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In the recent Equip for Ministry issues we have talked about open theism,
denominationalism, and the emerging church movement, to name a few. Knowing
something about church history is essential if we are to contend for the faith
and its truth. So much of what is happening today is a result of either not
knowing or ignoring the lessons from history.
Also, while we need to understand where we are today as far as Christianity
is concerned, we will not be successful without starting with a good grasp of
history and tradition. This is clearly illustrated in trying to understand
evangelicalism in our North American culture. For example, of the two billion
plus people in the world who profess to be Christians, over half a billion are
evangelical Christians. But some statistics suggest that if Pentecostals and
charismatics are counted as evangelicals, there are four-fifths of a billion
evangelicals today. Those two groups account for 570 million while other
evangelicals exceed 242 million. This is what Sweeney points out in his preface
to set the stage for the overview that follows.
Sweeney first gives an overview and summary of the recent debates and scope
of evangelicalism. Chapter one is merely a prelude to the good content that
follows. Trying to define “evangelical” today is a bit slippery. For example:
you have Alister McGrath’s six controlling convictions regarding evangelicalism.
You also have David Bebbington’s definition that features four qualities of
evangelicalism. Beyond those you can find John R.W.Stott's three qualities and
many broader definitions such as demonstrated by George Marsden, James Hunter
and others. It is obvious that there is great diversity within evangelicalism
and often unanimity as well.
Dayton and Johnston in their book, The Variety of American Evangelicalism
wrote, “American evangelicalism resembles a large, extended family and should be
described in only a general manner in terms of their ‘family resemblance’ rather
than pigeonholed with excessive, propositional precisions” (page 21). Sweeney
tries his hand at defining the term evangelical, “Evangelicals comprise a
movement that is rooted in classical Christian orthodoxy, shaped by a largely
Protestant understanding of the gospel and distinguished from other such
movements by an eighteenth century twist. Or put more simply (though less
precisely), evangelicals are a movement of orthodox Protestants with an
eighteenth-century twist” (pages 23, 24).
This volume gives good summary of the “great awakenings” and their role on
determining evangelicalism in America. He traces America’s great awakenings to
those in Europe and Great Britain and then on the North American British
colonies. Sweeney talks about the good things, as well as the challenges, that
arose out of those awakenings. He reviews some of the people, like John and
Charles Wesley, George Whitefield, and Jonathan Edwards who played significant
roles in this development.
The book deals with some of the results and impact of the awakenings on the
church and world. Although thousands joined the churches, religious controversy
was also present and the revivals divided families, churches, and communities.
In the chapter “Crafting New Wineskins, Institutionalizing the Movement,”
Sweeney opens up some avenues of understanding the tensions always present in
evangelicalism, one being the role of institutions. He points out the truth that
movements cannot survive without institutions and yet institutions have a way of
squelching the Spirit, hence the need for revival. This was so clearly
demonstrated in early America between the “Old Light” and “New Light” and “Old
Side” and “New Side” schools of thought. The Old Light camp said we need
institutions and tradition while the New Light camp maintained that all we need
is the Bible. Sweeney demonstrates how both extremes fed liberalism in early New
England.
One of the distinguishing characteristics of evangelicals is that they have
always known how to market their faith. They knew how to capitalize on the free
market concept. They knew how to advance the faith and did so with much fervor
and enthusiasm. The circuit riders, the scholars, and the local churches all
played significant roles in advancing the evangelical cause in America.
The book also contains a good summary of the development of the modern
missionary movement. Sweeney points out how the early missionaries were able to
contextualize their faith with much effectiveness, though there was a constant
struggle to distinguish the Gospel from the culture “to become all things to all
men so that by all means, they might be saved” (1 Cor. 9 18-22).
The history of black evangelicals contains important parts of the story. Much
can be learned from studying the relationship among the races in church history.
For example, Sweeney writes, “While evangelicals did not invent the sins of
racism or ethnocentrism, the slave trade, segregation discrimination, or racial
hate groups, literally millions of white evangelicals have either participated
in or sanctioned one or more of these things, distorting their common witness to
the gospel” (page 108). In the mid twentieth century this racial tension was
demonstrated by both a white and black evangelical association—the white
National Association of Evangelicals and the National Black Evangelical
Association founded in 1963.
There is a good chapter entitled “In Search of a Higher Christian Life,”
dealing with the holiness movement, along with Pentecostal and charismatic
movements. This is an important chapter as we look at today’s churches embracing
the evangelical framework. These are areas of great tension and controversy
within the evangelical family. Today’s struggles and divisions are not new ones.
Who were some of the people influential in this arena? What was their emphasis?
How was it received? Sweeney uses key people to deal with those questions.
People and movements such as: Charles Finney, Phoebe Palmer, Charles Fox Parham,
John Wimber, Oral Roberts, Pat Robertson, the famous Azusa Street revivals of
Los Angeles, the Assemblies of God and the charismatic movement.
The last major chapter focuses on the fundamentalism and neoevangelicalism
that emerged in the late 1800s through the twentieth century, dealing with
topics such as the “fundamentals” and their attempt to put down modernism. He
also talks about men such as Carl F. H. Henry, J. Gresham Machen, Billy Graham
and their role in the neoevangelical answer to both fundamentalism and
liberalism. Of course Sweeney points out that we cannot overlook the role of the
famous Scopes Trial in this mix. Then there was the decline of orthodoxy in the
mainline churches with the influx of German higher criticism, thus undermining
the authority and integrity of the Sciptures, and the need for Christians to be
salt and light and make a cultural difference rather than withdrawing their
cultural influence. He also accents the tensions between those who believed that
the best theology had already been produced and those who believed in always
reforming their theology according to the Word.
This book is readable, extremely interesting, and tremendously helpful in
understanding why we are Presbyterians who are Reformed evangelicals following
Presbyterian polity and government. This would be a good book for personal and
group study. I recommend it with much enthusiasm.
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