the Epistle of James 'straw-like'.[21] Luther changed the order of the 'NT'
books in his German Bible translation in such a way that the Epistle of James
was moved to the back of the Bible, just before the book of Revelations. Many
believers since Luther went to another extreme. Thus some evangelicals reacted
in opposition to the so-called 'Social Gospel' of the early 20th century. They would over-emphasise
faith, sometimes even side-lining or bad-mouthing works of compassion. No less
than the Master himself showed where the priority should lie, when he said, ‘But
seek ye first the kingdom of God, and His Righteousness’(Matthew 6:33). The Bible teaches the combination of
faith and works, or better still, it highlights works of faith. Jesus’ example
of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25ff) is the prime paradigm, where the ritually
and doctrinally ‘inferior’ Samaritan - in the view of Jesus’ Jewish audience -
put the Levite and the Priest to shame. The
probable view of the law expert, who had questioned Jesus in the context of the
parable, would have been legalist. James stressed in his epistle that our faith
should be derived from our works - faith
without deeds is dead (James 2:14-26).
In this passage James highlights the action of the harlot Rahab, that she was
performing a deed of faith when she was still a pagan.
It is possible that James deemed it necessary to give this correction because
of an extreme interpretation of Pauline teaching. Paul possibly merely meant
that works should not be abused to boast with or attempting to earn rewards
with them. But he did not discard them either. In fact, 1 Corinthians 3:14
shows that he did reckon with rewards: If
what has been built survives, the builder will receive a reward. In that context however, the rewards
are not material. Elsewhere Paul gives an idea what he means with the
remuneration the believer should be looking at, e.g. ‘I love you and long to
see you, dear friends, for you
are my joy and the crown I receive for my work’
(Philippians 4:1). Paul thus pointed to
the committed mature believers of Philippi as ‘You... my crown’. Nevertheless, we may take for
granted that nothing we
ever do for the Lord goes unrewarded. God is not unrighteous to forget our work
and labour of love. It has become proverbial that the Lord is no man's debtor.
The
Importance of the Quality of the Material
In his second letter to the Corinthians the believer
is challenged to aspire to be ‘transformed
into his (the Lord’s) likeness’ (3:18) and in 1 Corinthians 9:25 Paul
writes about a crown that will last forever. The crown refers to a reward. The
quality of the material used in building on the foundation Jesus Christ, was
important, whether it would stand the test of fire (1 Corinthians 3). Thus
believers who have been discipled well, would be the sort of reward Christians
should be aiming for. At the same time, building on any other foundation than
Jesus, is disqualified for any reward. Timothy Keller (Generous Justice,
2010:98) summarized the various positions of Paul and James succinctly:
'The contradiction is only apparent. While a
sinner can get into relationship with God by faith only (Paul), the ultimate
proof that you have saving faith is the changed life that true faith inevitably
produces (James).[22]
Two Types of Christians
The side-lining of Jews had a very negative effect on
Christianity. A tragic aberration set in when the Church became the
establishment. The rapidity of numerical and geographical expansion of
Christianity in the third century greatly accelerated the acceptance of a
double ethical standard. Acute theological problems were raised by a doctrine
of two types of Christians, ordinary ones and the clergy. (Already in the
first century the concept was known as the doctrine of the Nicolaitans, composed
of two words, nikao meaning conquer and laos which means people.). A Nicolaitan was
someone who supposedly conquered the laity, the common people. This germ was
disseminated among other things in a sermon of Origen (184 -254 AD), when he spoke of an elite army that was supported by
soldiers who also fought against evil but who were not involved with the actual
fighting (Chadwick, 1969:176).
The State Church replacing House Churches
The secular advantages given to the Church as a result
of the Constantine military victories and the subsequent reforms had a fatal
side effect. The unified State Church replaced house Churches, which were
actually forbidden. This was of course far removed from the biblical idea of
the unity of the Body of Christ. In the process the Church lost its prophetic
power over social, cultural and pagan habits. The clergy became less dependent
on God and their life-style moved further and further away from biblical
standards. Thus the biblical word paroikia of which Peter, the apostle, speaks in
his first epistle, meaning to be a stranger on earth, evolved to become a
parish. This became almost the opposite of the original concept, but
understandable in the environment of a society without money. The parish was
the security of the priest.
Contextualization or Confrontation
If all issues were as straightforward as the logos/rhema debate, it would not be such a problem. (At
closer examination of these translations for the original Greek word, we notice
that they are used interchangeably in the 'NT').
However, there are instances where the
heart of the Gospel is at stake. One such issue is the so-called contradiction of
contextualization and confrontation. The ‘New Testament’ is quite clear that
both have its rightful place; in fact, proper contextualisation inevitably
leads to confrontation. The nature of the Gospel is that it ‘offends’ because
it goes against the grain of our innate yearning for self-sufficiency.
Improper contextualisation occurs when the adaptation to the culture goes so
far that no confrontation comes about. The message of the Cross is always
‘folly’ to those who oppose the Gospel (1 Corinthians 1:18). On the other hand,
it does not mean that the carrier of the Good News must set off on
confrontation course every time he/she shares the Gospel. Jesus taught that his
followers should be ‘shrewd as serpents and as
innocent as the doves’ (Matthew 10:16).
Paul became a Jew to the Jews and a Greek to the Greeks (1 Corinthians 9:20ff).
Nevertheless, this did not eliminate the necessity of confrontation with the
Romans, the Greeks or Jews. In fact, his contextualisation, going into the
synagogues and sharing the Gospel from the Scriptures, more than once led to a
threat to his life. Abusing contextualisation to avoid confrontation is
unbiblical. Dialogue which becomes an end in itself is biblically untenable.
This does not take away the necessity of sharing the Word in a way that is adapted
to the culture. Ideally, sharing the Gospel respects the hearer in every way.
It is sensitive to his/her special needs.
Occasional Need of Confrontation
In no way should we condone an airy-fairy covering up of differences. Jesus
used God’s Word as a prime weapon against the devil when He was attacked in the
desert. But also the assistants of the arch enemy had to be opposed. Because
the Lord had observed their ways meticulously and listened carefully to what
they were saying, Jesus could venture into enemy territory, telling his
religious opponents to their face that they were hypocritical. He gave Simon,
the Pharisee, a lesson in hospitality, while he uplifted the prostitute who
'wasted' precious nard ointment to anoint him and drying his feet with her hair
(Luke 7:37ff).
The Master furthermore spoke of ‘binding the strongman’ (Matthew 12:29).
Paul wrote about ‘taking
captive every thought’ (2
Corinthians 10:5), about ‘strongholds’ (2 Corinthians 10:4) and ‘weapons of righteousness in the
right hand and in the left’ (2 Corinthians 5:7). The full ‘armour’ of the
believer (Ephesians 6:11ff) belongs of course to the very well-known portions
of Scripture which have even been taught to children in Sunday school. In
traditional theology these warlike terms have generally been
over-spiritualized. (This probably happened when the superficial impression
could be gained that it could clash with the impression that Christians should
be peace-loving or even pacifist. Islamic adherents love to say that their
religion is a peaceful one – albeit not quite accurately as they could
basically only refer to the Meccan Surah’s and verses of the Qur’an.)[24]
In Galatians 2:11-15 it is reported how Paul criticized Peter to his face in
the presence of others when he detected hypocrisy. If the actions of fellow
brothers and sisters confuse young believers, it might be necessary to do the unusual
thing to reprimand them publicly. Paul had been taught at the feet of the
renowned Gamaliel. As a Pharisee, he thus had a head-start. But, like the
Master, he dared to confront his opponents on their own turf. In Athens
he challenged the learned Greeks who were constantly debating on the Areopagus
(Acts 17:16ff). In the same vein, the apostle did not beat about the bush in
his condemnation of hand-made gods as idols. This made the Ephesians very
nervous, causing uproar in the process. The presence of Paul and Silas caused a
furore in Thessaloniki, especially when Paul spoke about Jesus as the Christ
(Acts 17:1-9).
At a time when it
has become fashionable to be a 'Revolutionary',[25]by
just quietly leaving the conventional Church system, there is more than ever
need for healthy confrontation. Every pastor should know why people are leaving
the (sinking?) ship. Before leaving, church members should pray for a good
opportunity to share their frustrations and/or disappointments in a mature and
loving way. This phenomenon is simultaneously subtly fragmenting the Body of
Christ – and not conducive to the transformation of communities.
Chapter
12 Two special Fore-runners of Church
Unity
In this chapter we
discuss two special fore-runners of church unity who
impacted Count Zinzendorf. In the case of Jan Amos Comenius it was the indirectly,
after he had been challenged by the Moravian and Bohemian refugees that
had come to Saxony from 1721. With August Hermann Francke it was personal when
he attended the famous boarding school in Halle, where he founded with a few
fellow teenage believers the Order of the
Mustard Seed.
Ever since Peter, the apostle, was
challenged to step down from his condescending attitude in obedience to the
command of the Holy Spirit to enter the home of the Roman soldier Cornelius,
there can be no excuse for permitting any artificial social barriers in the
Church of Jesus Christ. Any effort in this regard would be tantamount to
disobedience to the teaching of the Word. It has perhaps not been appreciated
sufficiently that real, meaningful contact between master and servant contains
the seed of radical mission work.
Jesus himself had set the standard when he called his disciples friends, no
longer servants: No longer do
I call you servants, for the servant does not know what his master is doing;
but I have called you friends, for all that I have heard from my Father I have
made known to you (John
15:15). Paul blew into the same horn with his teaching of the broken wall and
the one new man (Ephesians 2:14f). There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor
free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus (Galatians
3:28).
In the next chapter we examine
in some more detail how Count Nicolaus Zinzendorf and the 17th century believers in Saxony’s Herrnhut
implemented biblical principles, adapting them for their
generation.
Obedience rather than Glamour
A sign of great personalities is
that they choose suffering rather than glamour when the chips are down. At the
outset of his ministry Jesus chose not to be impressed by the adulation of his
Nazareth townsfolk. Instead of riding on the crest wave of praise, he swam
against the stream, risking his life in the process (Luke 4:14-30). When a
multitude of Jewish worshipers wanted to forcefully make Jesus their worldly
King (John 6:15), he refused this praise. Instead, he left the multitude. In
the same chapter it is recorded how he responded with a hard word, after which
the crowd left him en masse (John 6:66). Jesus chose the road of
suffering, to be ultimately crowned with thorns. His Kingdom is not of this
world.
When Peter merely faintly suggested that Jesus should escape his innocent
death, the Master had to rebuke him strongly, seeing no less than satan behind
this idea (Mark 8:33). Although he was the Son, the Lord had to learn obedience
to the Father (Hebrews 5:8). By the time of the Gethsemane struggle he had
obviously learned the lesson when he was required to empty the cup, the content
of which ultimately took our Lord from the presence of His Father, so much so
that he ultimately used the word forsaken. In the agonizing prayer in the
Garden of Gethsemane, He responded thrice with ‘not my will but your will be
done…’ (Mark 14:36).
One of the most self-effacing gestures in Church History was performed by
Francis of Assisi. He was asked to pray for a spastic child in an Italian
village whose body was all twisted. He initially didn’t want to pray for the
child because he didn’t want to receive any glory if the child was healed.
After persistent pleas by the village folk, he prayed a simple prayer. The
young child thereafter just ‘unwound and relaxed’. The people were
ecstatic. After five minutes they were looking for Francis because he was
nowhere to be found. He believed that all glory belonged to God.
We
have seen how William Tyndale refused a high position in the court of King
Henry VIII, a safe return to England and a great salary to oversee his
communications. However, Tyndale was not willing
to surrender his work as a Bible translator, theologian and preacher merely to
become a propagandist for the king!
The line between acclamation and rejection can be very thin at times.
Choosing for absolute truth often makes the difference. Compromise could
sometimes prevent persecution or rejection. When Bishop Comenius had received
secular recognition via the invitation to become the rector and pioneer of the
newly established Harvard University
near Boston in the ‘New World’, he declined, preferring to stay with his small
persecuted flock in Poland. Let us look more closely t the life of this true
pioneer of church unity.
Jan Amos Comenius - a special Exile
One of the Czech nation's
most beloved sons, Jan Amos Comenius (1592-1670), is buried in Holland. This
visionary religious leader, theologian, philosopher and educationist lived most
of his life in exile, fleeing political and religious persecution in Europe.
His last 14 years, among his most active and productive, were spent in
Amsterdam, where he hoped to realize his project for the betterment of
humanity.
[1] One of his timeless statements was: ‘[2] We are
all citizens of one world, we are all of one blood. To hate a man because he
was born in another country, because he speaks a different language, or because
he takes a different view on this subject or that, is a great folly’
Comenius
was the bishop of the Unitas Fratrum,
the Bohemian Church of the Brethren, whose members had been were forced into
exile when the Habsburgs imposed Catholicism on Bohemia. The Brethren were
Calvinists and had many contacts with the Dutch Calvinist churches. In Dutch
society however Comenius was better known as the author of language textbooks.
In his book Orbis Sensualium Pictus
(the visible world in pictures), he was one of the first to use images to teach
Latin and sometimes two other vernacular languages. This was revolutionary at
the time, along with his idea that all children, from both sexes and all social
classes, should be educated.
But
education for Comenius should serve a yet greater aim: in order to achieve
worldwide peace, all of mankind needed to be re-educated. From his canal house
in Amsterdam, he set about compiling and rewriting his pedagogical works, with
the support of the city council, who gave him the key to the city's library,
and his lifetime benefactor, a rich merchant cum arms dealer. Comenius had lost
his personal library and many precious manuscripts in a fire before he fled
from his previous place of exile in Poland. According to Nicolette Mout,
Professor of Modern European History at Leiden University, Comeniius"
found the peace and time to work on what was to become his lasting contribution
to philosophy and pedagogy alike" in Amsterdam.
His
General Consultation for the Improvement
of Mankind expounds his philosophical system, called pansophy, close to
what we would call today "holism". Nicolette Mout: ‘Comenius thought that he could put all the knowledge,
philosophy, theology, geography and history, into one system of knowledge. And
that system would then be the basis for the re-education of mankind towards
peace and brotherhood.’ Comenius hoped to
set up in Amsterdam an international college of wise and learned men who would
help bring about world peace. The Consultation remained unfinished. It was
rediscovered and published only in the 20th century. Throughout his
life, Comenius continued to believe that one day, he and his followers would
return to their homeland.
Muslims and Jews as Followers of Jesus?
Jan Amos Comenius believed
that one of the sure signs that the end of the world was near would be that
Muslims and Jews would become followers of Jesus. To this end he started to
translate the Bible into Turkish.
Comenius
was under the impression that Muslims
worshiped the same god as the Christians and that it would therefore be very easy for them to
convert. He was so enthusiastic
about the idea of having the Bible translated into Turkish and then seeing all
the Turks convert to Christianity, that he wrote an introduction long before
the translation was finish. Dutch historian Nicolette Mout again: ‘Their
souls would be saved, so why not become Christians now that the end of the
world was at hand? Of course the Christian religion in his view was the best,
the only true, but he thought that for Jews and Muslims it would be so much
better, he was terribly well meaning. He did have a certain understanding of
the Islam, very biased, but nevertheless he was one of the few people who were
interested in Islam at the time.’
There
might have been political considerations as well. The Turks were the enemies of
of Christendom at large but the Catholic Habsburgs occupied Bohemia. Nicolette
Mout: ‘so by
getting friendly with the Turks, Comenius also hoped for Turkish political
support, maybe even military support, in order to free his homeland from the
Habsburgs.’
At
the time the Turks were seen as the enemies. The Turkish Sultan had conquered
and occupied part of Europe in the Balkans, ‘so it was quite unusual for somebody like Comenius to
write about the Turks in such a friendly way. Comenius really wanted to get
through to them, to communicate and impress them with the idea that they had to
convert to Christianity because in this way they would also contribute to world
peace.’ If the Turks were
converted, Comenius believed, world peace would be much nearer.
Because
he felt the end of times was imminent, Comenius wanted the Bible translated as
quickly as possible. For this, he is believed to have received financial
support from his Dutch benefactor Laurence de Geer. The translation made in
Istanbul under the supervision of the Dutch Republic's learned ambassador in
Istanbul was completed in 1659 but was never published.
Even
at the end of his life, this eternal optimist and untiring apostle of world
peace tried to mediate in negotiations between two arch enemies: the English
and the Dutch. He attended the Breda peace conference where he presented his
book "the angels of peace" and called on both countries to stop
fighting for supremacy in world commerce. The war continued.
True Piety of an AcademicAugust Hermann Francke (22 March 1663 – 8 June 1727) was a unique German. As lecturer in Leipzig he soon became popular; but the peculiarities of his teaching almost immediately aroused a violent opposition on the part of the university authorities; he was interdicted from lecturing on the ground of his alleged pietism. Prohibited from lecturing in Leipzig, Francke in 1690 found work at Erfurt as diakon of one of the city churches. Here his evangelistic fervour attracted multitudes to his preaching, including Roman Catholics, but at the same time excited the anger of his opponents. Francke accepted an invitation to fill the chair of Greek and oriental languages in the new University of Halle. He was also appointed pastor of Glaucha in the immediate neighbourhood of the town. He afterwards became professor of theology. Here, for the remaining thirty-six years of his life, he discharged the two-fold office of pastor and professor with success. At the very outset of his labours, he had been profoundly impressed with a sense of his responsibility towards the numerous outcast children who were growing up around him in ignorance and crime. After a number of tentative plans, he resolved in 1695 to institute what is often called a "ragged school," supported by public charity. A single room was at first sufficient, but within a year it was found necessary to purchase a house, to which another was added in 1697.
In 1698 there were 100 orphans under his charge to be clothed and fed,
besides 500 children who were taught as day scholars. The schools grew in
importance and were later known as the Franckesche Stiftungen. The education given was
strictly religious. Hebrew was included, while the Greek and Latin classics
were neglected. (Where else could Count Zinzendorf have been impacted in his
love for the Jews than in Halle where he attended boarding school?) A
chemist, whom Francke had visited on his deathbed, bequeathed to him the recipe
for compounding certain medicines, which afterward yielded an annual income of
more than $20,000, and made the institution independent. Shortly after its
founding, the institution comprised an orphan asylum, a Latin school, a German
(or burgher) school, and a seminary for training teachers for these
establishments. Although Francke's principal aim was religious instruction, he
also taught natural science and physical exercises and manual trades. He ran an apothecary's shop
and, having assisted in founding the first modern Bible society, a printing press for publishing cheap copies of
the Bible for mass distribution. Francke's schools provided a prototype which
greatly influenced later German education.
In his university teaching as well, he gave great emphasis to religion.
Even as professor of Greek, he had given great prominence in his lectures to
the study of the Scriptures; but he found a much more congenial sphere when, in
1698, he was appointed to the chair of theology. Yet his first courses of
lectures in that department were readings and expositions of the Old and New
Testament; and to this, as also to hermeneutics, he always attached special importance, believing that for theology a
sound exegesis was the one indispensable requisite. Halle
became a centre from which pietism became very widely diffused over Germany.
Under Francke's influence, Christian missionary efforts were greatly enhanced,
zeal was aroused and recruits for Christian missions were gained,[5] and Halle also became the center
for Danish-Halle Mission to India.
Chapter
13 The Herrnhut Moravians in Church Unity Endeavours
To Follow Christ means Stepping
Down
Another profound example of the
principle in well-known mission history is the instance when Count Zinzendorf
‘stepped down’ to speak to the slave Anton at the occasion of the coronation of
Christian VI of Denmark in 1731, after the mediation by one of his Herrnhut
believers. Meaningful dialogue[26] ensued
because Anton, the slave who hailed from the West Indian island St Thomas,
challenged Zinzendorf, the aristocrat, in no uncertain way. The Count responded
in a positive way by inviting Anton over to Herrnhut to repeat his challenge to
the congregation that had been hearing repeatedly of the worldwide mission
need.[27] Although the Herrnhut believers were apparently still
very much in the revival mood, they needed the slave Anton to get them moving
to the mission fields. What will the reaction of the more affluent South
Africans be if their poorer compatriots challenge them to share their lives
meaningfully in partnership, to become servants, the equivalents of slaves?[28]
In Herrnhut the slave Anton did not mince his words either. He stated clearly
that any prospective missionary to St Thomas, the island in the West Indies
from where he originated, should be prepared to become like one of them; the
missionary candidate had to be prepared to become the equal of a slave. The
Moravians of Herrnhut, through their child-like faith in Jesus, accepted the
challenge spontaneously. In the next few decades they left the little village
to places all over the world.
The socializing of Count Zinzendorf with the slave Anton was definitely not an
one-off occasion. This was in line with the charismata,[29] the spiritual gifts of Romans 12, 1
Corinthians 12 and the five-fold ministries of Ephesians 4. They are not only
given to leaders. Moreover, it was part of Zinzendorf's life-style to converse
with kings and slaves alike, whoever came across his path. For almost a decade
the Count had been ‘on everyday terms with artisans and peasants’, confirming
his instinctive conviction that spiritual gifts are independent of social rank (Weinlick, 1956:96). This was evidently part and parcel of the DNA of Moravian
missionaries.
Servant Leadership
Count Zinzendorf demonstrated
what servant leadership entails. Although it becomes clear from all reports
that he was a dominant aristocratic figure in the fellowship, his style was not
autocratic or domineering. Thus he regarded the way Friedrich Martin treated
his Caribbean congregants as too strict, but Zinzendorf did not oppose him in
the least (Spangenberg, 1773-75:1177). Even though he disagreed
fiercely on some issues, it seems that Zinzendorf hardly ever imposed his will
on others. Although he was for example very dissatisfied about a financial
transaction which was enacted in his absence - and against which he protested
as soon as he heard about it, the Count assisted to scratch the capital
together (Spangenberg,
1773-75:1490).
The Count excelled at integrating the initiatives of
congregants. Centuries before cell groups were rediscovered in the 20th century, the Herrnhut congregation was
divided in 56 small bands where an informal atmosphere encouraged innovation.
Thus the cup of the covenant - whereby the cup would pass from hand to hand -
as well as the dawn service on Easter Sunday became standard practice in the
denomination as a whole (Weinlick, 1956:85). Both traditions were initiated by
the group of the single
brethren.
Zinzendorf instructed candidate
missionaries to have a servant attitude: ‘You must
never try to lord over the heathen, but rather humble yourself among them, and
earn their esteem through the power of the Spirit...’ How seriously they took the
instructions is borne out by the fact that Matthaeus Freundlich, a first
generation missionary in St Thomas, married the mulatress Rebecca, at a time
when non-Whites were still called ‘Wilden’, also in the literature of
the Brethren. The missionary had to seek nothing for himself. ‘Like the cab-horses in London, he must wear blinkers and
be blind to every danger and to every snare and conceit. He must be content to
suffer, to die and be forgotten’
(Lewis, 1962:92). Zinzendorf
demonstrated what it means to regard the other higher than yourself. The Count
praised the North American indigenous believers. In his diary the following
entry is found for March 9, 1729: ‘...I spoke earnestly with our servant
Christoph and was deeply humbled by his testimony concerning himself. He is
far in advance of me’ (Lewis,
1962:90).
Teachability and Humility
It has been reported how Count Zinzendorf was getting challenged in his
faith in the Holy Scriptures from a very early age. He became deeply involved
with questions around the authority of God's Word from the age of seven
(Beyreuther, 1962:84). Zinzendorf discovered that whosoever is prepared to face
uncomfortable questions and then take a step of faith, can only grow through it
spiritually. He had the courage to speak bluntly of transcription errors, of
geographical and chronological mistakes in Scripture. He saw it as no major
tragedy that the apostles erred in their imminent expectation of the second
coming of the Lord. The Count even proceeded to say: ‘Misunderstood prophecies
can and should not be defended, but they should rather be pre-empted and
acknowledged’ (Cited in Beyreuther, 1962:89). Count
Zinzendorf was quite radical. He believed that the Holy Spirit can empower
anybody to interpret the Word for himself according to his own capacity and
circumstances. Not only the professional teacher had the right to expound
Scripture, because the paraclete (The Holy Spirit) ‘will teach you everything’ (John 14:16).
It is evident that the lessons
were thoroughly learned and put into practice. John Wesley was struck by the
humility of the Moravians. In his
first confrontation with Moravians who were with him on a ship bound for North
America, John Wesley was deeply impressed: ‘... I had
long before observed ... their behaviour... performing servile offices for the
other passengers which none of the English would undertake.’Zinzendorf also taught that the leaders had to be
teachable themselves. ‘Only when the ‘Amtsträger’ (clergyman)
becomes a brother amongst brethren and accept from them fraternal help in
comfort, encouragement, complimenting, admonishment, correction and prays with
and practises brotherliness as one of them, then brotherhood is realized' (Beyreuther, Studien
zur Theologie Zinzendorfs1962:193).
Through his example
Zinzendorf inspired others. His teachability inspired noblemen and professors
to go and sit at the bare feet of the potter Martin Dober. His example of putting the
Kingdom first, found a following when learned men declined high academic posts.
Teaching by Example
Count Zinzendorf not only taught
this, but he also displayed that he was teachable. Thus he became willing to go
to Dresden in 1721, although that was really the last of the places where he
wanted to serve the Lord, after the godly Magister Schwedler had spoken to him (Beyreuther, 1957:231). When Zinzendorf was offered a full-time post as one of the cabinet
ministers of the Danish king, he declined, citing his commitment to Herrnhut as
a reason. (Earlier he had aspired to go to Denmark.) He was willing to be
employed in some lesser capacity, so that he would have time for free-lance
religious church activity. He really understood the biblical injunction ‘Seek ye first the kingdom of God
and its righteousness.’
His example was duly followed by
other Moravians.
August Spangenberg
refused an offer as professor of Theology at Jena. Arved Gradin, a prominent
Swedish academic of Theology and Philology, declined the call to a
professorship at Uppsala University, coming to the village of lowly Herrnhut
instead. Samuel Lieberkühn who had studied Hebrew thoroughly in Halle and Jena,
preferred to go and work among the Jews in Holland, rather than accepting an
offer to become professor of Semitic languages in Königsberg.
The Biblical Model of Fellowship
Practised
The biblical model of mutual
fellowship has hardly been practised better ever than among the Moravians of
Bethlehem (Pennsylvania) in the ‘new world’ in the 1750s. ‘Seldom has even the most easy service (been) executed
with such holy reverence... a brother in the stable or in his manual work can
ever think that he does nothing for the Saviour; whoever is faithful in the
outward (things) is just as well a respectable servant of Christ as a preacher
or a missionary.’ The joy with which
they performed mundane tasks, interspersed with love feasts, was part of their
DNA. Even at work they would sing. Thus Bishop Spangenberg could write: ‘In our economy the spiritual and
physical fit together like the body and soul of man...’
Hierarchical church structures
have sadly conditioned leaders to become bosses. The dictum coined by Lord
Acton (1834-1902) that 'power tends to corrupt, but absolute power corrupts
absolutely', is so true, also in religious contexts. This is however alien to
the spirit of biblical servitude. Loving brotherhood, (or rather siblinghood),
should be the hall-mark of Church work, where the leader's endeavours should
result in the empowering of the
congregants.
The early Moravian
missionaries evidently understood this very well. They discerned that ‘New
Testament’ life had to be demonstrated. In the Caribbean they bought slaves
free, took them into their houses and worked alongside them on the plantations
(Spangenberg, 1773-1775:1177). On the other hand, the
Herrnhut fellowship respected the culture gender pattern of their day, whereby
a distance of mutual respect had to remain intact. The sisters called each
other by the familiar ‘Du’ (you) but used the polite ‘Sie’ (thou)
when they addressed the brethren.
Among the males the same thing
happened. But also the Bishop was not addressed with a title, but merely as
brother so and so. (In fact, the Bishop's role in the Moravian Church to this
day is merely that of the pastor of the clergy, without an administrative
function).
Winning Sectarians over Through Love
God commands his blessing where brethren live in love
and harmony (compare Psalm 133:1,3). On the
other hand, the enemy of souls is therefore always on the lookout to
cause disruption and disunity.
It
is no wonder that Herrnhut received its fair share of sectarians, who quite
soon converged on the village after 1722 from all geographic and spiritual
directions. The practice of winning sectarians over through love eventually won
the day. The refugees from Moravia refused to be drawn into religious quarrels
until a separatist with the name of Krüger came to Herrnhut in 1726. He
described Count Zinzendorf as the ‘beast from the Abyss’. Krüger dubbed Johann
Rothe, the Lutheran pastor of the neighbouring town Berthelsdorf a false
apostle. Even Christian David, the faithful pioneering refugee from Moravia,
was misled. Ultimately only three brethren remained with Zinzendorf. When the
Count discerned that the fiery Pastor Johann Rothe merely aggravated the
situation with his sermons, he requested leave from his lawyer’s office in the
city of Dresden to move to Herrnhut at 'Easter' 1727. Hereafter he spoke
laboriously to the erring members individually with patience and love. In
public he shed heiße Träne (hot
tears) because of the evident disunity.
The big About-Turn
The revival of August 1727 in Herrnhut is often
romanticized. It is often overlooked or forgotten that Count Zinzendorf went to
the little village on his estate in April 1727 explicitly ‘that he might give all his time
to the healing of the discords and to caring for the souls whom the Lord had
led to his estate’ (Lewis, 1962:51). The summer of 1727 could only flourish after a major conflict had been
resolved. The Moravian refugees wanted their original denomination - the Unitas Fratrum - restored, whereas Zinzendorf preferred
a small fellowship evolving that would display a significant ‘leaven’ presence
within the bigger Lutheran
Church. A good compromise was reached when the statutes were finalized on
12 May 1727, including the radical statement: ‘Herrnhut shall stand in unceasing love with all
children of God in all churches, criticize none, take part in no quarrel
against those differing in opinion, except to preserve for itself the evangelical
purity, simplicity and grace’.
The big about turn
came when the Count called all the inhabitants of the village Herrnhut to a
public meeting on May 12, 1727. He taught them for three hours in the new
statutes - the rules and regulations. Everybody who wanted to live on his
property had to sign the agreement to abide by the statutes. The general tone
of these statutes was significant. The brothers and sisters of Herrnhut were
enjoined to live in love with the children of God in all churches. Internally, the mere critical judging of each other
would be regarded as a ‘Greuel’, an abomination, to be fiercely opposed.
He ‘discoursed on the sole ground of
salvation – without entering into the various notions which had caused
confusion and division among them’ (Langton,
1956:72).
One
after the other the members agreed until only a few stubborn separatists were
left. (On 12 May 1748, twenty one years later, the Count recalled how the
village had been weighed. He used to call the 12th May, 1727 the ‘critical day’ upon
which Herrnhut would prove to be either a ‘nest of sects’ or a vibrant
fellowship of Christ.) The inhabitants were required to sign the statutes, the Manorial Injunctions and
Prohibitions, promising with this act to end their sectarian quarrels, and
to live in loving fellowship with Christians of all beliefs and
denominations.
Twelve Elders were elected who had
control over every department of life, and enforced the Injunctions and Prohibitions with an iron hand. They levied the
usual rates and taxes to keep the streets and wells in order and supervised the
care of widows and orphans, while keeping a watchful eye over the relationships
of single young men and women. They also followed the actions at the inn
closely and they reprimanded the narrators of evil tales. All who disobeyed the
laws, or conducted themselves in an unbecoming, frivolous or offensive manner,
were requested to leave Herrnhut.
Small Cells of Mutual Trust
On Sunday 9 July 1727 the tide had almost turned, but Zinzendorf was not
yet completely happy. He noticed that there was still not warm mutual trust and
love. Hereafter he endeavoured to meet every member of the community
individually, sometimes with one other person who had their trust, discussing
the respective spiritual condition of the person concerned. He sought to link
them up in small groups of two, three or more from the same sex who could
console, encourage and rectify each other. This was the beginning of the
'bands', by which not a single soul was left out in the cold. This developed
into small cells of mutual trust where transparency prevailed.
On the 5th of August
1727 Count Zinzendorf conducted a moving all-night prayer event on the Hutberg, the hill just outside
the village. On Sunday 10
August they had another lengthy afternoon meeting of song and prayer that went
on until midnight. The remaining separatists were finally pulled in. Three days
later the congregants went to Berthelsdorf for the celebration of the Lord’s
Supper, where a ‘sea of tears’ - mutual love and forgiveness - drowned the
occasion. It seems as if God was only waiting for the unity to let the revival
break out in force!
Taking Critics Seriously
A major problem in Church
History has been that leaders often responded to critics inappropriately. All
too often these critics were either not listened to properly or Church leaders
over-reacted, giving people the option to leave the fellowship if they were not
satisfied.
Count Zinzendorf was exemplary in listening even to critics of the Gospel.
Although he was self-confessingly not an avid reader, he stayed a humble
learner throughout his life. Erich Beyreuther, in his hey-day professor in Munich and a
prominent biographer of Zinzendorf, saw the greatness of Zinzendorf amongst
other things in how he would even look for help during his personal religious
struggle at the work of Pierre Bayle, an eminent 17th century harsh critic of the
Church.[31]Beyreuther
shows quite convincingly how Zinzendorf understood Bayle much better than
anyone before or after him, better even than the renowned philosopher Ludwig
Feuerbach. Whereas Bayle kept on waiting and hoping for new revelations of
faith in the churches, Zinzendorf surged forth towards the realization of it (Beyreuther, 1965:233). It testifies of special grace that Zinzendorf
could throw ‘a conciliatory light on the tragic figure of Bayle’ after the
lonely fighter had bravely put forward uncomfortable views, heavily attacked
thereafter(Beyreuther,
1965:233). That Zinzendorf candidly confessed that he was reading
Bayle’s works as a close second to the Bible, did however not earn him acclaim.
This was yet another reason for clergy of other denominations to castigate
Zinzendorf.
The bad Smell of Theology
Count Zinzendorf’s views on
certain doctrinal issues - to let love prevail instead of clinging to official
Church doctrine and the letter of the law - could have averted much pain if
they had been taken seriously by the Church of his day (and ever since). He
detested the 'bad smell of theology', stating that ‘all the essential theology
can be written with large characters on one octavo sheet’ (Cited
in Lewis, 1962:15), i.e. on half of an A4 page.. Zinzendorf was very concerned at the development at the Herrnhut Theological Seminary during his absence in America, fearing
that ‘the brethren would move away from simplicity, that their bishops would
start filling the young people with learnedness’ (Spangenberg,
1773-1775:1492). In
one of his Fetter Lane
Lectures in London, the Count
made the remark that the philosophers and theologians ‘have made that which was
before obscure so pitch dark that, if earlier, before hearing it explained, one
did understand a little bit; now after the explanation one no longer has the
slightest idea what to make of it.’ In
the sentence just prior to this remark, Zinzendorf offers the reason that was
so typical of him: ‘they have been intent on hunting for expressions outside of
Scripture in order to expound... those passages of Scripture which they found
obscure’ (Zinzendorf, Nine Lectures, 1746). The Count referred to the vain
academic theological practices and exercises as odium theologicum (bad
theological smell). To put
the record straight: the Bible does not teach that intellect must not be
appreciated. Paul sat under the feet of the famous Gamaliel (Acts 22:3), but he
only became a spiritual giant after his mental capacity came under the rule of
Christ. Thus the warning is possibly just as apt for our day and age as in by-gone
times. (In South Africa many a Bible School suffered in spirituality when
academic accreditation was frantically sought because of government
requirements for lecturers in the democratic era of our nation.)
Doctrinal Differences can cause
Rifts
Zinzendorf taught missionary
candidates not only to refrain from getting involved in doctrinal disputes, but
rather to try and diminish the differences between churches (Spangenberg,
1773-1775:1272). In an age of tremendous
Protestant bigotry, he wrote:
‘I have been severely censured for not acknowledging the
Pope to be the Antichrist, as I am sure he is not, and cannot be deemed so upon
the authority of the Bible...’ In the same context the Count said ‘...Every church bearing the
name of Christ... (is) to be (seen as) a congregation formed for his sake; more
or less erroneous … I never will boast of it (my church) and despise others’ (Cited in Lewis, 1962:20).
The people of Herrnhut caught the
broad vision. They sought nothing for themselves, wanting only to be ‘used by
the Lamb of God as a leaven of his unity wherever he might call them’ (Lewis,
1962:61). Utilizing the unique divinity of Jesus as Lord and shunning all other
doctrinal tussles, the Moravians became the pioneers of ecumenism.
Co-operation
in Missionary Endeavour
A major contribution of
Zinzendorf in missionary strategy - which has often been over-looked by many
‘faith mission’ agencies at their own peril - was that he succeeded in getting
other denominations to co-operate in the support of the Moravian missionary
endeavours. Already in Germany he exploited the Moravian tradition of music to
the full when their groups were invited to conduct ‘singstunden’
(singing hours, devotional meetings with songs around Bible verses, the daily
texts, as the 'sermon') in both Reformed and Lutheran congregations.
Zinzendorf’s emphasis on the Body of the Messiah was not appreciated
everywhere. Committed believers nevertheless joined them from almost every
denomination of the time. In England he could call on support from Anglicans,
Methodist and Quakers. At the first Pennsylvania Synod of the Reformed Church the representatives of the
denomination were called upon by one of their leaders to support the
non-denominational Moravian work for the furtherance of the Gospel in the
Americas and the West Indies. Little groups of contributors were organized in
Philadelphia and New York and in the homes of many synod members (Lewis,
1962:149). Similarly, some Moravians worked alongside the Lutherans. In the
teaching of Zinzendorf to his missionaries he made it clear: ‘You must not
enroll your converts as members of the Moravian Church, you must be content to
enroll them as Christians’ (Lewis, 1962:95). At a Moravian church conference in
‘s Heerendijk (Holland), Zinzendorf stated emphatically: ‘I cannot ... confine myself to
one denomination, for the whole earth is the Lord’s and all souls are His; I am
debtor to all’ (Lewis, 1962:143). As the reason for this activity, the
Count expressed himself thus in 1745:
‘For thirty years I
have yearned that all may be one in the Lord’ (Nielsen Der Toleranzgedanke
bei Zinzendorf, Vol.1, 1951:44).
The Love of God as the only
valid Motivation
Andrew Murray stated repeatedly:
‘The missionary problem is a personal one.’ It
is not the sheer effort which will get missionaries to the fields, but the love
of God personified. He allowed His Son to die for our sins. After seeing the Ecce homo painting of Christ in the museum
of Düsseldorf with the challenging words,[32] the
youthful Zinzendorf was deeply moved. He knelt before the painting, pleading that the Lord might ‘draw him forcefully into
communion with his sufferings.’[33] He surrendered his whole life to
the Lord and the Cross: his name, rank and fortune became relative. He was hereafter
more determined than ever to give his everything in the service of the Lord.
Andrew Murray took the cue from the Herrnhut Moravians: ‘Get this burning thought of ‘personal love for the Saviour who redeemed me’ into the hearts of
Christians, and you have the most powerful incentive that can be had for
missionary effort’ (Murray, 1901:44). Or in different wording: ‘Missions was the automatic outflow and the overflow of
their love for Christ. It was to satisfy Christ’s love and express their own
love that they brought to Him souls that He had died for to save’ (Murray, 1901:158). This somehow also puts a
question mark to some modern-day 'worship' services, which all too often
resembles a glorified concert, with musicians amplified too much on a stage and
the congregation hardly singing along. It seems to me very problematic when
loving Christ is expressed vocally, but where the logical consequence - like
loving outreach to the needy and spiritually lost - is conspicuous by its
absence.
Zinzendorf’s Vision for Church
Unity
Count Zinzendorf had a tremendous vision for the unity
of the Body of Christ. He envisioned the believers around him not as a separate
denomination, but as a dynamic renewal society which would serve to revitalize
existing denominations and help create new work in mission areas. There are
numerous churches in Pennsylvania where Moravians had started a church and
school for the settlers and native Americans, and then turn it over to the
Lutheran Church, the Reformed Church, or whatever denomination they perceived
to be the strongest in that area. This also happened in other parts of the
world, such as Greenland and Australia.
Ecumenicals in the biblical Mode
Count Zinzendorf has been
described as the first ecumenical after the Reformation, [34] but then it should be remembered that his ecumenical
theology arose from the religious experience among those who ‘have experienced
the death of Jesus in their hearts’ (Lewis, 1962:15). It was a ‘heart
religion’ that
he preached: ‘without it, all efforts towards
unity he regarded as unfounded and doomed’ (Lewis, 1962:15). Visser ‘t Hooft, the first General Secretary of the World Council of Churches (WCC), quoted Zinzendorf: ‘All
fellowship which is only based on agreement of opinions and forms without a
change of heart, is a dangerous sect’ (Visser’t Hooft, 1959:27). Increasingly however, the leaders
of the WCC after Visser ‘t Hooft did not heed this warning.
Zinzendorf was however for many Christians too difficult a customer. He was too
unconventional, fraternizing with Roman Catholics while remaining on very
friendly terms with those who are coming from the opposite doctrinal pole of
the Church spectrum. Even in our day many Christians would be unhappy with
someone who straddles the Church boundaries as Zinzendorf did. In my view the
only persons who approached that ecumenical evangelical spirit ever since were
Dr Billy Graham and Dr David du Plessis. (The Cape-born but Free State-raised
South African who was dubbed ‘Mr. Pentecost’, became the instrument that God
used to usher in the breaking down of the wall not only between Pentecostals
and other Protestants, but also between Protestants and the Roman Catholic Church in the 1960s.)
Being a reconciler
has never been easy. Dr Billy Graham has been fiercely criticized by
evangelical leaders, notably for going to speak in Communist countries and
meeting the Pope (see for example Drummond, 2001:97).
Making Use of All Generations
It seems that the Reformation
did not bring major revision with regard to the use of people from all
generations. The Moravians were once again exemplary; nobody was excluded. Even
children had a role to play. Gifting and ability was primary so that teenagers
were given leadership functions. When Melchior Nitschmann was nominated to
become one of the four chief elders of the Herrnhut fellowship, Count
Zinzendorf had reservations. He thoughtthat
they should not have included the teenager into the lot because of his age. The Count apparently did not
know Melchior Nitschmann that well. The bare-footed youngster evidently had the
trust of the congregants, demonstrating a steadfast attitude that soon enough
impressed Zinzendorf (Uttendörfer and Schmidt, 1914:95). Anna Nitschmann was
given the leadership over the single sisters although she was only fifteen (Weinlick, 1956:84). Eighteen single females under her leadership lived
solely for the Lord. Along with Anna Nitschmann, Susanna Kühnel would be a
special channel that God used in the 1727 revival among the children. In 1731
Martin Linner, a seventeen year-old, became the ‘Älteste’ - the elder - for the unmarried young
men.
An independent
Biblical Line
In various matters Zinzendorf
took an independent line from Martin Luther, although he was deeply influenced
by the great reformer. The most striking difference is perhaps their respective
views on Jews. Martin Luther
initially emphasized the Jewishness of
Jesus, urging Christians to love all Jews for the sake of Jesus. Towards the
end of his life, however, Luther wrote one of the most anti-Semitic tracts. Whereas
Adolf Hitler abused the latter writings of the Wittenberg reformer to implement
the Holocaust, Zinzendorf’s contemporaries from the Jewish nation regarded him
as their great friend! In various other ways he demonstrated an independent
spirit; he wanted to be dependent on the Lord alone. Zinzendorf did not
follow the austere strict 'Busskampf' (painful struggle on conversion)
of Jacob Spener, his godfather, who became known as the father of Pietism. Instead,
the Herrnhut Moravians became known for their frivolity and joyous worship with
lots of singing. Those Pietists, who insisted on the Bußkampf of the Halle tradition, had problems
with the joyful practice of the child-like faith that the Herrnhut Moravians displayed. With regard to another
accusation - that Zinzendorf strived after a unified Church - these fears were
completely unfounded. The Count actually encouraged the believers to remain in
their churches, to rather be the ecclesiola,
little churches within the bigger Lutheran denomination (Spangenberg, 1773-1775 (1971):1462). In America the Moravians worked very closely with the
Reformed Theodore Frelinghuysen, who had been there since 1720, so much so that
Frelinghuysen was regarded as one of them. Of course, Zinzendorf remained a
pain in the neck for all denominationalists because of his wide vision of the
Body of Christ.
The Moravian missionaries sent out from Herrnhut in the 18th century were required to fend for
themselves. They received just some pocket money, together with a coffin.
They were expected to be ready to die in the tropics in the service of their
Saviour after a few years due to the health conditions due to the absence of
medical facilities. The missionaries were required to identify fully with the
slaves and indigenous people among whom they would be working. They were
expected to empower the slaves and indigenous people where they brought the
Gospel, without getting politically involved in skirmishes with the slave
owners or local authorities.
William Carey, who revived this missionary spirit from 1792, and the generation
of missionaries that came through in the next fifty years, spread the same
vision.
Moravian Inclusivity
If one considers how inclusive Count Zinzendorf and his Moravians were
we understand why they were arguably the most successful ever in the outreach
to Jews. The celebration of the Singstunde (singing hour) on Saturday
evening was a tradition that they had brought along from the early Herrnhut
days, which they adapted from the Jewish practices, where the Sabbath starts on
Friday evening. The abounding grace that went ahead of the emissaries to the
‘heathen’ nations enabled the Count to be bold enough to see the same grace at
work in the christening of infants.
Count Zinzendorf
took matters further, spelling it out that differences could even be used to
serve towards mutual enrichment. Sigurd Nielsen, a bishop of the Moravian
Church in South Africa and originally a Danish national who served for many
years in the Transkei, examined the idea of tolerance in Zinzendorf's theology.
He summarized the tension with the word homopoikilie, a term which expresses the unifying in
diversity and the diversity in unity (Nielsen I, 1951:60).
Various Approaches
It was the rich variety of
believers and the varying approaches to spread the Good News which led
Zinzendorf to appreciate the various denominations: they were to him clear
evidence of God’s providential care for the different temperaments and needs of
His children. He thus clearly saw in this an expression of the Church radiating
the multi-coloured[35] wisdom of God
(Ephesians 3:10). Within the Church of the Lord Zinzendorf distinguished
various tropoi: Lutheran, Calvinist, Anabaptist (Mennonite) and
Anglican. He expected every group to retain their own identity within a
multi-coloured 'rainbow' constellation.
Nevertheless, Zinzendorf did not ride roughshod over the ecclesiastical
disunity, and we should not do so either. According to him the main ecumenical
task was a deep sense of repentance and need of forgiveness because the
holiness and the unity of the Church had been broken by the narrowness, bigotry
and pride of nominal Christianity (Lewis, 1962:108). But Zinzendorf was too far
ahead of his time. The other church groups did not trust him. In fact, when he
tried to create one denomination in the United States among the German
speakers, Heinrich Melchior Mühlenberg was specially sent from the Pietist
stronghold of Halle to counter this influence. Zinzendorf was however much too
ambitious and activist, organising no less than six non-denominational
conferences or synods in half a year in 1742 (Praamsma, De Kerk van alle Tijden, III, 1980:125).
An accommodating View on Baptism
It is well-known how the
followers of Luther persecuted the 'Anabaptists'. For four centuries the
'Anabaptists' as a group were labelled as folk who preached false doctrine and
who led people into apostasy. Followers of Zwingli in Switzerland were among
the first to persecute the 'Anabaptists', decreeing in 1526 that some of them
should be drowned.
During Zinzendorf's life-time the christening of infants was common and the
immersion of believers was regarded as sectarian, associated with re-baptism.
Yet, the Count advised Georg Schmidt in Baviaanskloof, the later Genadendal of the Cape
Overberg in a letter of
ordination: ‘Baptise him where you shot the rhino’. Georg Schmidt evidently
understood this advice as an encouragement to baptise the new convert in the
river, because one can read in his diary entry of 31stMarch, 1742:
‘Then I said to him to go and stand in the water and I baptized him.’[36] The
context does not indicate whether the water was deep enough to immerse Wilhelm,
but this action was already revolutionary for the time. Georg Schmidt used the
precedent of the Ethiopian Eunuch (Acts 8:26ff) when he was challenged soon
hereafter why he baptized someone at a venue outside the confines of a church
building. In the same letter of ordination Zinzendorf referred to the
christening of the children of believers. He thus did not take an absolute
stand. The
Herrnhut Moravians refrained from getting involved in divisive debates about
the mode of baptism. Be it as it may, the Reformed Church clergymen both at the Cape were
furious, because there was no congregation present at the Sergeant's River
event at Baviaanskloof.
The Cape Reformed ministers regarded this as absolutely necessary for the
practice of baptism. To interpret
that the Count was playing it safe in case he could have been labelled an
Anabaptist, would definitely not be applicable. He took many a life-threatening
risk!
Unity on God’s Terms
Ephesians 4:4,5 (There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were
called to one hope when you were called; one Lord, one faith, one
baptism...)shows
nevertheless that Zinzendorf was probably too accommodating. Biblically, there
is no such thing as unity at all costs. There is only unity on God’s terms. The
issue of ‘one baptism’ to which Paul refers among others in the verse quoted,
may bear out the above theory in the years to come. Devoid of a dramatic ‘Here
I stand’ position of Baptists and Pentecostals, the Holy Spirit has brought
movement on this issue which was unthinkable a decade or two ago. The loving
acceptance of divergent views - allowing God to bring about the shifting of
positions through his Holy Spirit - is apt to bring about more unity than
heated synod discussions on doctrinal issues. (Nehemiah 3, the building of the
wall, does demonstrate that different (church) groups can work towards a common
goal. Various groups worked next to each other, each with a clearly defined
goal within the bigger purpose: the completion of the wall around Jerusalem.
Thus the Bible underscores unity in diversity.) A united front against abortion
and the legalisation of prostitution are issues where Bible believing
Christians may even be challenged to join hands with people of other faiths.
Capetonians from diverse backgrounds have been doing this when they attempted
the name change of Devil's Peak. Victory on this score has not been achieved as
yet!
In Search of the Invisible
Church
Count Zinzendorf looked on the
one hand seriously for evidence of the 'Invisible Church', but he also deemed
it a priority to work towards visible expressions of it. As he put it: 'The church cannot live on the long
run from an invisible and uncommitted brotherhood’ (Beyreuther, Studien
zur Theologie Zinzendorfs 1962:193).
Zinzendorf also believed that the unity should become concrete, that believers
had the task to make the Church of Christ visible. The challenge is to bring
together all those who are
already united in Christ in some ‘field of encounter’ (Lewis,
1962:108). All the
denominations have only relative value, they could only point to the ecclesia invisibilis, the
invisible church (Lewis, 1962:108). At the same time, Zinzendorf believed in ‘the manifoldness of life.’
He said for instance: ‘... souls must not be forced;
we must not expect them all to be measured by the same yardstick or to share
exactly the same development of inward experiences ... It is not Gospel-like to
prescribe rules, methods and dispositions, or require equality of souls’ (Lewis, 1962:102).
Spirit-wrought Unity the Name of
the Game
Count Zinzendorf’s desire for
Church unity was influenced by the tragedy of the fragmentation of the Body of
Christ. He referred to his own church as Secta Morava (Spangenberg, 1773-1775:1230). And if he may still have erred in being too
accommodating, Zinzendorf made up for it by going out of his way to take
differing theological positions really seriously. He succeeded in a special way
with a great balancing act, succumbing neither to engage in squabbling nor by
offering cheap compromises. In his activism, he was however sometimes too
hasty. When he wanted to include Roman Catholics in a unifying process without
clear indication that their leaders were prepared to address Mariolatry, he was
definitely expecting too much from other Protestants.
Count Zinzendorf discerned that overt
co-operation could never be a substitute for unity wrought by the Holy Spirit
through prayer and supplication. He knew only too well that men could join in
the same ‘outward ceremonies and duties of religion, but in reality deny the
truth of it.’ The Count realized that we should not strive after an organic
union of denominations, but work towards unity which transcends all church
divisions. The ‘unity of His wounds’, of common faith in the crucified and
risen Christ, will ultimately determine all other kinds of unity (Lewis, 1962:99). Therefore, it is
not surprising to find the Count attacking righteousness and piety that come
out of human efforts. Without the blood of Jesus they are like ‘ein beflecktes Kleid’, a stained garment
(Spangenberg, 1773-1775:1451). This is of course a reference to Isaiah 64:6 where
human righteousness is described as filthy rags.
No Christianity without Fellowship
Zinzendorf showed by his example that his
philosophy: ‘Ich statuiere kein Christentum ohne Gemeinschaft’ (I propose that there is no Christianity without
fellowship), was no empty theory. It has been suggested that
Zinzendorf added fellowship as a third sacrament in the Protestant Church (Lewis, 1962:66). Yet, it must be stressed that the Count did not expect fellowship to
be man-made; it was a gift of the Lamb. ‘It is not so much a fellowship of kindred minds but
fundamentally of kindred hearts’ (Lewis, 1962:66). It was
therefore natural that he expected believers who were linked to Herrnhut to get
involved with fellowship locally, wherever they lived. Although Zinzendorf
broke with Pietism in many other ways around 1734, the small ecclesiolae within the bigger churches
remained a part of the Moravian practice in the diaspora.
Concentration
on a few dedicated Believers
The Herrnhut
Moravians had a good missionary strategy, concentrating on a few dedicated
believers who could work alongside the missionaries to evangelise their own
people. In fact, Count Zinzendorf encouraged His missionaries to be especially
on the lookout for those individuals whom the Holy Spirit had already prepared.
Count Zinzendorf was one of the few people in Church history who really
discerned the importance of this principle. He saw on the one hand the untiring
will to reform of the ‘children of the world’, but on the other hand he also
saw the ‘sleeping churches and their inactive
congregations.’ Little has changed since then. Influenced by the
principle of the ecclesiolas(small
fellowships inside the big churches) of the Pietists, the Count organized the
Herrnhut community in small ‘bands’ and ‘choirs’, which would of course be
easier to handle. He also put a lot of emphasis on young people. He guided and
nurtured them, even during conferences so that they could grow into the Church
work, but he also used them for experimentation, because thus he could also
stop any new endeavour more easily when it did not succeed. Following the
Master, the vibrant Herrnhut church openly discussed the success (or lack of
it) of missionary ventures.
In recent decades the house church
movement has been making great strides, notably in various Asian countries.
Will the lessons derived really be heeded or are we just going to continue or -
just as bad - are we going to proceed with pouring new wine into old bags,
wasting the precious wine?
Utilizing Diversity of Gifts
An
important part of a personalized approach is working towards the development of
latent gifts in others. Zinzendorf ‘was swift to recognize the diversity of racial and
individual gifts, and from the beginning he insisted on the enlistment of
native ‘Helpers’ wherever possible'(Lewis,
1962:96). The graves of native
Christians from all over the world at Herrnhaag, where the Count and his
retinue found refuge after their banishment from Saxony, bear witness to the
fact that this idea was also put into practice.
Special in this regard was the
Count’s eschatology where he saw it as the duty of missions to bring in the
‘first fruit’, the first converts from all tribes and nations. He believed that
the evangelizing by believers could hasten the Lord’s return in this way. His
personal sojourn among the Indians of North America taught him to be happy and
contented to see individuals come to the Lord, but also to search for those who
are also fully sold out in His service. From the ranks of the nations the
individuals who had been fished, were expected to take the message to their
peoples. The day of using the net to catch fish (Matthew 13:47) would come.
Zinzendorf thus taught what would be highlighted at the turn of the 21st century in the Church Planting Movement, where the missionary is constantly
on the look-out for and praying to meet the person of peace (taken from Jesus
command to the 72 disciples he had sent out two by two in Luke 10).[37]
Chapter
14 Evolving International Prayer for Unity
Down the centuries united prayer has been a divine
‘tool’ par excellence to usher in spiritual renewal and
revival. It is sad that the prayer for Christian Unity has not yet functioned
completely unitedly.
Roots of international united Prayer
The Evangelical Alliance tradition of a Week of Prayer the first full week of January goes
back to the year after its launch in 1846. It was one of the agreed initiatives
that came out of the founding conference.
The Week of Prayer has been in vogue in many countries in
Europe for a very long time. In countries of the former communist world in
Europe it was only the Evangelical Alliance issue that stayed alive
through the communist era. So, even when people had heard of nothing else about
the Evangelical Alliance, they had often heard of the Week of Prayer.
Pentecostal Prayer Meetings in South Africa
South Africa was the first country where the tradition
of prayer services between Ascencion Day and Pentecost went nationwide.
Ds. G.W.A. van der Lingen of the Dutch
Reformed Church in Paarl was divinely
used to stem the tide of liberalism that swept over the Cape in the 1850s. It
is no surprise that he became God’s instrument for introducing the blessed Pinksterbidure, the tradition
of prayer services between Ascencion Day and Pentecost that became such a
blessing to the Dutch Reformed
Church for over one and a
half centuries.
It
all started on 6 February 1861 as an overflow of the revival that started in Worcester
the previous year. Ds. Van der Lingen of the Strooidak
(Straw Roof) congregation
arranged a special meeting of approximately 100 prayer leaders - including
women and children - to discuss their concerns. After experiencing the manifest
presence of the Holy Spirit and His quickening power, the congregation was
fearful that the divine presence would decrease over time and finally stop.
They wanted, therefore, to find ways of preserving and spreading the blessing.
They started cell groups. Taking their cue from the Disciples who were unified
- with one accord (Greek homothumadon)
- in the Upper Room after Ascencion Day (Acts 1:14), the cells were
challenged for communal prayer during the ten days between Ascension Day and
Pentecost.
An
invitation was published in De
Kerkbode for all existing
prayer groups in Paarl to participate in corporate prayer between 9 and 19 May,
1861. The believers attempted to follow the example of the believers who had
been meeting for prayer while waiting in Jerusalem to be baptized with the Holy
Spirit. Ds van der Lingen was initially quite reluctant to join these meetings.
There was a gradual built-up of expectation during that week, interspersed with
cries for mercy. He not only finally relented but he also became God's anointed
vessel of blessing on Pentecost Sunday, 1861.
When this news
began to spread to neighbouring congregations, they too decided to follow
Paarl's example. Over the next few years more and more congregations joined in.
As a direct result, the 1867 Dutch Reformed synod advised all
congregations to conduct 10 days of prayer in the run-up to Pentecost every
year. The tradition became a major blessing to the nation. The Pinksterbidure would impact Afrikanerdom for many decades. Many Afrikaners look back to
some Pentecost prayer season as the time when they were converted or when they
recommitted their lives to the Lord.
Other Week of
Prayer Attempts
In 1894 Pope
Leo XIII also suggested
Pentecost as a symbolic date (the traditional commemoration of the birth of the
Church) for the unity of the Church. Protestant leaders suggested in 1926 via
the Faith and Order movement in the mid-1920s to have an
annual octave of prayer for unity amongst Christians, leading up to Pentecost Sunday.
A different date for a Week of Prayer began in 1908 as the Octave of Christian Unity.
The dates of the week were proposed by Rev. Paul
Wattson, co-founder of the Graymoor Franciscan Friars. He
conceived of the week beginning on the Feast of the Confession of Peter, the Protestant variant of the ancient Feast of the Chair of Saint Peter, on 18 January,
and concluding with the Feast of the Conversion of Saint Paul on 25 January.
Evolution of
the Week of Prayer for Unity
Abbé Paul
Couturier of Lyons, France,
who has been called "the father of spiritual ecumenism", advocated
prayer "for the unity of the Church as Christ wills it, and in accordance
with the means he wills". He hoped that other Christians, with differing
views to those of the Roman
Catholic Church, would join
in the prayer. In 1935, he proposed naming the observance Universal Week of Prayer for
Christian Unity. In 1941 the Faith and Order Conference, at that time a Protestant daughter
group that developed out of the Edinburgh international conference of 2010,
changed the date for observing the week of unity prayer to come in line with
that observed by Catholics. In 1948, with the founding of the World Council of Churches, the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity became
increasingly recognised by different churches throughout the world. The
proposal was finally accepted by the Catholic
Church in 1966.
In
1958, the French Catholic group Unité
Chrétienne and the Faith and Order Commission of the World Council of Churches (a body which includes, among others,
most of the world's Orthodox churches as well as many Anglican, Baptist,
Lutheran, Methodist, Reformed, United and Independent churches) began
co-operative preparation of materials for the Week
of Prayer. The year 1968 saw the first official use of materials prepared
jointly by the Faith and Order
Commission and the Pontifical Council
for Promoting Christian Unity, representing the entire Catholic Church.
Collaboration and cooperation between these two organizations has increased
steadily since, resulting in recent years in joint publications in the same
format.
Chapter 15 Unifying Movements and Events
Prayer was the
driving force of all evangelistic and missionary efforts ever since the 120
believers gathered in the Upper Room of Jerusalem in the first century that
ushered in that marvelous Pentecost thereafter that took the Gospel to the ends
of the earth. The 24/7 prayer of the Herrnhut Moravians that started in August
1727 kept them going in pioneering mode with holistic ministry in different
parts of the globe for well over a century. In chapter 12 we highlighted how
God used the
Slavery as an
integral Part of the spiritual Battlefield
It is no co-incidence that a meta-historical battle of
unseen things was revolving around slaves (not only) at the Cape for centuries.
The slaves - and their offspring who came to the Cape in the 17th century -
turned out to be an important part of the ideological battleground of the
forces in the unseen world. Therefore it is no surprise that God used a slave as a divine instrument at the time of
the co at the coronation of Denmark’s King Christian VI in 1731. While
the Church in the West was not even aware of the presence of unseen occult
forces, Islam gained ground in different parts of the world. The spiritually
dead church at the Cape had no credible message. The mystical Islamic Sufism
could expand unchecked and was hardly detected. A
sore point, and consequently a matter for confession, is the effect of slavery
on family life. During the 15th to 18th century, very few people in Europe and
North America had ethical problems with slavery. The inhuman practices of slavery were
regarded as reconcilable with Christian norms in spite of the views of early
critics, such as the Spanish priest Alfonso de Sandoval in 1627. Furthermore,
influential high-ranking people like Queen Isabella of Spain and Queen Elisabeth
I of England however had their reservations about the trade in human beings. Through
the lack of international communications, the sensitivity to the inhumanity of
slavery broke through only relatively slowly.
The Rebirth of Western Christian Culture The
rebirth of Western Christian culture can be traced back to those men and women
who carried the revival fires across America and Europe during the twenty years
of 1727-1747. It became a predominantly
German movement until 1740. Then the Anglo-Saxons took over the leadership. The
Great Awakening started in 1720
with the preaching of Theodore J. Frelinghuysen, who was born in New Jersey
from German-Dutch parentage. The revival that began with Frelinghuysen, a Dutch
Reformed Pietist, was spread to the Scottish-Irish Presbyterians under the
ministry of Gilbert Tennent. The fire leapt over to the Baptists of
Pennsylvania and Virginia when the extraordinary awakening began in
Northampton, Massachusetts, under the ministry of Jonathan Edwards in December
1734. Edwards
played a critical role in shaping the First Great Awakening.
Across the Atlantic Ocean George
Whitefield, the other key figure of the First Great Awakening in America,
studied together in Oxford at this time with
the Wesley brothers John and Samuel. There Whitefield became serious about spiritual things, joining the
‘Holy Club’. A key step in the development of John Wesley's ministry, influenced and
initially egged on by Whitefield, was to travel and preach outdoors. In due course John Wesley and
George Whitefield would revolutionalize Church
ministry, using open-air preaching.
Thousands flocked to hear the irresistible eloquence and engaging fervor of
Whitefield especially.
Second Wind of the First Great Awakening in America Since
late 1735 the New England revival had begun to decline. But Whitefield’s
arrival there heralded a second wave of deep spiritual impact. He took the
revival to heights it had never before attained, inspiring a host of others to
engage in revival work. During these first two visits to the US he began with open-air
preaching and remarkable scenes that had b accompanied his ministry in Britain.
John Wesley
helped form and organize small Christian groups in Great Britain and Ireland that
developed intensive and personal accountability, discipleship and religious
instruction. Under Wesley's direction, Methodists became leaders in many social
issues of the day, including prison reform and the abolition of slavery.
The first Great Awakening faded out by the
middle of the 1740’s. But its results for the forward movement of the unity of
the Body of Christ were very significant. As a result of the Great
Awakening many African Americans and Native Americans came into the Protestant
Churches. As oppressed peoples, who had been denied educational opportunities,
the emotional elements of “The New Light’ Protestants had great appeal to
them. Ambivalently, the Great Awakening also led to the rise of many
denominations and sects.
Sadly, doctrinal
differences between prominent role players did use some energy, thus affecting
the impact of the movement adversely to some extent. John Wesley and Count Zinzendorf parted ways a
mere two years after the former had reported excitedly about his visit to
Marienborn, (Germany) in 1740, a split developed between
Wesley and the Moravians. In the following decades relations between the
Moravians and the Methodists were strained. A low point was reached when Wesley
published a pamphlet against Zinzendorf and the Moravians in 1755. John Wesley and Whitefield also parted ways because
of doctrinal differences.
Evangelism with global Ramifications
The seed that Georg Schmidt, the first missionary to
South Africa, had sown at the Cape during his stint of not even seven years,
germinated with a global impact. Schmidt was said to have been a man of great
faith and a prayer warrior. In fact, colonists told his two colleagues
Nitchmann and Eller admiringly during their stay in Cape Town en route from Ceylon, how Schmidt
succeeded ‘to teach a Hottentot to pray as he has done.’ The intelligent Khoi female referred to, got the name
Magdalena when Schmidt baptized her in the river near to the present day
Genadendal. She went on to become the first indigenous evangelist of Sub
Saharan Africa. Magdalena was also the first known indigenous female church
planting evangelist of all time.
Another
convert of Schmidt impacted Ds Helperus Van Lier, a young minister from
Holland, who would have a worldwide influence from the Cape.
A spiritual Giant:
Reverend Helperus van Lier
Officially Van Lier was appointed as the third
minister (also in rank) of the Groote
Kerk. He had already been impacted spiritually in a deep way before his
departure from Holland. The evangelical revival which started in England under
John Wesley, had swept into the Netherlands, Germany and Scandinavia.
Van
Lier found fertile ground among a group of Christians at the Cape, including a
group of pietistic Lutherans, the spiritual descendants of those believers who
had been impacted by the short stint of Georg Schmidt, more than 40 years before
Van Lier’s arrival. Quite soon after his arrival at the Cape in 1786, the legacy of Schmidt worked through into Van Lier’s
life when he was present at the deathbed of one of the missionary pioneer’s converts. He saw how the Khoi believer died ‘in volkome rus en vrede van sy siel en in vertroue op die
Here.’[1] It made such a deep impression on Van Lier that he
mentioned this in one of his letters to his uncle Professor Petrus Hofstede, an
influential academic in Rotterdam, who was at that stage still an opponent of
the Moravian brethren.
Van
Lier was encouraged and inspired in another way. In 1787 the boat carrying the Moravian Bishop
J.F. Reichel en route to Germany from India made a stop at the Cape. It
would have been natural for Reichel not only to share something of the
Moravians’ passion for the lost but also about the 24 hour prayer watch that
was still going strong in Herrnhut after 60 years. Reichel’s visit spurred Van
Lier and all his followers on to do something about the spiritual welfare of the
Khoi and the slaves. Conversely, Reichel took the challenge of the resumption
of the mission work in the Cape Colony back to Herrnhut.
The
international Impact of Van Lier
The young preacher Van Lier almost single-handedly set
the evangelical world ablaze. His letters from the Cape to Europe were very
influential indeed. His testimony - in the form of six letters to Rev. John
Newton - was originally written in Latin and translated by the well-known poet
William Cowper. The title of the booklet in English is The Power of Grace, illustrated in six letters from a Minister of the
Reformed church to the Rev John Newton. Van Lier’s story of the influence
of divine grace in his life seems to have made a lasting impression on Newton
who belonged to the inner circle of (slave) abolitionists.[2] Van Lier’s humility came through when he insisted
that a pseudonym Christodulus (slave
of Christ), and not his own name, should be used on the publication of his
letters to Rev. Newton. (It was published in Edinburgh by Campbell and Wallace,
1792). Van Lier’s story about the influence of divine grace in his life seems
to have made a lasting impression on Newton, who belonged to the inner circle
of (slave) abolitionists - especially when one considers that the famous hymn
‘Amazing Grace’ came from Newton’s pen. Van Lier’s humility came through when
he insisted that a pseudonym Christodulus,
(slave of Christ) and not his own name would be used with the publication.[3]
Various letters of Van Lier had the goal of getting the Moravians back
to the Cape. After initially failing to sway his uncle, the Rotterdam clergyman
and academic Professor Petrus Hofstede (1716-1803) into action on this score, Van
Lier wrote to Ds. Hubert in Amsterdam. In a letter to his uncle, Petrus
Hofstede, he wrote about the Khoi believer whose death he witnessed, that the
native believer was putting other Christians to shame (Schmidt, 1937:6).
It is
only natural that the prayer chain – 24 hours a day seven days a week - at
Herrnhut would have included intercession for their Bishop Reichel on his trip
to the East. But no one probably have envisaged that this would lead so soon to
the resumption of their missionary work at Baviaanskloof.
Van
Lier’s correspondence continued to have an impact in Europe. Through his
evangelical zeal Van Lier, along with William Carey’s 1792 book An enquiry into
the obligations of Christians to use means for the conversion of the heathens,
definitely laid the foundations for a Cape missionary society. Van Lier’s
correspondence may have influenced his uncle not only to attack the internal ‘onverdraagzaamheid’ (intolerance) in the
church in Holland, but also to challenge the general arrogant attitude towards
‘de heidenen’ (the pagans). God used
Hofstede hereafter to such an extent that religious tolerance increased
significantly in the Netherlands towards the end of the 18th century.
Impact of Prayer in Europe and America
In Europe there was a significant increase in
missionary zeal at the end of the 18th century. The 24-hour prayer chain of the
Moravians in Herrnhut that started in 1728, was definitely still going strong.
In England evangelicalism was gaining ground and Christians were praying.
Starting in 1784, believers throughout the Midlands met for one hour on the
first Monday of every month to pray for a revival which would lead to the
spread of the gospel to the most distant parts of the globe. Intensive prayer preceded the revival of 1792-1820
when no less than 12 mission agencies came into being. In London and Rotterdam
two interdenominational missionary societies were founded in 1795 and 1797
respectively.
For centuries Protestants had been insisting that the office of apostle
was limited to the first century only, and that it was to the apostles that the
Great Commission had been given. If God chose to convert the heathen, he would
have to do so by conferring the same miraculous gifts which had accompanied the
preaching of the gospel in the apostolic age. It was taught that they had died
out.
The
Gospel gets Wings William Carey, a young
Northamptonshire shoemaker, differed with the prevailing view among
Protestants. He yearned for God's people to persevere in their new commitment
to prayer and to translate that commitment into action. Carey began in 1788 to plan a
pamphlet setting out his conviction that the commission to preach the gospel to
every creature was obligatory on all Christians for all time. He was clearly
influenced by the Moravians, possibly especially after reading the pamphlet Periodical Accounts Relating to the Missions
of the Church of the United Brethren Established Among the Heathen. It
first appeared in 1790 under the editorship of the well-known British Moravian
leader Christian Ignatius la Trobe, who also later impacted missionary work at
the Cape. Carey’s
work eventually appeared on 12 May 1792 under the title An Enquiry into the Obligations of Christians, to use Means for
the Conversion of the Heathens: in which the religious state of the different
nations of the world, the success of former undertakings, and the
practicability of further undertakings, are considered. His treatise was seminal. His
opportunity came on 30 May 1792 when he preached to the Northamptonshire Baptist Association at Nottingham. Carey chose as
his text words from Isaiah: 'Enlarge the place of thy tent, and let them
stretch forth the curtains of thine habitations: spare not, lengthen thy cords,
and strengthen thy stakes . . .' Carey saw a parallel between the centuries-old
plight of the exiled nation of Judah-apparently forgotten by God-and the
unproductive and desolate church of his own day; in the biblical promise of a
new and wider destiny for Judah lay the promise of countless new members of the
Christian family to be drawn from all over the world. Once again, however,
Carey insisted that God's promise was also his command. God was about to do
great things by extending the kingdom of Jesus throughout the nations, and
therefore Christians must attempt great things in taking the gospel to the world:
'Expect great things from God. Attempt great things for God.' That
William Carey was disseminating the Moravian legacy of holistic missionary work
is evident when we consider that J.E. Hutton, the prime 20th Century
Moravian Historian, includes Carey with the pioneers of modern missionary work.
The effect of William Carey’s book An enquiry into the obligations of
Christians to use means for the conversion of the heathens was quite deep
in Britain and North America. Protestant
missionary work literally exploded hereafter, with forays from Europe and
America to all parts of the globe in the 19th century, with
doctrinal differences slowing the advance of the Gospel only to a limited
extent.
The Cape Missionary
Contribution to the Abolition of Slavery
The early 19th century battle that raged at the Cape around
the Khoi and the slaves – in which the missionary Dr John Philip had a big hand
- had worldwide ramifications when it aided the cause of the abolition of
slavery.
During
Dr Philip’s visit to England in 1826, he met the evangelical parliamentarian
Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton. The latter had close links to William Wilberforce,
the staunch fighter for the complete emancipation of slaves. In his subsequent correspondence with Buxton,
Philip linked the slave issue to the situation of the Khoisan in the Cape
Colony already in his first comprehensive report on the LMS stations although
he made a distinction between the problems with the Khoisan and those
pertaining to slaves (Walker, 1964:153). Ordinance 50 of 1828 and last not
least the publication of Philip’s two-volumed Researches in South Africa were major factors in the run-up to the
final emancipation of slaves worldwide.[4]
Dr Philip’s role in the proclamation
of Ordinance 50 has sometimes been exaggerated. John Philip however definitely
played a crucial role in the run-up to this ordinance and he became a prime
mover both in the eventual formal abolition of slavery in 1834 and in its
implementation at the Cape in 1838.
No lame Duck
Injured in an accident in
infancy, Thomas Pringle could not follow his father into farming.
After attending Edinburgh University he
worked as a clerk and continued writing, soon succeeding to editorships of
journals and newspapers. In 1816 one of his poems came to the attention of the
novelist Sir Walter Scott, who admired it. A friendship developed between the
two and by Scott's influence, whilst facing hard times and unable to earn a
living, Pringle secured free passage and a British Government resettlement
offer of land in South Africa, to which he emigrated in 1820. Being lame, he
himself took to literary work in Cape Town rather than
farming, opened a school with fellow Scotsman John Fairbairn, and
conducted two newspapers, the South African Journal, and South African Commercial Advertiser. However, both papers became suppressed for their
free criticisms of the Colonial Government, and his school closed.
Thomas
Pringle returned to the UK and settled in London. An anti-slavery article which
he had written in South Africa before he left was published in the New Monthly Magazine,
and brought him to the attention of Thomas Buxton and others, which led to his being appointed Secretary
of the Anti-Slavery
Society. He began working for the
Committee of the Anti-Slavery Society
in March 1827, and continued for seven years. He offered work to Mary Prince, a former slave, enabling her to write her
autobiography describing her experiences under slavery in the West Indies. This book caused a sensation, partly arising from
libel actions disputing its accuracy, and went into many editions. As Secretary to the Anti-Slavery
Society he helped steer the organization towards its eventual
success; in 1834, with a widening of the electoral franchise, the Reformed
British Parliament passed legislation to bring an end to slavery in the British
dominions - the aim of Pringle's Society. Pringle signed the Society's notice
to set aside 1 August 1834 as a religious thanksgiving for the passing of the
Act. However, the legislation did not came into effect until August 1838, and
Thomas Pringle was unable to witness this moment; he had died from tuberculosis in December
1834 at the age of 45. It is doubtful if
William Wilberforce would have been able to die with satisfaction after his
half a century of pioneering fighting of slavery, if he did not receive the
support from the Cape.
Charles Finney as a Vanguard of the mid-19th Century Revival Charles Finney can be regarded as a
vanguard of the revival of the mid-19th century in the US. The
highlight of Charles Finney's evangelistic ministry was the 'nine mighty years'
of 1824 to 1832, during which he conducted powerful revival meetings. In addition to becoming a popular Christian
evangelist, Finney was involved with the movement for the abolution of slavery
in America, denouncing it frequently from the pulpit. In 1835, he moved to Ohio
where he became a professor and later president of Oberlin College from 1851 to
1866. Oberlin became a vanguard to end slavery and was among the first American
colleges to co-educate Blacks and women together with White men.
Beginning of the US
Holiness Movement
In 1835 Phoebe, wife of a
physician Walter Palmer and her sister Sarah Lankford, began women’s prayer
meetings each Tuesday afternoon with Methodist women. Two years later, Phoebe
Palmer became the leader of the meetings, which were referred to as the Tuesday
Meeting for the Promotion of Holiness. The meetings were held in the
Palmers' home. Beginning in 1839, men
were allowed to attend the meetings.
Among these men were Methodist bishops, theologians, and ministers. That
women were thus presiding over influential men was still quite revolutionary
for the time.
Phoebe Palmer and
her husband Walter became itinerant preachers as they received more and more
invitations from churches, conferences, and camp meetings. Although Walter
Palmer spoke at these meetings, it was Phoebe who was better known. She played
a significant role in spreading the concept of Christian holiness throughout
the United States and the rest of the world. She wrote several books, including
The Way of Holiness, which became a
foundational book in the Holiness movement. This renewed interest in holiness
eventually influenced the Methodist Church nationwide. Word of these successful prayer
meetings inspired similar gatherings around the country, bringing Christians of
many denominations together to pray. Phoebe soon found herself in the
limelight—the most influential woman in the largest, fastest-growing religious
group in America. At her instigation, missions began, camp meetings were
organized, and an estimated 25,000 Americans got converted.
Revival in Hamilton (Canada)
The revival that started at the end of September 1857 with Jeremiah Lanphier, a 48-year old New York businessman,
has received great prominence traditionally. However, the revival that started
at the same time in Hamilton (Ontario), had a much greater impact. By
1857, prayer movements were growing in Ontario. In August or September 1857,
Walter and Phoebe Palmer, a Methodist physician and his wife from New York,
came to hold what turned out to be very successful meetings. Returning to the
States, they were delayed in Hamilton. On 8 October, the next day, the
Methodist ministers convened a prayer meeting at which sixty-five people
attended. The greater number of these people pledged themselves to pray for an
"outpouring of the Holy Spirit." That night, Phoebe Palmer felt that
God was about to move. On the evening of the 9th October, a larger
crowd met in the basement of the John Street Methodist Church. Twenty-one
people were converted.
The
following meetings were made up mostly of exhortations and testimonies. Many
testified of conversion, while those who were already Christians testified to
an entire dedication of heart and life to Christ. The
Canadian Awakening of 1857 sparked the Third Great Awakening in the United
States.
The
Revival of 1858 in the USA was easily the most unique awakening that the US has
ever experienced. Its beginning, its approval from almost every source, its
spirit of cooperation, and its lack of emotional excess easily set it apart
from other awakenings. It contained all the wholesome features of other
awakenings and sifted out the questionable ones. Ultimately, this awakening
gave birth to a new era in evangelism. Its force was felt on three continents.
The Revival in the UK News of the North American revival soon hit the UK. The first
place to be affected was Ulster, and a mighty revival hit that region in 1859
with somewhere around 100,000 people converted, which as a percentage of the
people in that country was quite staggering. About the same time and quite
independently Wales also was affected and a revival brought again around
100,000 people to Christ. The 1859 revival was one that affected virtually the
whole of the UK. The revival arrived in Scotland in the north of the country
and as time went on it spread down south, until it arrived in England.
Liverpool was one of the centres of this revival.
A report from that the
1859 revival in the US was a direct spark that helped to ignite the
Worcester event of April 1860 at the Cape. Just as that revival brought Dwight
Moody into the international frame, Dr Andrew Murray became a personality that
would impact the Church globally. Ironic divine interaction followed when
Andrew Murray had no liberty to accept the invitation of Moody to address a big
international mission conference in New York.
Social Impact of the 1857/8
Revival
Because of evangelical preoccupation with evangelism
first, then social action, Unitarian "keepers of the social
conscience" asserted that a true religion was not merely a spiritual
experience to enjoy and a holy life to be lived. But the Evangelicals also had
advocates of "self-sacrificing zeal in good works." The churches were bettering the condition
of destitute and needy as well as giving them the Gospel message.
Interdenominational societies as well as the local churches distributed food
and clothing, found employment, resettled children, and provided medical aid
for the poorer classes. From just a few before the Revival of 1857-58, the city
missions increased to several hundred by 1860. It must never be forgotten that
a great Civil War erupted within three years of the 1857-58 Revival. To
understand what the 1857-58 awakening might have done, one has only to look at
the increase of the societies for social betterment in Britain following the
1859-60 revival there.
Out
of the 1858 Awakening came the introduction of the Y.M.CA. into American
cities. It produced new leadership, such as that of Dwight L. Moody, out of
which came the religious work carried on in the armies during the civil war. It
gave impetus to the creation of the Christian and Sanitary Commissions and
numerous freedmen's societies that were formed in the midst of the war. Benevolent
enterprises flourished during the civil war, and the period saw charities on a
larger scale than ever before.
William Booth and the Salvation Army
The most prominent successor
to implement the legacy of street preaching was William Booth. After his marriage to Catherine Mumford in 1855, Booth spent several years as a Methodist
minister, travelling all around the country. He shared God's word to all who
would listen. Yet he felt that God wanted more from him, that he should be
doing more to reach ordinary people. He returned to London with his family,
having resigned his position as a Methodist minister.
One day in 1865
he found himself in the East End of London, preaching to crowds of people in
the streets. Outside the Blind Beggar pub some missioners
heard him speaking and were so impressed by his powerful preaching that they
asked him to lead a series of meetings they were holding in a large tent. Booth
soon realised he had found his destiny. He formed his own movement, which he
called The Christian Mission.
Slowly the
mission began to grow but the work was hard. His wife wrote that Booth would 'stumble home night after night haggard with fatigue,
often his clothes were torn and bloody bandages swathed his head where a stone
had struck'. Evening meetings were held
in an old warehouse where urchins threw stones and fireworks through the
window. Outposts were eventually established and in time attracted converts,
yet the results remained discouraging. It was not until 1878 when The Christian Mission changed its name
to The Salvation Army that things
began to happen. The idea of an Army fighting sin caught the imagination of the
people and the Army began to grow rapidly. Booth's fiery sermons and sharp
imagery drove the message home and more and more people found themselves
willing to leave their past behind and start a new life as a soldier in the Salvation Army. The Salvation
Army championed holistic ministry,
including care for the poor and needy, almost unprecedentedly.
Leaders in Church Cooperation
South Africans were among
the world leaders in church cooperation when the Evangelical Alliance
was formally started in 1857 in Cape Town. In fact, at this occasion the
founders declared that an Evangelical Alliance existed in the Mother
City in all but name already in 1842. The South African Evangelical Alliance
thus functioned long before it
kicked off formally in England and six years before it started in Germany. They
referred to the move when pastors of different churches had a weekly prayer meeting
a few years after the slave emancipation.
The South African branch of the Evangelical Alliance was the
first outside Europe. This was the start of the worldwide movement, which again
brought the major correction in Lausanne in 1974, after Marxists had
successfully infiltrated the World Council of Churches.
Cape Evangelicals got together in Cape Town in 1842 to work
out a strategy to reach the lost of Southern Africa. Within five years after
the centenary of the start of Georg Schmidt’s endeavour ‘concerted action had
arrived.’ At that stage there were
only 9 mission societies in South Africa, the bulk of which had to be
contributed to the endeavours of Dr John Philip, the superintendent of the London Missionary Society. (In 1937 –
another century on – South Africa had become the best occupied mission field in
the world with 1,934 Protestant missionaries and 658 Roman Catholic priests,
according to the World Mission Atlas of those years.)
The Run-up to
the Cape Revival
The 1860 revival of Worcester that started in the
church where the well-known Dr Andrew Murray was the minister, has been
described as a result of teamwork (Brandt, 1998:58). It has been reported that his father, Rev Andrew
Murray (sr.), had prayed for revival every Friday evening since 1822. By 1860
he would thus have prayed more or less 38 years. The gifted young dominee Andrew Murray, who had just come to Worcester prior to
this, would be impacted during the revival along with thousands in the Western
Cape. The younger Andrew
Murray appears to have at least matched his father as a prayerful minister of
the Word. About his life the secular Dictionary
of South African Biography, Volume 1 (p.578) wrote: ‘The golden ray of prayer illumined all he did... He
believed that nothing that was amiss and demanded correction could not be
corrected or endured by prayer.’ This is confirmed when one takes a closer
look at the titles of his 250 books. There one finds titles like De Kracht des Gebeds (1860), Pray without Ceasing (1898) and The prayer life (1912). A letter was sent out to
call for prayer.
A
significant contribution to the revival came from Montagu where three believers
came together for early morning prayer on Sundays from the beginning of January
1860. Then there was the missionary conference in Worcester in April 1860 that
can be regarded as the run-up to the revival. Three hundred and seventy preachers and laymen attended. The Presbyterian Dr James
Adamson set the tone with a report at the conference of the outpouring of the
Holy Spirit in America, and the conditions for revival. Ds Andrew Murray (sr.) was so overawed by the
same topic that he burst into tears. And then there was a passionate prayer by
his son and namesake that stirred the hearts of many, so much so that someone
has suggested that this caused the beginning of the revival.
Montagu was the first place to experience revival under Rev
James Cameron, a Methodist minister. In May
1860 the revival started there with three prayer meetings per day. There was
also great conviction of sin and confession.
Special Results
The start of the Alliance in
Cape Town led indirectly to the opening of the Stellenbosch DRC theological
seminary in 1859. The next year some 400
delegates from the Dutch Reformed, Congregational, Lutheran, Methodist,
Moravian and Presbyterian churches converged on Worcester for an epoch-making
conference. Worldwide it was one of the first of its kind.
An interesting view expressed at the conference in
Worcester was: ‘the
home of every Christian should be a mission station’. The success of Worcester led to a similar
one in Cape Town in January 1861. A special innovation – worldwide perhaps a
first – was that the conference was conducted in two languages on alternate
days, Dutch and English. The first
missionary conference took place in Genadendal in 1865 where 20 participants of
the Rhenish, Berlin, London, Dutch Reformed and Moravian groups gathered. In
1872 Andrew Murray suggested regular missionary conferences with all churches
and missionary societies.
Andrew Murray in more barrier-crossing Ventures
In 1870 there had even been a discussion about
unification of the Dutch Reformed Church
and the Anglican Church. In the Cape General Mission, which was started
in 1889 with Andrew Murray as President, there were people from different
denominational backgrounds from its outset. Andrew Murray was closely involved
with this mission until the end of his life. From the outset the Mission agency
was a dual enterprise, intending to reach both the White and Black sections of
the population. In the main towns of the country they would labour among the
neglected Whites. The Mission agency was blessed with spectacular growth. After
only five years the original six workers had increased to sixty-eight.
John Mott, a Church and Missions
Leader Dwight Moody became an important
divine instrument to impact John Mott. The New-York-born John Mott (May 25,
1865 – January 31, 1955) was nurtured in a devout Methodist home. He came to
faith at Cornell University after hearing and speaking personally with C. T.
Studd, the renowned cricket-player-turned-evangelist (and one of the
"Cambridge Seven" who later worked with Hudson Taylor in China). Mott
was struck by Studd's admonition, "Seekest thou great things for thyself?
Seek them not. Seek ye first the kingdom of God." That same year, at the
1886 Northfield (Massachusetts) Student Conference led by Dwight Moody, Mott
stepped up and became one of the 100 men who volunteered for foreign missions. Mott's destiny, however, lay not in foreign missions but
in evangelizing college students and inspiring others to foreign mission work.
He became college secretary of the YMCA in 1888, when the organization was
consciously evangelical and aggressively evangelistic. That same year, he
helped organize the Student Volunteer
Movement for Foreign Missions (SVM), a branch of the YMCA and YWCA. By the
time he spoke at SVM's 1951 convention, over 20,000 volunteers had gone to
mission fields through its efforts.
The Rise of Faith Missions
Whereas the Moravians and the Salvation Army still had close connections
with the mainline churches, the so-called faith missions made a point of it
that they do not solicit funds from anybody, also not from churches. Born in Germany, the son
of a tax collector, George Müller lived a wicked life as a youth but was
converted at about age 20 at a Moravian mission. This connection must have
accounted for his desire to minister to Jews. Another connection was the impact
of August Hermann Francke’s biography which he read at this time. The
orphanages and other institutions of Halle already had impacted other great men
more than a century prior to this. (There Count Zinzendorf started his Order of
the Mustard Seed as a teenager in the boarding school.) George Müller went to
England in 1829 to prepare for missionary work among Jews and eventually became
a preacher affiliated with the Plymouth Brethren, who also had spiritual. He
was determined to rely totally on the Lord for his financial support. His
policy continued even after he started an orphanage in Bristol. Without direct
appeals for funds, his orphanage was supported and grew. By the time he died,
more than ten thousand orphans had been cared for. God not only supplied the needs of Müller and
his orphanage work but provided for many other missionaries around the world
through Müller’s obedience and stewardship. Hudson Taylor was not
only one of the beneficiaries. But also in other ways George Müller impacted him.
Engaging so-called non-Entities in Mission
The names of George Mueller,
Hudson Taylor and CT Studd ushered in a new era of missions. After the 18th century Moravians and Methodists, the
next spiritual giants who engaged so-called non-entities in missionary work
significantly were William Carey and Hudson Taylor, a British Protestant
missionary to China, and the founder of the China
Inland Mission (CIM, now OMF International). James
Hudson Taylor (21 May 1832
– 3 June 1905) spent 51 years in China. The agency that he founded was
responsible for bringing over 800 missionaries into the country. He started 125
schools and his ministry resulted in 18,000 Christian conversions. More than
300 stations of work were established with more than 500 local helpers in all
eighteen provinces of China.
Hudson Taylor was known for his sensitivity to Chinese culture and zeal for
evangelism. He wore native Chinese clothing even though this was rare among
missionaries of that time. Under his +leadership, the China Inland Mission (CIM) was exemplary non-denominational
in practice, accepting members from all Protestant groups, including
individuals from the working class and single women, as well as multi-national
recruits. Primarily because of the CIM's campaign against the opium trade,
Hudson Taylor has been referred to as one of the most significant Europeans to
have lived in China in the 19th century.
Historian Ruth Tucker (2004:186) summarises his influence as follows: 'Few missionaries
in the nineteen centuries since the Apostle Paul has had a wider vision and has
carried out a more systematised plan of evangelising a broad geographical area
than Hudson Taylor'.
Prayer as the Key to the Missionary Problem
Dr Andrew Murray
put in practice what he had taught about ‘waiting on the Lord’ when he was
invited to be a speaker at the World
Missions Conference in New York, 1900 - billed as the biggest ever to be
held. (At this time the effect of the Enlightenment and rationalism had
significantly diminished belief in unseen forces like the Holy Spirit.) Andrew
Murray had no inner peace about going to New York, not even after the
organizers tried to use his famous friend Dwight Moody to entice him. Moody
invited Murray to join him in outreaches in the USA after the World Missions Conference, but Murray
was not to be swayed. He felt morally
bound to stay with his people because of the Anglo-Boer War (1899-1902). We may safely surmise that Murray was
sensitive to the Holy Spirit, only wanting to take instructions from the Lord.
Murray’s subsequent absence at the
conference ironically became the biggest cause of missions in the 20th
century. After he received the papers
and discussions at the conference, Murray wrote down in a booklet what he
thought was lacking at the event: The Key
to the Missionary Problem. This book had an explosive influence on the
churches in Europe, America and South Africa.
In the booklet Murray referred prominently to the 24-hour prayer watch
of the Moravians. It called seriously for new devotion and intensive prayer for
missions. Murray powerfully stated that missionary work is the primary task of
the church, and that the pastor should have that as the main goal of his
preaching. These sentiments were repeated in a small booklet he called Foreign Missions and the week of Prayer,
January 5-12, 1902 - formulating that ‘missions are the supreme end
of the church’. He furthermore suggested that ‘to join in united prayer for God’s Spirit to work in home churches a
true interest in, and devotion to missions (is) our first and our most pressing
need.’ One of Andrew Murray’s classic statements
of the early 20th century was that ‘God is a God of
missions.’ He wrote powerfully in his book The
Kingdom of God in South Africa (1906): ‘Prayer
is the life of missions. Continual, believing prayer is the secret of vitality
and fruitfulness in missionary work. The God of missions is the God of prayer’.
It is
surely no mere co-incidence that revivals broke out in different parts of the
world in the years hereafter - in such divergent countries as Wales, Norway,
India and Chile.[5]
Growing
Ecumenism
The Conference on Foreign
Missions in October, 1878 in London was in a sense the
fore-runner of the international gathering in New York at the turn of that
century. The formal name of the 1900 event was the Ecumenical Conference on Foreign Missions.
Official delegates at this event were numbered at 2,500 (including more than
600 foreign missionaries from fifty countries). This conference was in turn part
of the run to an even more ecumenical event in Edinburgh in 1910. The World Missionary Conference of Edinburgh 1910 was an epoch-making
event to which many different movements of mission and unity trace their roots.
The conference in 1910 in the
mood of the student movement's watchword of "the evangelisation of the
world in this generation" is considered the symbolic starting point of the
contemporary ecumenical movement. There
had been earlier major mission conferences, but at Edinburgh, first steps were
taken towards an institutionalized cooperation between Protestant mission
councils. However there were no Catholic nor Orthodox delegates present. Out of
the 1400 participants, 17 came from the global south.
John Raleigh Mott (May 25, 1865 – January 31, 1955) came to the fore as a world leader. He was
a long-serving leader of the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) and the World Student Christian Federation (WSCF). From 1895 until 1920 Mott was
the General Secretary of the WSCF. Intimately involved in the formation of the World Council of Churches in 1948, that body elected him as a
lifelong honorary President. His best-known book, The Evangelization of the World in
this Generation, became a missionary slogan in the early 20th century. Mott
received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1946 for his work in establishing
and strengthening international Protestant Christian student organizations that worked to
promote peace.
Ambivalence in the Ecumenical Movement
Faith and Order
was born as a faction within the Ecumenical Movement. Its counter-part was called Life and Work. Faith and Order was supposed to deal
with theological-theoretical concerns, while Life and Work was expected to be of purely practical orientation.
This dichotomy between "faith and works" - familiar to the Western
Church already since the Reformation - was itself questionable and problematic.
The formation of the World Council of
Churches in 1948 as a merger of these two movements has helped a great deal
the overcoming of this dichotomy. Yet, the specific identity of Faith and Order
was retained even after the formation of the WCC.
Aftermath of
World War II
The bewilderment and devastation caused
by the Second World War had another result. Young people became completely
estranged from the Church. Youth for
Christ was born in the mid-1940s through an impulse from the heart of God
that simultaneously touched dozens of leaders in different places with a
concern to reach young people normal church channels were missing. This led to
dynamic young evangelists, using revolutionary methods, conducting lively mass rallies in dozens of cities under the name of Youth for Christ, in the USA and abroad. With the rapid expansion
of the movement there soon became a need for leadership and organization and in
1944 Chicago pastor Torrey Johnson was elected Youth for Christ’s first president, with Billy Graham as its first
full-time evangelist.
Youth with a Mission (YWAM) was conceived by
Loren Cunningham in 1956. As a 20-year-old student in an Assemblies of God
College, he was traveling in the Bahamas when he had a vision of waves breaking
over the Earth. When he looked closer the waves appeared to become young people
taking the news of Jesus into all the nations of the world. He envisioned a
movement that would send young people out into various nations to share the
message of Jesus, and which would involve Christians of all denominations. In
late 1960, the name Youth with a Mission
(YWAM) was chosen and the group embarked on their first project, a vocational
mission trip.
Loren Cunningham married Darlene Scratch in 1963. By this time, the new
mission had 20 volunteers stationed in various nations, and the Cunninghams
were planning the mission's first "Summer of Service". In
1967, Cunningham began to work on his vision for the first school. It was to be
the School of Evangelism, which was
held at Chateau-d'Oex, Switzerland in 1969 with 21 students. A second school
which was twice as long, ran from the summer of 1969 through the summer of 1970
just outside Lausanne, Switzerland (in Chalet-A-Gobet). The students' lodging and classes took place in a
newly renovated and leased hotel. By the end of the year, YWAM purchased the
hotel and made Lausanne its first permanent location. The School of Evangelism was formed in 1974 in New Jersey as well as Lausanne. With a focus on biblical foundations and character
development as well as missions, much of the material from this course is now
taught in the present day Discipleship
Training School (DTS). A format of three months of lectures followed by two
or three months of outreach is still used in most Discipleship Training Schools
today
CRU
(known as Campus Crusade for Christ until 2011) is an evangelical Christian organization. It was founded in 1951 at the by Bill Bright as a ministry for university students. Campus Crusade for Christ International (CCC) was founded in 1951 on the campus of University of California, Los Angeles by the then 29
year-old Bill Bright (1921-2003), who at the time was a seminary student at neo-evangelical Fuller
Theological Seminary. Bright was a successful businessman with an oil
company and a specialty food business before attending seminary. Since the agency has
expanded its focus to include adult professionals, athletes and high school
students. In 2011 Campus Crusade for
Christ in the United States changed its name to CRU, to avoid the negative
connotation of "crusade" from the historical Crusades (particularly to Muslim communities) and that much of
the organization's work was no longer limited to college campuses. The
visionary he was, he had already in 1956 contemplating to make a film on the
life of Jesus that would be close to the Bible. The Jesus Film Project became a reality,
translated into all the main languages of the world. This is arguably the most
powerful evangelistic tool ever. The claim of the project that the film ‘is the most dynamic way to hear and see
the greatest story ever lived’ is not vain.
More than 200 million people have come to Jesus after watching these
films. Bright’s Four Spiritual Laws booklet – a 4-point outline
written by Bill in 1956 on how to establish a personal relationship with Jesus
– has been printed in some 200 languages. Bill Bright's booklet has become what
is considered to be the most widely-disseminated religious booklet in history,
with more than 2.5 billion booklets distributed to date. Bill Bright’s unique
blend of Christian commitment and communications insight was at the heart of
his success.World Congress on Evangelism
This major global gathering devoted to fulfilling Christ's great commission
to evangelize the earth was held in 1966 in West Berlin. Major ecumenical
assemblies and conferences had been sponsored by the World Council of Churches to discuss church unity, faith and order, and
church and society concerns. The World
Congress on Evangelism was a para-ecumenical effort inspired by the massive
crusades of evangelist Dr Billy Graham, who served as honorary chairman.
The congress drew participants
dedicated to evangelism in more than 100 countries, most being nationals
carrying evangelistic tasks in ecumenically aligned and independent
denominations. Their identification within seventy-six church bodies inside and
outside the conciliar movement constituted the Berlin Congress in some ways
more ecumenical in scope than the World Council. Participants went back
historically as far as the Mar Thoma Church in India. Others came from young
churches in Africa and Asia; youngest of all was the Auca church in Latin America sprung from the witness of five American missionary martyrs. The congress
achieved a significant emphasis on evangelistic priorities and a correlation of
theological and evangelistic concerns in a time when neo-Protestant
reconstruction of both the doctrine and task of the church was displacing
historic Christian commitments.
Convened by an international group of 142 evangelical leaders under the
honorary chairmanship of Dr. Billy Graham, this congress aimed: to proclaim the
biblical basis of true evangelism; to relate biblical truth to contemporary
issues; to share and strengthen unity and love in Christ; to identify those yet
unreached with the Gospel; to learn from each other the patterns of evangelism
the Holy Spirit is using today; to awaken
Christian consciences to the implications of expressing Christ’s love in
attitude and action; to develop cooperative strategies toward partnership in
the work; to pray together that the congress might notably further world
evangelization; and to be God’s people, available for His purposes in the
world. There
were nearly 3,000 official participants from 150 countries. The congress
produced the widely acclaimed Lausanne
Covenant and set up a continuation committee ’to further the total biblical
mission of the Church,’ with special reference to the 2.7 billion of the
world’s people yet unreached.
A Cape-born
Reconciler at Work
If ever there was someone who took the ministry of
reconciliation seriously, it was the Cape-born David du Plessis. He moved to Ladybrand in the Orange Free State
with his family before he was nine years old. Du Plessis first had to go
through the mill himself, leaving his home when his father would not allow him
to go to university. He was reconciled to his father two years later. The Lord
first had to deal with the prayerful Du Plessis before he could be used
optimally. ‘I began
to be sensitive to the Lord’s checking’.
Even
though it was not generally recognized as such, one of Du Plessis’s greatest
achievements was in race relations. At a time when Professors Ben Marais and
Barend Keet were battling against apartheid in their denomination in the 1940s,
Du Plessis as General Secretary of the Apostolic
Faith Mission (AFM) was responsible for reducing missionary staff to a
minimum, taking the work out of the hands of the North Americans and Europeans
and putting it under the jurisdiction of Africans. ‘The local work, we felt, had to be under the control
of the nationals’ (Du Plessis, 1977:112).[6] As if that were not radical enough,
the AFM had a central conference in which ministers, missionaries and
executives of all races met at top level. It appears that this denomination
came the nearest to practical non-racialism at a time when apartheid was
already practiced far and wide.
But
this was by far not the end of Du Plessis’s ministry of reconciliation. He had
to go through the crucible once again. After an accident in the USA, when the
car in which he was a passenger, drove into a shunting locomotive, he landed in
hospital. Du Plessis later described this time as ‘the most extended period of silent prayer in my life’. He was challenged to forgive Protestants in
general. The first test came at the Second World Conference of Pentecostals in
Paris, which he attended on crutches. God used him to reconcile Pentecostals
who were fighting each other. In his typical humble manner, Du Plessis did not
gloat over the victory achieved there. Instead, he said ‘I know that if I would have any success at all with
what the Lord had directed, if I was to be able to forgive the old main line
churches, I had to forgive these Pentecostal brethren.’ God was to use him to bring the first Pentecostal denominations into
the maligned World Council of Churches.
Into the
Vatican
David Du Plessis’ ecumenical work was however not appreciated
in his own denomination. Fellowship with independent Pentecostals was to him
just as important. He was invited to become the secretary of the world
conference in Toronto in 1958. There he was completely cold-shouldered, and all
but pushed out of the Pentecostal movement. Du Plessis felt clearly led ‘to resign from every position that I held in any
society and to follow Him wherever he may lead.’ Sovereignly God over-ruled. In 1959 he was lecturing in the
theological institutions of a wide spectrum of denominations. The following year he was requested to give a
lecture at a meeting in Scotland, in preparation for the WCC plenary occasion
that was to be held in New Delhi in 1961. This resulted in him being invited to
the WCC conference itself. There he met Professor Bernard Leeming from Oxford,
who was the personal representative of Pope John XX111. One thing led to
another until Du Plessis wrote from New Delhi that he would make a stopover in
Rome.
There
he spent many hours in prayer, ‘considering the difficulties that lay ahead for Protestants and
Catholics in matters of trust and forgiveness.’ The Lord first had to deal with him through His Word. In fact, it came
to him through the context of the Lord’s well known prayer. ‘...If you forgive not men their trespasses,
neither will your Father forgive your trespasses’ (Matthew 6:15). He
sensed: ‘I am
certain the Lord spoke to me about the many burdens of unforgiveness and
suspicion’ between Catholics and Protestants for so many
centuries. “The
souls of Christians will live when
all learn to forgive.”
In Rome Du Plessis met Dr Strandsky, the secretary of
Cardinal Bea, who headed a new Roman Catholic secretariat for promoting church
unity. Strandsky had a special charge to learn as much as he could about the
Holy Spirit and the Pentecostals. Because David du Plessis was now a ‘mere
zero’ in the Pentecostal movement, he was ideally placed to share at the
Vatican. When Cardinal Bea asked him: ‘Well then David, what do the Pentecostals have to say
to Rome?’ He was in a predicament. In honesty he could only
hesitantly stutter: ‘I have
to say that the Pentecostals have no intention of talking to Rome.’ When Cardinal Bea asked him for his personal
opinion, God used David du Plessis to minister to millions of Roman Catholics
all around the globe. ‘Make the Bible available to every Catholic in the world ... If Catholics
will read the Bible, the Holy Spirit will make that book come alive, and that
will change their lives. And changed Catholics will be the renewal of the
church.’ Cardinal Bea
immediately ordered those words to be written down.
The
words of ‘Mr Pentecost’ – as David Du Plessis was nicknamed - turned out to be
very prophetic. At the Vatican Council it was decided to make the Bible
available to every Roman Catholic person in the world. David du Plessis was
present at a session of the Vatican Council. His contribution in 1964
introduced the charismatic renewal to the Roman Catholic Church. Du Plessis was
also used by the Lord to bring about a thaw in the relationship between
Protestants and Roman Catholics worldwide, notably at a meeting in Zürich in
June 1972.
A significant
Power Encounter
When
Ds. Davie Pypers commenced work in 1956 as a minister of the Dutch Reformed St Stephen’s Church in
Bree Street, he discerned the need for increased prayer for the Muslims of the
area. Soon he initiated praying for Bo-Kaap and the Muslims living there.
Together with two other pastoral colleagues, he interceded every Monday for the
area that became even more pronouncedly Islamic in the wake of the envisaged
implementation of Group Areas legislation.
Ds.
Pypers appears to have been one of the very few ministers at the Cape of
his era who had any notion of spiritual warfare. It was by far not common
practice yet. And satan was definitely
not going to release his gains so easily.
Davie Pypers was called to become the
missionary to the Cape Muslims on behalf of the Dutch Reformed Church,
linked to the historical Gestig (Sendingkerk)
congregation in Long Street. It is the church where once people from different
denominations worshipped, the cradle of missionary outreach in South Africa.[7] Ds.
Pypers had hardly started with his new work when a challenge came from a young
imam, Mr Ahmed Deedat, to publicly debate the death of Jesus on the Cross. As a young dominee David Pypers prepared himself through prayer and fasting in
a tent on the mountains at Bain’s Kloof for the event which was to take place
on 13 August 1961 at the Green Point Track.
Because of publicity in the media, 30
000 people of all races jammed into the Green Point sports venue. The stadium
quivered with excitement like at a rugby match. In the keenly contested debate,
Imam Deedat started with the assertion that Jesus went to Egypt after the
disciples had taken him from the Cross. He thoroughly ridiculed the Christian
faith, challenging Pypers to give proof that Jesus died on the Cross. The young
dominee rose to the challenge by
immediately stating that Jesus is alive and that his Lord could there and then
do the very things He had done when He walked the earth.
Dr David du Plessis, who was
nick-named ‘Mr Pentecost’, reported on the event in his autobiography: ‘Taking a deep breath, he (Pypers) spoke loud and
clear, ‘Is there anybody in this audience that, according to medical judgement,
is completely incurable? Remember, it must be incurable...’
Of course, the stadium was abuzz by now. And then several men came along,
carrying Mrs Withuhn, a White Christian lady, with braces all over her body.
She was completely paralyzed. Then Pypers went ahead, asking whether there were
any doctors present who could examine her and vouch for her condition. ‘Several doctors came forward, including her own
physician, and they concurred in pronouncing her affliction incurable.’
Pypers simply walked to her and
without any ado prayed for her briefly and proclaimed: ‘In the name of Jesus, be healed!’ Immediately
she dropped her crutches and began to move.
The Green Point Aftermath
The
Green Point Track event resulted in a clear victory for the Cross, with
Mrs Withuhn being miraculously healed in the name of the resurrected Lord Jesus
Christ.
What was perceived as the defeat of
Ahmed Deedat, and thus of Islam at Green Point, inspired a call for revenge.
Deedat stated publicly that the original motivation for public debates was what
he had experienced as his humiliation at the hand of Christians. He was not
willing at all to accept defeat lying down. He would challenge many an
international speaker to a debate in the decades hereafter. His Islamic
Propagation team craftily manipulated the footage of these debates in video
productions. He became known world-wide in Muslim countries as a South African
second only to Nelson Mandela! More than any other Muslim, he succeeded to revive
Islam from 1961 until May 1996 - when he suffered a stroke which side-lined him
- into an ideological force to be reckoned with.
The effect of the Green Point Track miracle was almost nullified by news that came
from another part of the world on that same day. The report of the building of
the Berlin Wall resounded throughout the world! A new type of battle was
cemented - the ‘cold war’ between Soviet Communism and Western Capitalism!
However,
it was nearly just as bad that Pypers was heavily criticized by his
denomination for undertaking the confrontation without getting prior synod
approval. Furthermore, the leaders of his denomination were still clinging to
an untenable interpretation of divine healing – that it belonged to a past age
- to the times of the apostles.
Islam linked to Communism?
As the ensuing cold war became
the focus, the enemy of souls abused Communism with its atheist basis,
attempting to stifle the spreading of the victorious message of the Cross, as
it had been proclaimed at the Green Point Track.
Was there a subtle link to
Communism
in opposition to the Cross?
I surmise that the event of 13
August 1961 had great importance in the spiritual realm. One wonders whether
the Islamic Crescent was not probably subtly linked to Communism in opposition
to the Cross at that occasion. (This was to happen again in reverse in 1990
after the demise of Communism. Islam took over the mantle from the atheist
ideology as a threat to world peace when the Iraqi army marched into Kuwait.
That event became the catalyst for many Christians to start praying for an end
to the bondage and deception at the base of the ideology of Islam as a
destructive spiritual force.)
In
his denomination, Ds. Pypers was still a lone ranger. In some quarters he was vilified after the
Green Point event, although he had actually been challenged by the literature
on faith healing, which had been written by Dr Andrew Murray, a revered hero of
his church. Pypers was out on a limb in
the Dutch Reformed Church. At the Kweekskool
in Stellenbosch, the theological seminary of the denomination, it was still officially
taught that faith healing was a doctrinal
tenet which belonged to the days of the
apostles.
If we take as a given that the arch enemy will always attempt to cause disunity and strife of any sort, we should not be surprised that God always raised persons to fight on behalf of those who have been oppressed or discriminated against. Colonialism, Imperialism and White domination in the secular world sadly had its mirror equivalents also in the ranks of the Church.
An interesting fact is
that many a fighter against injustice received their inspiration in the US in
the 19th century, where Afro Americans had to bear the brunt of
oppression and discrimination. Without exception, all the early 20th
century fighters against injustice who were impacted in this way, received
their inspiration within the perimeters of the Church. We look here at a random
sample.
Booker Taliaferro Washington (1856 – 1915) came from the last
generation of American leaders who were born into slavery. He became the
leading voice of the former slaves and their descendants. They were newly
oppressed in the South by disenfranchisement and the Jim Crow discriminatory laws enacted in the post-Reconstruction Southern states in the
late 19th and early 20th centuries. Between 1890 and
1915, Booker Washington was the dominant leader in the African-American community and an advisor to presidents of the United
States.
Washington called for Black progress through education and
entrepreneurship, rather than trying to challenge the Jim Crow segregation and the disenfranchisement of Black voters in the South
directly. Booker Washington mobilized a nationwide coalition of middle-class
Blacks, Church leaders and White philanthropists and politicians. His long-term
goal was the building of the community's economic strength and pride by a focus
on self-help and schooling.
Pixley Seme was born on 1 October 1881 in Natal.
He was the son of Isaka Sarah (nee Mseleku) Seme. He obtained his primary
school education at the local mission school where the American
Congregationalist missionary, Reverend S. C. Pixley, took an interest in him
and arranged for him to go the USA. He attended Colombia University in New York
where he won the University's highest oratorical honour, the George William
Curtis medal. His topic was “The Regeneration of Africa”.
Seme and Alfred Mangena met at the South African Native Convention in
London that had come there to monitor the progress of the draft South Africa
Act through the British parliament in 1909. Seme returned to South Africa in
1910 and set up a private practice in Johannesburg, later going into
partnership with Mangena.
On 8 January 1912 Seme, Mangena and two
other lawyers educated abroad, Richard Msimang and George Montsio, called for a
convention of Africans to form the South
African Native National Congress (SANNC), which was renamed the African National Congress (ANC) in 1923,
in Bloemfontein. Reverend John Langalibalele Dube was elected as its first
president (in absentia), and Seme became the Treasurer-General.
John
Langalibele Dube was a Zulu patriot but an opponent of ‘narrow tribalism’
simultaneously. The rising generation of militant African nationalists came to
look upon him as a parochial figure. Looking back in history, we discern that
the country had been blessed with a gifted Christian, whose potential could not
be fully exploited because of racial prejudice. As a sixteen year old Dube went
to America where he also travelled and gave talks on self-help for the Blacks
of South Africa. He returned to the USA in 1897, this time to study theology
for three years. Ordained in the Congregational church, he was one of the delegation
to London in 1909, to lobby against the colour bar in the Act of Union. Unable
to attend the founding conference of the South
African National Native Congress (later the name was changed to the ANC),
he was elected in absentia as its
first president.
As a missionary-educated
person, who also studied in the US, there was for John Dube conflict between the newly
arrived Western education and African traditional society. It is conceivable
that Dube would never have been part of the SANC, except that his teaching and
discourse on the necessity of unity fitted the political atmosphere.
Assistance in Resistance from Abroad
An interesting
feature of the resistance against oppression of all sorts was the assistance by
foreigners. A move at the Cape supplied the seed for the birth of Pan
Africanism on South African soil. F.Z.S. Peregrino was a West African who had
an office in Tyne Street, just off Hanover Street in District Six. As a
recruiting officer for Jamaicans, he not only looked after their interests, but
he also sought to promote broader Africanism.’ Towards the end of 1900
Peregrino launched an African-controlled newspaper, the South African Spectator. He
said that it was an organ for all ‘the people who are not white’. The paper
adopted a high moral tone, carrying no advertisements for alcohol, fortune
telling or other activities he though could undermine the morals of the
populace. To instil race pride in Blacks, articles were published n teir
world-wide advancements and achievements.
The
slogan ‘Africa for the Africans’ has often been branded as Black racism. It is hardly known that a White missionary
from New Zealand was actually one of the first protagonists of the principle.
Joseph Booth, who was born in Derby, England, wrote a booklet with the title Africa for the Africans in 1897. Booth’s
unorthodox approach to mission work and his schemes for African self-help and
advancement eventually created friction with colonial authorities.
Paternalism breeds
Secession
In the attitude towards people of colour there was a
lot of goodwill among Whites at the turn of the century. A problem was that
even radical thinkers among them hardly ever consulted people of colour. Proper
consultation could possibly have averted many a crisis. From the earliest days at
the Cape the ‘natives’ were regarded as inferior, their culture despised.
Paternalism was rife.
This
gave rise to the secessionist ‘Ethiopian movement’. The ‘Ethiopians’
have been typified by the sentence: “We have come to pray for the deliverance
of Blacks’ (Cited in Elphick et al, 1997:212). The ideological link went back
to the Ethiopian eunuch of Acts 8 and the church, which developed in that
country without mediation of Western Churches. The term ‘Ethiopian’ was derived
from the concept that the first indigenous church on African soil started in
Ethiopia. The ‘Ethiopian’ movement started in different parts of South Africa
as breakaway congregations from the Methodist churches. Disillusioned by the
imperfections of colonial society, they withdrew from white-dominated
structures to from exclusively African organisations. Their policy was to throw
off the shackles of White domination and reassert their former independence,
while retaining at the same time what they considered to be the best elements
of European civilisation. The secessionist ‘Ethiopian movement’ really took off when the separatist ideas
spread to the Witwatersrand after the discovery of gold. The first ‘Ethiopian
church was established in Pretoria in 1892 after black Wesleyan (Methodist) ministers
had been excluded from a meeting of White colleagues. In a sense the
good teaching of the Methodists backfired when they tried to make the
indigenous independent, because the missionaries kept on patronizing their
congregants of colour.
By
1902, Ethiopianism was used for
the entire indigenous church movement.
For the ‘rebel’ Black churchmen, Ethiopia was the model land where Blacks were
ruling their own country. In America a separate church had been started among
Negroes as the American Methodist Episcopal
Church (AMEC). It was only natural that the ‘Ethiopian’ Methodists of South
Africa linked up with them. Bishop Levi Coppin was sent here as the first Black
bishop. The AMEC headquarters was in Blythe Street, District Six.
The missionary
Drive slowed down
Secessions affected all denominations (Odendaal,
1984:26). Significant was the missionary drive of the new separatist church.
The secessions start seems to have drowned the desire to bring the Gospel to
the rest of the continent, even to the Sudan and Egypt. James Dwane, who was
earmarked to be ordained as the first South African bishop of the merged AMEC,
reflected on the broad aims of the movement: ‘Africa must not be evangelised by
Europeans, not even by American blacks, but by real Africans’ (Cited in
Odendaal, 1984:26). A negative facet of Ethiopianism was the tendency to polarise, by blackening
everybody who did not join them. Lovedale-trained Elijah Makiwane concluded:
‘Those who refuse to join this movement are now called white men or Britons’
(Cited in Odendaal, 1984:83).
Empowering the
Underdogs
This visionary had the courage of his conviction to
start a denomination for the upliftment of the poor from the Cape to Cairo.
That is the reason why he gave his church a continental name. The AMEC played a
significant role in the liberation struggle, by enabling South Africans of
colour to study in the USA. Among the very prominent ones were the social
worker and teacher Charlotte Maxeke. Charlotte Maxeke toured the USA in the 1890s
with an African choir. She remained in the States to study at Wilberforce
University in Ohio, where she graduated with a B.S. in 1905, the first Black
woman from South Africa to earn a bachelor’s degree.[8]
After her marriage to a South African overseas and their return to the country,
the couple impacted many Blacks. The couple was worldwide surely of one the
first instances when indigenous folk opened a Bible School as they did on
behalf of the AMEC in 1908. One of these
persons influenced at the Cape was Rev. Zaccheus Mahabane, who was to become an
influential personality in the ANC for many decades. Charlotte Maxeke founded
the women’s league of the ANC.
Cape-born
Frances Gow returned from the USA with a doctorate, becoming a bishop in the
denomination in 1956, one of the first western-trained bishops on the continent
who was not self-appointed. The AMEC denomination - with its origins among the
Negroes of the USA - was a great propagator of the indigenisation of the church
at the Cape. Under Dr Gow’s leadership – he only became their bishop in 1956 -
the church expanded rapidly, at least numerically, with churches in different
parts of the Peninsula.
Another
influential figure at the Cape was Henry Sylvester Williams, a black lawyer who
hailed from Trinidad in the West Indies. He came to Cape Town in October 1903,
with the intention to build Pan-Africanism and to see British status coming
into being for all Black people in the British Empire. When he and Bishop Levi
Coppin saw how the ‘Coloureds’ were distancing themselves from the ‘Africans’,
they thought that the ‘Coloureds’ might be the next to be segregated
residentially (Blacks had been dumped in Ndabeni in 1901). They discerned all
the ingredients of divide and rule when John Tobin, one of the early leaders of
the African Peoples’ Organization
(APO), looked for reconciliation between ‘Coloureds’ and Whites who also spoke
Afrikaans. Tobin and his supporters were angered by what they regarded as the
betrayal of the British in the run-up to the Anglo-Boer War.
The next formation of
Black people into a coherent socio-political movement was to come into being
with the Jamaican Marcus Garvey and his Universal Negro
Improvement Association and African Communities League, founded in 1914.
Probably
the first indigenous church planting move at the Cape started in District
Six. A strong element of ‘Coloured’
Nationalism was present when Rev. Joseph J. Forbes started his ‘Volkskerk
van Afrika’ on 14 May 1922.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer – a
Fighter for the Underdog Jews
The name Dietrich
Bonhoeffer became known as a martyr for his stand against the Nazi regime. What
is not known generally is that he had been impacted in the USA before that.
There he had heard someone preach the Gospel of Social Justice and became
sensitive to not only social injustices experienced by minorities but also the
ineptitude of the church to bring about integration. Bonhoeffer began to see
things from below - from the
perspective of those who suffer oppression. He observed, ‘Here one can truly
speak and hear about sin and grace and the love of God...the Black Christ is
preached with rapturous passion and vision.’ Later Bonhoeffer referred to his
impressions abroad as the point at which he "turned from phraseology to
reality."[3] He traveled by car
through the United States to Mexico, where he had been invited to speak on the
subject of peace. His early visits to Italy, Libya, Spain, the United States,
Mexico, and Cuba opened Bonhoeffer to ecumenism.
Strongly influenced by the Swiss
theologian Karl Barth, Bonhoeffer’s Christocentric approach appealed to conservative,
confession-minded Protestants while his commitment to social justice as a
cardinal responsibility of Christianity appealed to liberal Protestants. He was
thus an excellent link and bridge between the false alternatives that the Faith and Order and Life and Work factions of the
ecumenical movement had created.
Central to Bonhoeffer’s theology is
Christ, in whom God and the world are reconciled. Bonhoeffer's God is a
suffering God, whose manifestation is found in this-worldliness. He believed
that the Incarnation of God in flesh
made it unacceptable to speak of God and the world "in terms of two
spheres," an implicit attack upon Luther's doctrine of the two kingdoms. Bonhoeffer
stressed personal and collective piety and revived the idea of imitation of
Christ. He argued that Christians should not retreat from the world but act
within it. He believed that two elements were constitutive of faith: the
implementation of justice and the acceptance of divine suffering.[31]
He insisted that the church, like the Christians, "had to share in the
sufferings of God at the hands of a godless world" if it were to be a true
church of Christ.
Deeply interested in
ecumenism, he was appointed by the World
Alliance for Promoting International Friendship through the Churches (a
forerunner of the World Council of Churches) as one of its three
European youth secretaries. At this time he seems to have undergone something
of a personal conversion from being a theologian primarily attracted to the
intellectual side of Christianity to being a dedicated man of faith, resolved
to carry out the teaching of Christ as he found it revealed in the Gospels
Church Opposition to
the Removal of ‘Coloureds’ from the Common Voters’ Roll
Probably in no other area
did the influence of DRC (former) clergymen play such a clear role as in the
removal of ‘Coloureds’ from the Common Voters’ roll in 1956. When a similar
move happened in 1936 to remove Blacks from the voters’ roll, there had been
hardly any church protest - apart from Ds Nicol’s address as officer of the Christian
Council of South Africa. The run-up to the equivalent move in 1955 not only
led to a temporary and uneasy union of all ‘Coloured’ groups, but it also
caused quite a stir among Whites.
In
fact, a clear result of the actions of the Cape clergymen Botha and Morkel, was
that they heightened the political consciousness of Afrikaners, after the new National Party government had used
vicious manipulation to achieve their goals. This was doubly tragic because the
Prime Minister. Dr D.F. Malan, who was a former dominee, had once been a
supporter of the ‘Coloured’ franchise. His political summersault on this issue
may be explained by the need for Afrikaner unity and the slim majority which
his party had achieved in the 1948 elections. He realized how strong the
Afrikaners of the Northern provinces felt about ‘Coloured’ voting rights.
Furthermore, his majority in parliament could easily be overturned in a future
election in Cape seats with a substantial ‘Coloured’ population. That had to be
forestalled at all costs, especially after the 1949 provincial elections where
the United Party took the
constituencies of Paarl and Bredasdorp – both of which they had won the year
before in the national elections. The Nationalist ascribed their defeat in
Paarl to the registration of hundreds of new voters since the general election.
Therefore the initiative to remove the ‘Coloureds’ to a separate voters’ roll,
was vicious and pre-meditated to secure future electoral success.
That
the Nationalists were trying to settle an old score against the
English-speakers on this issue was an added factor.
White Dutch Reformed
Opposition against Apartheid
Already in 1950
Professor Ben Marais wrote a controversial book Kleurkrisis in die Weste
(Colour crisis in the West). The resulting controversy caused the popular
preacher to be effectively silenced by the tactics of the secretive Afrikaner
Broederbond. Church councils had to make sure that he would not be invited
to preach in Dutch Reformed Churches. In 1956 the Stellenbosch academic
Professor Barend Keet raised the question in his book Whither South Africa
whether apartheid or the better sounding term ‘separate development’ could be
applied in a just manner as claimed by his denomination. Five years later –
thus a year after Sharpeville - he and eight other Afrikaner theologians
answered the question with a resounding NO! in their book Delayed Action!
They spelled out clearly that apartheid implied discrimination.
One of the leading Dutch Reformed ministers, the gifted Ds
Beyers Naudé, was seriously challenged. In Wellington, the first congregation
that he served as a hulpprediker
(assistant pastor), he immediately became uneasy when he saw that the training
was inferior at the Sendinginstituut,
where ministers were trained who would serve at the daughter churches (Ryan,
1990:31). On a personal level the
heritage of the pioneer missionary Georg Schmidt impacted his life when he met
his wife. She was the daughter of Emil Weder, a Moravian missionary in
Genadendal. After seeing the degenerate ‘Coloureds’ in the Karoo town of Loxton
where he was a pastor subsequently, Beyers Naudé was reminded of the cultured
educated people of colour he had encountered for the first time in Genadendal
during the time of courting. The question came to him ‘why it was not possible
to have this in other parts of the country’ (Ryan, 1990:33). The seed for the
multi-racial Christian Institute was sown into the heart of the former Afrikaner
Broederbond leader whose father had helped to found the secret organization
with lofty ideals for the upliftment of Afrikaners.
An emerging Church
Unity high-jacked
In South Africa the
Boer-Brit rift, a traditional animosity was still rife in the 1940s among
Whites as a legacy from the Anglo-Boer War at the end the 19th century,
especially after the Dutch Reformed
Church withdrew from the Christian
Council of Churches. The unity in the latter body, which was started in
1936 with Dutch Reformed ministers in leading roles, had however been quite
frail all along. The sense of unity which had been experienced at the
inauguration of the World Council of Churches (WCC) in Amsterdam (1948)
was nevertheless still reverberating in many a country. Gerdener could still
write in 1959: ‘With thankfulness we observe signs to come together and work
together, also in our own Dutch Reformed Church’. Gerdener rightly saw exclusiveness and isolation as a danger to
missionary work. ‘Nowhere is isolation and exclusiveness so deadly and
time-consuming than in the fight against the mighty heathendom and nowhere is
co-operation and a unitary front so necessary and useful as here.’
Albert Luthuli, the President of the ANC, was asked to
address a predominantly Afrikaner – all White study group in Pretoria in the
early months of that year. Soon hereafter, Luthuli was escorted from the Cape
Town railway station to ‘an open square packed with people’, pre-figuring the
event on the Grand Parade with Nelson Mandela many years later after his
release.
The enemy of souls succeeded however in high-jacking an
emerging unity of believers in South Africa at the end of the 1950s. After
Luthuli’s return to his home town Groutville, he was visited by the Special
Branch and served with a muzzling banning order, silenced and confined to the
town for five years. The link to the apartheid legislators threatened the
emerging unity in no uncertain way. The Sharpeville massacre of 21 March 1960
could have been God’s corrective to get the Church in South Africa at large to
change its course. The World Council of Churches (WCC) met their eight
member churches in South Africa – ten delegates from every church - at
Cottesloe, a suburb of Johannesburg, from 7 December 1960 to discuss the crisis
in the country in the wake of the Sharpeville killings and the arrest of Black
leaders.
The body of Christ seemed to be speaking with one voice. A
significant segment of the White Dutch
Reformed Church was at this time very much part of the ecumenical movement
in South Africa in 1960. The Cape and Transvaal Dutch Reformed Dutch Reformed ministers initially agreed to oppose
apartheid but the bulk of the leadership was thereafter subtly cajoled into
line - after the Prime Minister, Dr H.F. Verwoerd, had exerted pressure on the
bulk of them.
Dr H.F.Verwoerd was successful with demonic scheming to
make every move suspect, which intended to foster Church unity. The
‘English-speaking churches’ and others sympathetic to the unity of believers
across the race divide, were made suspect. The storm caused by these moves
caused the old Boer-Brit resentment to flame up: divide and rule was once again
the name of the game.
Battle against Communism
Internationally Richard Wurmbrand (1909 –2001) was one of
the first persons in the Communist Block that arose after World War II who
dared to say publicly that Communism and Christianity were not compatible. As a Romanian Christian minister of Jewish descent he did this already in 1948, having become a Christian 10 years
before. As a result, he experienced imprisonment and torture by the then
Communist regime of Romania, for his beliefs. After serving five years
(1959-1964) of a second prison sentence, he was ransomed for $10,000. His
colleagues in Romania urged him to leave the country and work for religious
freedom from a location less personally dangerous. After spending time in
Norway and England, he and his wife Sabina, who had also been imprisoned,
emigrated to America and dedicated the rest of their lives to publicizing and
helping Christians who are persecuted for their beliefs. He wrote more than 18
books, the most widely known being Tortured for Christ. He founded the
international organization Voice of the Martyrs, which continues to aid
Christians around the world who are persecuted for their faith.
Brother Andrew and Open
Doors Brother Andrew, the founder of Open Doors, was born in Holland as Anne
van der Bijl (born 11 May 1928). He has arguably done more than anybody else to
bring down the Communist Wall. In July 1955, visited communist Poland, "to see how my brothers are doing," referring to the
underground church. He signed up to a Communist youth group, which was the only
legal way to stay in the country In that time, he felt himself to be called to
respond to the Biblical commission ‘Wake
up, strengthen what remains and is about to die’ (Revelation 3:2). This was the start of a mission leading him into several Communist-ruled
countries where Christians were persecuted - those behind the ‘Iron Curtain’, where religions like Christianity were actually tolerated but technically
illegal. In 1957, Van der Bijl travelled to the
Soviet Union's capital city, Moscow, in a Volkswagen Beetle, which later became the symbol of Open Doors, the organization he founded. An older couple that mentored him had given him their new car, because it could hold several Bibles and
spiritual literature. Although Van der Bijl was violating the laws of some of
the countries he visited by bringing religious literature, he often placed the
material in plain view when stopped at police checkpoints, as a gesture of
trust in God's protection. Van
der Bijl visited China in the 1960s, after the Cultural Revolution had created a hostile policy
towards Christianity and other religions. It was the time of the so-called Bamboo Curtain. He came to Czechoslovakia, when the suppression by Soviet troops of the ‘Prague Spring’ had put an end to relative
religious freedom there. He encouraged fellow believers there and gave Bibles
to Russian occupying forces.
The Smuggling of Scriptures
The smuggling of sacred writ has a long history. We took note of the
phenomenon with William Tyndale who had the English Bible printed in Germany
and then muggled into England in bales of cotton.
The smuggling of Scriptures came only really of age
during the 'cold war' era.[9] It was a major source
of spiritual power, dynamite that eventually caused the demise of the Communist
ideology. The gift of one million Bibles to
the Orthodox Church at the occasion
of their one thousandth year anniversary – together with the seven years of
prayer for the Soviet Union from 1984 - spawned the dismantling of the ‘iron
curtain’. As a member of the official Dutch delegation at a conference on human
rights in the 1980s in the conference centre De Burcht in the Dutch
village of Heemstede, Brother Andrew offered to donate one million Bibles to
the Russian Orthodox Church on behalf of Open Doors for their
coming millennial celebration. Furthermore, the translation of Scripture into indigenous languages not only opened
many primitive tribes to modern civilization, but it also gave them dignity.
Brother Andrew and the Islamic Edifice After
the fall of communism in Europe,
Brother Andrew shifted his focus to the Middle East
and has worked to strengthen the church in the Muslim world. In the 70s he visited
war-torn Lebanon
several times, stating that "global conflict in the end times
will focus on Israel and its neighboring
countries." In
the '90s, van der Bijl went to the region several times again. In the book Light
Force, van der Bijl tells about Arab and
Lebanese churches in Lebanon, Israel and Israeli Arab areas that
express great delight because of the mere visit of a fellow Christian from
abroad, because they feel the church in the Western world
at large is ignoring them. Likewise, he visited Hamas and PLO leaders including Ahmed Yassin
and Yasser Arafat,
handing out Bibles. He got linked to a project called Musalaha,
which was founded by the Palestinian Evangelical leader Salim Munayer. Musalaha's
name is an Arabic word
which translates as "reconciliation," and it attempts to bring closer
together Israelis and indigenous Israeli Arabs.
Alpha Courses as a unifying Tool Alpha Courses have been among the most
powerful unifying tools among churches from different denominations in recent
decades. Simultaneously it was a divine instrument That brought many people all
around the globe to know Christ as their Saviour and get Holy Spirit filled as
well. Alpha
Courses were started in 1977 at Holy Trinity, Brompton, a Church of England parish of London. In 1990 the Reverend Nicky Gumbel, a curate at Holy
Trinity, took over the running of the course. Alpha is organized as a series of
sessions over 10 weeks, typically preceded by an ‘Alpha Supper; which often
includes the talk "Is there more to life than this?" and with a day
or weekend away. Each session starts with a meal, followed by a talk (often a
video by Nicky Gumbel) and then discussion in small groups. The talks aim to
cover the basic beliefs of the Christian faith.
Chapter 17 Prayer erupts in different Places
In
the early 1970s Brian O’Donnell owned the Hippie Market of the city of
Cape Town as well as a night club called The Factory. When he was
spiritually revived, he decided to conduct an outreach on Monday nights and
later also at Green Point Stadium. A supernatural intervention occurred
when Brian asked Dave Valentine to pray about assisting him in some way at his Hippie
Market.
Revival Vibes resound from the
Cape
The Holy Spirit moved mightily among
young people, ultimately leading to the Hippie Revival that paved the
way for ten new Assemblies of God (AoG) congregations among Whites and
five among ‘Coloureds’. With ‘Coloured’ AoG pastors like James Valentine and
Eddie Roman working closely alongside their White colleagues, this was a
significant contribution to the breaking down of the racial barriers of the
apartheid era on grassroots level.
Cape Revival vibes radiated
to the
ends of the Earth
The revival vibes radiated even much
further afield. In Grahamstown the ‘charismatic renewal’ as it was called,
moved into the Anglican Church where Bishop Bill Burnett was impacted. The
Holy Spirit movement flowed via a big national church event with Dr Billy
Graham in 1973. Held in Durban in March 1973, the Congress was attended by 630
delegates and observers from 31 different denominations, 36 Christian service
groups, and 13 different African and overseas countries. The original idea of
the Congress
on Mission and Evangelism in Durban came from Michael Cassidy of Africa
Enterprise and John Rees, General Secretary of the South African
Council of Churches (SACC).
At the Congress on Mission and Evangelism the
racial barriers came down in a significant way for the first time in this
country. Dr Graham's insistence on the absence of any segregation among
the audience played no small role. Durban also was an important forerunner for
Lausanne the following year when the evangelical-ecumenical schism was
addressed as well as the unbiblical separation of evangelism and compassionate
outreach.
Personal
Impact of the Hippie Revival My two years of full-time study at the Moravian seminary
included a good mix of evangelistic activity and ecumenical activism. Our
full-time student colleague Fritz Faro really got enflamed by the evangelistic
zeal of the Jesus People. We tried to accommodate that issue, but at the
same time we deemed it necessary to challenge the apparent Jesus People
acceptance of the racist South African way of life. We also sharpened our axes
for White liberals who professed to be against apartheid. Thus we decided to
challenge the St Andrews Presbyterian Church in Green Point. Outside
this church complex a notice board welcomed all races. Reverend Douglas
Bax and his St Andrews Presbyterian Church passed the test with flying
colours. Thereafter he became a close friend of our seminary.
A Revival among District Six
Youth The flip side of the Islamic
resurgence in the wake of the Group areas legislation was a mini-revival
amongst young people of District Six. The use of the bigger Church Hall of Holy
Cross displayed that there was a non-denominational flavour of the movement.
That this was no superficial 'happy clappy' occasion can be easily discerned.
Youth rallies were also held in neutral venues like the Palace Bioscope (Cinema) in the suburb Salt River, which even
turned out to be too small.
Young
people turned from drugs and gangsterism to Christ. Some started cottage
meetings, others held open air services. From this movement many young people
went to night Bible Schools and colleges. Many of them became pastors and
leaders in their churches. No less than 50 young people from this revival
became pastors or pastors' wives.
Worldwide Ripple Effects of the Hippie Revival
This Durban Congress on Mission and
Evangelism of 1973 birthed PACLA (Pan African Christian Leadership Assembly)
in Nairobi in 1976. The Durban event led to the
influential SACLA (South African Christian
Leadership Assembly) in Pretoria
in 1979 where the German-born Reinhardt Bonnke was divinely touched. In
subsequent years Bonnke would take the Gospel to many African countries and
even further afield. Whereas
earlier congresses apparently hardly seemed to impact the Cape, the Durban
event did it in no uncertain way. One of the leaders, Professor Nico Smith, was
based at Stellenbosch University with its hallowed theological faculty.
The Run-up to the Koinonia Declaration The banning of the Christian
Institute and its leader, Dr Beyers Naudé on 19 October 1977, along with
many other organizations that were perceived to be in opposition to apartheid,
unleashed unexpected forces against the government.
Dr Nico Smith,
Professor of Theology in Stellenbosch at the time, played a significant role in
starting Koinonia, a movement that organised inter-racial weekends in
different towns and cities. Participants would always lodge with someone from a
different ethnic group. From these ranks the Koinonia Declaration followed in November 1977
when three Dutch Reformed Church leaders in the Western Cape reacted
against a government ruling which made opposition against detention without
trial unlawful. The prayerful attitude of these clergymen was revealed in the
first sentences of the Koinonia
Declaration: ‘…We also
believe that the prayers of just men have great power. We therefore urge all
Christians to pray without ceasing for those in authority that… they may not be
led astray by unbiblical ideologies…’ Its link to the cause of visible expression of
the unity of the body of Christ can be easily deduced from some of the
statements:
‘… 4. We believe that God is a God of justice, and
that his justice is a principle implanted in the hearts and the lives of his
children. We believe that God should be obeyed by practicing his justice in all
spheres of life, and at this time especially in politics. We believe that
Christian love, as defined by God's law, supplies the norm for practicing
justice. This means having the opportunity of doing unto others as one would
have them do unto oneself. We believe that justice embraces, inter alia,
equity. In a sinful world this implies a certain flexibility in the application
of the law, which is best guarded by checking and balancing human authorities
in order to avoid a concentration of power.
5. We believe that the Body of Christ is one, and this unity includes rich diversity. This principle should be acknowledged and actualized by members of the Body in all spheres of society. On this basis we deem it necessary that particularly within the state, the legitimate interests of each group as well as the common interest of all, should be fully recognized within the framework of a just political dispensation. We dissociate ourselves from all extreme forms of Black and White national consciousness which identify the Gospel with the history of group interests of any one group, excluding all other groups, and we call upon the church of Christ to consciously dissociate itself from an exclusively White as well as an exclusively Black theology which distorts the vital message of Scripture.’
5. We believe that the Body of Christ is one, and this unity includes rich diversity. This principle should be acknowledged and actualized by members of the Body in all spheres of society. On this basis we deem it necessary that particularly within the state, the legitimate interests of each group as well as the common interest of all, should be fully recognized within the framework of a just political dispensation. We dissociate ourselves from all extreme forms of Black and White national consciousness which identify the Gospel with the history of group interests of any one group, excluding all other groups, and we call upon the church of Christ to consciously dissociate itself from an exclusively White as well as an exclusively Black theology which distorts the vital message of Scripture.’
A spiritual Earthquake in Pretoria Since 1978,
Gerda Leithgöb, an Afrikaner believer, has been directing spiritual warfare in
Pretoria. She and her prayer team
offered confession at the Voortrekker
Monument. Their prayers and confession surely helped to cause a change in
the spiritual complexion of the country’s capital that made true democracy
possible. That
prayer ministry for the city of Pretoria was the prelude to the South African Christian Leadership
Assembly (SACLA) event in the national capital the following
year. This conference was the equivalent
of a spiritual earthquake. Professor David Bosch, a giant rebel
against apartheid, was its leader.
SACLA influenced the whole country deeply in a positive way and the
conference was evidently part of God’s plan to transform the apartheid
stronghold and capital of South Africa. Pastor Ed
Roebert initiated a gathering of like-minded pastors with the purpose of
fellowship and mutual encouragement. Soon he met regularly with Reinhardt
Bonnke, Ray McCauley, Fred Roberts, Tim Salmon and Nicky v.d. Westhuizen. In
due course many new charismatic churches were established and men with
unusually anointed ministries appeared on the scene.
A
Gale catapults an Evangelist into Prominence The
destruction by a gale of a gigantic tent in the mid-1980s in which the
German-born evangelist Reinhardt Bonnke was to hold an evangelistic campaign in
the Cape Township of Valhalla Park, created much interest for the event. The
organisers were forced to conduct the campaign in the open. Thousands attended
who would never have fitted into the gigantic tent. Instead of the planned 15
nights, four extra nightly services were added amid clear skies in mid-June
which is known to be part of the Cape rainy season.
There
was an unprecedented networking
of Cape
township churches
The
networking of township churches in the run-up to this campaign was
unprecedented, with a corresponding response at the altar calls. Many Muslims
gave an indication that they wanted to become followers of Jesus. However, lack
of proper follow-up by the churches prevented a massive spiritual turn-around
at the Cape. This lack, combined with a brutal apartheid clampdown at the time, drove many
nominal Christians to Islam. To become a Muslim was regarded as part of the
‘struggle’. Marriage swelled the numbers of Cape Muslims when the Christian
partner converted to Islam, staying Muslim even after divorce. A
sequel of the gale in Valhalla Park and the campaign was that Reinhardt Bonnke
became a household name throughout the African continent and beyond.
Bliss Brings
Blessings
Under
the auspices of Africa Enterprise
(AE) David Bliss came to South Africa in 1967 from the USA as a
student. The relatively young missions and evangelistic agency AE started by Michael Cassidy in 1962, had such a
profound effect on David Bliss that he decided to postpone his return to Princeton
University for a year. After his marriage to Deborah (Debby) in 1972, the
couple came to South Africa in 1979 as AE workers on the Wits University campus
in Johannesburg. That year the South African Christian Leadership Assembly (SACLA) took
place in Pretoria, an event that changed their lives. The Holy Spirit
confronted them with the issue of unreached people groups and the possibility
of sending South Africans as missionaries. The
next year the couple participated in the students’ conference in Edinburgh,
which ran parallel to the 70th anniversary celebrations of the
founding of the World Council of Churches.
The 1980 event brought the use of non-Westerners as missionaries into focus.
For Dave and Debby Bliss this was a natural follow-up to SACLA in Pretoria the
previous year.
A Wave of
Prayer starts at UWC Dr Charles Robertson, a lecturer at the University of the Western Cape (UWC)
from 1971-76, became part of the prayer emphasis in 1983. After his father’s
death in 1979, he was thrust into a quagmire of spiritual turmoil. Hereafter he
broke through into a living faith in Jesus as his Lord.
Dr Robertson was approached to help
fund the hiring of a bus to take participants to a prayer service at the
historical Sendingsgestig Museum in the Mother City’s Long Street, which
coincided with a Frontiers Missions
Conference at UWC.
A national Prayer Awakening erupts The Sendingsgestig
Museum itself would become the venue for Concerts of Prayer. That event reverberated throughout
the country, ushering in the prayer movement. In 1983 a prayer awakening started in a few
congregations all around South Africa. One of these was a small group of
intercessors led by Gerda Leithgöb in Pretoria that helped set them on a path
previously unexplored in this country. Simultaneously, Bennie Mostert, a Dutch
Reformed Church minister, started a newsletter to mobilize prayer in
Namibia. Mostert dubbed his newsletter for Namibia Prayer Action Elijah.
Gerda Leithgöb requested prayer
warriors from other countries at a conference in Singapore in 1988 to pray for
South Africa, which had been in constant crisis since 1985. Ds. Bennie Mostert
founded a national prayer network known as NUPSA (Network for United Prayer in Southern Africa) which became closely
linked to the spiritual transformation of the continent. In 1993 the first
teams started praying through information gained from serious research. During
1993 South Africa also participated in the Pray
through the Window[10]
initiative that was launched internationally by the AD 2000 Prayer Track.
Community Disruption
leads to Missions
BABS (Build a Better Society) was a local community organisation of Kewtown, a gangster-ridden Cape Township. In 1982 the gangs of Kew Town killed seven people in 3 months. After approaching other organisations without success, BABS asked the local Docks Mission Church to do something about the situation. A coffee bar was started specially for the gangsters, led by Rodney Thorne and Freddy Kammies. Every Sunday evening between 60 – 80 of them attended. Many of the gang leaders were challenged to put down the weapons and guns. Soon the crime rate came down. As a denomination the local Docks Mission faithfully prayed for the ministry which continued for quite a long time. The ministry sowed seed for missions. Eugene Johnson was the first missionary sent out by Docks Mission in 1978 on one of the Operation Mobilisation (OM) ships already in 1978. He was followed by many others from the Cape ‘Coloured’ community.
BABS (Build a Better Society) was a local community organisation of Kewtown, a gangster-ridden Cape Township. In 1982 the gangs of Kew Town killed seven people in 3 months. After approaching other organisations without success, BABS asked the local Docks Mission Church to do something about the situation. A coffee bar was started specially for the gangsters, led by Rodney Thorne and Freddy Kammies. Every Sunday evening between 60 – 80 of them attended. Many of the gang leaders were challenged to put down the weapons and guns. Soon the crime rate came down. As a denomination the local Docks Mission faithfully prayed for the ministry which continued for quite a long time. The ministry sowed seed for missions. Eugene Johnson was the first missionary sent out by Docks Mission in 1978 on one of the Operation Mobilisation (OM) ships already in 1978. He was followed by many others from the Cape ‘Coloured’ community.
Cape Prayer Endeavours of the early 1990s In the late
1980s the Concerts of Prayer -
inspired by David Bryant - drew good crowds to the Sendingsgestig Museum, a fitting commemoration of the
inter-denominational work that started there in 1799. Dr Charles Robertson led the Concerts
of Prayer hereafter not only at the monthly meetings at that venue, but
also later when the event relocated to the Presbyterian
Church in Mowbray. It was very fitting that Robertson
and his wife Rita would donate the property where the first NUPSA School of
Prayer was to be erected in 2000, later known as Jericho Walls premises in Stellenberg.
At the Presbyterian Church in Mowbray, the monthly meetings were also led
for many years by Rev. James Selfridge, an Irish missionary
of the Metropolitan Church.
Around the turn of the millennium the monthly meeting was moved to Grassy
Park. The Concerts of Prayer were thereafter held in the Bethel Bible School in the former ‘Coloured’ sector of the suburb
Crawford.
The Western Cape Missions Commission was quite effective in the early
1990s with strategic people from the Cape mission scene like Jan Hanekom,
Martin Heuvel and Bruce van Eeden. One of the events organised in 1993 by the Western Cape Missions Commission was a
workshop with John Robb of World Vision.
I used the list of participants at this event to organize the Cape Jesus Marches the following year. In
this way I updated my contacts for further mission endeavour in the Western
Cape.
Local Churches spearheading foreign Missions The Cape led
the country in local church involvement with foreign missions. Until the 1970s
it was however only a church here and a church there that was sending out
missionaries. A congregation from the Docks
Mission with its strong emphasis on prayer spearheaded the foreign
missionary endeavour.
Cooming from the ranks
of this ‘Coloured’ denomination Peter Tarantal became a national leader of OM
and Theo Dennis was appointed as the Western Cape regional co-ordinator of the
mission agency. Theo’s sister married Dennis Atkins who was the principal of
the Bethel Bible School until his retirement in 2006. Freddy Kammies, who grew up in the adjacent
notorious township of Kewtown, came to the Lord at this church and he was
discipled through the ministry of the Gleemoor congregation.
Another Cape congregation that caused a stir in missions is the Rondebosch Dutch Reformed Church.
In the apartheid era that congregation was one of the few White Dutch
Reformed churches in the country where people of colour could enter without
the real fear that they would be prevented entry (or worse, evicted, as it
actually happened in isolated cases). When Dr Ernst van der Walt came to pastor
that congregation in 1982, the church was supporting a few ‘children’ from the
congregation who were involved in missions. The denomination as such was
initially only supporting missionaries linked to the Dutch Reformed
synod.
This would change
drastically when David Bliss, the OM missionary based at the Andrew Murray Centre in
Wellington, visited the church. After his visit, the Prayer Concert concept got off the
ground with an early morning meeting every Sunday. When the minister’s son
Ernst went to the William Carey School
in Pasadena in the USA, it meant an intensification of the church’s involvement
in missions. This was even more so when Ernst van der Walt (jr.) became the
personal assistant of George Verwer, the international leader of OM.
Chapter
18 The Road to the Global Day of Prayer
At the sending of prayer
teams to different spiritual strongholds in 1997, a team from the Dutch Reformed congregation Suikerbosrand in Heidelberg (Gauteng) followed the
nudge of NUPSA to come and pray in the Mother City.
A team from Heidelberg
(Gauteng) pray in Bo-Kaap
This was spiritually
significant because Heidelberg had once been the cradle of the racist and
right-wing Afrikaanse
Weerstandsbeweging (AWB).
That the AWB town Heidelberg was sending a team to pray for Bo-Kaap, might have
hit the headlines had it been publicized! But all this was undercover stuff.
This was transpiring at a time when PAGAD was still terrorizing the Cape
Peninsula. The Bo-Kaap Islamic stronghold was not geographically situated in
the 10/40 window, but Bennie Mostert correctly discerned that it was the case
ideologically. It had become a Muslim bastion because of apartheid.
Moravian Hill hosts a strategic
Meeting
As part of this visit from Gauteng, a prayer meeting
of confession was organized for November 1, 1997, in District Six, in front of
the Moravian Church. Sally
Kirkwood not only had a vision for the desolate District Six to be revived
through prayer, but she also informed Richard Mitchell and Mike Winfield about
the event. The Cape prayer movement received a major lift. Eben Swart of Herald
Ministries led the occasion. That turned out to be very
strategic. Eben Swart’s position as Western Cape Prayer Coordinator was
cemented since he was now able to link up with the pastors’ and pastors’ wives
prayer meeting led by Eddie Edson. The event on Moravian Hill in District
Six attempted to break the spirit of death and forlornness over the area, so
that it would be inhabited again. However, it would take another seven years
before that vision started to materialize.
Prayer
on Mountain Tops and Stadiums
In mid-1997 Eben Swart became the co-ordinator of Herald
Ministries for the Western Cape. He worked closely with the Network
of United Prayer in Southern Africa (NUPSA), which had appointed Pastor Willy Oyegun, a Nigerian, as their
Western Cape coordinator. Together they did important work in research
and spiritual mapping, along with Amanda Buys (Kanaan Ministries), who
counselled Christians with psychiatric problems.
Led by Pastor Mitchell, a Hindu-background Indian, Christians prayed from Signal
Hill early on Saturday mornings. After the
citywide prayer event on Table Mountain in September 1998, organized by Eben
Swart of Herald Ministries, the
vision of praying on the heights was revived.
Citywide Prayer Events
1998 brought significant steps to
effect more unity in the body of Christ city-wide through the initiatives of
NUPSA and Herald Ministries. Regular prayer meetings at the Mowbray Baptist Church ensued, with believers coming from
different parts of the Peninsula and from diverse racial and church
backgrounds. The meetings carried a strong message of unity. However, the suggestion
to continue on local level in different areas, never took off. Nevertheless,
the Mowbray exercise brought two racial groups for prayer together, becoming
the forerunner of citywide events.
A prayer event on the Grand Parade
almost floundered after a bomb threat
A well-publicized prayer event on the Grand Parade almost floundered after a bomb
threat. Prior to this, churches across the Peninsula had initially been
requested to cancel their evening services on Sunday, 19 April 1998 and join
this service. In sheer zeal, a Christian businessman had thousands of pamphlets
printed and distributed. Unwisely, he did not consult with the organizing
committee about its content. The flyer and poster that invited believers to a
mass prayer meeting against drug abuse, homosexuality and other moral concerns,
unfortunately also referred to Islam in a context that was not
respectful enough for some radical Muslims. It was however also sad that
certain City Bowl churches had not been prepared to close their doors even on a
one-off basis for this event.
A PAGAD member apparently regarded the
flyer as an invitation to disrupt the meeting. He passed on a threat to that
effect. The event was subsequently announced as cancelled, but a few courageous
believers showed up nevertheless. These included the late Pastor Danny
Pearson, who had been deeply involved with the preparation of the prayer
occasion. He believed that we should not give in to the intimidation, and that,
if need be, Christians should be willing to die there for the cause of the
Gospel. The meeting proceeded on a much smaller scale than originally planned.
The service included confession for the sins of omission to the Cape Muslims
and to the Jews. And there was no PAGAD disruption of the meeting!
More Prayer Efforts in the City
At
one of the Saturday morning prayer times at Signal Hill in 1999, the idea of
Cape Town as a spiritual gateway to the continent was shared. The prayers
resulted in a surge towards transformation in the country after Richard
Mitchell had seen the Transformation video at a pastors’ prayer meeting.
Within
months, the vision of praying
in sports stadiums became a reality
Within a matter of months the vision of praying in sports stadiums
became a reality. There followed significant combined prayer events: at
Bellville’s Velodrome on a Sunday morning; at the Athletics Stadium of the University
of the Western Cape; at the Vygiekraal
Stadium and at the Athlone Stadium.
Some churches in the
City participated in a forty-day period of prayer and fasting from Easter
Sunday to Ascension Day 1998. Rev. Louis Pasques of theCape Town
Baptist Church spearheaded
this endeavour. A weekly meeting with a prayer emphasis gained ground
slowly after the 40-day effort from April to May 1998. Later that year, combined
evening services were held once a month in the City Bowl in participating churches,
with the venue rotating very
time.
A corresponding period of prayer and fasting
in 1999 - this time for 120 days - was concluded in the Western Cape in the
traditional Groote Kerk celebration of the Lord’s Supper when
pastors from different denominations officiated. This was a visible sign of a
growing church unity. At that Ascension Day event, Dr Robbie Cairncross was
divinely brought into the situation. He came to the Mother City with a
vision to see a network of prayer developing in the Peninsula. His prayer for
an office for his Christian
Coalition/Family Alliance near to Parliament was answered in a special way
when he moved into the premises of the Chamber
of Commerce (SACB), a stone’s
throw from the Houses of
Parliament.
A Link forged
with Community Transformation elsewhere
Pastor Eddie
Edson of Mitchells Plain organised two all-night citywide prayer events on 25
June and 15 October 1999. By this time White pastors started to attend the
monthly pastors' gathering more regularly, even at places like Die Hok in Manenberg, a former
drug den.
Rev. Trevor
Pearce, an Anglican minister from the township Belhar, started joining these
prayer meetings. He was no stranger to the pain and hardship of discrimination
and violence, yet his gentle disposition was often used by God to fulfil the
role of peacemaker.
Seeds for 24/7
Prayer
The pastors’ and
pastors’ wives monthly meetings of the 1990s became the run-up to the city-wide
prayer events at the Light House Christian Centre in Parow, on the Grand Parade in the City and at
sports stadiums from 1998. These occasions, along with prayer
events like the one at Moravian Hill in District Six on 1 November 1997,
brought about further correction.
After
a visit to the USA, Rev. Trevor Pearce, an Anglican minister who also had some ministry
experience on one of the Operation
Mobilization(OM) ships, brought back copies of the Transformation video and an
audio copy of the book Informed Intercessions by George Otis,
jr. This documented account of what happened in Cali (Columbia) also included
principles for successful community transformation.
Trevor Pearce wasted no time in meeting with Eddie Edson. Soon thereafter the
group listened to the recorded voice of George Otis and watched the stories of
transformation and redemption. They too felt that deep stirring within their
hearts. Drugs, death, and despair had all been part of daily life for the
residents of Cali, Columbia, until the Holy Spirit brought transformation
through the praying church. What satan had intended for evil, God was using for
good.
At the city-wide prayer event at the packed out Lighthouse Christian Centre on 15 October 1999 the Transformation video was viewed by the audience.
Moravian Heritage Rekindled
Although the Moravian denomination itself seemed to
have dwindled into obscurity, the heritage of the early Moravians was once
again at the cradle of a mighty movement of God across the world. A group of
intercessors from America visited the East German village of Herrnhut in 1993.
The group included a believer from St Thomas, the island to which the first two
missionaries left in 1732. That group experienced a sovereign outpouring of
God’s spirit as they prayed in the prayer tower of Herrnhut. This could possibly
be regarded as the beginning of the modern wave of prayer that was sweeping
around the globe since then. The vision of the 24-hour prayer watch - that kept
going in Herrnhut for 120 years - was rekindled in a big way towards the end of
1999. Like wildfire, the concept spread around the world. At the beginning of
the year 2000 African leaders - spearheaded by Bennie Mostert from Pretoria and
John Mulinde of Uganda - got together to attempt implementing the example of
the Moravians in Africa.
Jericho Walls at the Cape
„Sooispit” - the turning of the soil – in
preparation for the building of a prayer room in the Western Cape, took place
on February 9, 2000. Charles Robertson, a Cape Christian businessman with
a heart for prayer - along with his wife Rita - generously donated resources
towards a venue for the work of NUPSA in the Western Cape. The premises in
Brackenfell were earmarked to become a 24-hour prayer room for intercessors
from the whole continent.
Daniel and Estelle Brink were called to lead the NUPSA initiative to get a 24-hour
Prayer Watch off the ground at the Cape. That this was spiritual warfare of a
high degree became evident when Daniel Brink became critically ill shortly
after commencing his new function. The Lord touched and healed him in answer to
the prayers of many intercessors. In due course the ministry was renamed Jericho Walls, and the Western
Cape branch became Global
Watch.
The well-publicised transformation meetings started in March 2001 at the Newlands
Rugby Stadium. But there were still many other obstacles to
overcome before that fell into place.
Impact of the Transformations Video
Graham Power, a Cape businessman, who is a member of
the board of Directors of the Western
Province Rugby Football Union, saw the Transformations documentary video in
March 2000, birthed in him a strong desire to see a prayer event at the
headquarters of the Rugby Football Union in Newlands. He promptly approached
his co-directors for the use of the big sports stadium. This was approved in
August 2000. The Sentinel Group, that
included George Otis of the well-known Transformation videos, staged a
three-day conference at the Lighthouse
Christian Centre in Parow with international speakers from 3 November 2000,
followed by a citywide prayer meeting at an Athletics stadium in Bellville on
Sunday, 5 November. The meetings in Parow and Bellville were preceded by prayer
events that not only coincided with a bout of spiritual warfare against the
occult Satanist Halloween celebrations, but they were also part of a
countrywide 40-day offensive of prayer and fasting for the continent.
Bombs discovered and defused
On Friday 3 November, 2000 two potentially destructive
bombs were discovered and defused at a well-known shopping centre in Bellville.
The bombs could have caused massive loss of life, had they detonated at the
intended time a few kilometres from the venue of the prayer event in Parow. On
the same day of the start of the prayer conference, the main alleged
perpetrators of the pipe bomb planting were arrested. Reverend Trevor Pearce,
who led the Community Transformation prayer initiative, stated that it could
hardly have been co-incidence that the arrest of the surmised culprits happened
at the time of the conference. Nor could it have been mere co-incidence that
pipe bombs were discovered under a snooker table at a house in Grassy Park on 6
November, a day after the citywide prayer event in Bellville. For five years
not a single PAGAD pipe bomb detonated at the Cape.
Transformation of the
Mother City of South Africa received a major push on 3-5 November 2000 through
the Lighthouse Centre event and the
one in Bellville. After these events, the stage was soon set for a major
occasion at the Newlands Rugby
Stadium.
The Newlands Event of 21 March 2001
On the local level churches also
seemed to be playing a role in bringing about peace. On Sunday 25 February
2001, it was reported on national television that local church leaders had
brokered a peace accord between two Bonteheuwel gangs, the Cisko Yakkies and the Americans.
The Transformation
programme was closely linked to intercession from the outset. It is no surprise
that the 24-hour prayer watch was connected to a big prayer occasion scheduled
for the Newlands Rugby Stadium on 21 March 2001. In the 21 days prior
to the event more than 200 congregations joined in a prayer effort for the
stadium meeting on a 24-hour basis. This was completely unprecedented.
A satellite connection and
big screens allowed more
people to participate
The 21 March 2001 event was
extraordinary in the extreme. Because Newlands was too small for all the people
who wanted to attend, several local churches used a satellite connection and
big screens to allow more people to participate. Radio CCFM and Radio Tygerberg radio stations also broadcast the
unprecedented occasion live. Because it was a public holiday, many followed the
prayers at home via radio and TV.
A prophetic Move in District Six
Murray Bridgman, a Cape Christian
advocate, felt God’s leading to perform a prophetic act in District Six. He had
previously researched the history of Devil’s
Peak. Along with Eben Swart, Bridgman provided some research that
encouraged Dr Henry Kirby to lobby Parliament to change the name of Devil’s Peak to Dove’s
Peak. (Duivenkop had
been an earlier name.) Kirby’s role as the prayer coordinator of the African Christian Democratic Party resulted in a motion tabled in the
City Council in June 2002. The motion was unsuccessful, fuelling suspicion that
satanists also had significant influence in the City Council.
On June 1, 2002 Susan
and Ned Hill, an American missionary couple, joined Murray Bridgman and his
wife as they poured water on the steps of the Moravian Hill Chapel in District Six, symbolically
ushering in the showers of blessing that we prayed would come. Forcefully the
message was confirmed that Messianic Jewish believers should be invited to join
in the prayers of welcome to the foot of the Cross, to those who intended to
return to the former slum-like residential area District Six.
Run-up to a Continental Prayer Convocation
The Koffiekamer,
once mooted as the venue for a 24-hour prayer watch, suddenly became a major
channel of blessing when an Alpha Course started there. A special role in the
transformation of the city was accorded to the Koffiekamer when many a vagrant was transformed by
the power of the Gospel and prayer meetings for the city were held there every
last Wednesday of the month.
It was furthermore fitting that the prelude to a prayer convocation for the
African continent from 1st to
the 5th December 2003 at UWC, Bellville, took place on Robben Island. This was
a follow-up of the ‘Cleansing South Africa’ event of September 2001.
Transformation Africa!
Prayer events in the 58 nations and islands which are linked
to the continent of Africa were held on 2 May 2004 in some 1100 stadiums. The
theme running throughout the afternoon was that the time had come for the Dark
Continent to become a light to the nations. In an inspiring message, the
Argentine speaker Ed Silvoso led the millions of believers in stadiums across
the continent through prayers of repentance, dedication and commitment.
The 7 DAYS Initiative
As a follow-up strategy of Transformation Africa, the 7-Days Initiative was launched. On the
verge of the 2004 event in stadiums all over Africa, Daniel Brink of the
Jericho Walls Cape Office sent out the following communiqué:‘...From Sunday May
9th thousands of Christians all over South Africa will take part in a national
night and day prayer initiative called „7 Days”. The goal was to see the
whole country covered in continuous prayer for one year from 9 May 2004 to 15
May 2005. At relatively short notice, communities in South Africa were
challenged to each take 7 days to pray 24 hours a day. The initiative started
with the Western Cape taking the first seven weeks. Daniel Brink, the regional
organizer, invited believers of the Cape Peninsula to ‘proclaim your trust
that, when we pray, God will respond. Declare your trust that if we put an end
to oppression and give food to the hungry, the darkness will turn to
brightness. Pray that houses of prayer will rise up all over Africa as places where
God’s goodness and mercy is celebrated in worship and prayer, even before the
answer comes.’
Global Prayer Watch, the
Western Cape arm of Jericho
Walls, filled the first 7 days with day and night prayer at the Moravian
Church complex in District 6, Cape Town, starting at 9 o’clock in the evening
on May 9. Every two hours around the clock a group of musicians would
lead the ‘Harp and Bowl’ intercessory worship, whereby the group would pray
around scripture. In another part of the complex intercessors could pray or
paste prayer requests in the ‘boiler room’.
What a joy it was for the fervent prayer
warrior Hendrina van der Merwe to be present on the 9th May 2004 in the Moravian Church. However, she would
neither experience a spiritual breakthrough towards new church planting in
Bo-Kaap nor the start of a 24-hour Prayer Watch in the City Bowl. She went to
be with her Lord on 31 December 2004.
Jericho
Walls challenged ‘millions of
believers’ all over the world ‘to
seek the face of the Lord and ask him to fill the earth with his glory as the
waters cover the seas’ (Habakkuk
2:14) from 6th to the
15th May 2005. Young
people were encouraged to do a ‘30 second Kneel Down’ on Friday 13 May and to
have a whole night of prayer in the run-up to the Global Day of Prayer on
Saturday 14 May, a ‘Whole night for the Whole World.’ On Sunday 15th May 2005 the first Global Day of
Prayer took place. This was one of the most unifying event of the body of
Christ since Pentecost.
Chapter 19 Challenges at the Cape in Recent Years
It was exciting to see how in different parts of the
country, the vision ‘adopt a cop’ - prayer for the police force - took off. Cops for Christ saw themselves as stimulators and
co-ordinators for prayer.
Prayer at Die Losie
When we were still
wondering whether it was feasible to go ahead with plans to have a 24/7 week of
prayer in the City Bowl at the beginning of February 2005, Trevor Peters phoned
me. This happened just as my own faith had started to wilt on the matter. It turned
out that he had been corresponding for some time with leaders of the Moravian
Church about the use of the complex in District Six.
At the monthly prayer for the City on Saturday 8 January (2005), it was decided
to press ahead with another week of prayer from 30 January to 6 February as a
next step towards the goal of a 24-hour Prayer Watch in the City Bowl. Our
friend Beverley Stratis, who has prayer burden for the city that stretches over
many years, was asked to get in touch with Superintendent Fanie Scanlan to see
if a room in the Buitenkant Street Police Station was available as a plan B.
One
thing led to the other within a week, until it was finalized that the week of
prayer would be held at Moravian Hill, to be followed thereafter with a prayer
watch at the nearby police station. Superintendent Scanlan put to our disposal
a room called Die Losie, a former Freemason lodge in the police
station. This was a significant step in the spiritual realm. On Sunday 23
January, 2005 the station was anointed and prayed over.
In
preparation for the 2006 Global
Day of Prayer, prayer drives were organised. The prayer
drives converged at the Central
Police Station in Buitenkant Street. God used this event to
touch at least one person in a special way. Wim Ferreira had been invited to
work with the Deputy Mayor of the metropolis.
When all the groups had arrived at Die
Losie, Daniel Brink, the co-ordinator of the
event, asked me to share in a few words how God had changed things at the
police station. I became too emotional. However, at this moment, Wim Ferreira
was deeply moved. He promptly requested a room for prayer in the metropolitan Civic
Centre where he had just started to work. This was another
divinely orchestrated move. After a few months, Barry and I joined Wim for a
regular weekly Friday prayer time in a board room of the Civic
Centre. The Lord put the unity of the Body of Christ
on our prayer agenda once again. We continued with efforts to get Capetonian
believers to pray together. This was to us an important step towards the
revival we were yearning for.
Start of a 24-hour Prayer Facility
Before
long, a trickle of workers from all walks of life was coming to faith in Jesus.
On Wednesdays at lunch time believers from different denominational backgrounds
gathered there to pray and intercede for the city. The Lord also challenged Wim Ferreira
to start a 24-hour prayer facility at the Civic Centre premises. Soon a prayer room near to the parking area on the ground floor was
frequented by many people throughout the day. The foundation stone towards 24/7 prayer in the CBD of the metropolis
was laid.
Pastor Barry Isaacs
became the new co-ordinator of Transformation
Africa. As a result of their
deliberations, prayer meetings started in October 2007 at the Uni-City Council Chambers on one Saturday morning of every month
at 5.30 a.m. (This was later changed to 6 a.m.). Wonderful answers to prayer
were subsequently experienced month after month. At one of these occasions, the
lack of the availability of the Civic
Centre Banqueting Hall for a
combined prayer event on Ascension Day touched Peter Williams, the secretary of
the Provincial Parliament. He promptly extended a provisional invitation to the
group to come and pray there as well.
On 31 May 2008 more than
100 believers gathered in the legislative house of the Western Cape for prayer
at 6 a.m. Three days later there was a hush – and no mocking - as two
Christians shared their biblical convictions at the same venue, as part of normal
parliamentary procedure. For Peter Williams this was a direct result of the
united prayer at that venue! The
implementation of unity on biblical grounds in the spirit of the person and
example of Jesus - without semantics
(notably the playing with words) and
doctrinal bickering around issues like baptism and women in the pulpit –
started appearing on the horizon.
Our Friday lunch hour prayer meeting became the start of yet
another venture in 1996 after Daniel, a believer from Eerste River, a distant
suburb in the north of our city, who had been a regular participant in the
beginning of these prayer meetings in 1992, popped in again one day. He
challenged us, referring to the many French-speaking Muslim street traders from
West Africa, who had been moving into the city: ‘Have you ever considered
doing something about bringing the Gospel to them?’
In the meantime Louis Pasques, who was raised in
an Afrikaner environment, had become the senior pastor of the Cape Town
Baptist Church in 1996. He had not only become a regular participant at the
Friday prayer meeting in the Koffiekamer, but he also speaks French.
A public
confession was made
on
behalf of Afrikaners for the hurts
meted out to people of colour
When Blacks started attending the fellowship
increasingly and because of a brave sermon in which Louis made a confession on
behalf of Afrikaners for the hurts meted out to people of colour during the
apartheid era, a few White people left the church. This triggered the gradual
change of the complexion of people attending the church.
Outreach to Foreigners
When we started to pray about the possible outreach to foreigners at our
Friday lunch-hour meeting, God surely used these occasions to prepare Louis
Pasques’s heart. When the destitute Congolese refugee teenager Surgildas
(Gildas) Paka pitched up at the church, Louis and his wife Heidi sensed that
God was challenging them to take special care of the youngster. One weekend
Louis and Heidi had their parents over for a visit. They asked Alan Kay, an elder and the administrator of Cape Town Baptist Church, to provide accommodation
to the destitute teenager. Gildas
captivated Alan’s heart. This was the beginning of an extended and unusual
adoption process. One thing led to the other until Alan
Kay not only finally adopted Gildas, but he also got more and more involved in
compassionate care of other refugees. Soon the Cape Town Baptist Church became a home to refugees from many
African countries. Gildas and our son Rafael, became quite close friends.
Allain Ravelo-Hoërson (T.E.A.M.)
played a big part in establishing the ministry among Francophone Africans at
the church, along with other missionaries who had been working in countries
where French is the lingua franca. Allain ministered there faithfully
from 1998 to August 2001, when he and his wife left to study in London. He was
supported by Ruth Craill, an SIM missionary, who had ministered in West Africa.
She played the piano and took care of providing meals after or before the
services.
A positive Change towards Refugees
The attitude of Whites in the Cape Town Baptist Church
hereafter gradually changed positively towards refugees. Before long, quite a
few refugee-background
Africans started attending our churches services, especially when special ones
in French were arranged monthly and later twice a month, as an effort to equip
the Francophone believers for loving outreach to the Muslim French-speakers
from our continent. The word spread quite well, so that in due course also
other churches started opening their doors to refugees.
The Koffiekamer, suddenly became a major channel of blessing when an Alpha Course was started there. A special role in the effort towards transformation
in the city was accorded to it when many a homeless person was transformed by
the power of the Gospel, and prayer meetings for the city started at that venue
on every last Wednesday of the month. This is where we had increased contact
with Vlok Esterhuyse. He would become one of our stalwart intercessors at the Cape Town Central
Police Station.
The need for
refugees to get employment was the spawn for the English language classes at
the church to be revitalized. This inspired the offer of free English lessons
to many of these refugees, ultimately leading to the resumption
of English language classes at the church as an aid to help refugees find their way in the city. The
simultaneous need for a discipling house for Muslim converts and a drug
rehabilitation centre gave birth to the Dorcas Trust. I hoped that the
city churches could take ownership of these ventures. (That turned out to be
easier said than done.)
Kindred Spirits
My
wife Rosemarie and I were encouraged by the arrival of Floyd and Sally McClung
at the end of 2006, especially because we detected kindred spirits when we got
to read their reasoning for coming to the Cape. When we
heard that Floyd and Sally
McClung were coming to the Cape with the vision to ‘establish a training and
outreach community in Cape Town that impacts Africa from Cape Town to Cairo’
and the vision ‘for a multi-cultural community that exemplifies the kingdom of
God’, we became quite excited. This was more or less what we wanted to see
happening, even though our vision was somewhat broader, including countries
outside of Africa to be impacted from Cape Town. Getting the vision across to
local Christians and pastors was however a very big challenge.
We endeavoured even more to see a
church planting movement established among those foreigners who have come to
the Mother City of our country. We longed intensely for the metropolis to
become the Father's City at last. With the Mc Clungs, leaders of the relatively
new mission agency All Nations
International, we had a common experience of seeking God’s will for the
next step in our lives. Floyd and Sally
had come to a dead-end in the church in Kansas City (USA) that they had been
leading. We felt the same way with our mission agency here in Cape Town in
respect of outreach to foreigners.
Equipping and Empowering People from
the Nations
One of the new ventures of Friends from Abroad (FFA), long before
its official inauguration on 17 February 2007, with which we started before we
left for Europe in 2006 was fortnightly sessions of fellowship, Bible Study and
prayer with a hitherto unreached people group in respect of the Gospel, a few
Uighur believers from China in Cape Town, as well as other Asians. The
philosophy of FFA is to equip and empower people from the nations to serve
their own people, akin to the way I had been impacted while in (in)voluntary
exile in Holland.)
We resumed our contact with Bruce van
Eeden, the former pastor of the Newfields EBC, with whom we had started
children’s work in 1992. (In 1995 he initiated a Mitchell’s Plain-based mission agency
called Ten-Forty Outreach.) We thought that his
ministry could be a valuable complement to our Friends from Abroad concept - to bless indigenous Christians and be
blessed by them.
Through Pastor Theo Dennis we
linked up with Ds. Richard Verreyne, pastor of the Soter Christelike Gereformeerde Kerk in Parow. Rochelle Malachowski
and an American short-term volunteer, are two valued co-workers
who assisted in starting up free English lessons for refugees and other
foreigners at that church in Parow. It was an added blessing
that we had a short-termer from Germany at our disposal to keep the little
children of the refugee ladies busy in a good way. This was a forerunner
towards a weekly children’s club at the same venue with refugee and local
children. A jewellery workshop for refugee ladies, the bulk of them Muslims, to
help them earn a few cents and teach English to quite a few of them, was part and parcel of the FFA
compassionate outreach to foreigners.
In
due course resigned from WEC International. We started Friends from Abroad
in February 2007 formally as a ministry of friendship and hospitality towards
foreigners that have come to Cape Town. Rosemarie and I also simultaneously
started the process to become missionaries linked to All Nations
International, led by Floyd McClung.
The 2010 Soccer World Cup and Lausanne III
After the failure of the Church in our country to hone in on an opportunity
towards effective networking during the xenophobic mob attacks of May and June
2008, we latched on to the national outreach effort that was launched in the
country with the 2010 Soccer World Cup called The
Ultimate Goal (TUG). This was a very positive experience but it
still only resulted in limited networking when some rivalry surfaced. Due to
two strong missionary personalities of Muslim evangelism, two separate camps
developed. The rift took years to heal.
Both
the Global Day of Prayer and the Lausanne
III events of 2010 did not live up to our high expectations to foster unity among the Bride
of Christ in the city. The 2011 initiatives of 'Strengthening the Ties' of
followers of Jesus and 'Fire Trails' straddled man-made boundaries and barriers, but these events had
no significant noticeable impact.
The Church universal still has to acknowledge collective guilt for the
doctrinal squabbling that led to the establishment and rise of Islam. The
maltreatment and side-lining of Jews by Christians fall in the same
category. If they are not repented of and confessed, these issues may
remain hurdles in the way of a collective turn around by Islam or Judaism.
Divine Nudges towards One-ness of
Followers of Christ
At the beginning of 2010 I was deeply
touched when I discerned that Isaac and Ishmael, the two eldest sons of
Abraham, had actually buried their father together (Genesis 25:9). The
evident reconciliation was probably preceded by confession and some remorse. Or
was there some reconciling agent involved?
On 11 October 2010 the
Lord ministered to me from Romans 1:16 when we received the Lausanne Consultation for Jewish
Evangelism (LCJE) Quarterly
Bulletin. That edition of the LCJE Bulletin highlighted the legacy of Moishe
Rosen, the founder of Jews for
Jesus. In the paper that
Rosen delivered as part of the Jewish Evangelism track at Lausanne II in Manila
in 1989, he highlighted 'Jews first' from Romans
1:16. This led to
the low-key beginning of Ishmael
Isaac Ministries and another attempt
at Muslim/Jewish dialogue and reconciliation, an effort to link Messianic
Jewish believers and Muslim background believers at the Cape.
I thought to have discerned another
'missing link' that same month, viz. that revivals were, as a rule, accompanied
by deep remorse over personal and national sins. This would then often result
in the shedding of 'rivers of tears'. I shared this insight on Signal Hill and
at a few other occasions. In the run-up to Lausanne III in October 2010 at the International Convention Centre in our city, I was deeply moved to 'discover' the disobedience and
neglect of the Church at large in reaching out 'to the Jews first'. I was especially moved again how the Jews were
side-lined by our Christian ancestors. (In my research I had been discerning anew how our
Christian forbears have haughtily stated that the Church replaced the nation of
Israel and the Jews.) That the venue of Lausanne III was more or less
equidistant to Bo-Kaap and Sea Point, the respective strongholds of Islam and
Judaism in the Western Cape, was a special nudge.
An Isaac
Ishmael Nudge
A meeting on
the Saturday afternoon of 23 October at a private address in Milnerton became a
defining moment. Believers were invited to meet Pastor Baruch Maayan
and his family that had returned from Israel. He was responding in obedience to
a call by the Holy Spirit to come to the Cape. He shared that he felt like
Jonah, to have received a second chance to minister to believers here on that
occasion. There I was thoroughly humbled and embarrassed, completely
overwhelmed by a sense of guilt towards Jews. Experiencing an extraordinary urge
to apologise on behalf of Christians for our disobedience and for the fact that
we have been side-lining the Jews, I broke down almost uncontrollably.
Baruch shared his conviction that he was sent to Cape
Town to challenge believers with the highway message of Isaiah 19. Highway
meetings started every last Saturday of the month in Sea Point soon thereafter.
A close link developed between us and the Maayan family. My hope and prayer
that these Highway events could become a meeting point of believers from
different denominations and backgrounds, did not materialise. With some
disappointment I had to see how the weekly meetings develop into another
fellowship around Baruch Maayan as the pastor.
Baruch
and his family returned to Israel in 2013. Some wonderful seeds were however sown,
notably that an up and coming business woman with the
name of Maditshaba got closely befriended to the Maayan family after they had
moved to Pinelands where she lives. Another fruit of that season was a north
facing prayer facility at our home that we dubbed the Isaiah 19 prayer room.
The direct run-up to this was a weekly prayer meeting at the home of Gay French
in Claremont which led to a visit to Israel in 2011 and ultimately to the
building of the prayer room.
Devil's
Peak to be renamed?
In 2009 the lack of public demonstrations of the unity
of the Body of Christ quite strongly on my heart. I really hoped to see
believers uniting with the possible renaming of 'Devil's Peak'. I linked up
with Pastor Barry Isaacs and Murray Bridgman, a local advocate, who had been
praying with us at different venues over a number of years. A year later Marcel
Durler, a local businessman, joined us.
At
the beginning of 2011 the possible renaming of 'Devil's Peak' came to the fore
once again. I was well aware that the contentious issue came up for
discussion in the city council some years ago. I believe that the matter was
not handled well in 2002 – in my view abused to score political points. With
municipal elections due later that year, we were wary of repeating the same
mistake. We did not want the issue to become embroiled in the
run-up to the elections.
On
election day 2011 our little group, i.e. Pastor Barry Isaacs, Advocate Murray
and myself deliberated again. We requested Barry Isaacs to take the matter to
the executive of the Religious Forum for input from that side as well. The
provincial Heritage Council was quite favourable because we researched that the
peak had previous names like Windberg
and Doves’ Peak. The matter turned
out to be quite an intricate issue when Table Mountain was declared one of the
seven natural wonders of the world. We knew that satanists had vested interests
in the retention of the name. Murray Bridgman put some persevering stalwart
work into the process, but only by the end of 2013 there appeared some light at
the end of the tunnel. Tess Seymore, an able and energetic missionary colleague,
joined us in Friends from Abroad. Along
with a young man who had a heart for united prayer, the three of us became the
nucleus of the Dove’s Peak Prayer Network,
networking closely with Daniel Brink of
Jericho Walls. Christians in the suburb Woodstock were a strong tower of
support.
New
Turmoil in Government
On Monday
6 April 2009 the National Persecuting Agency (NPA) announced that 16
charges of fraud and corruption against Mr Jacob Zuma, the President of the
ANC, were being dropped. He was touted to become the country's next leader.
(There were all in all 783 charges of this nature stacked against him which
resulted in more prayer than in the previous two elections. More than ever the
ogre of a situation like Zimbabwe drove many to prayer who would otherwise not
have done so.
At this time the Dalai
Lama was refused a visa for attending some conference which was to promote the
World Cup. When Archbishop Tutu and ex-President as other Nobel Prize winners
indicated that they would not attend the event in protest, the event had to be
cancelled. The refusal of the visa to the Dalai Lama not only highlighted human
rights, but it also brought the level of corruption in the ruling party, the
ANC, who had to dance to the tune of the People's Republic of China. It was
leaked that this country dictated the terms behind the scenes, leading to the
visa refusal.
Over the next years the corruption in government circles
proved to be a constant prayer point. The rise and fall of Julius Malema within
the ANC until his expulsion from the party, led to his starting his own party,
which posed an almost immediate threat to the ANC. His popularity among young
voters augured the fear of a Zimbabwe scenario
The Threat of the Rule of Ancestors
The threat of
our country to be put under the occult rule of ancestors at the centenary
celebrations in Bloemfontein in January 2012 caught the imagination of
intercessors. Here at the Cape the Lord used Pastor Light Eze, a Nigerian
pastor, to bring believers together. We linked the ogre of demonic ancestor
spirit rule to the effort to change the name of a well-known mountain summit to Doves' Peak. The result was a new season of spiritual warfare
including '8 Days of prevailing prophetic
prayers...' during which we sang every evening Jesus, we enthrone you! Fairly spectacular answers to prayer followed and
there were also supernatural phenomena which gave us great expectations. Our attempt included a meeting on 4 February 2012 at Rhode’s Memorial just below the mountain
peak.
Satanic Backlashes
We must have angered the arch enemy at least
to some extent at this time. Some of the main Cape evangelical role players
experienced the one or other form of attack at the beginning of 2012. It seemed to me no co-incidence that it was
touch and go or I was eliminated personally in the night of 30/31
January 2012. This happened a few days before a Transformation Africa event that was scheduled for Saturday 4
February at Rhodes Memorial.
A completely blocked main artery should have
taken me out. But God had
fore-stalled this attack on my life. A few days prior to this, He gave to
Beverley Stratis, a good friend of us and a faithful intercessor, a picture of
me while she was praying. Some darkness and life-threatening confusion surrounded
me. That was her clue to pray for me fervently.
About
two weeks later Erika Schmeisser, an intercessor who attended our Saturday
evening fellowship regularly, came up to me to tell me her experience because
she heard that I had a heart attack. At that time she woke up from a massive
pain in her chest. She immediately knew that this was from someone else and
that she must intercede.
This
highlighted Isaiah 53 to me in a special way because doctors and nurses were so
surprised that I had no need for tablets for pain in the chest region. Also the
physician who sent me to hospital for an EKG initially was very surprised that
I drove to her myself with the low pulse that she had felt.
The
result of the heart attack was a reappraisal of our activities, which would
include much less driving but also taking more time to work on manuscripts
which had been waiting on completion.
We continued to hope and pray that the Church
at the Cape might grasp new chances to get out of its complacency, indifference
and lethargy to reach out lovingly to Muslims, Jews and those foreigners from
the nations that are already in our midst.
Naive
Hope
I hoped much too naively that church leaders would get
on board against the government's anti-Israel stance in 2012. I wrote an email
to minister colleagues with the following content after a visit by Pastor Umar
Mulinde had shared at meetings in August how the Church there countered efforts
to introduce Sharia Law in their country:
… The
question is: Must we wait until similar moves also happen here? The point is
that there are many a precedent in Africa where countries went into serious
economic decline after turning against Israel in recent decades (DR Congo
(Zaire), Malawi).
In a recent
radio broadcast Pastor Barry Isaacs gave seven reasons why Christians should
support Israel. I asked him to email this to me. Please consider them in the
attached document and please comment. Do you agree that it is time that the
Church should speak out; that it is time for the silent majority – which we
believe is present in South Africa, notably in the Church – should we take a
stand in opposition to those in government who express views which will harm
all of us in due course?
There was hardly any
response. Also other efforts to get the
local churches of the Cape Town City Bowl joining in concerted action,
floundered.
A Role for the Church in corporate Restitution?
Participating in a group of believers which looked at the
follow-up of a conference at the Drill Hall in December 2012 as the 5 R's with
restitution at its core, the quest was of course also to get some unified
action by the Body of Christ. In a response to notes by Hilary-Jane Solomons, I
wrote the following lines after attending one of the meetings where I was so
excited to hear of biblical research around Sabah and Ramah as the possible
ancestors of the first nation of South Africa:
Confession
by the Body of Christ for the gradual increase in the first A.D. Centuries of
anti-Semitism of non-Jewish background Christian believers and for the
Replacement Theology of theologians, including the Church Fathers – that the
Church replaced Israel. General global confession is also needed for the
subsequent side-lining of Israel and Jews (notably by the decrees of Emperor
Constantine in the early 4th century) and for the general neglect of the Tenach
('OT') as second-rate in respect of the 'New Testament' by the Body of Christ
at large.
I believe
that a possible subsequent return of the Body of Christ to the Torah in a
non-legalist and loving way and/or giving prominence to it could be the result
which the Father will honour in a big way….
Hilary-Jane
Solomons became critically sick hereafter. The initiative went dormant although
the movement for church-led restitution prodded on perseveringly.
Events to
highlight the five-Fold Ministry
Events to
highlight the five-fold ministry (Ephesians 4:11)[11]kept the prayer
for revival alive. A significant move in the
spiritual realm occurred when Maditshaba Moloko, who had been ordained as
Pastor, was appointed as the co-ordinator for the annual Jerusalem prayer
convocation.in 2014. The gifted intercessor and visionary moved with her
business into office space on the 20th floor of the
Thibault Square Building in mid-2015. Soon thereafter a monthly prayer meeting
for Jerusalem started there. This would become the venue for many strategic
city-wide meetings linked to prayer events, such as meetings ahead of abig
event at the Lighthouse in July 2015 and a prayer event with Pastor Baruch
Maayan at Cape Point on 11 December that was organised on very short notice.
That event would transpire in the context of intense spiritual warfare.
Rhodes Memorial sets off Sparks On 9 March
2015 a student protest started on the UCT campus, originally
directed against a statue at the University of Cape Town (UCT) that
commemorated Cecil
Rhodes. The campaign for the statue's removal led to a wider
movement to "decolonise"
education across South Africa. On 9 April 2015, following a UCT Council vote
the previous night, the statue was removed. The
#Rhodes Must Fall campaign
captured national headlines throughout 2015. It divided public opinion sharply.
It also inspired the emergence of allied student movements at other
universities, both within South Africa and elsewhere in the world. The campaign
was followed by the #FeesMustFall
which ignited racist overtones. Shortly after a red-carpet visit by leaders
from Hamas, the Middle Eastern group
known for its destructive views. The #FeesMustFall became quite violent until
the government succumbed to the claims.
The Fall and Rise of our
Economy within a Matter of Days The
country was not yet out of the doldrums as a result of these events when
President Zuma sacked Mr Nhlanhla Nene, an able Finance
Minister, replacing him with the inexperienced Mr Des van Rooyen who was
generally perceived as unqualified for this position. The Rand, our monetary
currency, nose-dived, sending danger signals in all directions.
In a pun on the historical classic of Edward Gibbon (The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire)
the ill judgment of President Zuma ignited the fall and rise of our Economy
within a matter of days. The use of modern technology was put to good effect as
prayer was solicited far and wide via Facebook, Whatsapp and Twitter. Our
prayer event at Cape Point that was triggered by the email of Rick Ridings was
due for Friday 11 December. That 50 intercessors rocked up at the venue for
which one had to fork out quite a few bucks, was something akin to a miracle.
It is impossible to gauge and compare the impact of the prayer that was rallied.
The effect was the most significant since our miracles elections of 1994 where
prayer was clearly also the driving force. That President Zuma seemed at least to have
the courage to heed the advice given to him was a miracle looking back. (In
2016 he stubbornly held on to his position in spite of many calls – also from
within the ranks of his party – to step down.) He appointed Mr Pravin Gordhan,
a former Finance Minister who had a good track record, in a desperate act to
salvage the economy of the country. The Rand recovered in resuscitation mode to
a level near to where it had been before the appointment of Mr van Rooyen.
At the beginning of 2016 various Christians felt
challenged to oppose the negativity in South Africa. The argument of the South Africa must rise
campaign was that ‘If everything must fall - then eventually, the nation
will fall’. The campaign had personal
ramifications when our son Sammy started a campaign using our booklet What God joined together as an example
of the opposite. Our son Sammy started #hopeforsa as a catch word and using our book in
the campaign via facebook. He wrote: I
quickly put together a website over here: www.whatgodjoinedtogether.co.za.
Another Side of Gang Violence
Appendix 1: Some Autobiographical Background
Ever since my
sister Magdalene returned excitedly from an ecumenical week-end youth event at Applethwaite in Elgin – in the apple growing district of Grabouw
around 1960 - I recognised that the unity of believers across the racial and denominational
barriers could be quite important in the spiritual realm. A young White student
from Rhodes University had rattled my sister's inculcated and
socially conditioned racial mind-set. (In
a country as ours where racial classification has caused such damage, I am
aware that the designation Coloured has given offence to the racial group
into which I have been classified. For this reason, I put ‘Coloured’
consistently between inverted commas and with a capital C when I refer to this
racial group. To the other races I refer as ‘Black’, ‘White’ and 'Indian'
respectively, with a capital B, W and I. The former two races, Black and White,
are written with capitals to note that they do not refer to normal colours and
the latter group refers to persons from Indian descent, but born and bred in
this country.)
I came to personal faith In Jesus as
my Saviour when I was 15, soon thinking thereafter that the most effective
opposition to the heretical apartheid ideology would be to assemble Christians
from different racial and denominational backgrounds as often as possible, to
demonstrate the unity of followers of Jesus in this way. However, my conviction
was more intuitive because my knowledge of the Bible was still very limited. I
could see my conviction put into practice when we had preachers from many
denominations on the pulpit of the Moravian Church in Tiervlei (later renamed
Ravensmead) including two Whites
A turning Point in my Life
A major turning point in my life occurred when two
different teenage friends nudged me to attend the evangelistic outreach of the Students’
Christian Association (SCA) at the seaside resort of Harmony Park near
Gordon's Bay that was scheduled to start just after Christmas at the end of
1964. There I was not only spiritually revived, but there I also received an
urge to network with people from different church backgrounds. Multi-racial
work camps at Langgezocht in the mountains of the Moravian Mission station
Genadendal from the mid-1960s - to help build a youth camp site there - gave me
the rare opportunity to meet students from other racial groups in a natural
setting.
A church-sponsored stint in Germany in 1969 and 1970 included study and
practical experience in youth work as well as studies of the biblical languages.
Wherever I had the opportunity to address groups in Germany, I highlighted the church
disunity, the fragmentation of the Body of Christ in my diagnosis of the einzigartige (unique) problems of South Africa.
(The other two problems that I mentioned in these talks were racial
discrimination - apartheid was still fairly unknown in Germany - and
alcoholism) At this time I would also read everything that I could get hold of
what Martin Luther King (jr) had written (This was banned literature in South
Africa at that time).
Quest for
visible Expression of the Unity in Christ
The importance
of the visible expression of the unity of followers of Jesus grew further after
my return to my home country in October 1970. However, in a rather overdrawn
and misguided anti-apartheid activism, I joined the Christian Institute (CI) soon thereafter, hoping that
White CI members would also be willing to expose themselves to the possibility
of arrest for breaking petty apartheid laws. (The CI was started by Dr Beyers Naudé to bring Christians from the different
races together to study God’s Word. The CI policy at that time was to respect
the law, although the apartheid laws were very immoral and discriminating.)[38] My activism probably estranged
the young White friends.
I met my future wife Rosemarie in May 1970 in an
infatuation-at-first-sight encounter in Stuttgart. After my wife-to-be had been
refused a work permit and thus entry into South Africa in order to get
reclassified as a 'Coloured', the Moravian Church Board assisted me to
return to Germany.[39] Rosemarie and I married in March 1975.
(In)voluntary
Exile
In the first
few years of my (in)voluntary exile in Germany there was little opportunity to
translate my conviction of a clear expression of the unity of the body of
Christ practically.
During the final part of my theological studies in Bad Boll, near to Stuttgart
in Southern Germany, the legacy of Jan Amos Comenius, the 17thcentury theologian
and last bishop of the old Czech Unitas
Fratrum (Unity of the
Brethren) and Count Zinzendorf,
the leader of the Renewed Moravian
Church, became very dear to me. I was ordained as a Moravian minister
in September 1975. Thereafter Rosemarie and I left for West Berlin where I
co-pastored a Moravian congregation. Two years later we moved to Broederplein in the historical town of Zeist in
Holland. There Rosemarie and I served the predominantly Surinamese Moravian
congregation of Utrecht.
I discerned ever more clearly with the passing of time that racial and
ecclesiastical divisions were hampering a deep work of the Holy Spirit, notably
in South Africa. The need for racial reconciliation and the attempt to help close
gaps between ‘ecumenicals’ and ‘evangelicals’, as well as between the rich and
the poor, became increasingly important to me as I became aware how much of a
micro-cosmos my home country was.
In November 1978 I needed divine healing from my anger towards the apartheid
government and my denomination for their indifference towards the gross
injustices of the day. This had been highlighted during a six week stint in the
country with my wife and our first born son Danny. God used the banned Dr
Beyers Naudé - who was basically under house arrest to make me determined to
labour towards reconciliation between the estranged population groups and
races.
I hereafter entered into intense correspondence with various agencies in what I
perceived as a calling to achieve reconciliation in my divided home country. God used Hein Postma, a Dutch
believer after I had gone overboard in my anti-apartheid activism. He
challenged me when I was still very much a disgruntled and embittered exile in
Holland.
I experienced
an intense challenge to oppose the demonic tenets of church rivalry and
competition, by stressing the unity of the Body of Christ, as well as fighting
the diabolical economic disparity and structural injustice in a low-key manner.
I hoped and prayed that South Africa might give an example to the world at
large, not only in respect of racial reconciliation, but also in the voluntary
sharing of resources. I possibly went
overboard, estranging some of my Moravian pastoral colleagues to some extent.
Blessing of united Prayer
Linked to this was also the blessing of united prayer,
which was repeatedly confirmed during a six-month stint in South Africa[40] - as we attempted to address the racial barrier in a
low-profiled way. We were very
much encouraged by a multi-racial group of believers from different
denominations in Stellenbosch. The group had been started by Professor Nico
Smith and a few pastors as a sequel to the South
African Church Leaders’ Assembly (SACLA)
event in Pretoria in 1979. At that special occasion church leaders across the
board broke ecclesiastic and racial barriers unprecedentedly.
Another networking initiative with local ministers of other churches saw me
deeply embroiled in the Crossroads saga of May 1981 taking big risks and
linking closely with Rev. Douglas Bax, who had been a friend of our Moravian
theological seminary in District Six. The plight and determination of the women of KTC, Nyanga and
Crossroads probably played a role in another sense. Churches now started to
take a clearer stand in opposition to apartheid laws. Rev. Rob Robertson and
our friend Rev. Douglas Bax played a crucial role in the political stand of the
Presbyterian Church of Southern Africa as a denomination (PCSA). We were very thankful to hear later that two
pivotal apartheid laws were ultimately removed from the statute books - influx
control for Blacks, which led to the establishment of Khayalitsha, and the
prohibition of racially mixed marriages. What a special privilege it was that I
could contribute to some extent, networking with other ministers and Black believers
at the Cape, to the repeal of these two pillars of apartheid.
Put Lessons to
good Effect
In Holland I tried to put the lessons of the unity of the Body of Christ to good
effect that I had been learning. A first big nudge came in 1982 from Rens
Schalkwijk, a teenager who had returned from Jamaica with his Moravian
missionary parents a few years earlier. He suggested that we pray together - in
the footsteps of our Moravian ancestors - early in the morning in the nearby
Zeist forest.
Soon Rosemarie and I were leading the Goed Nieuws Karavaan (GNK)
initiative of Zeist and surrounds. This we did from the end of 1982 until the
end of 1991. Our vision to
give visibility to the Body of Christ locally was partially realized during
this ministry when soon we had about 30 co-workers coming from the full
ecclesiastic spectrum, from Roman Catholic to Pentecostal. We were blessed with
holistic practical fellowship, in which believers from different denominational
backgrounds participated.
Concerts of Prayer
Rens Schalkwijk gave us another nudge in early 1988,
this time to start a small prayer group, along with two students of the local Pentecostal Bible School. The US prayer
leader Dave Bryant visited Holland to promote Concerts of Prayer. Pieter Bos, a Dutch YWAM leader, initiated
regional prayer groups as a sequel to Dave Bryant's visit. In no time our
geographic area became the first Regiogebed
of the country, attended by Christians from quite diverse denominational
backgrounds. The monthly events included prayer for local evangelistic work,
praying for missionaries that had been leaving our region to serve in missions
and also praying for individual countries. In 1989 we prayed especially for
Communist countries, notably for the German Democratic Republic, Hungary and
Romania.
At our ‘regiogebed’meeting of 4 October 1989, I mentioned in passing to someone
that I had posted a letter to President De Klerk that day. Spontaneously, a
teacher from the nearby town of Doorn, who was no regular at our prayer
meetings, overheard me saying this to someone. He promptly suggested that
we take more time that evening to pray for South Africa. Nobody objected. The
whole prayer meeting was hereafter devoted to praying for my beloved country.
That was the only occasion when we prayed so intensely for a single
country.
Nobody present
at the prayer meeting was aware that President De Klerk would meet Archbishop
Tutu and Dr Allan Boesak the next week. That strategic prayer event became in a
sense a watershed in the politics of the country, the prelude to the release of
Nelson Mandela and the end of apartheid. Also in other countries - especially
in South Africa itself - people had been praying for a change in the suicidal
direction of the political system.[41]
[1] John Stewart, a British church
historian, described the work of the Assyrian-Nestorian Church in 1928 as ‘a
church on fire’.
[2]This has
especially been highlighted by Karen Armstrong in her book The Gospel
According To Woman, London, 1986). It may be somewhat overdrawn what she
stated, but there definitely is validity of her statement that 'Christianity
has formed Western society and Christianity has been the only major religion to
hate and fear sex. Consequently it is in the West alone that women have been
hated because they are sexual beings instead of merely being dominated because
they are inferior chattels'. Armstrong's statement has to be disputed because
this is not true only for the West. Arab desert culture permeated Islam so much
that slavery of women (and children) after subjection was very normal.
[3]
Obviously the model is the house church. The hierarchical structure in the
Church evolved from the Temple with High Priest etc.
[4]
The Greek word here is charis,
with its plural charismata,
usually translated as spiritual gifts.
[5]
We could say that the real border crossing started at Jesus' crucifixion. There
one of the murderers and the Roman centurion both discovered something of his
divine nature. His crucifixion was in another way a double pointer to the
Church. The women who faithfully stood by him until the very end represented
the 'old' Jew and the Roman was the new Gentile believer. In this way the crucified
one draws people from different directions and nations.
[6] It
is still believed and taught in Islamic circles that Christians believe in
Mary, the mother of Jesus, as the Mother of God in a physical sense.
[8] It
is possibly not too far-fetched that Irenaus assumption that a certain
Cerdo was the teacher of Marcion, the Gnostic, whose heretic teaching from
around 144 was such a major source of Replacement Theology.
[9] His
grandfather, Bacchius, had a Greek name, while his father, Priscus, bore a
Latin name, which has led to speculations that his ancestors may have settled
in Neapolis soon after its establishment or that they were descended from a
Roman "diplomatic" community that had been sent there.
[10]In a similar way Abraham and Adam have been incorporated into the
Islamic faith because of their submission to Allah.
[11]Tertullian, De praescriptione haereticum (c.200) in Bettenson, Henry S. -Documents
of the Christian Church
1967(1943):3f
[12] The
sharp difference between Paul and Barnabas was highlighted via a forgery, the Gospel of Barnabas
[13]The lapsi were those
who had renounced their Christianity under persecution, but who later wanted to
return to the church. Re-baptism
has subsequently become standard practice in more than one denomination and
sect when someone joined their ranks, not recognizing the baptism performed in
any other denomination.
[14] Not all Pharisees were bad people.
However, it is sad that a few rotten potatoes sometimes do influence a whole
bag. The 'NT' probably distorts the picture of a group of people who generally
had a good reputation amongst their compatriots, comparable to the damage
certain paedophilic and adulterous clergymen inflicted on the image of their
profession or the distorted negative portrayal of the role of the pastor
in the average Hollywood film.
[16]The reference
to kombuis was probably not meant as a normal
kitchen, but the one on a ship where the sailors practiced the notorious
uncouth language.
[18]
This is a word or phrase identified with a particular group or cause; a
catchword. The Gideonites used the word shibolleth as a test of pronunciation to
check whether the Ephraimites could pronounce thesh sound (Judges 12:4-6).
[19] There is also a comparable haughty attitude by
some Catholics towards Protestants as well, contending that the Bible which
Protestants are using, has been changed.
“The outspoken Martin Luther had no qualms to put on paper what did not
suit him. He also declared: ‘I am so hostile to the Book of Esther
that I would it did not exist.’
[22]
In a commentary to the Letter
of James, p. 141f, D. Moo gives a very helpful explanation of the
'contradiction'. He said with regard tojustification
by faith: 'James and Paul use 'justify' to refer to different things. Paul
refers to the initial declaration of a sinner's innocence before God; James to
the ultimate innocence pronounced over a person at the last judgement.'
[24] In his booklet The Destiny of
Israel and the Church, 1992, Derek Prince wrote about three P's as
spiritual warfare weapons: Proclamation (pp. 109-112), Praise (pp. 112-116 ), Prayer
(pp. 117-120 ). (Suffering under) Persecution could be added as another P. Brother Andrew expanded this significantly in 1998, devising ten
strategic steps, ten P’s (prophetic, planning, persistence, preparation,
presence, penetration, profiling, permanence, proclamation and power) to which
he linked a prayer apiece.
[25]George Barna
highlights the phenomenon of Christians who experience vibrant faith outside
the walls and confines of the conventional congregational church format (Revolution, Tyndale House, 2005) .
[26] I do not make any excuses for
using the word dialogue, which has been maligned in some evangelical circles. There
is definitely a very positive side to it.
[27]This happened for example at a prayer meeting on 10 February 1728, when
Zinzendorf especially referred to distant lands - Turkey, Morocco and
Greenland. Twenty six men thereafter started preparing for missionary work,
although there was no immediate prospect to leave for some mission field. We note that this challenge to missions of February 1728
occurred only half a year after the widely reported revival of 13th August, 1727.
[28] In
Greek the word doulos is used for both slave and servant.
The basic differences between the two concepts like coercion and choice became
less stark over the centuries.
[29]This is the
plural form of charis (grace), given to every follower of
Jesus, according to Ephesians 4:7.
[30]
On the mission fields this model however did not function at all. The teaching
was somehow not imparted efficiently to empower the indigenous towards
leadership. The bishop who invariably was a gifted leader, also became an
administrator in the absence of trained indigenous candidates. The original
model was restored in South Africa in recent years. (Bishop Errol Moos had
never been a member of the Moravian Church Board.)
[31] Via
his Dictionnaire
Historique et Critique (Historical
and Critical Dictionary) Bayle expressed his view that much which was
considered to be ‘truth was actually just opinion, and that gullibility and
stubbornness were wide-spread.
[32]The painting,
by Domenico Feti, was titled Ecce
Homo (Behold the Man) and it
showed Jesus with a crown of thorns on His head. At the bottom of the picture,
the artist added the inscription: This
I have done for you. What have you done for Me?
[33]P.M. Legene, Graaf van
Zinzendorf, de man die maar één
passie had(Voorhoeve, Den Haag, 1900) p.50.
[34]No less than the universally acclaimed Karl Barth called Zinzendorf not
only ‘the first genuine
ecumenist’, but also ‘the only genuine Christocentric of
the modern age in his Church Dogmatics (Edinburgh: T.T. Clark, 1956, Vol.
1:683).
[35] I am alluding here to the
literal translation of the words in Ephesians 3:10 that has been usually
rendered with manifold wisdom
of God.
[36] Georg
Schmidt, Das Tagebuch und die
Briefe von Georg Schmidt,(Weskaaplandse Instituut vir Historiese Navorsing,
Bellville, 1981) p.344
[37]
In Matthew 10 the twelve disciples had to be looking out for the 'worthy'
person. It was the standard practice of Zinzendorf and the Herrnhut Moravians
to send missionaries out in twos or in small teams. Georg Schmidt was the
exception, sent to the Cape alone as punishment for allegedly recanting his
Protestant faith during his imprisonment in order to be set free.
[38]That was to change later de facto, when Dr Beyers Naudé,
our leader, preferred imprisonment to a monitory fine because he would not
testify to the biased government-appointed Schlebush commission of enquiry into
the funding of the CI.
[39]A fuller
version of these experiences our story is called(In)voluntary Exile, accessible on our internet blog.
[40]
The government of the day allowed us to live in the country for six months as a
family of four pypersto assist my late sister's family. She had been suffering
from leukaemia, passing away in December 1980. During this period I taught at Mount View Senior Secondary School in Hanover Park.
[41] I do not want to minimize the
political efforts, e.g. by the moves behind the scenes sponsored by the Swiss
government or by Dr van Zyl Slabbert’s IDASA, but I nevertheless assert that it
was ultimately the concerted prayer that made the difference.
[42] After substantial research into missionary work to these groups, I
deemed it appropriate to dub outreach to Jews and Muslims neglected 'Cinderella's'
of evangelism and missionary work.
[43]
A fuller version of how this transpired is recorded in Seeds sown for Revival and in Spiritual Dynamics at the Cape.
Both titles can beaccessed on our internet blog >.
[44]Some of these
Christians have been working alongside Muslim background followers of Jesus
here at the Cape and elsewhere and who who have been discipling some of them -
in certain cases over a lengthy period of time.
[45]Some enmity did develop over the centuries though, as
the prophet Isaiah attested to seventeen hundred years later.
Do you think
that’s a little too severe to suggest? If all of God’s word is true then why
should this not be accepted as instruction? God tells us that if our character
shows selfish ambition and pride then it’s not a representation of His nature.
So my question to you as a Believer is this: If it’s not Father’s nature that
is on display, then whose nature is it?
[1]
Died in complete rest and peace and in trust in the Lord (Schmidt, 1937:6)
[3]
Newton subsequently became a prominent catalyst for the end of the slave trade
in 1807. He had been the boyhood hero of William Wilberforce. When the
evangelical parliamentarian Wilberforce wanted to resign his seat in parliament
to become a clergyman in December 1785, Newton dissuaded him (Pollock, John
1981:175). No two years later, on 22 May 1987, Wilberforce initiated the ‘Society
for the Abolition of Slavery’.
[4] Kapp (1985:285) plays down the role of Dr Philip in
the emancipation of the slaves. It might be true that John Philip did not play
that big a role, but his indirect contribution was surely just as important,
even as that of Caledon was in this way and should. not be down-played
[5]A
similar effect has been achieved when the 24 hour prayer watches were revived at
the beginning of 2000 CE with Namibia’s Bennie Mostert and John Mulinde from
Uganda prominent.
[6]
In a position of authority the Moravians appear to have led the field with the
indigenous Ernst Dietrich a member of the Church Board in 1930, along with Richard
Marx and H Birnbaum, two German missionaries.
[7]The building is the premises at
which the SAMS started. Later it was turned into the Missionary Museum.
[8] The influential
Zaccheus Mahabane joined the Congress movement in 1917 after hearing political speeches
by Charlotte Maxeke and her husband Marshall Maxeke, a fellow South African
whom she met in the USA. Both studied at Wilberforce University.
[9] The 'Cold War' was the continuing state of
political conflict, military tension, proxy wars, and economic competition
existing after World War II(1939–1945), primarily between the Soiet Union and
itssatellite states, and the powers of the Western world, particularly the USA.
[10]The so-called 10/40 Window denotes a
geographical area between 10 and 40 degrees north
latitude, where the main unreached people groups with respect to the Gospel can
be found.
[11] The fivefold ministry
or five-fold ministry is a Charismatic and
Evangelical Christian belief that five offices mentioned in Ephesians, namely
those of apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors (or "shepherds")
and teachers, remain active and valid offices in the contemporary Christian
church.
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