THE SPRINGFIELDER 
EDITORIAL COMMITTEE 
ERICH H. HEINTZEN, Editor 
~ ~ A Y M O N D  F. SURBURG, Book Review Editw 
Davm P. SCAER, Associate Editor 
JOHN D. FRITZ, Associate Editor 
PRESIDENT J .  A. 0. PREUS, ex officio 
Contents 
EDITORIAL 
LOUIS H. BET0 IvlEMORIAL LECTURE 
RICHARD R. NIEBURR, Professor of Divinity, 
Harvard University 
C. A. GAERTNER, Zion Lutheran Church, Dallas, T 
Indexed in INDEX TO RELIGIOUS ~ O D I C A L  L r r ~ ~ ~ l ~ a a ,  
American Theological Librmy Association, Speer Library, 
logical Seminary, Princeton, New Jersey. 
of address should be sent to the Business Manager of The Sprhr 
rflrclii~ I'h~nlogical Seminary, Springfield, Illinois 62702. 
Address communications to the Editor, Erich H. Heintzen, 
logical Seminary, Sprin&eld, Illinois 62702. 
Book Reviews 
T H E  ZONDERVAN EXPANDED CONCORDANCE. Zondervan Publish- 
ing House, Grand Rapids, 1968. 1848 pages. Cloth. $14.95. 
One of the interesting developnlents of our times is the  great interest 
manifested by the  Christian public in modern speech trans!ations of the 
Scripture. At no time in church history have so many different transla- 
tions been available to the modern student of Holy Writ. However, as 
Dr. Charles Conn stated in the  foreword to the Concordance: 
The availability of these translations, however, has created some con- 
fusion in the  mind of the  Bible student, especially in a n  effort to 
remeniber just what translation gives a particularly helpful rendition 
of some specific passage. 
T h e  Zondervan Expanded Concordance is a n  attempt to aid the  Bibli- 
cal student in making available the  results of various modern speech 
translations. The  following translations have been incorporated in this 
Concordance: T h e  Amplified Bible ,  The  Berlceley Version of  the Bible, 
The  Nezcj Tcsla?nent i n  Modern English by J.B. Phillips; T h e  Revised 
Standurd Version,  l'he New  English Bible,  T h e  English Revised,  The 
King  Jnnzes Version (including new words from the Scotield Reference 
ISible). 
The volume has 1848 pages of text with more than 250,000 references 
printed on glare-free paper. The reader will find that  key word headings 
stand out clearly and a re  printed in bo:d face type for easy location. The 
word headings a r e  centered in columns so that  words and passages may 
easily be located. The key word in each passage is in italics. Each entry 
will be found to have a Biblical entry. Many words accompanied by 
inodifiers a re  separated according to alphahetizing of the modifiers. As 
a n  example: According to all.  After clll. Before all, For  0 1 1 ,  From all, 
etc. The inclusion of synonynlous terms under specific headings is a very 
helpful featurc of the Concordance. 
According to the publisher's blurb churchmen like Doctors Ockenga, 
Richard Ilalverson, Wayne Ward, Sherwood Wirt, Charles Conn, Oswald 
Hoffmann have all been favorably inlpressed with this new tool for 
Biblical study. Dr. Hoffmann, the  Lutheran Hour Speaker, is listed as 
having given the  following endorsement: 
Th.e Zonderva?~ Gxpanded Go?fcordance is a valuable work of reference 
for pastors, teachers, and all stildents of the  Bible. For teachers of 
the  Bible a t  any level it may prove to be invaluable, informing the 
t e s t  with meaning as i t  guides the user to the  path that  he  is seeking 
or  to cross references in word study of the  Scriptures. 
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Book Reviews 4 1 
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HISTORICAL SURVEY O F  THE OLD TESTAMENT. BY Eugene H. 
Memill. Craig Press, Nutley, N. J., 1966. 322 pages. Cloth, $5.95. 
(Pape r ,  $4.50). 
In th is  ten-chapter book t h e  aut,hor presents a text-book covering. the  
s tory a n d  l i terature of t h e  Old Testament for  the conservative fresh- 
an a n d  sophomore student. I n  the  preface Dr. RIerrill wrote: 
Being  firmly ccmmitted to the  conservative school of thought, he  
h a s  had to eliminate work,  which because of their critical historical 
a n d  theological biases, were colnpletely unacceptable for t he  conser- 
vat ive freshman o r  sophomore student  w11o is in t!le rudililentary 
s tages  of Old Testament study. And yet illally of the  conservative 
books ei ther  have not t he  depth of scholarship necessary for  a collcjie 
approach o r  have gone beyond the  ability of the beginning student in 
t h e i r  details and presuppositions. i\'Ioreover, many of them are  re- 
s t r ic ted  to  too narrow a n  approach, such as  an emphasis on content, 
his torical  background, doctrine. o r  other specific areas (p. viii).  
In  chapter  1, Introduction, the author sets  forth the  presilppositions 
h a t  Control h i s  approach to the  Old Tes ta~ncnt .  He accepts thc iner- 
ancY of Scr ip ture  and  states  t ha t  "where the  Old Testamelit does speak 
listorically, it has yet to fie proven in error7* (11. 19 ) .  Dr. hlerrill evai- 
a n d  rejects the  higher critical a1)l)roach to the Old Testament, 
vhich was  fostered and influenced by rationalism and naturalism. Higher 
: r i t ic ism, h e  believes, has conipletely demo!ished the integrity of the 
jc r ip tures  in this respect, fo r  it  claims thiit all kinds of alleged nnhis- 
,or ical  o r  llonhistorical Biblical references had been uncovered (p.  19).  
I n  t h e  author's ol)inion higher critical scholars cannot do justice to 
111 t h e  da tes  of the Old Testament because of their ar~tisu~)errlatllralistic 
bi;ls which of necessity rejects the  concept of direct revelation fronl God to 
mar l  in  t e rms  of propositional stat,enients, r1:pudiates tht! mirndes of 
t h e  Old Testament and will not allow for t rue  propher y. With the  advent 
of 1l1odt8r.11 sc.ic,lt isln thcrc. 2 1 ~ 0  nn :~.;s;rult on the scientific acc:uracY 
and re1iill)ility of thc! Old Test.ament. Tllr~s he wrote: 
T h e  sillne ratioua1ist.i~ spirit  which at.tc~r~l)ted 1.0 onderniine the 
au tho r i ty  of t.he Word of God in matters historical is also the genius 
behind tlie "Bible-Science" conflict. This should conli! as  no surprise. 
f o r  if t h e  Old Tes tan~ent  can he proven invalid in ont: of thesc areas, 
t he re  is likelihood tha t  it will be proven to he so in others as well 
(11. 2 3 ) .  
Dr.  Sfel-rill divides his history of t h e  Old 'I'estarnel~t jrrto ninr  major 
periods. H e  cor~cludes his presentation with the  J'ersian period, during 
w h i c h  t h e  last. canonical books were  written and t h e  canon of the Old 
T e s t a m e n t  was completed. 
While the reviewer finds hir~lself in basic agreement with the over 
a l l  position taken by the author, there a r e  statements here and t.here 
w i t h  which he disagrees. However. those int.erested in a conservative 
in terpre ta t ion  of the literature of the Old Covenant will find this a serv- 
iceable volume. I t  will be useable in college, or as  a reference book for 
Sunday School and Bible Class teachers. Thosc pastors, teachers, and lay- 
men who would like material to suppleine~it A. TV. Klinck, Old Testan~ent  
History,  one of the  volumes in the Concordin Leclde?-shill Trclining Pro- 
gv-ant, will find the viewpoint of Merrill's book similar to that  in Dr. 
Klinck's. I t  would be a good volume to  place in the  congregational library. 
EXPOSITORY SERMONS ON THE BOOK O F  DANIEL. Vol. 1. By TV. 
A. Criswell. Zondervan Publishing House, Grand Rapids, 1968. 123  
pages. Cloth. 
Dr. W. A. Criswell is pastor of one of the largest Baptist churches 
i n  the world. He  has a filled auditorium (seating about 4000) nearly in 
every service. 
The volume of ten sernlons represents one in a series of books of ser- 
111ons on Daniel. The sermons are  for the niost part  apologetic. I n  view of 
the  virulent and bitter attacks on the part  of alillost all higher critics this 
can be understood and ought to be appreciated. A man's faith in Christ 
of the Scriptures and consequently his acceptance of the  Holy Scriptures 
that  bring us Christ becomes most evident when he is challenged to 
choose between scholarly wisdom and biblical knowledge. Not that  such 
a choice is ever truly necessary, but the total claini of ~nan ' s  fallen reason 
forces the  Christian to turn to Him who makes all wisdonl of man foolish- 
ness. Dr. Criswell is not unaware of the arguments raised against the 
authenticity of Daniel by heretics froni Porphyry to whatever eniineut 
critic to-day denies, ridicules, and disbelieves the I3ook of Daniel. 
For  pastor and student and for ally laymail these sermons will present 
this Rook of the Prophet in simple and clear arguments. If the word mil- 
lennial occurs Dr. Criswell, who has written another volume on Our 
I-Ionle in Heaven, does not in this book particularly present a doctrine of 
a n~illenniunl. As an iiltroduction to the  Book of Daniel these ten ser- 
iilons could well be the basis for a nuniber of Bible studies in a congre- 
gation. 
Jf. J. Maunf,nnn 
ONCE UPON A LIFETIME. Ry Sylvan D. Schwartzman. Union ot 
American Hebrew Congrcgations, New York, 1965. 134 pages. Cloth. 
-1Yell. S o  price ,' 
The editor's introducation calls this a textbook that  will enable chil- 
dren of the Liberal Reform Jewish homes cherish those Jewish observ- 
ances tha t  occur Once Upon A Lifetime. 
As a textbook for children i t  is very well done in every respect. For 
anyone who would like to  know what the various holidays and observances 
of the Jews are  all about this is an introduction to the  main events in 
the life of a Jewish family. The family is of course fictional and its ex- 
Book Reviews 4 3 
zriences bring in  all the  events that  come once in a lifetime. There 
'e many pen and  ink illnstrations. Some of them picture items connected 
ith the rituals. T ~ P  Chair of Elijah caught our eye as almost like the  
le we had bought as second h a n d  shortly before seeing this  book. Every 
~ap te r  h a s  a motto taken fronl some prayer fo r  the occasion discussed 
ld printed in  the  margins in  Hebrew and in  English. 
Any Pastor o r  teacher of the Christian churcli should have a little 
llume l ike  this  enabling h im not only to know and understand the life 
f the Jews in  his  community but  also to  illustrate Old Testament stories 
One reads about a circumcision; a B a r  Mitzvah; a confirmation ( a t  
Se 1 6 ) ,  a list of s tatements of the  purpose of confirn~ation-; a wedding 
'ith t h e  marginal  quote f rom a prayer: "who makes his people holy 
?rough marriage"; a funeral  service in described, we learn what the  
:addish is and  we hear the  rabbi say: "Our bodies return to the earth, 
ut o u r  souls returr, to God for they can never die." 
15f. J .  hT(l 117n 071 71 
'EHSONALITIES AROUND D A V I ~ .  BY lIolnles Rolston. John Krlox 
Press. Richmond. 1952. 1 4 4  gages. Paper. $2.15. 
Holmes  Rolston is editor i n  chief of the  Board of Christian Education, 
'resbyterian Church U.S. 
T h e  au thor  gives a portrai t  of 22 Inen and women whose lives were 
iometimes very much sometinles less involved with the life and career 
)f K i n g  David. The last two chapters discuss David and Christ. An- 
)ther series of studies tha t  will serve well in Bible Classes. 
T h e  abiding interest, arid relevancy of the story of David and the 
personaiities around him rest not only j:n the fact that l)aridJs life 
snd his tory  point to David's greater Son, but xiso l ~ e s  in the down to 
earth repor ts  of holy writer  and Scriptures' deep knowledge of the inner 
workings of the  heart of man. The first chapter stresses the Age of David 
as be ing  relevant to-day. 
-%I. b. Srrlimtrnn 
THE INFALLIBLE WORD. By the members of the faculty of \Vest 
min i s t e r  Theological Seminary. Preshyteriarl and Reforrned Publish- 
i n g  Co., Philadelphia. 1967. 308 pages. Paper. $3.35. 
T h e  repr in t ing  of these essays is evidence ellough for the  hook's c.011- 
t i nu ing  importance as a valuable apologetic for the article on Scripture. 
Chr is t ians  have always known that Scripture represents a unique conjunc- 
t ion of divine and human agencies. Hut because of the human elelnerlt 
ser ious  threa ts  have perennially been launched against the fully divine. 
inspired,  inerrant  character of Holy Writ.  I t  is in order to esprrss some 
basic ground rules here. If the human factor inevitably precludes an 
infal l ible Scripture, then ob~ ious ly  i t  is impossible to assert Scripttrrc's 
inerrancy.  Moreover, if Scripture itself does not assert inerrancy for 
itself,  then we have no r ight  to do ~ t .  On the other hand, if it is Pound 
t h a t  t h e  Scriptures do not only not adversely criticize themselves in  any 
way bu t  consistently and  throughout attest with a great deal of evidence 
to their  divine origin, inspiration, authority, infallibility, then i t  falls 
upon t h e  church and i ts  members to support Scripture's testimony faith- 
fully. The  significance of Scripture's "it is written" is, after all, very 
plain: What Scripture says is what God has said, because it is His Word; 
i t  is God's Word because i t  is Scripture; and it is Scripture, because it was 
given by His divine inspiration. The circle here is unreasonable to  
unbelief only. 
"If the testimony of Scripture on the doctrine of Scripture is not 
authentic and trustworthy," writes John Murray in an  excellent. first 
chapter, "then we must not think that the finality of Christ remains unim- 
paired even if the finality of Scripture is sacrificed. The rejection of the  
inerrancy of Scripture means the rejection of Christ's own witness to 
Scripture" (p. 41). This corresponds exactly to  the considered opinion 
of J. Gresham Machen, the leading figure in the founding of Westminster 
Seminary, "that in the  modern attack on the historical foundations of 
Christianity (he  was referring to the Word of Scripture) nothing less is 
a t  s t ake  than Christianity itself and the Christian gospel" (p. 239 f ) .  
E. J. Young, in the second chapter, attests eloquently for the fact that  
"the O:d Testament books claim to have been spoken by the  Lord" (p. 84).  
In similar vein, in the  third chapter, N. B. Stonehouse shows con- 
v inc ing :~  that the New Testament authority is not something superim- 
posed but derives from "an authority which the books possessed from 
the very moment of their  origin" (p. 93) .  John H. Skilton's chapter on 
the "Transmission of the Scriptures" delves into the question whether a 
present-day Christian can be assured that  the Bible he has in his hand is 
God's Word, or, to put i t  another way, whether in the Greek and  Hebrew 
editions of the Bible the  Biblical scholar has substantially the autographic 
text. A helpful chapter on Scripture's relevancy is contributed by the  
editor of the third revised printing of this book, Paul Wooley; and equally 
useful t o  the preacher is R. B. Kuiper's chapter on Scriptural preaching. 
"Nature and Scripture" is the final chapter. Cornelius Van Til, with close 
reference to the Westniinster Confession, gives the reality, meaning and 
scope of natural or general revelation, also tracing in helpful summaries 
the subject of natural theology in the main theological systems of the 
past. I n  this connection he shows the debt which 13arth and Brunner, 
et a2.; owe to the philosophical phenomenalism or existentialism of K ie rke  
gaard and  Heidegger. 
Having referred to Barth, one should also state that  there is  timely, 
incisive critique of the Swiss theologian's theology of the Word inter- 
spersed throughout the  book. Murray, for example, shows correctly that  
for Barth Holy Scripture is never and can never be "an existing corpus 
of t ru th  given by God to  man by a process of revelation and inspiration in 
past history," that the  Scripture therefore can never be thought of as  
possessing "binding and  ruling authority by reason of what i t  is objec- 
tively, inherently and qualitatively," and that i t  is a t  most a unique 
record and  medium of witness to the revelation God has given in the past, 
a thing that presently "makes i t  the fit medium for t he  ever-recurring 
act of divine revelation" (p. 43 f ) .  If i t  is "to be revelation i t  must be a 
Book Reviews 
-- -. 
4 5 
lo men tar^, contemporaneous, divine act," (p. 104) according to Barthian 
nderstanding of the nature  of revelation, Stonehouse points out. He no 
oubt has his colleagues' full agreement in concluding that  "the Barthian 
h e o l o g ~  of the  Word is  basically as antithetical to the historic Christian 
.octrine of the canonicity of Scripture as  the  Ritschlian" and that it 
sustains a f a r  larger measure of continuity with that  thought than it 
lees with traditional orthodoxy" (p. 104). 
Here is a good book with which to fly through the eye of the wild 
heological hurricane which threatens to wipe out conservative Christian 
hinking on t h e  important article of Scripture, and with it the very (30s- 
Jel itself! Lutheran circles, af ter  all, have not escaped the "Barthian in- 
Tuence'' on the Word, a s  various writers, whether wittingly or naively 
and unconsciously, have a t ten~pted to  sell this theology t o  the church. 
There is a solemn word of caution expressed in the book's foreword which 
is worth  t ak ing  to heart: "It is part of the  indifferentist attitude and 
fostered and encouraged by ecunienical thinking of s wrong sort, 
\r-lli('ll. ill sonic. places fellowship before truth,  and bonhomie and intel- 
lectual respectability before integrity--and in others allows the 'problem 
Of coRlmunication' so to occupy their attelltion that they forget that that is 
the  Prerogative of the Holy Spirit, and that  our task is to be faithflll to 
' the  t ru th  once and for ever delivered to the Saints' " (11. x i ) .  
OI''FENUARIJI\;G SCHKIFT KIRCHE. Dokumentarband der deotsch- 
skandinavischen Theologentagung zu Sittensell 21. bis 25. Februar 
1968, herausgegeben van pastor Peter Hartig. R. Urockhaus Verlag. 
Wuupertal. Verlag Stelten & Co., Bremen. 1968. 213 pages. Paper. 
$4.00. 
This  is a most significant discussion of tt~eological issues arllong 
today, a paperback report on the meeting of the "no other gas- 
pel" movements in G e r ~ l ~ a n  provincial and the Scandinavian state 
churches.  The  meeting of these conservative evangelical cIen~ents in 
L u t h e r a n  Europe was held a t  Sitt,enseri near Hamburg on Feb. 21-35, 
1968. T h e  circumstances a re  paradoxical when viewed fro111 .%merica. 
b u t  nlOSt instructive. These Lutherans are  all in the broad but uneasy 
fel lowship of the Lutheran World Federation. They a r e  C O ~ I S C ~ O U ~  of 
t h e  serious breakdown of church life because of liberalisnl and theological 
laxity.  
The report here published shows that. these concerned Christians can 
no longer endure the bypassing of the issues which the Chrjstian must 
f a c e  in t h e  twentieth cent.ury. They form protest and study organizations, 
n o t  fearing the displeasure of the bishops of the churches: they meet 
f o r  mutual  study and strengthening and publish their payers and decisions. 
Among the  essayists there are such names as Dr. Walter Kuenneth, 
professor a t  Erlangen, Prof. Dr. Martin Wittenberg of Neuendettelsau, 
Prof .  Dr. Joachim Heubach of Kiel, Prof. Dr. Karl H. Rengstort of 
illeunster, Uishop Ro Giertz of Goeteborg. Prof. Dr. Regin Prenter of 
Aarhus, Denmark, Prof. Dr. Sverre Aalen of Oslo, and the list of other 
speakers and participants is impressive. 
The various theological issues arc  grouped around the key words: 
Revelation-Scripture-Church. There is no diplomatic evasion of the 
issues which have so long corrupted the confessional fellowship of Euro- 
pean Lutheranism, in  fact, there is a hunger for the  Word, for the  balm in 
Gilead, which is the only hope for churches long in the slump of a dead 
liberalism. 
The  Lutherans in America should not fail to exanline this record 
of a nonconfessional fellowship, against which a broad protest has arisen 
in Europe. 
I11 addition to the theological essays there a re  most interesting re- 
ports on the Scandinavian churches, suggestions for further work, greet- 
ings from the various groups-a vital report on an important event in 
Lutheranism. 
I t  would be interesting to l~ronlote such a meeting among the conser- 
vative Lutherans in America, from which one might expect a report of 
the issues to be considered in America. Is i t  possible that the members 
of American synods are less free than the  members of state-related 
churches in Europe? Is the American churchman in his affluence less 
ready to take the risk, which his European brother takes? 
Lutherans in America cannot afford to be uninfornied on devolop- 
rrlents in the world of Luthera~lism elsewhere. 
O t t o  E'. Stuitlke 
- -- 
BY OATH CONSIGNED. By Meredith '. Kline. Willia~il B. Eerdnlans 
Publishing Company, Grand Rapids, Michigan. 1968. 110 pages. 
Cloth. $3.75. 
The author, a scholar in Semitics, applies a wealth of Old Testament 
background in presenting the doctrine of Baptism in a way totally com- 
patible with the tenets of Reformed theology. The  major thesis of the 
Scriptures, which is then also applied to the understanding of Baptism, 
is that  Cod enters into a covenant with people. Within this covenant God 
distributes mercy or judgment according to His people's faithfullless or 
the lack of it. Of course this is iln~nediately recognized as the tradi- 
tional covenant theology of the Reformed. Though this reviewer will 
take issne with the covenarit theology in the lines below, he must salute 
tlle author in using the  suzerain-vassal relationship of the ancient Middle 
East  in explaining God's relationship to His people. The Abrahamic and 
Mosaic covenants can certainly be better understood in thc light of arche- 
ological evidence. These covenants with oaths, pron~ises, and curses fit 
the typical scheme of political treaties. 
However, does the coveriant theology actually meet the Biblical data? 
Obvious as i t  might seem, it  is right on the matter of the Law and Gospel 
that  Lutheran and Refornled theologies part. Reformed theology sees the 
Law as  a requirement which God places on His people from Adam, to 
Noah, to Abraham and then finally to the New Testament church. To 
break the covenant is  to bring the judgment of the covenant down on 
Book Reviews 
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47 
-- 
head. Baptism, as did circumcision, ushers a person into a situation 
: God dispenses covenantal judgment and mercy. God's election is 
ssociated with the covenant itse!f or  the entrance into it, but how 
ldividual acts  after h e  has entered the  covenant. I n  keeping with 
juridical activities within the  covenant, circumcision is seen as 
lg under the knife of Cod's judgiiient and  the water of Baptism 
:sts t h e  ordeal by water. The  author pushes and peddles God's judg- 
on every page. The morbid synibolisrn of the  knife nr circumcision 
.he destructive waters of the  Flood in connect~on with Baptism mili- 
against  individual pericopes a s  well as the  entire intent of God's 
:llling love a n d  grace. This is after all the  I?ible's central nlessage. 
au thor  interprets  John's Baptism as an oplmrtunity to flee to God's 
went instead of f ~ o n ~  it. 
[f anything is  clear from t h e  writings of Paal ,  it i s  this, that the 
nant  of God with Abrahani was one solely of promise and was a differ- 
l a t u r e  than t h e  Sinaitir. one. Raptism. as \vas circumcision, is a sign 
ad's continual promise of grace. l:aptisni, and not nly action, is the  
of m y  election. To join oneself to Christ is to be put under His grace 
not  covenant judgment. 
No, i t  is not  exactly fair for  a Lutheran to criticize a conlribution 
a Reformed theologian especially on a matter  like Baptism, s i i~ce  
Keforrlled view t.he entire Scripture from a different perspective 
1 do tI10 Lutherans. For  then1 it is thc! concept of the  covenai~t and for 
.t  is the  Law-Gospel. But sonie ohvioos exegetical strictures 111ust be 
ie. Tile Pauline phrase "circunicision of Christ" (Col. 3 : 11) hardly 
:rs to  Christ's own circumcision. As Par11 does not us~lnlly mention 
cific events in the life of Jesus,  as do the Gospel writt!r-s, the  sugges- 
1 seems absurd. Another possible ~near i i~ ig  pui forth by the author is 
t t h e  ~ h r a s t :  refers to Chr.istia.n experience. The best inlergretation 
t refer r ing  t o  Baptism is not even suggested. The phrase "circrumcision 
Christ" is better biblical evidence for t h e  baptism of infants than the 
.her's atternl>t t.o link it to suzerain-vasscl treaties of the ancient world. 
e a u t h o r  c l a i ~ n s  that  as the t.reaty of Esarhaddon wit11 Ramataia horl~ld 
: sons  and grandsons, even the unborn. so Uaptis~il, a symbol of the 
ienant  relatio~lship, obligates families and desrendeots. If this al-gu- 
:11t were yushed, then any descendent. no ~tlat ter  how Car removed. 
ruld be p f ~  sc entitled to Baptism. Absurd! The  pclVicopes of the gar- 
t s  bringing their  childl.en is disniisscd in a few words a s  referring to 
sus' allproval of parents who esercised t.heir authority in  bringing 
em to  .lesus. Even form cri t icisn~ wooltl propose tha t  these words sug- 
s t  a tirile in the early church where children were being ext.lucled frorn 
e i r  rightful piace in the kingdom. This reviewer sees Inore vallie in 
e se  pericopes in esl,lainirig infant Uaptjsm than i n  the  t.rcaty of Esar- 
~ d d o n .  Dr. Kline has been very resourcefnl in s h n r i n ~  ul, the ~ e f o r n l e d  
Ivenant doctrine of Baptism with the evidence of the most recent archae- 
ogical finds. However, Lutheran and Reformed theologicans are going to 
,n t inue  to interpret the Riblical data differently. 
D a ~ i r l  P .  Scacl- 
T I I E  SOURCES 0 1 ~  I I )OCTRI~ES  xSI) THE FALL OF ORICIXXL SIN. 
By F- R. T e n n a n t .  Schockell Books, Inc.. Xew York, 1968. 390 Pages. 
Paper.  $2.45  
F- R. T e n n n n t .  is probably best remeinbered for his two volunle Philo- 
-9op7&i(!ai The02oyY. H, also published three hooks on the  general subject 
of s in -  T h e  t h i r d  i s  t he  book ullder review. After presentinf; ;in exegesis 
a n d  a l i t e r a r y  c r i t i c i s in  of the  Fall--story, in which he  makes reference 
the "crude n a i v e t . ~  of J 'S delineation of J. a h veh" the  author  offers R 
r a t h e r  d e t a i l e d  s t u d y  of the et.hnologica1 origin and  relations of the 
Genesis a c c o u n t .  f-Te derives eleniellts of the  biblical record froin the  early 
Hebrew r e l i g i o n  a n d  points to parallels in Phoenician, Egyptian,  Babylon- 
ian,  Greek, and India11 ;~ccounts. Ile "that  the  material is too 
scanty  t o  enable us to  reconstruct Israel's religious s ta te  a n d  legendary 
~ o s s e s s i o ~ l s  w i t h  a n y  degree of colu~bletelless l>re\-iollsly t o  the l l a t i o l l~  
ent rance  into C a n a a n . "  In  his discussioas of t.he ~)sycholog.ical origin of 
t h e  n a r r a t i v e  of t . l ~ e  Fall Tennant  declares t ha t  whether a corrupt s ta le  
of h m a n  nature preceded by a n  incorru1)l s ta te  or  not,  this is  the 
most  vivid a n d  n a t . u r a l  \vay of exhibiting the  t ruth tha t  in God's primary 
purllose n l a n  w-as incorrugt so that evil niight be regarded as having a 
secondary c k l a l ' a c t e r .  Not limiting his  t reatment  of Original Sin to t he  bib- 
lical a c c o u n t s  a l o n e ,  the author carefully examines the teachings of Ec- 
c l e s i a s t i c ~ ~ ,  the Oracles ,  Philo, ihe Rnhbirlical l i terature of Judaism, and  
t h e  P s e u d e p i g - r a p h  i c  literatiire. then tilrns to the  teachings of St.  Paul ,  
t h e  pos t -Augus t . i  n i a n  Fathers ,  and concludes that  t he  development of the  
highly con1plic:it.ed doclrille of Original S in  \\-as Icss t he  outcome of a 
s t r i c t  e x e g e t i c a l  p u r s u i t  t.han the exercise of speculation. H e  grants  tha t  
t he  speculation wa.s guided by t.he Scriptnrczs; hut i t  was also infllier~ced by 
mater ia l s  a f f o r d e d  by  contelnporary science and philosophy. A provocative 
s tudy  of t h e  c o l ~ c t e l l t  of death as int.roducc?d by Ben Sirach and  the  t reat-  
men t  of P h i l o ' s  m e t h o d  of cornhilling Hebrew exegesis a n d  Greek philo- 
sophy a r e  i l l u n l i l l a t i n g  to any st l ide~lt  of the inter-testamental period. 
I11 h e r  i n t r o d u c t i o n  bI;iry Frances Thelen observes tha t  teachers in  t h e  
major  l i b e r a l  s e m i n a r i e s  dur ing  the  first third of t he  twentieth century 
concerned t . h e ~ n s e l v e s  very litt le with the  subject of sin. Thei r  work was 
done in n a t n l - a 1  theology and in metaphysics; they had  litt le t ime for 
t h e  rnore s p e c i a l  q u e s t i o ~ l s  of revealed theology. Professor Tennant  broke 
th i s  s i l e ~ l c e  on  the subject of sin and man a s  the s inner  when he produced 
t h i s  work.  An i n d e x  of authors and  sllbjects is fortunately included in 
t h e  text.  
.John F. Jolinson 
T H E  E N C O ~ , ! N T E R  BETIVEES CTIRISTIASITY A N D  SCIENCE. By 
R i c h a r d  Bube. 15'111. B. Eerdnlans Publishing Conlpany, Grand Rapids, 
1968. 315 p a g e s .  Cloth. $5.95 
T h i s  s y n ~ y o s i u l l l  volume is intended for those individuals who a r e  
confrol l ted by w h a t  they believe a re  apparent  conflicts between traditional 
Chr is t ian  d o c t . r i n e  and  the  clainls of modern scientific research. Th i s  
book i s  a i l r l e d  espec ia l ly  a t  those whose Christian fai th is  threatened by 
Book Reviews 49 
td questions tha t  have been raised by their  use of the scientific 
1 the areas of biology, astroncmy, geology, the  social sciences and 
;y. 
xichard R. Bube, professor of Materials Science and Electrical 
ing a t  Stanford  University, has  edited this  volume with the  help 
'wen Gingerich, F. Donald Eckelniann, Walter R. Hearn, Stanley 
uist and David 0. Moberg. Concerning the  illen who wrote the 
s m ~ r i s i n g  th is  volume the  editor stated in his preface: "This 
i been written by men who profess to be servants, disciples, and 
of Jesus Christ.  They acknowledge Him a s  the Savior and Lord 
lives. They a r e  a t  the  same time recognized in the scientific com- 
1s responsible contributors to  the varioas fields of scielitific knowl- 
'our of the  contributors a r e  listed as n1enlhel.s of The American 
*filiation, a n  organization comprised of Christian scientists 
~logians.  
E n c o u n t ~ l  betzcecn (Ihrist i trnity trnrl Rciet~cc is organized into ten 
3 and begins with a basic disctlssion of the nature of science and of 
lnity so t h a t  the  terliis of the  sl~bject  matter  will bc apparellt to 
der fro111 the  outset of the presentation. This is then followed by 
iption of. lilethods for unders t~nd ing  both thc  liatural world and 
lical record and an attempt is made to show that  each has its own 
!e and no conflict should result bet.\veen the two areas of revela- 
'he last six chapters present the relation of the sciences of astron- 
he Physical sciences, the  biological sciences. ps.vc.hology arid the 
jciellces to Christianity. 
ch contrihutol- has concluded his chapter \vith a bibliogral>hy for 
research. An indes of sllhjects and of nawes of theologians and 
s t s  Quoted comglete the symposium. 
le Dosition taken by Dr. Bube and his colleguee is to the effect that 
ible has no  answers to give to questions raisc:d by the sciences. 
ling to these men the purpose of the Bible is to set. forth the g.osl)el 
us Christ. t o  tell sinners how to be saved and  the Scril~tui'es do not 
r t  to give information on such sciences as astronorn!', cosl~lo!oC3'. 
Y, the social sciences, ~)sychologg or on any  phase of human exist- 
which call be investigated by the mind  of m;in. 
our  of the  ten chapters of this synlposium have bee11 written by the 
of tlle book. Dr. Bube, who in 1955 published through the Moody 
, the book: '1'0 fit,ery -3fwn i,ins~r:e?.,: i Gl/.stewl.atic Gtuliy o? 
1 1 1 1 . ( 1 1  BCL.Y~S of Ch.,-,j.stic~.n Doctrine. Although the latter volume does 
a y  111uch about God as Creator or describe the crc:alion of the first 
Dr.  Ilube does accept the statement of St .  I'aul that -4dam was the 
man,  that  he  sillncd arid as  a result of Adam's  fall sin has passed 
all Illen. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ r ,  in  T h e  Enccju,ltel. Belzcrcn Chris t iani ty  and 
Bllbe is willing to accept organic evolutioll as  as the 
: of Inan fl-olll some form of animal life. The  co-authors of the 3ym- 
l m  all assume the of the interpretations of science and where 
a r e  ill direct collflict with the Bible. the clear Sc r i~ tu ra l  statements 
have to be reinterpreted. Dr. Bube correctly has that the 
jict between the  Bible and the sciences i e  a matter of interpretation 
a n d  I.hus in chapter  4 h e  devotes a nurnbt~r  of ).)ages t.0 a disc.ussi0n of 
t h e  r u l e s  of Biblical i ~ l t e ~ - ~ ) ~ ~ t a t i o n .  The  pr imary  sense of t h e  is the 
l i  t e r : t l .  a rule Rube does not, conveniently s tate .  1)r.  LSube does not corn- 
I > l . e h e n d  t ha t  a nunlher of signiticr,n~ doctrinal int,or~l.etntiolls Of the New 
T €!st x m e n t  rest on a litel-al, nat a s y n ~ b o l i ~ o l  r allegorical in te rpre ta t ion  
of t h e  first  three chapters  of Genesis. T h a t  there  is a differellce betweell 
s c i e n c e  and  sciclntism is a fact tha t  Euhe does not  take il l to considerat ion.  
T h e  assulupt  ion o f  t he  c?ditor and his  colleazues is that. t h e  inter l j re tat ions 
of s c i e n c e  arc, correct,  even though scientific views :ire c o l ~ s t i ~ ~ l t l ~  chang- 
 in^. I n  t.heir hiblio:raphies 1.he cont r ib~i lors  l ist  only t hose  sciellt ists and  
t h e o l o g i a l l s  who atlvocate and suppol-t their  position. T h a t  t he r e  a r e  
s c i e n t i s t s  and t,heologial1s who dis;lgree \vith t he  I ~ a s i c  p r c s~ l l j~os i t i o r l s  
Un d e r l  yin; t Ile ap1)ro;tch of the aut.hors of th i s  hook to sc ience  a n d  religion, 
n o  r e a d e r  ~vollid susi)r:cr. f rom the wading  of this volume. 
T H E  C;OSIbEL OF LIAPTIS31 fiy Ricli:trd .lungkuntz. Cancord ia  Publish- 
Ing  Jlorlbe. S t .  Louis .  137 p:ljirs. I 'al)e~- y3.50 
3111ch of rr:crnt diseussioll and  research is 11ow ~n t tde  ava i lab le  t o  t he  
l a i t y  i l l  this ver r  rcxduble ])al)c:rbac:k by the esec :~~t ive  secl 'etary of t he  
?AI issour i  Synod's Conin~ission O I I  Theo!ojiy. Thcrc  h a s  been i n  recent  
> - e a r s  i1 resurxence of irit.erest in th(+ sacrenlents,  especial ly  Raptism. 
T h e  a u t ~ h o ~ .  osc-\s 1)ihlical i n l a ~ e r y  in a vc.1-y creative s t y l e  a n d  analysis.  
I31s f i r s t  c1ia1)ter is :t \ .erg cl.t!ative and  i ~ i ~ z g i n a t i v e  honlily on  t h e  signifi- 
c a n c e  of water i n  I.hc Itible t h ro~ lzh  wliic11 the au thor  l i n k s  creat ion and  
r e d e l l i p t i o n .  Use is made  o f  t h ~  recent Qun1ral-l firids ill descr ibing t he  
b a p t . i s r n s  o f  .lolrn a n d  . I ~ S I I S .  Thi: au tho r  is al. his theological  best in 
thaw ch:iptcra which t i c  Cal)tis:t~ togcth(:r with t he  resur rec t ion  a n d  t he  
w h o l e  nf Christian life. ,L\ chapter 011 hnl!tismal ceremonies  will  m a k e  th i s  
t.>ook itn ideal xif t  for  the  adult convert o r  the  ~ ) :~ re i i t s  of bapt ized infants. 
T H E  S1IOIITE:R C.L\TECHISRl ILLUSTRATED. By J o h n  Whitecross.  
Thcl 13iiri1ier of  T r u t h  Trust .  London. 196s.  1 7 1  pages.  Cloth. $2.50. 
fJu blishcd first i n  lR2S. Tlr c 811v).tc).  (*(rtct,l~.isnl. I l1?~st l -r1becl  is n cate- 
chis111 for Pltritans w i th  the  Iiible ljassages replaced by s h o r t  i l lustrat ive 
s t o r i e s .  The preface is correct in i ts reninrk t ha t  even t h e  general  reader  
x v i l l  no t  find the  lnater ial  unintt.resl.ing. The  Lu the ran  g a s t o r  will find 
m a n y  of thesc anccdotes,  in spi te  of the i r  captivating conten t .  l i t t le  111ore 
t h n r i  succinct e sa~ l lp l e s  of ljioos ~nora l iz ing .  F o r  e l i a n l ~ l e ,  u n d e r  t he  com- 
m a n d m e n t  dealills w i th  adultery the vir tues  of a s lave  s h i p  cap ta in  a r e  
e s t o l l e d  who fasted while he was t ransport ing female s l aves  i n  order  to  
keep himsclf moral ly  pure.  U~itler baptism there  is men t ion  of a minis ter  
who r e f l ~ s e s  l o  bailtize t he  dying child of parents  descr ibed as "depraved." 
In refus ing  to adminis te r  the ba l~ t i sm and  in calling d o w n  t h e  bereaved 
p n r e n t . ~ .  the  ~ n i n i s t r r  i s  pictured heroic. The  Puritanic;al approach seenls 
Book Reviews 5 1 
.hat fo r  the  glory of God, i t  is  necessary to awaken fear in people's hearts. 
i f t e r  fear has  been awakened in the heart, then the people should strive 
ifter great works of religious piety. This is for the Calvinist way of 
;hinking, a sign of God's grace. I t  is no wonder that  the  Lutheran 
-'lergyman, whose theology centers in the cross as the expression of God's 
love and forgiving grace rather than in the  awesome glory of G-od, will 
find t h e  material strange and  himself feeling a little uncomfortable. With 
these warnings, and they a r e  solely Lutheran in character, a qualified 
endoresenlent can still be given to the The Shorter Ccrtechism Illustrc~,ted 
as a type of religious Readers Digest-frequently not profound, but always 
very interesting. Jus t  the reading of it gives the feeling that the reader 
is somewhere on the craggy, cold damp coast of Great Britian, huddled in 
a n  English peasant's hut, as he strives to know the law of God and fulfill 
i t  in the  fashion of the English free Protestants. 
Dtr?.~id P .  Sccrer 
THE MARK O F  CAIN. By Stuart  Barton Rabbage. Wm. B. Eerdmans 
Publishing Company, Grand Rapids, 1966. Paper. 157 pages. 6/-net. 
MAN: THE NEW HUMANISM. By Roger Lincoln Shinn. Vol. VI in 
New Directions in Theology Today. Westminster Press. Philadelphia. 
1968. 207 pages. Paper. $2.25. 
UKFINTSHED MAN AND THE IILIAGINATION. BY Ray L. Hart. Herder 
& Herder, New York, 1968. 118 pages. Cloth. $9.50. 
Man is his own favorite. subject, sonlethi~ig these three hooks have in 
ComnlOn. But there the sinlilarity ceases. Babbage adinirable depicts 
man ' s  plight, as well as his hope, with a sprightly overview of the poets, 
as Aristotle called all literary men. Shinn, a s  rlsrlal crisp and clear, de- 
ta i l s  the  new  humanism currelltly sweeping through theology as well as 
through society. Hart's effort, lrlucli nlore aiiibitious, digs at the roots 
a n d  ontology of revelation, man's problern of knowing himself, God, and 
t.hings in general. 
T h e  great merit of Habbagc's book (as  also his earlier iTInn i n  3'atu.r~ 
and GI-uce) is that he is able not only to trace ~ h t  fact of man's sin. its 
gravi ty ,  its acconlpanying zingst and alie~iation, its ineradicability, its 
close connection with the  terrifying enigma of death-illustrating this 
a l l  with pertinent references to the best in current I i tcrature-but then 
goes on to nail dowu this "serious business of heaven," as C!. S. Lewis 
p u t s  i t ,  of how God in Christ is our exceeding joy. The book is bound 
1) to  afford the ~reac l i e r  with 3 lot of good. ready-made illrlstrations 
f r o m  recent literatore: and 2 )  goad him on to a little more reading on 
h i s  own, i r ~  order to keep aBrc:lst of what his jleople, especially his high 
school and college students, are reading. 
Shinn begins with the truism that "man is constalitly struggling to 
unders tand hi~nself." Neo-orthodoxy had stressed anew for our time the 
s inful  depravity of man, hut, as  Shinn shows, a retooled humanism is the 
rlew mood in theology, an  optimism about man and his potential. Stimu- 
la ted by such factors as the new technology, urbanization, social erigi11r:er- 
ing, mass communications, etc., the new humanism throbs with 1 )  pro- 
found appreciation for and celebration of the  secular; and 2 )  ceaseless 
quest for identity and meaning on the part of the individual who finds 
himself in a world that ,  on the  one hand, threatens him with obliteration, 
and,  on the other, with alienation from his fellows. In  his second part 
Shinn surveys happenings in the dialog between theology and the other 
disciplines on the problem of man, specifically the new biology, the chang- 
ing realm of psychology, the always volatile social sciences, and finally 
the  very conteniporary philosophies of life like existentialism afid Marx- 
ism. His third and concluding section is an  attempt to bring theology up 
to date aiid thus, hopefully, to help the church speak more relevantly to 
the  times. The  danger as  "the conte~nporary Christian doctrine of man 
opts for the open future  rather than for a fixed nature  of man" (p. 137) is, 
a s  Shinn correctly warns, that  "sometimes i t  forgets that  inan is a crea- 
ture." (P. 153) When the new humanism thus raises a flag for man, i t  
does so with naive sort  of optimism about human perfectibility and  with 
the  old tendency of acting a s  God. Over against this ,  says Shinn, "it is 
the  Christian faith that  in Jesus Christ men have seen a new revelation 
of divine love and human possibilities" (p. 179) and  Christian huiilanism 
of t h e  right sort is that  "the man Jesus has the  compelling grace that 
calls out of others the  recognition of God and of thei r  brothers" and  in so 
doing of "self-recognition." (p. 181) This, we can say, is a great and  pious 
hope, but, a s  Luther showed the theological world so convincingly in his 
great  C'o?~~?nentnry on Gtalatiuns. it inakes the  mistake of Augustine, which 
has  plagued the church ever since, of mixing sanctification and justifi- 
cation by speaking of faith a s  formed and adorned by charity, good works, 
o r  sanctifying grace-or whatever other name it is given--instead of the  
reverse: Charity, love, good works, sanctification, being formed and 
adorned by faith which alone justifies and which, like a fecund mother, 
brings all the  rest with it. 
"Perhaps not since John Henry Newman's Anglican study . . . has a 
theological treatise been so significant in its import, so sophisticated in 
i t s  argument, so learned and  so literate." is the prediction of the  sumiilary 
on the jacket of Hart 's  book. Those are  broad claims which this reviewer 
has  no mind to debate; but one thing is sure, Har t  weaves an almost 
incredibly difficult and intricate pattern---largely the result of a heavy, 
educationist sort of jargon-as he probes the problenl of nian's self-under- 
standing, and the  meaning and significance of re\-elat.ion. I t  leaves the  
work solnewhat long on linguistic analysis and short on clearly delivered 
content. A writer has a perfect right to make his readers stretch their  
mental inuscles to the limit, but, in turn,  the  readers have a need t o  
stop short of mental hernia. Har t  seems to be a t  his best when he s i f t s  
between tradition and imaginative discourse in the  theological task. Also 
his "Appendices," which occupy the last hundred pages, a re  considerably 
more transparent and accessible. With his rejection of Neo-orthodoxy's 
theology of crisis ( I t  is "now in a state of terminal illness," along wi th  
existentialistic theology, according to Har t ) ,  a s  well as  conservative 
Biblical theology, he  seems to opt for a kind of Schleiermacher redivivus, 
a revival currently going on in theological circles. Hart's foreword indi- 
Book Reviews 
cates tha t  h is  work is t he  frui t  of his teaching a t  Vanderbilt's divinity 
school, though much of i t  took shape during pleasant summers in a cabin 
nea r  Polebridge, on the North Fork  of the Flathead, in Montana. This  is 
g rea t  country, with the  towering peaks of Glacier P a r k  lying just t o  
t h e  east. Having read the  charming tale of reminiscence by  Chet Iiuntley 
(The Generous Yeurs), w h o  is a native Montanan, s imul t aneous l~  with 
Hart 's production, the  thought inevitably crossed my mind that  the 
la t te r  would have benefited immeasurably by having absorbed a little 
more  of t h e  honiespun and  down-to-earth sagacity of the B ig  Sky Country's 
citizens and  some of the  piercing, pointed clarity with which Glacier's 
lofty peaks penetrate the  heavens, all of which make living in the  Flat- 
head  one  of life's greatest experiences ( t h e  "seven fat  years" in this 
reviewer's ministry) .  
E. F. h-lz1y 
RUDOLF BULTMANN IN CATHOLIC THOUGHT. By Thomas F .  O'hleara 
and  Donald M. Weisser. Herder and Herder, New YOI-k. 1968. 254 
Pages- Cloth. $5.95. 
R ~ ~ c l o l f  6 u l t ) n n ~ ~ n  in Catholic TAolcyht does not present anything new 
o r  astonishing in the  way of Rult?nnnnio. An expression of gratitude 
f rom the  Marburg theologian appears in t h e  forward, but unlike Walther 
Schmithals '  The Theology of R~idolf B~tl tmann,  recently published in 
Engl ish  translation by Augsburg, it does share the rrihil ob.vtat of the 
IXeat theologian himself. While Schmithals attempted t o  remain neutral 
d u r i n g  t h e  autopsy, the Catholic theologians have vivisect,ed th r  corpse 
wi thout  fearing to identify diseased and healthy organs. In reviewing 
t h i s  kind of a book, this  reviewer is continually amazed a t  the vitality 
a n d  the  vivaciousness with which the Catholic theologians are attacking 
theology. You might even say that  their  attitude is downright Protes- 
t a n t !  Since Bultmann is not one of their 'boys', they can view the whole 
scene  wi th  a n  attitude of aloofness withoat incri~ilinating themselves with 
a self-styled objectivity. 
The re  are ten contributors, all with impeccable credentials, if their 
views had to be summarized into one sentence. it would be this. Bultnlann 
h a s  seen a valid thrust of the text in reading it for the  existential an- 
alysis ,  but  this one thrust  certainly does not exhaust all what the Bihlt? 
in t ends  to convey. All of the chapters are weil written and  the reader can 
look forward to some delightful theological treats. Some of the usual 
anti-Bultmannian things a re  said here again. Typical examples include: 
W h y  doesn't Rultmann demythologize Christ o i ~ t  of religion? Isn't Bult- 
m a n n  a Karltian after al l?  Hasn't Bultinann made all theology nierely 
anthropology? I n  addition, there are  sorne contributions not previo~lsly 
found  in the Bultmann analysis books. A chapter on "Demythologizing in 
t h e  School of Alexandria'' studies a very early precursor of the Marburg 
theologian. While Bultmann saw reality and myth throughout the Bible. 
the Alexandrians considered the Old Testament myth and  the S e w  Testa- 
m e n t  reality. Schnackenburg's chapter on "Form-Criticism and the Gos- 
pels" is one of the sanest contribution in this field. If t h e  method can be 
divorced fro111 Eultmann's virtually agnostic view to past history and 
events, it actually begins to open the meaning of the I t  sees so 
much value in a word, it call actually be called the  "proof word" method 
and  builds a strong foundation beneath the doctrinal folllldation of the 
church. The most critical essay is offered by Josef Blank in "Bultmann 
and the Gospel According to John." Eultmann is justly chastised for his 
non-historica] view which in the end limits the  incarr:ation to a "that" 
and  destroys the very fiber of John's Gospel. A chapter entitled "The 
Sacraments in Bultmann's Theology" is not unexpected in a Catholic 
book. Aside from the fact that Rultnlann lllight he dead wrong in attach- 
ing the sacranleilts in Hellenisln instead of Qumran, the author sees a 
Prominent contribution in that the church is now regarding the  sacra- 
ments not as magic but as preaching. The concludingr chapter by the 
editor, O'JIeara, gives an overview of theology in the wake of Bultmann. 
Short  descriptions of Eheling. Fuchs, Metz and bloltmann-are given. 
This is the kind of book that makes even the most general type of reader 
feel like an espert a t  completion. Highly recommended for all who want 
to know more about what the fight is all about. 
David P.  Scner 
ROYCE A S D  HOCKlSG AMERICAN IDEALISTS. BY D. S. Robinson. 
The Chris toph~r  Publishing I-Iouse, Boston, 196s. 175 Pages. Cloth. 
$5.00. 
Josiah Royce and IVilliam Ernest Hocking a re  recognized as the 
founders of a distirictly Anierica~i school of idealism. In  his book Dr. 
Robinson has provided ;1 series of essays on the  philosophy of both men. 
The essays deal mainly wit.h the logical and metaphysical coilcepts of the 
two inen. although their ideas concrriling God, goliticaI philosophy, and 
education also treated. In part 111 of his book the author oEers a 
numher of letters of both Royce aiid Hocking. Bibliographies of both nien 
a re  appended. 
One of the most. helpful essays in the book deals with Royce on the 
origin and developnient of philosopl~ical terminology. Royce contributed 
articles to the I_)i.clionclry of Philo.$oph.!j n?id P s y c l ~ o l o g y  on Greek, Latin, 
Scho:;~stic. Icant's, and Hegel's ternlinology. The author summarizes 
Royce's conclusions on the development of Greek terminology by distin- 
guishing a pre-critical slage in which philosophers rliodified common 
terms. a critical stage. in which philosophical terms were deliberately 
correlated with philosophical systems, and a post-Aristotelian Hellenistic 
stage in which philosophical terminology was considerably enriched. He 
a:so shows how Royce stresses the influence of Aristotle on the Scholastics, 
going back to the commentaries of Boethius and tracing the development 
of the medieval scholast.icism identified with Thomas. Royce notes that  
"the central chal-actel. of the whole scholastic vocabulary remains its 
elaborate use of distinctions. The method of distinctions had already beell 
carried forth by Aristotle. . . Scholasticism made the method of distinc- 
tions niore and more an ideal" (p. 39).  The author also shows how Locke 
Book Reviews 5 5 
injected caprice in the  use of terms, thus bringing about a certain dis- 
organization of technical language. 
H e  finds in Kant a great lover of analysis and synthesis and points 
to the  oft evaluated question of the influence of Kant upon the later 
terminology of Hegel. In  his essay on Hegel Royce pointed out what stu- 
dents of philosophy often have to learn the hard way, namely, that a 
superficial knowledge of the terminology employed by Hegel can be 
extremely misleading. I t  i s  necessary, says Royce, to summarize the whole 
of Hegel's Logik in order to  restate his definition accurately. 
Hocking, a student of Royce a t  Harvard, is recognized as  the leading 
representative of absolutistic personalism in the United States. His  
magnunt opus, entitled the  ,&feclning of God in Hunmn Kzpsrience (1912) ,  
sought to relate personal experience to a reality which is beyond physical 
nature  a s  well a s  beyond the separate minds of others, a reality which 
can be described as a being with whom a personal conlmunication is pos- 
sible. T h a t  ultimate reality is of course, God; because we can know this 
"other mind" we can also know "other nlinds." The fact. of God in human 
experience, says Mocking, makes possible not only the developn~ent of self- 
consciousness but also social consciousness. Sooner or later  in their phil- 
osophizing idealists get back to  the ontological argument. Hocking sum- 
marizes i t  this way: I have an idea of God, therefore I have an experience 
of God. Reality dwells in the self, in nature, or in another mind; God in- 
cludes these three. For  Hocking God is the all-inclusive being who unites 
self, other minds, and nature in a colnlnunal spiritual reality that is ineff- 
able, but  known in the  n~ystical experiences of mer.. God is ~~letaphysically 
real even though his essence might surpass the powers of hunian compre- 
hension. 
While philosophical idealism inight not. be one of the burning issues 
of our day (either in philosophy or theology) this reviewer feels that  some 
sor t  of idealistic-intuitive interpretation of reality might become the "ism" 
t o  creep into the vacuum caused by the demise of t.he death of God 
theology and the growing impatience with an anti-metaphysical analytical 
philosophy. Ijertrand Russell once opined that every philosopher is soine- 
t ime o r  other haunted by the idealist lurking deep within his soul. 
,John F'. Johnson 
INCLUDE M E  OUT. Confessions of an  Ecclesiastical Coward. By Collin 
Morris. Abingdon Press, Nashville and New York, 1968. 99 pages. 
Paper. $1.25. 
Morris cuts the theological air like a hot knife cuts through butter. 
T h e  obvious iconoclastic intent of the author could be dismissed except 
t h a t  Dr. Morris has been the president of the United Church of Zambia. 
T h e  au thor  was driven to  this scathing critique of the  conitemporary 
church from a n  obvious feeling of imyatie~lce with the church's much 
ta lking and little doing. This reviewer found hin~self falling into the sin 
of giving Dr. Morris a theological classification and rating, e. g. funda- 
mentalist ,  old time liberal, Tillichian, ctc. But t.o state this here would 
destroy the author's intent and prejudice the reader. Stones a re  tossed 
in every direction, so the reader should not feel prematurely safe. 
Christianity is a bread and butter issue. Whoever brings hoine the 
bacon, carries the ball and stands up to be counted a t  the critical time can 
be called Christian. Fitting into this category a r e  Catholic and Bible be- 
lieving missionaries, massacred in Africa, as well as a Unitarian who 
rowed his boat into a nuclear blast area. The culprits are  negotiators for 
t he  Anglican-Methodist Union and the theologians with their long volu- 
monous productions and seemingly self-contradictory statements. Such 
issues as  the choice between fermented and unfermented beverages or 
between ordination, re-ordination, or com~nissioning become small issues 
i n  comparison to paganism and starvation in Africa. Though not immune 
to  modern theological thought, Dr. Morris throws some of his .iibes in that  
direction. Is the world that  rejected the traditional God going to  accept 
the  'God beyond God' ala' Tillich and Robinson? Cut to the core are those 
whose acquaintance with the theological giants is limited only to the cult 
of devotion and name dropping. Bonhoeffer's Letters and Barth's Commen- 
tary on the Ronzuns are "venerated by all and read only by those looking 
for a suitable Ph. D. subject." Morris's words on church assemblies, with 
their traditional dictums on international problems is well worth the  modest 
price of this paperback. Someone has to have the gall and the guts to tell 
the king about his non-existent new clothing. Dr. Morris has done this for 
the  church-like it or not. 
Dn17irZ P .  Scner 
THE THESES WERE NOT POSTED. By Erwin Iserloh. Translated by 
Jared Wicks. Beacon Press, Boston, 1968. 116 pages. Cloth. 
If this title suggests a negative view on the Reformation, the author, 
professor of medieval and modern church history a t  the University of 
Muenster, and a Roman Catholic, readily removes any such thought with 
his concluding chapter on "But the Reformation Began on October 31, 
1517." Iserloh, who studied under Joseph Lortz (often credited with 
initiating a Inore accurate and fa i r  appraisal of Luther in Roinan Catholic 
scholarship), is concerned merely to prove a theory, which has been 
bandied about in Germany for the last few years, that the dramatic nail- 
ing of the 95 Theses on the  church door at Wittenberg never really took 
place, but that  Luther, following accepted scholarly procedure, mailed 
his missile, which was destined to shake the  world like i t  had never been 
shaken before, to the proper officials, like Archbishop Albrecht of Mainz, 
on that  date, October 31. Only later did the Theses become public, accord- 
ing to Iserloh. 
I t  is one of history's interesting propositions, some 450 years later, 
and Iserloh argues for it in considerable detail; but, after all the firing, 
the traditional view seems still to be left unshaken, because some of his 
evidence is tenuous a t  best. In the process, however, Iserloh goes over 
events and material connected with the beginning of the Reformation 
in a sympathetic and objective manner. Luther is given generally fair 
treatment, as is the  church of that  day, too, which desperately needed 
Book Reviews 5 7 
reform. Iserloh closes t h e  argument for  his position with the thought, 
that,  only  if t he  posting of the  95 Theses is understood a s  a legend, will 
we see  "to what extent  t h e  theological and  pastoral failures of the  bishops 
set t h e  scene for  Lu the r  to  begin t h e  divisive Reformation we know, 
instead of bringing reform from within t h e  church" (p. 110). The aP0- 
dosis of his  conclusion seems to be grounded in some fact and validity, 
but  t h e  condition he  sets down in the  protasis of his argument, of the  post- 
ing of t h e  Theses being understood as a legend, seems unwarranted. 
B. F. Klr4y 
PRESBYTERIAN WORSHIP I N  AMERICA. BY Julius Melton. Johll 
Knox Press. Richmond, 1967. 173 pages. Cloth. $5.75- 
Tension between freedom and order in worship has  always existed 
among  American Christians. In this book, the first fully documented his- 
torical survey of American Presbyterial1 worship from the tinle of the  
Revolution to date, Professor Melton shows how Presbpterialls have dealt 
w i th  t h e  problem of free versus formal prayer, unifor~rlity versr~s diversity, 
the  use of the old prayer fornis versus the creation of new forms. Frorn 
t h e  f irs t ,  Presbyterianism has stressed Word-centered liturgies, eillploying 
i n  worship only that  which was comrnalided by the \Vord of God. But such 
l i turg ies  have also been influenced by the Anglican approach to worship 
as well a s  by the  approach to worship of groups sten~nling from the 
"radical  Reformation." Depel~ding on the sitr~ation a t  the tirne they set 
sai l ,  Presbyterians arr ived in the new \vol.ld with varying worship at t i -  
tudes.  T h e  result was a large degree of tolprance ill coloilial Presbyterian- 
ism. T h e  author shows how through the succeeding decades Presbyterians 
reshaped their worship and  its theory to fit  their changing views and their  
nation's changing cultilre. He sets forth t.hc ideas and practices of Xorth 
a n d  South ,  Old School and Sets- School. pro-liturgical and anti-liturgical 
vicars. clergy arid laymen. 
T h e  interaction between Presbylerinriisni and the camp lneeting t n e  
of service on the  American frontier is detailed in delightful fashion ( p .  
44ff.). T h e  "new measilres" of Charles G .  Finncy were seen as llecessary 
by t h e  New School Presbyterians who ~ n a d e  evangelistic effectivelless the 
cr i te r ion  of proper worship. The  author presents the worship vit.ws of 
nlen l ike  Charles W. Raird, Charles and A. 4. Hodge. Levi A. Ward, and 
Char les  i V .  Shields. Princeton Selninary's Clharles Nodge desired a "wide 
a n d  safe  liliddle ground" between Puri tan and Anglican prac t ice-nanre l~ .  
" the  optional use of the liturgy. or forrn of public service. havilll: t h e  sarlc- 
t ion  of the church." Ilodge's most iriiportant contribution. according t o  
Melton, was his suggestion that the denomination prod~lcr  an officially 
approved llrayer hook ( p .  751. 
T h e  keen interest some wid-lgth cel~turj '  American la~l l len  took ill 
m a t t e r s  of worship is e>;e~ilp[i[ied h y  the actions of Lt:vi A.  Ward, a 
weal thy  and pronlinent insurance broker and member of one of the pioneer 
faillilies of Rochester. Neb-$- York. had constructed in 1553. opposite 
h i s  family's estate. a presbyterian church which became u n i q ~ e  llot only 
becallse of its handsome Rolnanesque building but. hecnuse 01 its liturgical 
service. Ward wanted Presbyterian services to afford more opportunity for 
congregational participation. He desired both a n  impressive setting and 
expressive worship (p. 94). 
The ferment during the second half of the  19th century in matters 
touching upon worship forms led to the publication in 1906 of the first 
book of common worship among American Presbyterians. The features of 
this officially sanctioned pattern of worship, which has continued to the 
present day, are: the union of Word and Sacrament as the  normal diet of 
worship, readings from both testaments on a regular systematic basis, 
considerable congregational participation, inclusion of each of the familiar 
elements of adoration, confession, thanksgiving, supplication, and  inter- 
cession, and the provision of a lectionary built around the Christian year. 
Melton's concise, well-researched, and well-written book will be valu- 
able for students of American religious history as  well a s  for pastors and 
laymen responsible for guiding the worship of their congregations. 
Gerhard Aho 
GROWTH AND LIFE IN THE LOCAL CHURCH. By H. Boone Porter, 
Jr., The Seabury Press, New York, 1968. 1 2 4  pages. Paper. $2.50. 
This is still one more book added to the massive renewal literature. 
I t  is a very practical book. I t  does not attack the viability of the  parish 
form of the church, but assumes it. 
The author begins with the assumption that  the churches must grow. 
A church which continues statically has suffered a shift of motivation. 
I t  loses sight of its professed objectives and continues for reasons other 
than that  for which it was founded. 
The author attempts to provide some solutions. The discussion which 
this reviewer found most fruitful and interesting revolved about the prob- 
lem of manpower. The author looks a t  the many small parishes which 
can't get anywhere because of lack of clergy leadership. He points out that  
some small, rural churches deliberately seek out uninspiring, incompetent 
pastors because they know that is the only kind of man they can hold. 
In offering practical solutions for church growth, Porter suggests that  
we ought to remember that people often join churches for seemingly in- 
adequate reasons. Rather than rage against this, we should accept it and 
use these people who are the "new edge" of being in the church a s  those 
who can most effectively communicate with those outside the  church. 
Older members may, indeed, develop nlotivations which are  too complex 
and too theological to appeal to  the unchurched. 
As for the manpower problem, Porter offers two suggestions which 
merit attention. The first is the use of men of limited education and train- 
ing who can adequately serve the  many small churches. He suggests that 
they be given "crash courses" and then ordained. This limited ordination 
would not make them available to all positions in the church, but for a 
restricted ministry. He envisions these men as  remaining in their secular 
jobs until retirement. 
The second solution to  the manpower shortage is to  have married men 
of the parishes ordained to  the diaconate as a lifelong position. TO this 
Book Reviews 5 9 
reviewer, this suggestion has real interest. The process of electing men 
as "elders" or "deacons" for short periods of time with little or no train- 
ing leaves much to be desired. Porter refers to the  growing number of 
capable men who have retired early in good health. He feels that  a speci- 
fic call and some training would permit these men to serve capably to aug- 
ment the professional ministry. 
These two solutions are  not original with Porter, but he does hold a 
good brief for them. 
A large part of the book is taken up with a detailed report of a parish 
renewal project in Evansville, Indiana. This report gets tiresome, es- 
pecially in view of the fact that  so many similar reports are  being pub- 
lished. 
The book has several bright spots. It seems too lorig and too expen- 
sive for the  number of ideas. 
R,ichurd J .  Rchaltz 
SEX AND THE SINGLE EYE. Ey Letha Scanzoni. Zondervan Publishing 
House, Grand Rapids, 1968. 1-12 pages. Cloth. $3.95. 
This i s  a very good book about the Christian l~hilosophy of sex. The 
reviewer makes this judglnent on the basis of a n u ~ i ~ b e r  of premises. 
The book is honest. I t  is honest about what "the new morality" Says 
about sexual behavior. The writer does not engage in ill-considered gen- 
eralizations or misquotations. She gives credit where credit is due. She 
carefully distinguishes humanism, hedonism and the riew morality. She is  
honest also in reporting thc folly of the church in promulgating an un- 
biblical and frightful view of sex life. Above all, she is bluntly hotlest in 
stating again and again that only those who have "the single eye." that 
is, sincere acceptance of Jesus Christ as  Lord and Savior, can hope to agree 
with or  live by the Christian philosophy of sex. 
The book is courageous. Mrs. Scanzoni comes down hard. with both 
feet, on the propositioll that there is a matter of ol)etlience t o  God involved 
i n  this matter of sex behavior. While patiently considering all sides of an 
issue, the  writer does not hesitate to operate with the principle that the 
word of God is decisive for a Christian. 
The book i s  inforined and scholarly. Mrs. Scanzoni's husband is a 
professor of sociology a t  Indiana University. She  indicates her debt to 
his  scholarship in chapters relating the anthropological and sociological 
implications of sex and marriage. Beyond this, howe~~er ,  she displays 
sound scholarship in handling the Bible. There is some excellent exegesis 
in this book. The contextual meaning of the Greek noun pornetrt is thor- 
oughly explored. Many other passages relating to sex in both the Old 
Testament and New Testamerit are carefully studied. 
The book i s  readable. Mrs. Scanzoni addresses herself to educated 
young adults. She is thinking primarily of college students. Despite 
the  depth of scholarship, the writer displays a straightforward, delightful 
style. When the  going gets rough, she resorts to  a directly catechetical 
style to make sure her points get across. 
The book is helpful. It recognizes the  dilemmas of young people. It 
sympathizes with them. It takes up, one after another, t h e  answers which 
people today a re  t ry ing t o  give to sexual morality. The person reading 
the book will quite readily find his own problems treated. 
The book is evangelical. The explanation of the Song of Songs is 
beautiful. T h e  Postscript elucidates very clearly the forgiveness which we 
have in Christ and the  possibility of start ing over after  offense. The 
writer displays a bright and  abounding faith in the Gospel. In the face of 
questions which a r e  being asked of the church she says, " . . . if one is 
really confident of God's revelation of Himself through Jesus Christ, if 
one is really sure  of moral guidance He has given us in t h e  Scriptures, if 
one is  really convinced tha t  God does have something to say  to us in this 
matter, is there any  reason t o  fear that  the entire Christian faith will be 
toppled because some honest questions are  being raised?" 
COMMUNICATION-LEARNING FOR CHURCHMEN. Vol. I. Communi- 
cation for Churchmen Series. B. F. Jackson, Jr., edit.or, Abingdon 
Press, Nashville, 1968. Cloth. 303 pages. $5.95. 
This is  the first volume in a projected four-volume series designed 
to give a basic knowledge of the  media available for church use. Future 
volumes, which will focus on Television-Radio-Film for Churchmen, 
Audio-visual Facilities a n d  Equipment for Churchmen, and  Creative Coni- 
nlunication Skills for Churchmen, will point out the  strengths and weak- 
nesses of each medium and  consider the effectiveness of specific media in 
varied communication situations. The reason for this series is stated by 
the editor in the introduction to Volume I:  "Many employed and volun- 
teer leaders in the three major  faiths in the  United States believe the fu- 
ture  of the  church depends on its ability and willingness to make better 
use of the  processes of communication and learning." Surely the church 
needs to examine i ts  teaching methods and patterns of comnlunication 
with a view to up-dating i t s  use of these processes and employing then1 to 
greater advantage. In  a day when we are  experiencing a revolution in 
technology and  coinmunications, this four-volume series is indeed welcome. 
Volume I contains a discussion by four separate authors of the mean- 
ing of communication i n  t h e  church, the learning situation, and the use of 
printed and  audiovisual resources. 
William F. Fore, the writer  of the comiilunication section, avers that 
completely successful communication is impossible, and tha t  t.herefore the 
problem is  how t o  reduce the  probability that  we will be misunderstood. 
H e  describes the process of communication, using the  Shannon and Weaver 
communication model (source, encoding, signal, decoding, destination). 
H e  also explains t h e  communication principles ~f redundancy, feedback, 
retro-active inhibition, t h e  sleeper effect, and selective perception. The 
formal teaching methods which the church has used for the past few 
hundred years a r e  inadequate in terms of good conlmunication, says Fore. 
Not only have these methods failed to  take communication principles sum- 
Book Reviews 6 1 
ently into account, but they have failed to relate the church's message to  
the  real world of the person in the pew. 
But Fore himself fails to support some of the assertions he makes in 
Chapter VIII, "A Theological View of Communication," and in Chapter 
IX. "The Church's Comn~unication Task." For example, he writes: 
"Communication becomes distorted when the Bible is substituted for God 
as the object of ultimate loyalty and faith" (p. 83),  but he does not cite a 
single instance of such adulation of the Bible. Again, he  says: "The vocab- 
ulary which was once used to express the Christian faith to the world has 
almost totally lost its power to communicate" (p. 89) .  I t  is certain that  
the Christian vocabulary fails to  communicate to many people. But can 
w e  be certain that  the Christian vocabulary is more outmoded today than 
it was  in the  days of the  apostles? I t  appears that terms like justification, 
sanctification, sin, righteousness were just a s  incomprehensible in the 
Greco-Roman world a s  they are  today. Jesus and the apostles continually 
sharpened for their  hearers the meanings of religious terms. And so must 
we. 
Fore  disregards the uniqueness of the Bible as  a revealer of God. He 
understands the Word of God to-include every revelation of God in history, 
P ~ e S e n t  events, ar t ,  and symbols (p. 81). He goes so fa r  a s  to say: "When 
t h e  Bible and the Word of God are interchangeable, we no longer affirm 
something about either" (p. 98). On the contrary, by such an identification 
w e  affirm a great deal, both about the nature of the Bible and the nature 
of the  Word of God. Fore  operates with the assumption that  there is 
n o  objective truth,  that  revelation is in no sense a communication of in- 
formation,  and that  doctrinal statements a re  somehow fatal of faith and 
fa i l  to  communicate. This is a Kierkegaardian view which is not necessar- 
i l y  supported by the results of communication research. If one cannot 
really communicate the uncommunicable (God), why bother to write a 
book about communication in the church? 
How do the views of Marshall McLuhan fit into the  church's com- 
munication task? According to Fore, the great contribution of McLuhan 
is t h a t  he  has succeeded in placing the question of the  effects of media 
into a total cultural context (p. 49). McLuhan's insight, that  the type 
of information conveyed is not so important as  the medium by which 
it is conveyed, applied t o  the church, would mean that  essentiaIly the 
message of the Christian church is communicated by its own life and 
witness. I n  this sense the  church itself is a ~nedium of communication 
(P.  98). 
The section on Learning and the Church, by Howard W. Ham, 
discusses the four major theories currently being advanced a s  explanations 
of what  i t  means to learn and what happens when one learns-theories 
propounded chiefly by Edward C. Tolman, B. F. Skinner, Clark Hull, and 
Rober t  M. Gagne. Ham goes on to show how these theories can be em- 
ployed in the church's educational task, depending on what the church 
is t rying to  accomplish. The discussion of motivation. perception, evalua- 
t i o n  and timing in relation to learning should be extremely helpful to the  
person who must engage in teaching in the  church. The qualities of a good 
teacher a r e  listed, and the  relation of teaching to learning is pointed up. 
The  sections on Pr int  as a Resource for Learning, by B. F. Jackson, Jr., 
and  on Using Audiovisual Resources, by James C. Campbell, give excel- 
lent  guidelines for the use of these media in the  church. 
On the whole, this is a fine book. I ts  value, for  this reviewer, is less- 
ened by some of the  assumptions and conclusions expressed in chapters 
VII I  and IX. 
Gerhard Aho 
-- 
T H E  MANIPULATOR AND THE CHURCH. By Maxie D. Dunnam, Gary 
J. Herbertson, and Everett L. Shostrom. Abingdon Press, Nashville, 
1968. 176 pages. Cloth. $3.50. 
Manipulation and actualization are  the key words in this volume. 
The  manipulator is "one who exploits, uses, and/or controls himself and 
others as  things or  objects" (p. 2 ) .  The actualizer "is a n  individual who 
appreciates himself and others as possessors of unique worth and  poten- 
tial'' (p. 23). 
I t  is one of the  contentions of this book that  out of the raw clay 
of the nlanipulator may be molded the actualizer, and a congregation 
bound in the fetters of manipulation may break forth into the freedom 
of actualization (p. 24). 
Both congregation members and  pastors can function a t  the low level 
of manipulation. Church members t ry  to manipulate the congregation 
and  the pastor by such devices as concealing the pledge, withdrawing 
from participation, creating dissension, etc. Ministers, too, can attempt to 
use people as  pawns by appealing to the power of their profession, the 
weight of their authority, or the degree of their training. 
To move from manipulation to actualization, it is imperative that 
congregations and pastors allow people to be persons, that  they appreciate 
individual differences, and that  there be a healthy ministry-laity relation- 
ship, the pastor serving as playercoach. 
An actualization-centered chnrch will foster worship which permits 
shared meaning koinonia which affords people the freedom to be honest, 
and  dialconin which gives opportunity for authentic service. 
The purpose of life together in the church is to help people become 
authentic individuals who are aware of themselves, of others, and  of God. 
When we know that through Christ we are  loved of God, we can love our- 
selves and others. 
What would happen if you discussed this volunle a t  your next church 
council meeting? My guess is that  plenty couId happen. 
Henry J .  Eggold 
T H E  BITTER ROAD. By John H. Baumgaertner. Concordia Publishing 
House, St. Louis, 1969. 104 pages. Paper. $1.95. 
"From the ecstasy of heaven to  the agony of upraised timbers on a 
blood soaked hill-this is the bitter road" (p. 13). 
In this volume of ten Lenten sermons, the author, pastor of Capital 
Book Reviews 6 3 
Drive Lutheran Church, Milwaukee, takes us on a journey that  began in 
t ime for Christ in Bethlehem and ended in the garden beyond the wall. 
With a deft touch both for scenes and human emotions, the author 
takes  us to Bethlehem, Egypt, Nazareth, Jericho, Bethany, Gethsemane, 
Jerusalem, Calvary, and the garden; but with crushing realism he con- 
f ron t s  US with our world, torn and bleeding, a world for which Christ died 
a n d  in which we a re  to be little Christs. 
One example will suffice: Hardly has the blood of the Holy Innocents 
begun to  dry before: 
. . . we who ourselves ought to be willing martyrs for Christ are impos- 
ing on others the martyrdom of a painful and deadly neglect. We who 
have been so proud to be undeserving recipients of the forgiving 
love of God in Christ have consigned the  less fortunate among Our 
brothers and sisters in the race of man to a life that is starving for 
love and demonstrates the synlptons of its hunger and its sickness in 
rebellion and violence and crime (pp. 29 f . ) .  
Diagnosis is generally followed by helpful prescription, but a t  times 
t h e  Gospel's answer to man's malady could have come through more 
sharp1 y. 
For  directness, compelling style. and relevancy. these sermons Prove 
to be helpful reading. 
Hela?-y J. EqgoZd 
AWAY WITH COMPLAINING. By Betty Carlson. Zondervan Publishing 
House, Grand Rapids, 1968. 62 pages. Paper. $1.00. 
Constructive thinking, a forward-looking view of life, is 1lot to0 
common, but it is abundantly available in d ~ r r r y  W i t h  Gomplnining. In 
twenty-seven inspirational devotions for women, Betty Carlson lllaintains 
that chronic complainers a re  looki~lg through the wrong end of the binocu- 
l a r s ,  and  she lightly but surely leads the reader awpy from the wrong 
end-heads her toward constructive views, and enlarges the proper 
aspect.  
The  fulcrum for the change is a loving-trusting relationship with 
God,  our Savior. One of my favorite essays, number twenty-three, relates 
t h e  joy of the snlall congregation at  finally dedicating u lovely pipe organ. 
Shor t ly  thereafter the organist marries and moves away. " . . And so all 
w i n t e r  long . . . you would hear someone in our comnlunity pray, 'Dear 
L o r d ,  we hate to keep bothering You, but it worlld meal1 a lot to us to 
have  a n  organist. Thank You.' Let me warn you. Go easy when you 
p r a y  with miracle-minded people. . . We now have six organists, all 
excellent musicians, and the seventh arrives next week. 
Annoyances and frustrations enter our lives constantly, and we each 
know someone who is a chronic complainer. Indeed, if we are honest, we 
m u s t  also acknowledge times when such frustrations have brought out the 
wors t  in us. Rut with Betty Carlson we can keep or regain perspective; 
refresh our  memories a s  to the destructive power of cornplainers--who 
once shouted, "Crucify Him!"; but, best of all, when we find ourselves 
complaining, look to  see what with God's help roe can do to remedy the 
problem-and then do it-and away with complaining! 
Dnniel G .  Reuning 
T H E  MISSIONARY BETWEEN THE TIMES. By R. Pierce Beaver. 
Doubleday and Company, Inc., Garden City, New York, 1968. 196 
pages. Cloth. 
In the course of writing this review, I received some observations of 
a newly sent missionary from overseas that  contained this statement: 
"First of all throw away any materials or books older than five years. 
The  mission field has changed tre~nendously in the last decade." He 
was writing to seminary students who are interested in world missions. 
The changed and changing situation in other lands a s  well a s  ours 
comes to our attention again. But has anything come from the printer to 
replace the books that we might discard? In  the last decade a number of 
authoritative and helpful books on mission, missions and the missionary 
have been published. This past year R. Pierce Beaver has added an  excel- 
lent treatment of one of the  most popular mission subjects-the missionary 
himself. 
With obvious understanding Beaver analyzes the changed role of the 
missionary as  he  finds himself "between the age of the separate histories 
of peoples and regions, on the one hand, and of world history, on the 
other; of European or Western hegemony over most of the  earth 
and the emergence of some new order; of agrarian and urban industrial 
societies; of unilateral sending nlission from a geographic Christendom 
and the entire secular-partially religious world being a new mission field 
approached from a base of Christian churches and communities diffused 
throughout the entire earth;  of revolution in mission and in the world." 
In such a time a s  this he answers questions that  everyone is asking: 
Why send missionaries? Who should go? How do others see the nlission- 
a ry?  Why the vocational? He  goes on to say that "a renewal of 
mission is urgent. Not fewer missionaries, but more--more than ever 
were sent before-are required by the magnitude of the  challenge." On 
the  basis of the Scriptural theology of the apostolate of the Church that 
h e  outlines a t  the  beginning of his book. Beaver stresses again and again 
that  the lending of personnel and subsidy to sister churches overseas is 
only part  of the apostolate and does not excuse Western churches from 
sending missionaries. "Neither can the young churches of Asia, Africa, 
the  Pacific, and Latin America be excused from sending nlissionaries on 
t he  plea that  the  local evangelistic task is gigantic and the resources 
small." Nowhere in the world and a t  no time is the  necessity of sending 
missionaries eliminated. The great Christian Imperative to go still stands 
for all Christians in the world, the West included. 
Beaver thinks that  dialogue would be the  best means of communi- 
cating the Gospel in our times, and "is now even an evangelistic necessity." 
His  thoughts on the  relationships of the missionary with the  indigenous 
church in  other lands and his home church a re  lasered in on today's 
Book Reviaus 6 5 
problems. His insights into the development of the  indigenous church 
a r e  enhanced by his vast knowledge of church history and history of 
missions. 
There a r e  a few statements in his book that raise questions in my 
mind. But on the whole Beaver has some very pertinent, Scriptural and 
wise things t o  say about the  missionary between the times. His treatment 
of t h e  subject is not exhaustive, but what he says is exceptionally helpful. 
He  writes in his foreward that tbe book grew out of lectures given to  
newly appointed and furloughed missionaries, to members of mission 
boards, and to conference audiences of laymen and ministers. This re- 
viewer recommends this easily readable volume to all missionaries. 
mission executives and to all others mentioned above. Mission educa- 
t ionists a t  all levels in our Synod would do well to update their under- 
s tanding of the missionary and his task with this book. 
Otto C. Hintze 
BOOI. 
Doe8 Inspircitiorr 1)crnund Ijicrruncy? ISy Stewart  Custcr. The Craig I'ress. Sutley, 
Sew  .Icrsry, 1968. 120 llnges. l'iiprr. $:<.>I). 
Jntroduclu~-?I Strcdien WL Contempcrng-y Theoloyjj. Iiy I iol~crt  1,. R~yliiond. I'rcs- 
bytcrian and Reforlired Publishing Company, Philadelphia, l!)OS. 242 pages. 
1'al)t.r. $4.50. 
!I'7rcoln!~icnl Dit tlontr#-!l of 7'lrc .\ cvr Tcntament. Grrhard  I'ric.drich, ctditor. Erigli.;h 
trwrislixtor and c~li tor .  (;eoffrcly IV. Bronlilt~y. Win. B. Errdrnans Yahlishiiig 
Com]~nrig. l!MiS. Vnlliine V. 1O:;l pagcas. Cloth. $23.50. 
Rcbell~on i s  7'hr. 1V~Edcrnm.u. I:y (;csorge I:. .Coats. . \ l)i~>pdon 1'res.r. Srsw York aud 
Stlshvillc.. >Nib. 2HS pages. ('Loth. $b.50. 
?'he h'nu>rlr&fe of Cod in I?tcrt-~rt I.umc1. I?y 1iol)ert C. Drutan. The  Seabury 
I'rqhss, Sew \Fork. I!)tiS. 27.4 pagc.s. $i..?O. 
lino~r.irr.f~ 7'Ite I,ccr,c!f Cotl. l?g llarolcl I ~ - F h l l i l ~ s .  'L'he Wtlrnrr Press. -4nderso1i. 
I n t l i a ~ ~ a .  l!)tiS. 12s I)iigcb\. l 'aprr. $1. r .). 
Philosophical hfoven~cnts n%d l'heologiccrl Trends. By J o h n  F. Johnson. Concordia 
Serrlinary I'rintshop, Springfield, Illinois, 1968. 157 pages. Paper. $3.70. 
Wornf1n.s Mi.?.yinn To Humanit.zy. By WiIn~on IIeliry Sheldon. l 'he Christopher Pub- 
lishiuf Ilouse, Boston, Mass., 196H. 92 pages Cloth. $3.95. 
Luther's IVorPs: Lectures on Tatus, Philemon, and Hehrctcis. Vol. 29. Tr : Jaroslav 
Pelikan, Walter A. Hansen. Concordia I'uhlishing House, St. Louis, 1968. 266 
pages. Cloth. $6.00. 
T'he I'luce CaElcd CaIrar?/. B y  Marcus IA. Loane. Zondervan Publishing House, Grand 
Itapids, 196s. IS!) pages. I'tipcr. I'ricc not  glven. 
Repenl(tnc~c--The JO!J Filled Life. 1:y 31. Basilea Sclllink. Zondrrvan Publishing 
IIousc, (;rand Kapids, 1905. 63 pages. Paper .  $1.50. 
J v r ~ m  scic3)tce to l 'hcolog~. l i y  Georges Crespy. Abiugdon Press, Nashville, 1968. 
Cloth. 174 pages. $4.00. 
C!llrcr?zetic.u and the Iatuge of Man. By IIarold E. Hat t .  lb ingdon Press, Nashville. 
196s. 304 pages. Cloth. 85-95. 
Eugene  tnnesco and fldlcsrd .-tlhee: .I Critical E:ssal}. By X ~ l v i n  Vos. Wrn. B. 
Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Itapids, 1965. 48 pages. Paper. 85e. 
Philip Iiotk nlrd Bernard Yclamud: d Critical Essag. By Glenn Meeter. Wm. B. 
Eerdmans IDiiblishing Co., Grand Rapids, 1968. 45 pages. Paper. 85d. 
Par Lagerk~.ist: -1 Criticc~l Eskal~.  B y  Winston Weathers. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publish- 
i ng  Co., Grand Hapids, 1968. 4'7 pages. Paper. BT,f. 
Willinm Styron: A Critical Essay. B y  Robert II. Fossum. W1n. B. Eerdlnans Publish- 
ing Co., Grand Rapids, 1968. 48 pages. Paper. YBc. 
Un>nisked Man and the Imagination. By Ray L Har t .  I-Ierder and  IIerder ,  New 
York, 1'36s. 418 pages. Cloth. $9.50. 
Kapitene of the Costgo Stcamship Lapslry. By Arch C. McKinnon and Treusur-68 of 
Ilorkness. By Fannie  W. AIcKinnon. The Chris topher  Publisliing IIouse, Boston. 
1968. 295 pages. Cloth. $4.35. 
Mentul Health Thr-ough Will-Training. B y  Abraham A. Low, M.D. The Chris topher  
Publishing House, Boston, 1966. 393 pagcS. Cloth. $5.00. 
Books Received 
3'he Will to Win: Faith in .Action in tire Lil:cs o j  dthZete8. Dy James C. I l e f l e~ .  
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Welcome Home Gara. By William It. Bushong. The Christopher Publishing House, 
Boston, 1968. 557 pages. Cloth. $4.85. 
Comnau?licatio~t-~earnin~ for Ckurchmttl. R y  y. F .  Jackson, Jr., General Editor. 
Abingdon Press, Nashville, Tpnnessec, 1!)6S. .dl3 pages. Cloth. $5.95. 
God Reigns: Ezpository Studies in the Prophecg oj Isaiah. By James I&o Green. 
Broadman Press, Nashville, 1966. 178 pagcs. Cloth. $4.50. 
T h e  Nunga iny  Dark. By Frederick Ruechner. The SeaDury Press, New York, 1969. 
125 pages. Cloth. $3.95. 
JustiPcation of the IJngodly. By Wilhelm nnntine. Concordia Publishing House, St. 
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E~IJer iencex  i n  communitp: Should Reliyiol's T,,ife Burtiive? Rg Gabriel Moran and 
Maria Harris. Herder and Herder, iiew L'ork, 19G6. 205 pages. Cloth. $4.95- 
rsaiah: .4 S t n d ~ ,  Guidr. Uy D. llnvid (;arland. Zoudervan Publishing Co.. G ~ u d  
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K n o w i n g  the  T,irinn God .  By Haro],l r,.--Phillips. The Warner Press, Anderson. 
Indiana,  1968. 126 pages. Paper. $l.r 2. 
T h e  New American Reralution. Andrew J. nuehner, Fklitor. Lutheran Academy for 
Scholarship, St. Louis, 1968. 89 pages. Paper. 
y'he Church and the Visual Arts. Andrew J .  Ruehner, Editor. T l ~ e  Lutheran Academy 
for  Scholarship, St. Louis, 19612. IS9 pnges. Paper. 
the H o l ~  nag8 and H01jdn.g~. Sermons and Sermon Ideas for Erery  Day of the 
Year. By Herbert Lockyer. Zondervan Publishing Ilouse, Grand Waplds. 196s- 
283 pages. Cloth. $4.95. 
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A Short L i fe  of C'hfiyt. B y  Everett F. Ilarrisotl. Km.  I3. Eerdrnans Pul)lishin,rr 
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. <. 
Jesus atad The Y'ce11:e. 1 % ~  Robert P. Jlege. Wnl. E. &rdmans Publishiug Company, 
Grand Rapids, 1969. 257 pages. Cloth. $4.95. 
Contmporary  fllia?tg~lical 'I 'hotc~itt. Carl  F. H. Ilcnry, editor. Baker Rook House. 
Grand Rapids, 1966. 320 naaes. Pal)er. 33.95. 
- .> 
-i Church Tru ly  C'utkolic. By J;lnies K. XIi~thpws. .ibingdon Press, Sasbvillc, 1869. 
160 pages. Paper. $2.43. 
The Saciour's 8er:nz h'taten~entx pq-on, The Gross. By Iiollrrt (;. Lee. Grand Zia~>ids, 
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Jc~us-l!u~rittn rind Dicivie. ~ { y  1-1. D. JIclIonald. B o n d c r v ; ~ ~ ~  ub l i sb i l l g  House, 
(;rand Itapids, 3965. 144 pagrs. Cloth. $:3.:).3. 
Sourcc,booX- of IDoetr-y. Colllpiled I)y .\I Bryant. Z o n d ~ r r a n  Publishing Ilc)lls(>, Grand  
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T h o s e  IVho L u r e  Il im.  By nas i l ra  11. Ychlink. %ondrrvan Prll)Iisliin:: Ilouae. (:rand 
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M a r k  The  E L  unyel is t .  E y  Will 3 i a r ~ a r n .  .\ l)i n~ .dc~u I 'rcss, Snzhville, 1 !W. 222 
Pages. Cloth. $5.50. 
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Graud  Iiayids, 196s. 6.4 gages. I?~';lper. $0.92. 
-4udimcr: C'riticism und 'I'he Historiccrl J t  *......u.~. L;y J .  . \ r thu t  B;~ird.  T l ~ r  \\Tert~llillstcr 
Press, I'hiladelphia, 1969. 20s payea. Cloth. PI:.SO. 
How The World Il'ill End: Guide to s1trr.irc11. I:?. S:~lcrn Kirban. Salvnl K i r l~ :~n ,  Inc., 
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Love Looks Deep. By W. Sorrnan I'ittrngcr. .I. Ii. Jlobray & Co., Ltd., London, 
lgti!). 101 pages. Palwr. ](I?; T,Clg. 
I r I h c  Cht-istian B n c o u n t e r ~  Crime. i n  .Irnericc13~ soc ic t !~ .  By I:icl~:~rcl Gnudtc'n. Con- 
cordir-2 Publis l~ing House, St.  1.ouis. 1!)6!). 1x5 pages. L'ir11er. $1.2.2. 
The L ~ s f  C'hr-i.yt .-I Lost J V O , . ~ ~ .  ~y ~ ; o u d  811;i\v. Tlw Cllristophrr l 'u[~l ishing 
Ilousct. 1;oston. 1969. IS:! pages. Cloth. $3.95. 
T h e  Lot l r r r  Sou,-t:cbook. Icy Dr. Herbert I~>c)r>-<>r. %ondvrvnn 1'ul)lishitl~ l lousr .  
I Ino pagcba. c l o t  11. $4.95. 
Prolest nrbd I'olilicrs: Christioprit!, otrd C'utrtrrti/,c,t.u,.!, .-I J1,rir.v. I:?. Itol~crC i;. C ! O U S ~  
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