Church History Teasers (Part 7): Erasmus ‘In Praise of Folly’

Brief Outline of ‘In Praise of Folly’

1.    Introduction: Reason for Writing.

To Thomas Moore, in order “to resolve something of our common studies”.

2.    On ‘Folly’: The Mythological Character.

Erasmus explains Folly’s “lineage, education, and companions”.

3.    Defending Folly’s Deity: Her Self-Love.

Erasmus illustrates the role of Folly in the relationships of men. The illustrations draw on the necessity of self-love and the virtues of foolishness.

4.    On ‘folly’: A Broad and Sweeping Critical Analysis.

Erasmus illustrates and provides a critical analysis of the foolishness of men. Erasmus launches into a full scale discourse on the weakness and strength of folly (as it relates to men and their relationship with one another).

5.    On ‘those who exercise folly’: Specific Application: Certain Positions and Dispositions.

Erasmus specifically critiques those who are blinded by their folly, in two senses. There is a positive blindness (foolishness of belief in the transcendental reality), and a negative blindness (foolishness of sole focus on the earthly reality).

6.    On Christian ‘foolishness’: A Distinction Between Foolishness.

Erasmus encourages the Christian to depend on the wisdom of God, which equates to foolishness to other men. Erasmus provides a good ‘check’ for Christians to be ‘in this world but not of this world’.

‘In Praise of Folly’

Erasmus work ‘In Praise of Folly’ attempts to warn his contemporaries of attempting to ‘be wise beyond their own conditions’. Moving in and out of a satirical fantasy, and his own personal voice, Erasmus uses the mythological character Folly, in representation of the trait of folly often spoken of in Biblical texts. Using these varied literary devices, Erasmus offers a clear and moving analysis of the classes ‘wise men’ and ‘fools’.

In developing a critical analysis of the society Erasmus found himself in, he had one goal in mind – to purify the religious sect of their pride of position. Erasmus was disillusioned with the state of the church. Yet Erasmus also offers a critique of secular academics in seeking to redeem culture.

The character Folly was consumed with self-love, which impelled her to seek praise. Folly claims to be ‘man’s greatest patron’. Interestingly enough, this mythological character was nursed by ‘Drunkenness and Ignorance’. Even more, Folly claims to have followers such as Flattery, Laziness, Oblivion and Pleasure. Moving in and out of satire, Erasmus is able to bring mythological features home with real world application with his ‘real voice’.

To name a few, Erasmus speaks of the logicians and sophists who gain their laughs and reap the benefit of others folly.  Claiming to have ‘mastered all’, they circle each other in their blind conjectures about inexplicable matters. Yet Erasmus saves his most piercing analysis for the ‘divines’. He claims that the superstitious divines explicate the most hidden of mysteries according to their own fancy. In explaining the mysteries of the Bible, the ‘Theologians’ seek to suit their won tastes. Erasmus gives a similar caricature of the ‘Monks’, who live as if they are stage-players acting out ‘righteousness’. They use their religious uprightness to oppress those of other classes.

In the last section of the piece, Erasmus turns his attention to the ‘happiness of Christians’ found in folly. Erasmus illustrates that to the world, the Christian appears foolish, but in actuality possesses a much different type of wisdom.  For instance, the apostles refuted the heathen philosophers with their good lives and miracles rather than arguing over subtle trifles, though they were learned and well equipped for such a defense. It is true that the foolishness of God is wiser than men. Even Christ, in some manner became a fool in taking on the nature of man. This is the very essence of the cross; it is foolishness to those of this world.

In a sense, there is a duality of foolishness in this piece. In one way, the theologians and philosophers are described with a certain dislike. For they pursue their grammarian ways with much toil, which is a kind of madness and folly in itself. While in another way, certain fools have an advantage for they understand the true nature of folly. Some things are not meant to be defined as‘doctor-like’. This statement illustrates the concept of faith, ‘it is something not seen’.

Though the literary structure of this piece makes it somewhat difficult to follow, the overall message is clear. Beware of being so consumed with self-love and the particulars of this world, for in these things one can loose a sense of humility. The elements of scholarship and humility are to be held in balance. If these things were held in balance, the church would grow towards purity and a proper understanding of the humans’ role in God’s eternal redemptive plan.

Part 1: Tertullian’s Apology

Part 2: Athanasius ‘On the Incarnation’

Part 3: Saint Benedict ‘The Rule’

Part 4: Gregory’s ‘Pastoral Rule’

Part 5: Anselm’s ‘Proslogion’

Part 6: Bernard of Clairvaux ‘On Loving God’

Rick Warren’s Inauguration Prayer for President Barack Obama

Resources for “Sanctity of Human Life Sunday”

For many churches this coming Sunday has a specific focus on “the sanctity of human life.” Most will specifically relate their teachings to the issue of abortion.

Let me first acknowledge that the sanctity of life touches many other issues besides abortion, this is important because many people exclusively focus on abortion when speaking about this issue.

But, because of the nature of abortion it is also extremely important that we keep abortion at the forefront of this issue, since proper Christian doctrine proclaims that all human beings are created in the image of God.

We as Christians must defend the “right to life.” Here are some credible resources that might help Christian teachers thoroughly think through this issue and apply it to their learners lives.

Application is always important in teaching the Bible. It is also one of the hardest portions of a teaching to develop. So here are some helps;

Here is a link to John Piper’s sources on “Speaking Out Against Abortion.”

Bible Scholar D.A. Cason has written a pastoral article on “Practical Strategies for Addressing the Abortion Issue.”

Al Mohler is always a solid source on cultural issues, here are some articles on “Abortion.”

Faith by Proxy and the Salvation of Households?

“Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved, you and your household.” (Acts 16:31)

One of the basic beliefs of Christianity is that each human being will stand before God and give an account for his/her existence. That truth holds for each and every one of us, individually.

Recently I was reminded that some promote the idea “that salvation can come to each person by proxy”. This is usually spoken of in relation to family. The argument follows, “when the head of the household is converted each member of the family is also saved based on his faith.” I cannot agree.

I decided to go to the texts that are usually shown to prove this point. Namely, Acts 11:14, 16:31– and sometimes 16:15, 18:8; or 1 Corinthians 16:15.

On of the first principles of Bible interpretation (hermeneutics) we can refer to as “reading the text in their town.” We must begin with an affirmation, while Biblical texts are applicable to all people in all times, God spoke through the biblical writers while they lived in specific culture and context. This helps us understand what the Bible actually means. How can knowledge of “households” in this period help us understand these texts?

First, the basic unit of the ancient city was the household. It was through individual households that Christianity initially spread. It is important to remember that the Greek word for “household” (oikos) has broader perspective than our idea of family.

In the ancient world the family was not defined so much by kinship, but by the relationship of dependence and subordination. The head of the household was responsible not only for his immediate family, but also for his slaves, former slaves, hired laborers, and sometimes business associates and tenants. The head of the household, by normal expectations of the society, would exercise some authority over the group but mainly have legal responsibility for it. Therefore, it was expected that the “head” look out for the well being of those in his household.

Second, the household was a network. It was under this structure that the early church thrived. While it is commonly assumed that each Greco-Roman “household” shared in the same faith of its “head”, it is important to note that “not every” member of a household became a Christian when the head of the house did, as the case of Onesimus shows (read Philemon). Certainly, we understand that faith, not association, is necessary for salvation.

I think it is safe to say that once the “head of the household” heard and believed the gospel one of two things happened;

1. The missionaries were invited to come and share this message with those in his “household” (or network). It was through this process that the whole household would hear the Gospel, and those who believed were saved. (Acts 16:32-34)

2. The “head of the household” would share the Gospel message with those who were associated under his authority.

While those in a household were sometimes expected to follow the religion of its “head” the conversion was not automatic. But, it could be expected that all in the household would hear the gospel if the “head” was converted.

Either way, I do not think there are grounds to argue that all those under the care of “head” were granted salvation by proxy.

Remember, in the ancient world the “household” was a tight knit group. Privacy was rare, even among those out side the household. Much of life was lived in close proximity to those around you. Not much that happened in a neighborhood would escape the eyes of the neighbors. News traveled rapidly.

This, if anything, shows our modern individualistic conception of evangelism a bit off. The fact that “whole households” came to faith shows the power of the gospel message when it is proclaimed and witnessed to through the power of the Holy Spirit.

When the “head of a household” was converted this news was certainly shared with those under his care. It was through this structure that the Spirit used individuals (“heads of households”) to spread this message through close knit household networks, the most intimate form of evangelism!

Church History Teasers (Part 6): Bernard of Clairvaux ‘On Loving God’

Brief Outline of ‘On Loving God’ by Bernard of Clairvaux

Dedication: To Lord Haimeric
Chapter 1: On why God is to be loved, and how much
Chapter 2: On God deserving such love
Chapter 3: On the manner of charity to those who love God
Chapter 4: On those who take comfort in the thought of God
Chapter 5: On the Christian’s debt and duty to love God
Chapter 6: On the reward of those who love God
Chapter 7: On the first degree of love
Chapter 8: On the second degree and third degree of love
Chapter 9: On the fourth degree of love
Chapter 10: On the perfection of love in the age to come
Chapter 11: On the letter written to the holy Carthusian brethren
Chapter 12: On the law of mercenary love from self-interest
Chapter 13: On the law of love from children
Chapter 14: On the four degrees of love

Key Quotes

“You want me to tell you why God is to be loved and how much. I answer, the reason for loving God is God Himself; and the measure of love due to Him is immeasurable love.”

“Whosoever praises God for His essential goodness, and not merely because of the benefits He has bestowed, does really love God for God’s sake, and not selfishly.”

“Nevertheless, since we are carnal and are born of the lust of the flesh, it must be that our desire and our love shall have its beginning in the flesh. But rightly guided by the grace of God through these degrees… At first, man loves himself for his own sake… Next, he perceives that he cannot exist by himself, and so begins by faith to seek after God, and to love Him as something necessary to his own welfare… [Then] advances to the third degree, when he loves God, not merely as his benefactor but as God… [Until he] make further progress in this life to that fourth degree and perfect condition wherein man loves himself solely for God’s sake.”

“When he has learned to worship God and to seek Him aright, meditating on God, reading God’s Word, praying and obeying His commandments, he comes gradually to know what God is, and finds Him altogether lovely.”

‘On Loving God’

Bernard’s ‘On Loving God’ is good support to the idea that our ideas on prayer must be grounded in our doctrine of God. From the outset Bernard writes with a humble posture, “take from my poverty what I can give you,” understanding his right place when speaking of God. When one understands who God is, one rightly views the self and understands that “the reason for loving God is God Himself; and the measure of love due to Him is immeasurable love.”

Bernard assumes that all men have knowledge of God through self, “what infidel does not know that he has received light, air, food–all things necessary for his own body’s life–from Him alone who gives food to all flesh?” Beyond this common knowledge one begins to understand, and love God more “because they know themselves to be loved so exceedingly.” This is the ultimate grounds for thanksgiving in prayer, that “He gave Himself for us unworthy wretches.” God’s mercy is made abundantly clear in the Gospel of Jesus Christ, for He “died for our sins and rose again for our justification, and ascended into heaven that He might protect us from on high, and sent the Holy Spirit for our comfort. Hereafter He will come again for the consummation of our bliss.” For these reasons, we as Christians should “take comfort in the thought of God.”

It is the Christian, “the believing soul longs and faints for God…rests sweetly in the contemplation of Him.” In seeking God one begins to understand that He is ‘not merely the bounteous bestower of life, the generous provider for all needs, the pitiful consoler of all sorrows, the wise Guide of course: but that He is far more than all that. He saves with an abundant deliverance: He is the eternal preserver, the portion of our inheritance.’ Rightly understanding who God is leads one to adoration. One who adores and “loves God truly asks no other recompense than God Himself.” It is this realization that “He is all that I need, all that I long for”…Understanding that one “cannot love” Him as He deserves to be loved, limited by ones own feebleness.

Theologically speaking, “no one can seek the Lord who has not already found Him.” “So then in the beginning man loves God, not for God’s sake, but for his own.” But soon realizes that this love for God is a gift, “it is in God’s power to give it to whom He wills.” “One may therefore say with truth that love is at once God and the gift of God, essential love imparting the quality of love.” Therefore when one falls in love with God, they may look back and realize that they were “rightly guided by the grace of God” to that point of love.

Bernard argues that it is God’s will ‘to be found that He may be sought, to be sought that He may the more truly be found.’ When one has “learned to worship God and to seek Him aright, meditating on God, reading God’s Word, praying and obeying His commandments, he comes gradually to know what God is, and finds Him altogether lovely.”

One could conclude that Bernard, though Haimeric came seeking prayers, illustrated the importance of a proper doctrine of God as the foundation for prayer. For Bernard dealing with loving God is the sweetest of all topics to discuss, “for it can be handled most safely, and will be most profitable” to any discussion pertaining to the Christian life. Prayer is a gift, an implication of the ultimate gift, namely God, and “there is no glory in having a gift without knowing it.” “His goodness once realized draws us to love Him unselfishly, yet more than our own needs impel us to love Him selfishly.” Again, the doctrine of God leads one to understand His character, and the actions of His Son who dies so that “He might protect us from on high, and send the Holy Spirit for our comfort.” Does this not bear weight on how we should pray?

Part 1: Tertullian’s Apology

Part 2: Athanasius ‘On the Incarnation’

Part 3: Saint Benedict ‘The Rule’

Part 4: Gregory’s ‘Pastoral Rule’

Part 5: Anselm’s ‘Proslogion’

Evangelism in the Early Church

Michael Green’s Evangelism in the Early Church is the classic study on evangelism in early church life. In reading this book I asked myself, what can we learn from the early church when it comes to spreading the gospel?

He writes that “Evangelism is never proclamation in a vacuum; but always to people, and the message must be given in terms that make sense to them.”  While there are differences in their situation and ours, I see one major aspect of their proclamation where we can learn from them, their love. Green argues that “they made the grace of God credible by a society of love and mutual care which astonished the pagans and was recognized as something entirely new. It lent persuasiveness to their claim…”

Take for example the hypothetical ordinary man and ask, what would attract him to Christianity? The answer for the early church was clear according to Green. He writes, “undoubtedly the love of Christians had a lot to do with it, so did the moral qualities they displayed, the warmth of their fellowship, their manifest enthusiasm, the universal applicability of their message. Reconciliation with God had a lot to do with it.”

Not only was every individual important in their evangelism methods, but the community as a whole was involved. Green argues that “the great mission of Christianity was in reality accomplished by means of informal missionaries.”  Green clearly argues that Christianity was from its inception was a lay movement. Green shows that there was no distinction in the early church between full time ministers and laymen in this responsibility to spread the gospel by every means possible. He argues that “every Christian was called to be a witness to Christ, not only by life but lip.”  The life and lip analogy is important. This is where I felt Green worded it beautifully, “Christianity is enshrined in the life: but it is proclaimed by the lips. If there is a failure in either respect of the gospel cannot be communicated.”

Lastly, Green does offer some strong rebukes against today’s church. He states that the early church knew nothing of set addresses following certain homiletical patterns or preoccupations with large church buildings. Essentially he argues that this informal approach allowed for more variety when it came to the evangelism methods. Of course, he would argue that the gospel has clearly defined content , but there was no prevalent method for sharing that message. Green states that “It would be a gross mistake to suppose that the apostles sat down and worked out a plan of campaign: the spread of Christianity was, as we have seen, largely accomplished by informal missionaries, and must have been to a large extent haphazard and spontaneous.”  This observation is well taken. Here is a good description:

“This must often have been not formal preaching, but informal chattering to friends and chance acquaintances, in homes and wine shops, on walks, and around market stalls. They went everywhere gossiping the gospel; they did it naturally, enthusiastically, and with the conviction of those who are not paid to say that sort of thing. Consequently, they were taken seriously, and the movement spread, notably among the lower classes.”

The Proper Use of a Study Bible

I was recently given the The ESV Study Bible as a gift for graduating seminary. Finding solid resources for Bible study is one of the things that you inherently learn as a seminarian. You learn which scholars are well learned on certain aspects and books within the cannon of Scripture, thus you turn to those men for wisdom when it comes to their area of expertise. This is where the ESV study Bible surpasses other resources similar to it.

The 2750 pages represented are a massive resource for personal Bible study. Under the direction of Theologian Wayne Grudem, the scholars who contributed to this study Bible have blended practical application with deep theological reflection in a way that is helpful to the layperson, learned Bible teacher, and even Bible scholar.

Even with all my excitement for such a wonderful resource, I think Dr. Al Mohler provides us with a healthy reminder in his article titled “How should a study Bible be used?”

Mohler writes;

“1. Read the text of the Bible first. Meditate upon the text and read it with care. Apply your own knowledge of the Bible in order to understand the particular text within its context and place in the biblical story-line. Consider and note other texts that come to your mind as directly related to this text. Read the text with full attention and conviction.

2. Look carefully at the cross-references that the study Bible links to the text you are reading. Do not look only to the citations, but read the actual passages. This assistance is still the main contribution of a study Bible — making related and parallel passages more accessible. A first principle of interpreting the Bible is to interpret the Bible by the Bible. In other words, to allow the Bible to interpret itself text by text.

3. As a third step, take full advantage of the notes, articles, and other helps printed alongside the text. In some cases, short articles will help in understanding contested issues or matters that might otherwise require a Bible dictionary or encyclopedia. Where appropriate, maps can be very useful, along with tables of measurement and similar points of reference. The very best of the study Bibles will also offer some level of commentary within the notes.

Of course, it is the Bible itself that is inspired, inerrant, and infallible — not the study materials included in study Bibles. Therefore, judge the notes by the biblical text, and never the other way around. Where possible, use more than one study Bible in order to maximize this learning process.”

To read the whole thing, click here.

Salvation among the Unevangelized? A Theological Reflection.

Andreas J. Köstenberger, a professor at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary just published a blog post on the possibility of salvation among those who are unevangelised.

Drawing from Daniel Strange’s work, he puts these people in four different categories;

1.) Children who died in infancy and those mentally unable to respond to the gospel.
2.) Those who lived prior to the time of Christ and thus before the formulation known as “the gospel.”
3.) Those who have been presented with a less-than-adequate version of the gospel.
4.) Those who have not received a presentation of the gospel, such as because they lived in a geographically remote area.

Köstenberger does not deal with the first question, he argues that it “is not directly addressed in Scripture.” He continues, “regarding individuals in the other three categories, we may draw…conclusions from our study of the gospel in the Old Testament, the Gospels, the book of Acts, Paul, and the rest of the New Testament.”

1) The gospel is God’s saving message to a world living in darkness and a humanity lost in its sin. The gospel is not a human message, nor was its conception a function of human initiative, but its origin and its impetus derive solely from God.

(2) Acceptance of the gospel is not optional for salvation but rather required, owing to pervasive human sinfulness.

3) The gospel is not vaguely theological, as if it were amenable to various ways of salvation depending on a person’s belief in a particular kind of god, or depending on the degree to which people were able to hear the gospel presented in a clear way; it is decidedly and concretely Christological, that is, centered on the salvation provided through the vicarious cross-death of the Lord Jesus Christ.

(4) The messianic motif pervading all of Scripture and centering in the Lord Jesus Christ coupled with the risen Jesus’ “Great Commission” for his followers to go and disciple the nations inextricably link an understanding of the gospel as the exclusive message of salvation in Jesus Christ with the Church’s mandate to engage in missionary outreach.

5) In light of the clear biblical passages examined above, and in light of the strong and pervasive trajectory of references to the gospel throughout Scripture, there seems no proper biblical foundation on which to argue for the salvation of anyone on a basis other than explicit faith in Jesus Christ.

Click here to read the whole thing!

The Benefits of Expository Preaching

This past semester I took a class on Bible Exposition (a method of preaching/teaching the Bible). When teaching through the Bible, it seems that systematically moving through its books has many benefits,

Below is D.A. Carson‘s list of the benefits to expository preaching/teaching;

1.    Least likely strays from Scripture.
2.    Teaches people how to read and study their Bibles.
3.    Gives confidence to the preacher and authorizes his sermon.
4.    Meets the need for relevance without letting the clamor for relevance dictate the message.
5.    Disciplines the preacher to preach through tough texts of God’s word.
6.    Enables the preacher to expound systematically through the whole counsel of God.
7.    Provides a balanced diet and helps avoid ‘hobby horse’ preaching.
8.    Eliminates ‘Saturday night fever’ and helps with a planning program.

For those of you who are unfamiliar with the term ‘expository preaching’, it is basically “the communication of a Biblical concept, derived from and transmitted through a historical, grammatical, and literary study of the passage in its context, which the Holy Spirit first applies to the personality of the preacher, then through him to his hearers.” (Haddon Robinson)

Thoughts on the History and Proper Use of ‘Altar Calls’

I began thinking about the ‘altar call’ as I read Iain Murray’s book ‘Revival and Revivalism’. Andy Naselli also stirred my interest with his blog post on the subject. Then last week we discussed the topic of ‘invitations’ in a Bible Exposition lecture. So I decided to work through the history and thought behind altar calls, and here is what I found…

A Brief History of the Altar Call

If one were to study ecclesiological history it would be noticed that the ‘altar call/invitation’  is somewhat of a new fixture in church practice. This procedure grew out of the camp meeting strategy of the early 1800’s. For many denominations the camp meeting strategy (organizing mass meetings for the purpose of evangelism) was seen as a very effective part of spreading the Gospel message. But one of the understandable, yet questionable  concerns of the churchmen in this movement was ‘obtaining knowledge of the number of conversions in these large crowds’. Iain Murray observes that these men saw response methods like altar calls valuable because “if the response to gospel preaching could be made instantly visible, there would be a far readier way of assessing success.”  The altar call grew out of these desires. It all began in the Methodist church, “the innovation of inviting ‘mourners’ to come to the front, metaphorically, ‘to the altar ’”  to repent and believe. Church historian Iain Murray writes that;

“The initial justification for the new practice was that by bringing individuals to identify themselves publicly it was possible for them to be prayed with and to be given instruction.”  Nobody, at first, claimed to regard it was a means of conversion. But very soon, and inevitably, answering the call to the altar came to be confused with being converted. People heard preachers plead for them to come forward with the same urgency with which they pleaded for them to repent and believe.”

There was an encouragement for physical response because “the numbers who made a public response were held up as unanswerable proof”  of the work that God was doing. For many of these evangelists the call to ‘come forward’ was sealed with a virtual promise of God’s peace if the people responded. While the altar call was little known before the 1820’s William McLouhlin writes, “after 1835 it was an indispensable fixture of modern revivals.”  It is now a permanent fixture in many American churches.

The Theological Foundations that Led to the Practice of Altar Calls

For those of the Arminian theology “results could be multiplied, even guaranteed” with the use of altar calls…and “the use of techniques” lead to an overall confusion about the real meaning of conversion.”  For many in the Second Great Awakening the doctrines of grace were seen as a hindrance to effective evangelistic efforts. It was the Methodist’s in particular who held that the “idea that men cannot repent and believe unless they have the ability to do so seemed logical and reasonable.”  In fact one Calvinistic preacher, William M’Gready recalled his encounters with Methodists in 1809 as follows, “as I lodged with some of them I found that their preachers had told them that the Calvinistic doctrines just taught that men were like passive machines bound in unalterable fate by the absolute decrees of God.”  The logic followed that ‘if the doctrine of mans sinful nature, thus his inability to respond, is removed from the evangelistic method, then faith and regeneration would be seen as simple and an immediate response would be made more likely.

Charles Finney, often heralded as the ‘father of altar calls’, was “convinced that ministers could produce revival by using the right methods.”  For Finney the altar call was “necessary to bring sinners out from among the mass of ungodly to a public renunciation of their sinful ways.”  Finney went as far to proclaim that “Christians were to blame if there was no revival, for God had placed the Spirit at your disposal.”  In other words, altar calls were seen as a means to secure a response, a visual proof that something could be done at once. Clearly, ones theology and ones beliefs about conversion have direct and implicit impact on how one views altar calls. Murray observed;

“If conversion is nothing more than the moment the sinner, employing that [the Holy Spirit’s] aid, yields to the truth and makes his decision, and if there are measures such as the altar call to induce it, then certainly, the church is to be blamed if she does not achieve conversions and revivals.”

But, it is important to point out the underlying theological assumption behind such beliefs in ‘what’ the altar call was purposed for. For Finney, the essential component of conversion was ‘moving the will’ of men and women to respond. This was the central problem of man for Finney, his will, not that he had been born in a sinful state. Murray quotes Gardiner Spring;

“Men were instructed that all that is necessary in order to become Christians is to resolve to become Christians…It was the teaching that the renovation of the heart, instead of being the work of the Holy Spirit, is the creatures work.”

Therefore, the resolution to be converted became signified as a public action like ‘coming forward’ or ‘kneeling at the altar’. But for many who responded in such a way, there was an essential confusion, or should I say fusion between the external act and the inward change. These practices grew out of the robust Armenian theology that dominated the Second Great Awakening. In contrast, the First Great Awakening could be caricatured with evangelists of the Calvinistic persuasion. For these men, “conversion was much more a process by which the sovereign God brought salvation to the depraved and helpless sinner.”  Mark Dever is exactly right when he observes that “the way we understand the Gospel will inform the way we do evangelism.”

Some of the Arguments against ‘Altar Calls’

First, some would argue that the ‘call for a public response’ inevitably leads to confusion between the external act and the inward spiritual change. The rational behind this argument calls to attention that encouragement to ‘come forward’ and ‘become a Christian’ were so closely related that they were “virtually identical. The hearer was given the impression that answering the public appeal was crucial because salvation depended on that decision.”

Secondly, there was an inevitable concern for those who ‘come forward’ and experience no saving grace and continue in life with false assurance. In the most critical cases, this type of practice has the potential to produce “rapid multiplication of superficial, ignorant, untrained professors of religion.”  It is supposed that ‘spiritual unction’ leads people to ‘come forward.’ This may not always be the case, a physical response can be secured for different reasons altogether, such as emotionalism or even pride.

Thirdly, “altar call evangelism not only confused regeneration and faith but it also confused the biblical doctrine of assurance. When people were told that all that was needed to be save was an act of the will…willingness was ‘proved’ by a public response, assurance of salvation tended to be seen as an automatic consequence.”  The strength of such practices was tied to the response itself, and it was the response to ‘come forward’ that gave a point of proof for assurance.

Concluding Thoughts

Some would completely dismiss the use of altar calls as nothing more than an ‘organized response to religious excitement.’ The caution is heeded, “these methods…became linked inseparably to the weekly liturgy of Protestant worship. No service was concluded without an appeal to public decision. So important was this new symbol, that evangelical conversion itself is often described in the language of…’walking the isle’ or ‘coming forward’.”

It could also be argued that the establishment of ‘altar calls’ arose from the best of motives even though they were the result of a theology that diametrically opposed human responsibility against God’s sovereignty in the work of salvation. “Certainly, they” (Those in the Second Great Awakening) rightly “taught the immediate responsibility of every soul to repent and believe in the Gospel,”  but their methods reflected an unbalanced view of God’s work in salvation and human response.

I would agree with Mark Dever here, “every time we present the Gospel, whether in a public church gathering on Sunday or in a private conversation during the week, we need to invite people to repent and believe in the Gospel, if our presentation of the Good News is to be complete. What good is the Good News if I’m never told how I should respond to it or what I need to do about it?”

But I would add, in reference to altar calls, we need to be absolutely clear on what the ‘altar call’ is, and what it is not! “If we allow ambiguity on this point we are actually helping deceive people about their own spiritual state by encouraging them to be assured of their own salvation when they may not have genuinely repented and believed at all.”  The invitation is not a “gimmick to catch souls, a magical charm to ensure results, or a ritual to confirm orthodoxy.”  We are not to ‘coax or threat’  people into making a decision, we are to preach the gospel faithfully, “trying to persuade but knowing that we cannot convert. ” The Gospel, by its very nature calls for a response. Therefore we should invite people to respond, but understand that it is God who ultimately saves.

Resources Used and Quoted