"When churches lose their influence, when the
Christian message ceases to arrest the indifferent and the unbelieving,
when moral decline is obvious in places which once owned biblical
standards -- when such symptoms as these are evident, then the first need
is not to regroup such professing Christianity as remains. It is rather to
ask whether the spiritual decline is not due to a fundamental failure to
understand and practise what Christianity really is."
Evangelicalism Divided
|
"To become a Christian is to experience the power of Christ in the
forgiveness of sin and in the receiving of a new life. It is a change
accomplished by God and altogether apart from human effort or deserving,
for the very faith which is the instrument in uniting the sinner to Christ
is itself a gift -- By grace you have been saved through faith, and that
not of yourselves; it is the gift of God (Eph. 2:8) -- Further, while
obedience and love result from the gift of faith, these graces FOLLOW
rather than contribute anything to our acceptance with God. It is Christ's
finished work alone which secures for ever the believer's status of
righteousness and of no condemnation."
Evangelicalism Divided
|
"Christianity means knowing and trusting Christ
as a living Person; it is a relationship which so captures both the mind
and the heart of the believer that henceforth to know Christ, to esteem
him and his words, becomes the very object of existence... A Christian is
someone who no longer lives for himself but understands, with Paul, why
Christ is his righteousness, his life, his all."
Evangelicalism Divided
|
"In the nineteenth century it came to be believed that the most
successful soul-winning belonged to the revival meeting where many are
seen to come to Christ as the evangelist calls them to a visible, public
decision. Walking the aisle in response to the altar call was so closely
identified with conversion that coming to Christ and coming to the front
were treated as one and the same thing. Behind the practice lay the
fallacy that saving faith is of the same nature as a physical decision,
and that if only sinners will answer the evangelist's invitation then
grace will secure their rebirth. This thinking was inherited by Billy
Graham and it is clearly expressed in the way he has spoken of
conversion."
Evangelicalism Divided
|
"The dangers in the invitation system are many.
It creates the impression that compliance with it is part of becoming a
Christian."
Evangelicalism Divided
|
"Crusades depended upon crowds and in the Graham story there is an
almost ever-present concern for maintaining and increasing numbers... This
is surely part of the explanation for an eagerness to cultivate
connections with the famous whose names would catch attention. Friendship
was sought with all whose high profile could reflect with advantage on the
message he preached... This cultivation of connections with celebrities
came to its fullest expression with political leaders in the United
States."
Evangelicalism Divided
|
"The practice of seeking accommodation and
acceptance with exponents of error has dimmed the light. Contending for
unpopular truth is no longer a duty and the doctrine supposedly necessary
for evangelicalism has become so minimal that it has ceased to be
distinct."
Evangelicalism Divided
|
"The Graham evangelistic methods do not seem to have been openly questioned
by evangelicals in the United States until after the publication of his
biography by Marshall Frady in 1979... In his view the BGEA was not so
much a spiritual force as a conflux of the kind of American techniques
which are well calculated to gain results."
Evangelicalism Divided
|
"The Reformers would have had to shut their
Bibles before they could have regarded all their baptized contemporaries
as Christians."
Evangelicalism Divided
|
"For the New Testament unity is in order to preserve the faith, not
something which can exist irrespective of doctrinal purity."
Evangelicalism Divided
|
"The approval of doctrinal diversity has become
the hallmark of one-time evangelicals who have risen to high positions in
the Church and left definite convictions behind them."
Evangelicalism Divided
|
"For the Reformers the Reformation was no mere controversy or
doctrinal dispute. The Church of Rome, in her opposition to the way of
salvation clearly taught in the Scripture, was demonstrating here lack of
the Spirit of God... The Roman system, by putting faith in the Church, and
its sacramental system, in the place of the finished work of Christ, gave
sure proof that she was not being taught of God."
Evangelicalism Divided
|
"Wesley and Whitefield lost any possibility of
gaining the good opinion of their peers at the very outset of their work.
But, far from moderating themselves in an attempt to win it back, they
regarded the very idea as a temptation to be resisted. In the midst of a
worldly church they saw the bearing of reproach as a necessary part of
being a Christian."
Evangelicalism Divided
|
"There is reason to believe that evangelical policy of more recent
times has not given due account to one of the most basic facts of
evangelical Christianity. It has lacked due regard to the depravity and
deceitfulness of human nature and to what Christ assures will happen when
his truth meets the minds of unregenerate man. From apostolic times
onwards, wherever the gospel has entered with discriminating power, it has
been with disturbance, opposition, and personal reproach for its
preachers."
Evangelicalism Divided
|
"There is good reason why the laying aside of an
earnest contending for the faith has usually gone hand in hand with a
cessation of belief in the full inspiration of Scripture. Once doubt about
the words of Scripture is admitted, what is to be defended becomes a great
deal less definite. But Scripture itself lays great emphasis on its
WORDS."
Evangelicalism Divided
|
“Evangelicals, while commonly retaining the same set of beliefs, have
been tempted to seek success in ways which the New Testament identifies as
worldliness. Worldliness is departing from God. It is a man-centred
way of thinking; it proposes objectives which demand no radical breach
with man’s fallen nature; it judges the importance of things by the
present and the material results; it weighs success by numbers; it covets
human esteem and wants no unpopularity; it knows no truth for which it is
worth suffering; it declines to be a fool for Christ’s sake.
Worldliness is the mind-set of the unregenerate. It adopts idols and is a
war with God.” Evangelicalism Divided
|
“It is of believers that it is said—the flesh
lusts against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh; and these are
contrary one to another—Apostasy generally arises in the church just
because this danger ceases to be observed. The consequence is that
spiritual warfare gives way to spiritual pacifism, and, in the same
spirit, the church devises ways to present the gospel which will
neutralize any offence.” Evangelicalism
Divided
|
“The rule of Scripture has given place to pragmatism. The apostolic
statement—For if I still pleased men, I would not be the servant of
Christ—has lost its meanings.” Evangelicalism
Divided
|
“Human conduct is not capable of being
understood so long as it is imagined that man is self-contained and
insulated from any power other than his own.”
Evangelicalism Divided
|
"Worldliness is no accident; it is the devil’s use of such idols as
pride, selfishness, and pleasure, to maintain his dominion over men. What
he proposes for man’s happiness is in truth the result of implacable
malice towards the whole human race. He means to exclude God and to
destroy men, and the system he has devised to do this is so subtle than
man is a willing and unconscious captive.”
Evangelicalism Divided
|
“While we may expect unregenerate men to have no
discernment on this issue, it has to be a matter of concern when—given the
prominent warnings of the New Testament—the demonic ceases to be a vital
part of the belief of professing evangelicals.”
Evangelicalism Divided
|
“Non-Christians are in a condition of blindness and bondage. They are
under a power greater than the will of man and from which only Christ can
set them free.” Evangelicalism Divided
|
“We are constantly warned [in the Bible] that
Satan works principally through doctrinal deception and falsehood… False
prophets arise within the church yet they do not appear as such… The idea
that Christianity stands chiefly in danger from the forces of materialism,
or from secular philosophy, or from pagan religions, is not the teaching
of the New Testament.” Evangelicalism
Divided
|
“To deny the deity and the work of Christ will shut men out of heaven
as certainly as will the sin of murder.”
Evangelicalism Divided
|
“The apostles, filled with the Spirit of Christ,
suffered no toleration of error. They opposed it wherever it arose and
required the same spirit of all Christians.”
Evangelicalism Divided
|
“A biblical contending against error is fully consistent with love,
indeed it is love for the souls of men which requires it.”
Evangelicalism Divided
|
“It is the way in which the instrumentality of
the devil in corrupting the truth has been so widely overlooked. In this,
as I have already said, we differ widely from Scripture. Instead of
believers in the apostolic age being directed to listen to all views with
an open mind, they were told how to test the spirits, whether they are of
God… When churches have been in a healthy state they have always been
watchful in this regard.” Evangelicalism
Divided
|
“The idea that error false teaching is only an
innocent mistake and an inevitable part of scholarship is directly
contrary to Scripture. Many deceivers have gone out into the world
is the apostolic testimony, and this activity is going to continue… The
struggle in the future, as in the past, is to be with false religion.”
Evangelicalism Divided
|
“The evangelical, then, does not put the
external first, because Scripture does not put it first. The gospel comes
first. It is by the gospel that election takes effect; that God adds to
the church; and therefore where that gospel is obscured or denied, and
where the biblical terms of admission and membership are no longer upheld,
the external may become church in name only. When that happens there
are two churches: not the visible and the invisible, but the true and
the false.” Evangelicalism Divided
|
“A church which supposes she can impress the world is no church at
all, for she is denying a first principle of the gospel.”
Evangelicalism Divided
|
“It is patently clear that New Testament church
members were meant to be true believers and separate from the world; the
church is never defined in Scripture so as to allow the presence of
the worldly and the unbeliever.”
Evangelicalism Divided
|
“No one Scripture is to be interpreted so as to deny many others. The
New Testament churches were required to be distinct from the world; there
was to be credible evidence of faith and repentance in those admitted to
membership; they were to exclude as well as include.”
Evangelicalism Divided
|
“This [the ecumenical movement] is the
assassination of Christianity and its gospel. There is no
juster way to describe this spirit of antichrist… Unless the
ecumenical movement resolutely and explicitly sets its face against this
antichristianity, the prospect of the organization on a worldwide scale of
a vast and immensely powerful church of antichrist, embracing any and
every form of pseudo-Christianity, paganism, and heathenism, is far from
fanciful. And this will be a church so incredible as to be unrecognizable
as the Church of Christ, so totally assimilated to the image of the
unregenerate world that the church and world will be indistinguishably
merged into one. If and when this happens it will mean the eclipse and
disappearance of the visible church of the West.”
Philip E. Hughes, op. cit., Evangelicalism Divided
|
“It has never been by putting unity first that the church has changed
the world. At no point in church history has the mere unity of numbers
ever made a transforming spiritual impression upon others. On the
contrary, it was in the very period known as the dark ages that the Papacy
could claim her greatest unity in western Europe.”
Evangelicalism Divided
|
“The Reformers recovered from Scripture the
forgotten truth that the work of Christ in salvation did not end with his
ascension, thereafter to be carried on by the church and human energies.
Rather, Christ remains the source of all authority, life, and power. It is
by him that his people are preserved and their numbers increased. But this
on-going ministry he exercises through the Holy Spirit, whose work it is
to apply to sinners the blessings purchased for them at Calvary.”
Revivals And Revivalism
|
“Such is man’s state in sin that he cannot be saved without the
immediate influence of the Holy Spirit. Regeneration, and the faith that
results from it, are the gifts of God. Therefore, wherever conversions are
multiplied, the cause is to be found not in men, nor in
favourable conditions, but in the abundant influences of the Spirit
of God that alone make the testimony of the church effective.”
Revivals And Revivalism
|
“There is a sovereignty in all God’s actions. He
has never promised to bless in proportion to the activity of his people.
Revivals are not brought about by the fulfillment of conditions any more
than the conversion of a single individual is secured by any series of
human actions. The special seasons of mercy are determined in heaven.”
Revivals And Revivalism
|
“If we can trust Scripture only so far as our reason can accept it we
are not Christians at all.” Evangelicalism
Divided
|
“In the late-nineteenth and twentieth centuries
numbers were misled by the argument that the Bible is more easily defended
if it is not necessary to accept the inerrancy of all its details.”
Evangelicalism Divided
|
“Belief in the trustworthiness of all Scripture is essential for the
preservation of the Christian faith as a whole. Without verbal inspiration
the church cannot sustain a dependable corporate witness. All
authoritative exposition depends upon it… To make concessions to doubt at
this point has been a tragic mistake and grievous to the Spirit of God.”
Evangelicalism Divided
|
“The biblical portrait of false teachers is a
very clear one. While they profess to speak for God, they mislead people
over their true condition in God’s sight. They do not speak faithfully to
the unconverted.” Evangelicalism Divided
|
“The decay of Christianity in the west in the twentieth century is not
the result of sociological and secular pressures. Spiritual decline is not
a mystery which Scripture leaves unexplained. It is the result of the
presence of falsehood where there should be truth.”
Evangelicalism Divided
|
“At every point in Christian life and
labour it is the certainty of what is future which is to govern the
present.” Evangelicalism Divided
|
“The New Testament indicates that while the Spirit is always present
in the church the degrees of his power and influence remain subject to
Christ Himself... Whatever the condition of the churches, the plenitude of
the Spirit remains with Christ.” Pentecost -
Today?
|
“It was not that at a certain date the reformers
realised what they already had and therefore decided to act; it was
rather that something had first happened to them.”
Pentecost - Today?
|
“The New Testament never leaves the Christian in the position of
believing that all necessary grace and help is not now available.”
Pentecost - Today?
|
“If we think only that the Holy Spirit is
continuously resident in the church, as if necessarily present and
inherent in the means of grace, we can easily begin to forget how urgently
we stand in need of the supernatural.”
Pentecost - Today?
|
“If revival depends upon us then it is more than a possibility
that Christians will be eager to make it happen. Accordingly all
kinds of means may be adopted and, if these produce excitement and crowds,
it may even appear for a time as though expectation were fulfilled.
Probably nothing has done more to demean the whole idea of revival than
just such highly publicised efforts and their
temporary results.” Pentecost - Today?
|
“The fundamental question has to do with whether
or not the sin of Adam has ruined the nature of all his posterity... sin
is not simply a matter of actions which we repeat because we learn them
from the example of others. It is rather the result of an evil principle
which lies at the centre of a nature which is
fallen. Actual sins are only the surface proof of a deeper corruption
beneath... for God to deal with our sins would not be enough. It is our
sinfulness which is the fundamental problem.”
Pentecost - Today?
|
“Finney’s great argument was that if men have to experience a change
of nature before they can become Christians, and such a change as
only God can effect, then no sinner can be responsible for his unbelief
and lack of repentance... he deduced that men must possess the ability
to obey. This deduction sounds rational and logical, but it is not
scriptural... Hence what became known as the altar call, that is,
the practice of calling those who would be converted to take some visible
action which would clinch the matter... This new teaching was thus
popularising a dangerously superficial view of conversion, arising
out of a superficial view of sin. Man’s plight is a great deal more
serious than the representation implied by the new measures... the many
who responded to the measures without being converted were in a far worse
position, for in coming forward they did what they were told to do without
any result. With some justification they could come to regard conversion
as an illusion... The new teaching, by putting the emphasis on the instant
action taken by an individual following the evangelist’s appeal and not
upon a changed life, inevitably lowered standards of membership in
evangelical churches and so encouraged an acceptance of worldliness among
professing Christians.” Pentecost - Today?
|
“Martyn Lloyd-Jones,
when asked to be chairman for the Berlin Congress of the Billy Graham
Organization in 1966, declined to do so unless the practice of public
appeal was given up by Dr. Graham.”
Pentecost - Today?
|
“Where there is no alienation from sin there is no re-birth. Under the
new evangelism this ceased to be recognised and
so there grew up many forms of holiness teaching meant to help the numbers
of ‘unsanctified Christians’ now in the churches. Meanwhile the
fundamental reason for the existence of so many ‘carnal Christians’ was
largely unrecognised.” Pentecost - Today?
|
“All duties are vain the sight of God where the
pursuit of holiness is absent.” Pentecost
- Today?
|
“While a special duty lies upon those who teach, all believers are to
be steadfast in maintaining and defending—even to death—all that God has
revealed for our salvation. Heresy and error are no trivial things
according to Scripture.” Pentecost - Today?
|
“Prayer for revival is no substitute for
repentance and immediate obedience to the Word of God.”
Pentecost - Today?
|
“God gives promises and duties as instrumental means to
blessing, not as causes, for the grace of God is in the means as
well as in the result.” Pentecost - Today?
|
“To make human action the cause of divine
blessing is to overturn the whole nature of salvation.”
Pentecost - Today?
|
“Effectual prayer has a divine source and it achieves the purpose
which God himself intended.” Pentecost - Today?
|
“Instead of putting our hopes in the quantity of
prayer, as though that will bring revival, our trust needs to be in the
God who is himself the prime mover.”
Pentecost - Today?
|
“God has chosen to make prayer a means of blessing, not so that
the fulfillment of his purposes becomes dependent upon us, but rather to
help us learn our absolute dependence upon him.”
Pentecost - Today?
|
“The sufferings of Calvary are effective to
overcome all unworthiness and sin. There are no barriers and no
backslidings which sovereign love cannot overcome.”
Pentecost - Today?
|
“All spiritual weakness is ultimately due to poverty of thought about
God, and such weakness will persist as long as we suppose that man is the
starting point for its resolution.” Pentecost -
Today?
|
“Scripture never tells the believer that the
success of his work for Christ is the priority.”
Pentecost - Today?
|
“It is the work of the Spirit to make hearers conscious of a presence
distinct from that of the speaker.” Pentecost -
Today?
|
“True Christianity cannot exist without real
communion with God, and neither can true preaching.”
Revival And Revivalism
|
"Not to be taught by the Spirit, not to have such faith as originates
in his light and power, is not to be a Christian at all." Pentecost -
Today?
|