Saturday 11 November 2023

How Churches Become Missional

By W. Rodman MacIlvaine III

[W. Rodman MacIlvaine III is Senior Pastor, Grace Community Church, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, and Veritas Worldview Institute Fellow, Oklahoma Wesleyan University, Bartlesville, Oklahoma.]

How can churches shift to a missional focus? As Roxburgh and Romanuk put it, people ask, “How do we transition from a consumer model of church to one that is essentially missional in nature.”[1]

As this writer began to explore potential hypotheses for how missional change occurs, he assumed that senior leaders initiated changes in the conventional manner: (a) set down a plan, (b) recruit leaders, and (c) cast a vision. However, an extensive review of missional literature suggested that this is not the way missional culture change takes place in most churches. On the contrary the literature reveals that missional change is often quirky, nonlinear, and generally precipitated by a crisis.[2]

When a crisis is responded to in a spirit of humility and discovery, it creates an environment in which missional culture change can take place. This missional change is then expressed in service to the community (an external change), and a different way of worshipping as a community (an internal change).

Of course not all churches encountering a crisis will move in a missional direction. Some leaders respond to crises with anxiety and revert toward rigid leadership styles. Others seek to live vicariously through the ministry models of other churches. But churches primed for healthy missional change see their crises as an invitation to discover God’s new direction for ministry.

The Role Of Crisis In Leadership Development

In 2002 Warren Bennis made a claim that is rare in leadership literature. He suggested that he and his coauthor had made a new discovery. “We have developed a theory that describes, we believe for the first time, how leaders come to be. We believe we have identified the process that allows an individual to undergo testing and to emerge not just stronger, but equipped with the tools he or she needs both to lead and to learn.”[3]

Initially their research was designed to study generational differences in leaders. Interviewing eighteen leaders between the ages of eighteen and thirty-five, and twenty-five leaders age seventy and over, their objective was to observe how leaders grow and change relative to their respective cultures. Their ultimate desire was to crystallize a comprehensive theory of leadership, but their research moved in an unexpected direction.

One theme proved common in each leader’s life: crisis. Each leader had experienced one or more painful events that became a defining moment and propelled them into greater leadership effectiveness. This was true regardless of their age.

Corroboration From Other Authors

In the years since its publication Bennis’s crucible model has powerfully influenced others who write about leadership.[4] Bill George calls these crises “transformative experiences,” defining them as follows: “A transformative experience may come at any point in your life . . . [transformations] for many leaders result from going through a crucible.”[5] Like Bennis, George suggests that these experiences cause leaders to reframe their stories and increase their self-understanding.

Writing from a distinctly Christian perspective, Dan Allender also suggests that crises are integral parts of leadership development.

“In order to reclaim the joy and passion of leadership, we must walk the valley of the shadow of death and name the cost of leadership. . . . Every leader must count the cost of leadership, and the cost includes . . . crisis. . . . No one escapes these twists and turns in the valley.”[6]

Mary Townsend writes, “Crises occur when an individual is exposed to a stressor and [when] previous problem-solving techniques are ineffective. This causes the level of anxiety to rise. Panic may ensue when new techniques are used and resolution fails to occur.”[7] This disequilibrium and lack of control cause people to seek help from mentors, counselors, or friends.

For the crucible to have its intended effect, leaders must have a process in place to forge meaning out of the crisis in a way that gives fresh hope.

Nine Types Of Crises That Fuel Missional Change

Crises that lead to missional change fall into nine categories.

First, spiritual crises. The leader comes to a place of doubt about some aspect of theology or even the goodness of God. During the crisis phase he encounters a personal “dark night of the soul.” As he begins to resolve this issue, he thinks differently about the mission of the church.[8] He identifies with the serving ministry of Jesus and seeks to emulate that in his leadership style.

Second, cultural crises. The leader experiences frustration that the North American church in general and his church in particular are failing to engage postmodern culture with relevant expressions of ministry. As the leader and his team wrestle with the implications of this for their church, he comes to see missional ministry as a way of re-engaging people who are dissatisfied with church.[9] Serving becomes a context for expressing God’s common grace.

Third, midlife crises. The leader becomes painfully aware that he has given the bulk of his ministry years to a consumeristic flock that is never satisfied and constantly demands more. He asks, “What am I going to do in my remaining years to advance the Lord’s work and not just play church?”[10]

Fourth, interpersonal crises. A senior leader clashes with a ministry partner, which crushes expectations and creates pain. As the leader works through that pain, he comes to see his ministry in a different light.[11] This broken relationship makes the leader sensitive to the hurts of marginalized people in his community.

Fifth, moral crises or potential moral crises. A senior leader confronts the presence of a habit in his life that is out of control. As he effectively engages this struggle, he begins to minister from the vantage point of the healing he has experienced.[12] As he communicates his struggles, others with this same struggle are attracted to his ministry.

Sixth, situational crises. A church that once occupied a vibrant place in an urban area is now surrounded by poverty and pain. Or a church that was once highly focused stalls, and the leaders ask, “Do we move? Do we shift our vision? Or, do we stay and minister—missionally—in the spot where God has placed us?”[13]

Seventh, health crises. The leader or a member of a leader’s family goes through a crisis. The physical or mental distress requires extensive treatment and time away from the daily tasks of the church.[14] But the crisis also causes the leader to be on the lookout for others with health issues and then minister to them.

Eighth, managed crises. Chase Oaks Church, Plano, Texas, moved toward a missional ministry through a managed crisis. At the beginning of their transition, they faced five challenges: an imminent pastoral change, a location change, a name change, a shift in worship style, and a realignment of their subministries. The convergence of these issues constituted a crisis. However, the crisis was anticipated, and through skillful management of these challenges, they were able to move in a missional direction.[15]

Ninth, learning crises. Many churches move in a missional direction by deciding to learn from experiences gained on short-term mission trips.[16] For instance a church that has historically excelled at foreign missions returned from a short-term trip and asked, “Why don’t we feel the same passion for our city that we had when we ministered overseas? And how might we do things differently if we regarded our city as if it were a foreign mission field?” This was the experience of Bishop Lesslie Newbigin. After retiring from ministry in India, he discovered his own country was a more challenging mission field than India, and he adopted missionary principles as he ministered within his city.[17]

Biblical Examples Of The Crucible Model

Job endured a severe illness and in the process learned about the presence and power of God. Abraham waited more than twenty-five years for the birth of Isaac. God led him into a crucible in Genesis 22. Joseph was imprisoned for over thirteen years. His imprisonment became formative to his eventual leadership as prime minister over Egypt.[18] Jacob wrestled with God and became “incapacitated at the center of his human power.”[19] But he became the progenitor of the twelve tribes. Moses was forced to flee Egypt and to tend sheep in the wilderness for forty years. God then called him to serve as liberator of His people (Exod. 2:11-5:23). Elijah faced solitude at the Brook Cherith (1 Kings 17:1-7) before confronting Baal worshippers. Daniel was forced to adapt to the secular culture in Bablyon as a prelude for serving three of the most powerful kings in the world at that time (Dan. 1-4). God prepared Jonah to minister in Nineveh through his painful crucible experience in the belly of the great fish (Jon. 2).

In the Book of Acts the church discovered its sending identity as it encountered a series of crucibles. In Acts 6:1-6 a crisis stimulated missional serving. In Acts 8 a crisis, in this case persecution, stimulated missional going. In 11:19-26 a crisis prompted the church to learn to minister to those on the margins, and in chapter 15 theological conflict prompted the church to make new theological discoveries that further stimulated mission.

Two Observations On The Biblical Model

This biblical data suggests that two important discoveries take place when leaders encounter a crucible. First, the leader learns something experientially about the person of God that previously may have been known only in a theoretical way.

Paul’s thorn in the flesh is a classic example. Committed to the rigors of travel, this thorn had the potential to be immensely discouraging. However, after three seasons of prayer Paul made fresh discoveries about the presence and power of God. He wrote, “And He has said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for power is made perfect in weakness’ “(2 Cor. 12:9). This led Paul to submit courageously to God’s ways. “Most gladly, therefore, I will rather boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may dwell in me. Therefore I am well content with weaknesses, with insults, with distresses, with persecutions, and difficulties, for Christ’s sake; for when I am weak, then I am strong” (vv. 9-10).[20]

Paul’s attitude toward his crucible was honorable, because he knew that the outcome was increased spiritual power. Following the general pattern of Bennis and Thomas, the Sloan Leadership Institute uses the term “sense-making” for leadership discoveries in the crucible.[21] Paul was able to “make sense” through prayer, reflection, and bold acceptance of his circumstances in light of God’s transcendent meaning.

A second observation about the biblical model is that the “in-crucible” leader discovers new insights about theological concepts. Stark suggests that theologians are often forced to wrestle with the Scriptures in fresh ways as they confront new realities.[22]

Jeremiah 29:4-7 offers a fascinating example of this. The recently displaced exiles faced a crisis of identity. Their city of Jerusalem lay in ruins. Their temple had been reduced to rubble, and the instruments of worship had been removed to Babylon, where the exiles were taken as captives (Dan. 1:1-2).

This crucible of epic proportions could have destroyed their faith, but in the midst of that crucible Jeremiah penned a prophetic letter with insights that must have seemed radical. God instructed them to do four things: (1) build houses and plant gardens—build a financial presence, (2) take wives and start families—build a domestic presence, (3) seek the welfare of the city—cultivate a civic presence, and (4) pray for the city—have spiritual influence.

The exiles learned theological truths that they might not have learned apart from this crucible. The crux of their learning could be stated this way: common ground with secular culture is a vehicle for advancing God’s work in the culture, provided there is no moral compromise. This is the same principle on which Jesus built His ministries with tax collectors (Luke 5:27-32) and Paul with Gentiles (1 Cor. 9:19-23).

Examples Of The Crucible Model In Church History

In church history many leaders experienced crucibles that radically shifted the direction of their ministries. When Martin Luther became the leader of the Protestant Reformation, he pioneered new theological positions. Many of these positions had to be worked out quickly as he translated the Bible into German and prepared for his daily preaching and teaching.[23]

Embracing Psalm 119:71, Luther sought to learn theology experientially through his suffering. He developed the conviction that suffering was an important key to understanding what the Scriptures mean and how they apply to life.[24] He suffered from kidney stones, headaches, ear infections, constipation, and hemorrhoids.[25] However, he said that these were the trials that made him a theologian—precisely what the movement needed from Luther at this nascent stage.[26]

Charles Haddon Spurgeon offers another example of the crucible model. On October 19, 1856, when Spurgeon was twenty-two, massive crowds jammed into the largest public building in London. Someone cried, “Fire!” During the ensuing chaos, congregants, fearing for their lives, bolted from their seats. Some were killed; others were injured. Spurgeon spent the next several weeks in seclusion, suffering depression and anxiety from which he never fully recovered. At a time when authenticity was in vogue in the general culture but not in the church culture, Spurgeon’s deep struggles propelled him to levels of authenticity unknown among evangelical pastors. Moreover, Spurgeon’s ministry was missional long before the word came into fashion. Through Spurgeon’s leadership, over thirty ministries were started to meet the desperate needs of London’s poor, including orphanages and homes for elderly women.

Summary

The crucible model of leadership is well established within three literary streams: the biblical narrative, church history, and current works on leadership. However, the presence of a crisis does not automatically guarantee leaders will make missional changes. For missional change to take place, a certain kind of learning environment must also be present within the crucible.

Moving From Crisis To Missional Vision

Many assume that missional transitions in churches are primarily organizational in nature, led by senior pastors who learned the principles of engineering missional transitions and then mandated them on the strength of their charisma.

This suspicion is fueled by the massive literature from the “church-effectiveness movement” (ca. 1990-2004),[27] most of which is still in print and is selling well. Mancini notes that this movement came about in the early 1990s as church-growth writers recognized that church-growth techniques did not always work. Therefore a slightly different genre emerged: the “leadership effectiveness” genre, still cast within the worldview of modernity.[28]

However, the majority of missional authors reject both the church-growth model and the church-effectiveness model, assuming that long ago North American culture became thoroughly entrenched in postmodernity.[29] Therefore modernist notions of church effectiveness no longer apply and even frustrate change.

Without necessarily embracing the postmodern worldview, missional authors such as Roxburgh, Hirsch, Kiefert, and Frost ask, What are the new processes for moving toward missional ministry, given the reality of postmodernism? Today Roxburgh is the author most published in the field of missional change. Basing his change model on the research of anthropologist Victor Turner,[30] Roxburgh explores the sociology of transition in three phases: separation, margin (also known as liminality), and reengagement.

Separation Phase

In the separation phase a group loses its connection with an older, more established and more comfortable order. Roxburgh suggests that churches are currently experiencing this separation phase on two levels.

At the macrolevel the North American culture has changed radically in the past twenty-five years. The Christendom model, which suggested that the church was the chaplain to society, lasted in the West from roughly A.D. 313 into the late twentieth century. As the Christendom model has disintegrated, church leaders have sensed their marginalized status. Olson shows that church attendance is in decline,[31] McNeal explains that the church is seen increasingly as irrelevant,[32] and even within the evangelical community some suggest the local church, as currently conceived, is not only irrelevant but even pagan.[33] Moreover, the church is experiencing an increasingly strained relationship with the state and with secular universities, largely because of disagreement about the origin of life and the sanctity of life in the womb. Thus the church no longer enjoys the central place in North American culture it once did.

Churches are changing at the microlevel as well. The modernist ideal of the senior-pastor-dominated church has led to a crisis among pastors.[34] Hallmarks of the church-growth movement—contemporary worship, small groups, and the use of spiritual gifts—were not producing the numerical growth or spiritual growth that were expected.[35] Discouraged pastors wondered what they were doing wrong, not realizing that their increasingly marginalized, minority status was the result of broader culture shifts.

Roxburgh and Romanuk have underscored that the kind of change taking place in the postmodern matrix is not predictable change, but “discontinous change,” a change so profoundly different and unsettling that leaders quickly realize they are unprepared for its onslaught.[36] When church leaders finally realize that they are in crisis, and fully accept this reality, they enter a new phase, the liminal phase.

Liminal Phase

In the liminal phase (from the Latin limin, “threshold”), a group enters a transitional period with a purpose. The liminal phase refers to rites of passage in preindustrial cultures. “Individuals [were] detached from their established and normal role in society by being placed outside the social nexus in an in-between state. After some ritualized passage of time, they [were] returned, inwardly transformed and outwardly changed, to a new place and status.”[37]

This concept of liminality is an apt metaphor for churches in missional transition because of the assumption that church leaders should encounter this transition in community as a team. More-over, this metaphor is entirely biblical. But as Newbigin suggests, if missional churches are to be effective in the postmodern context, they must champion their countercultural identity, as a community, and offer a new expression of life in Christ.

The following agenda for the liminal phase may be suggested. First, the team becomes open to a renewed relationship with God as the pain of the crucible intensifies.[38] They express this openness by engaging in corporate spiritual disciplines.[39] An especially important component of this is the “de-catastrophizing of the crucible” by reflecting on God’s goodness and His sovereign control even in the crucible.

Second, the team moves toward a self-identity called communitas—the transformation of a group into an extremely close-knit team. When a leadership team in crisis feels marginalized and senses they are endangered, they commit to their common cause with renewed vision.[40]

Third, the team nurtures a different leadership environment. Consciously moving away from the modernist, top-down, proclamation of new vision, they suggest a bottom-up discovery process in which leaders speak with church members about where and how God is working in their midst.

Fourth, this renewed missional leadership team then begins to experiment with missional initiatives. Many missional authors suggest a five-step “Missional Change Model,”[41] based on Everett Rogers’s “Diffusion of Innovations” model,[42] in which change is viewed as a zig-zag process or an S-curve. Robert Lewis reflects this same kind of thinking.[43] Roxburg and Romanuk’s missional change model seems to have become standard in the literature. It includes five steps.

Step one: Awareness of the need for missional transition within the church. At this level the church begins to sense the crisis within the wider culture, and simultaneously senses God’s nudge to exit their comfort zone. Sometimes this step is precipitated by discussions with neighbors who surround the church.[44]

Step two: A growing understanding about what a missional transition might mean for the church. This step can be aided by reading about others who have experienced missional change.

Step three: Evaluation of what is happening in the church. Jim Collins’s dictum, “Face the brutal facts,” is a step toward the process of sensing the future God has in store for the church.

Step four: Creating missional experiments within the immediate local community and then evaluating those experiments. A crucial component of these experiments will typically be a renewed commitment to the biblical value of hospitality in which people use their homes as beachheads for ministry.[45]

Step five: Commit to a process of including a majority of church members in missional ventures so that a culture of communitas begins to develop.

Reengagement Phase

After successfully coming through the liminal phase the group is equipped to reemerge into their specific indigenous context—their city—with a new missional vision.

Summary

As missional leaders experience brokenness, they call their congregation into a new spiritual experience. Empowering church members to embrace their exilic—resident alien—status, these leaders foster a sense of communitas around a missional vision. The church then begins to engage its city in a countercultural way of life found in Christ.

How then do missional churches serve their cities?

Serving The Community

Historical Background

The body of Christ has enjoyed a glorious history of meeting significant needs within indigenous cultures around the world.[46] In the first three centuries it was service primarily that contributed to the exponential growth of the church throughout the Mediterranean world.[47] Even the pagan emperor Julian the Apostate admitted that religions rooted in polytheism did not have adequate resources to sustain service, especially when natural disasters such as plagues and fires swept through cities.[48]

Moreover, during seasons of spiritual renewal (such as the awakenings of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries) Christians recommitted themselves to the value of serving. For instance England experienced a profound evangelical revival in the mid-1800s, characterized by a renewed commitment to serving the poor.[49] Lord Shaftsbury helped enact laws protecting children.[50] George Mueller created orphanages, and William Wilberforce, in addition to helping abolish slavery, worked for the protection of animals, a commitment that stemmed from his belief that Christians are stewards of God’s creation.

But the social-gospel movement in the United States in the early twentieth century challenged this historic culture of service. Social-gospel proponents served their cities, but they had no use for evangelism. Evangelicals became passionate about sharing the gospel, but they showed little concern for social action.

A historic shift seems to have occurred in 1973. Through the influence of two men, evangelicals became reawakened to the value of serving. John R. W. Stott’s leadership in the Lausanne Movement and the books he authored set the stage for “the whole church taking the whole gospel to the whole world.” For Stott the whole gospel included social action.[51] Stott’s theologically conservative pedigree caused evangelicals to take a second look at social action as a legitimate expression of God’s method for engaging the world.

Francis A. Schaeffer awakened evangelicals to a cause with clear moral implications: abortion is the taking of a human life.[52] Evangelicals who watched Schaeffer’s films soon became passionate about serving unwed mothers in an effort to help stem the tide of abortions across the country.[53]

However, this new foray into service was frequently inconsistent. While evangelicals could become passionate about serving those in need overseas, they were somewhat less passionate about serving the needy domestically, and while evangelicals became passionate about serving unwed mothers, they were not quite so passionate about serving those stricken with AIDS.

Recent Evangelical Shift

A cluster of works between 1991 and 2001 awakened a new generation to the value of service. Specifically Sjogren’s books give examples of churches reaching into their communities by being God’s conduits of common grace.[54]

Robert Lewis’s seminal work The Church of Irresistible Influence seems to have helped launch a missional movement.[55] Lewis reported on a solidly evangelical church passionately devoted to working with their community, meeting needs, and seeing significant fruit. Lewis’s second work, Culture Shift solidified his role as the leader in missional transitions among evangelicals.[56]

Theological Reappraisal

Missional theologians began to focus on the serving nature of God.[57] Old Testament prophecies about the Messiah called Him a servant (Isa. 52:13; 53:11; Zech. 3:8). Jesus summed up His ministry as one of service, when He said, “For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many” (Mark 10:45).

This theological construct about God being a serving God encouraged evangelicals to reemphasize His role in common grace. If God is lavishly generous to those who do not bow to His lordship, how can His followers do any less? Should they not serve those on the margins of society?

Public Schools As A Target For Service

Churches moving in a missional direction will want to examine the specific needs of their local culture, paying special attention to those institutions that are experiencing chaotic changes. Mancini suggests that in many cases churches will discover tremendous needs in their local school districts. For instance a church might recognize that in certain parts of the city, “the education system is a huge failure; gaping community need is evidenced by a high percentage of high school dropouts.”[58] Many missional churches find that their first foray into missional ministry is through the public schools because their children spend most of their time there and they are most aware of their needs.[59]

From Shotgun Service To Targeted Service

In 2005 the Kennedy School of Government released a case study entitled, “A Mega-Church Takes on Urban Problems: Fellowship Bible Comes to South Midtown.”[60] One of the important discoveries in this study is that this church now targets its serving efforts to a specific part of their city. Rather than maintaining the shotgun approach that many missional churches adopted in their early transition, Fellowship Bible Church, Little Rock, Arkansas, targeted a specific geographic area of the city for an extended period of time with the intention of making a sustained missional change. Their theme “One Church, One School, One Neighborhood” emerged in 2003. Their goal was not a quick-fix approach. On the contrary, they looked at making changes over four generations or perhaps over fifty years.[61]

Deeply rooted in the biblical concept of common grace, Robert Lewis’s strategy looks for sustained social transformation. In this vision, as applied by Fellowship Bible Church, “school mentoring would serve both as an end in itself—to improve student performance and provide a volunteer opportunity for church members—but also to serve as a means for [the church] to raise its profile in the neighborhood and gain the confidence and trust of residents and local churches. Both would be important in helping [the church] realize its larger goals.”[62]

Summary

In missional churches service is seen as a return to a historic value of the church, temporarily lost during the twentieth century. In the missional construct, service is especially local. “What are the needs in our immediate situation? How can we meet those needs as an expression of God’s common grace for long-term sustained culture change within our community?”

Conclusion

Senior leaders in contemporary churches recognize that massive shifts are taking place in their culture, requiring fresh and sometimes counterintuitive ways of engaging secular and postmodern people. The seeker/performance model, pioneered by Willow Creek Community Church, helpful in the 1980s and 1990s, does not seem to attract young postmoderns.[63] Younger Christians regard other structured models with suspicion as well.[64]

Increasingly this group looks at megachurches with suspicion, wondering if behind their massive size is a pastor whose real passion is power instead of God’s work.[65] Church leaders wonder if a missional approach to ministry might be the way to connect with postmodern people who feel the church is out of touch with emerging spirituality and isolated from the needs of hurting people.[66]

This article has argued that most churches moving in a missional direction do so because of a crisis. So the final word to leaders in transition is this: Like Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego in the fiery furnace (Dan. 3:24-25), accept the crucible and Christ who reveals Himself from within it.

Notes

  1. Alan J. Roxburgh and Fred Romanuk, The Missional Leader: Equipping Your Church to Reach a Changing World (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2006), xiii.
  2. Roxburgh offers a helpful perspective on the nonlinear nature of missional change (ibid., 84-103).
  3. Warren Bennis and Robert J. Thomas, Leading for a Lifetime: How Defining Moments Shape the Leaders of Today and Tomorrow (Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2007), 4 (italics added).
  4. Bennis’s influence as the elder statesman of leadership theory is clear from the “Warren Bennis” imprint at Jossey-Bass publishers. Clearly anyone writing under this imprint will have studied Bennis and taken his theories into account.
  5. Bill George with Peter Sims, True North: Discover Your Authentic Leadership (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2007), 45 (italics added).
  6. Dan B. Allender, Leading with a Limp: Turning Your Struggles into Strengths (Colorado Springs: WaterBrook, 2006), 28-29.
  7. Mary C. Townsend, Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing: Concepts of Care, 4th ed. (Philadelphia: F. A. Davis, 2003), 205.
  8. Dave Tomlinson cites an example of this in The Post-Christian Evangelical: Revised North American Edition (Grand Rapids: emergentYS Books [imprint of Zondervan], 2003), 18.
  9. A growing number of authors are concerned that the church has failed to engage the postmodern culture. Their work has resonated with younger pastors seeking to reach peers in their own cohort. These authors include Dan Kimball, They Like Jesus but Not the Church: Insights from Emerging Generations (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2007); David Kinnaman and Gabe Lyons, Unchristian: What a New Generation Really Thinks about Christianity (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2007); Eddie Gibbs and Ryan K. Bolger, Emerging Churches (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2005); Sarah Cunningham, “Interview: Dissing Illusionment—Counter Culture Currents,” Leadership (winter 2007): 17; Katie Galli, “Dear Disillusioned Generation—the ‘Failed Experiment’ Called the Church Still Looks Better than the Alternatives: The CT Review,” Christianity Today, April 2008, 69; and David Olson, The American Church in Crisis: Groundbreaking Research Based on a National Database of Over 200,000 Churches (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2008), 191-226.
  10. Milfred Minatrea has observed this in his consulting with seasoned pastors (interview by the author, July 26, 2007).
  11. This seems to have been the experience of Dieter Zander at Willow Creek Community Church (Gibbs and Bolger, Emerging Churches, 323-28).
  12. Chuck Colson exemplifies this. A convicted and released felon, he started Prison Fellowship as a way to serve prisoners and transform the prison system. Many pastors who have started Celebrate Recovery ministries in their churches have done so because they detected the presence of an addictive habit in their lives. They now minister out of the strength of their recovery.
  13. College Hill Presbyterian Church, Cincinnati, Ohio, moved toward missional ministry in a crisis brought on by denominational conflict. To cast vision during the crisis Stephen Eyre suggested, “The missional process is the shift from the church as an institution in a Christian culture, to a community in mission in a non-Christian culture” (“Can the Church Be Converted: How ‘Missional’ Came to College Hill Presbyterian Church,” Theology Matters [September–October 2004], 6-10). Lois Barrett also suggests that a crisis is a common precipitating cause for missional change. “A congregation’s sense that it has a missional vocation, and its idea of what that vocation is, comes about out of the crucible of struggle” (Treasure in Clay Jars: Patterns in Missional Faithfulness [Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2004], 53).
  14. Lon Solomon of McLean (VA) Bible Church was motivated to start a ministry to the handicapped after the birth of his special-needs daughter (Todd Phillips, interview by the author, July 29, 2008). See also Lon Solomon, Brokenness: How God Redeems Pain and Suffering (Potomac, MD: Red Door, 2005).
  15. Chase Oaks Church, Plano, Texas, church staff (interview by the author, July 25, 2008).
  16. Case-study interviews with Irving (Texas) Bible Church and Christ Chapel Bible Church, Fort Worth, Texas, reveal that both churches had extensive experience in sending short-term mission teams before they embraced a missional philosophy of ministry. Their involvement in missions gave them a way of thinking about crosscultural ministry that was instructive as they ministered in their particular indigenous neighborhoods in the Dallas/Fort Worth area (see Rod MacIlvaine, “Selected Case Studies in How Senior Leaders Cultivate Missional Change in Contemporary Churches” (D. Min. diss., Dallas Theological Seminary, 2009), chapter 4.
  17. See Michael Green, “The Apologetics of Lesslie Newbigin,” in The Lord Is My Light: RZIM Zacharias Trust Summer School (Oxford: Keble College, Oxford University, 2005), 3. This is also the experience of this author. After Grace Community Church, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, had ministered effectively in Cuba for three years, the elders felt convicted to think differently about the role of the church in its immediate neighborhood. This led to adopting a public school as a target for service and then praying regularly for its teachers. This has resulted in a lasting relationship and opportunities to present the gospel.
  18. Joseph’s crisis ultimately led to powerful serving opportunities (Gen. 37-48).
  19. In discussing the Jacob narrative Carolyn Arends explains how failure empowers leadership effectiveness (“Here’s to All the Losers: Why Defeat at the Hands of God Is Magnificent,” Christianity Today, July 2008; http://www.christian-itytoday.com/ct/2008/july/20.50.html (accessed November 15, 2008).
  20. See Timothy Savage, Power through Weakness: Paul’s Understanding of the Christian Ministry in 2 Corinthians (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), 169-71.
  21. Sloan Leadership Institute, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, “Leadership: Building Your Personal Development Plan! People and Organizations, Fall 2005”; http://ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonlyres/Sloan-School-of-Management/15-668Fall-2005/885-F458F-2E1A-4005-BDD2-4060236717C6/0/lecture_15.pdf (accessed May 24, 2008).
  22. Rodney Stark, The Victory of Reason: How Christianity Led to Freedom, Capitalism, and Western Success (New York: Random House, 2008), 24-32.
  23. At the height of his ministry Luther preached, on average, every other day. He wrote approximately 130 publications per year. And he taught regular classes at a university (John Piper, The Legacy of Sovereign Joy: God’s Triumphant Grace in the Lives of Augustine, Luther and Calvin [Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2000], 86-92).
  24. Ibid., 104.
  25. Ibid., 105.
  26. Ibid., 106.
  27. This term is used by Will Mancini, Church Unique: How Missional Leaders Cast Vision, Capture Culture, and Create Movement (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2008), 29-31.
  28. Ibid., 31-32. An example of a modernist approach to church growth is the work of Carl George, who proposed a highly structured church using the globe model and conceptualizing the senior pastor as the chief executive officer. Shortly after the metachurch model was adopted by Willow Creek Community Church, it was subsequently adopted by most churches in the Willow Creek Association. For several years this was likely the dominant model among churches in the States. Today the vast majority of church leaders admit that it did not work, in part because its modernist notions about control were becoming irrelevant. For further information on the metachurch see Carl George, The Coming Church Revolution: Empowering Leaders for the Future (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1994); and idem, How to Break Growth Barriers: Capturing Overlooked Opportunities for Church Growth (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1993).
  29. There are subtle distinctions among missional authors regarding missional change. Stetzer (Ed Stetzer and David Putnam, Breaking The Missional Code: Your Church Can Become a Missionary in Your Community [Nashville: Broadman & Holman], 2006], esp. chap. 4) and Minatrea (Milfred Minatrea, Shaped by God’s Heart: The Passion and Practices of Missional Churches [San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2004], 143-54)—from their Baptist perspective—and Craig Van Gelder (The Missional Church and Denominations: Helping Congregations Develop a Missional Identity [Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2008])—from a Lutheran perspective—are more conservative than others in their change models. Those with no denominational ties tend to be more radical.
  30. Victor Turner, an English anthropologist, gained notoriety by updating the work of French ethnographer Arnold van Gennep (1873-1957) and his threefold structure of rites of passage. Turner’s seminal work is set forth in The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure (Piscataway, NJ: Aldine, 1995).
  31. David Olson, The American Church in Crisis: Groundbreaking Research Based on a National Database of Over 200,000 Churches (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2008), 177-80.
  32. Reggie McNeal says this, in part, is because the church refuses to admit that most people in North American culture are thoroughly postmodern in orientation. Consequently the church assumes modernity and preaches to modernity (The Present Future: Six Tough Questions for the Church [San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2003], 54-55).
  33. Frank Viola and George Barna, Pagan Spirituality? Exploring the Roots of Our Church Practices (Carol Stream, IL: BarnaBooks, 2008). While this author disagrees with the premises and the historicity of this work, it is part of the current missional conversation.
  34. The modernist assumption was that the pastor was the “educated professional” set apart from the laity of the congregation (Alan J. Roxburgh, The Sky Is Falling: Leaders Lost in Transition, a Proposal for Leadership Communities to Take New Risks for the Reign of God [Eagle, ID: ACI, 2006], 176).
  35. Joseph R. Myers makes this point in his two books, The Search to Belong: Rethinking Intimacy, Community, and Small Groups (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2003); and Organic Community: Creating a Place Where People Naturally Connect (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2007).
  36. Roxburgh and Romanuk, The Missional Leader: Equipping Your Church to Reach a Changing World, 8-9.
  37. Alan J. Roxburgh, The Missionary Congregation: Leadership and Liminality (Harrisburg, PA: Trinity, 1997), 24.
  38. Ibid., 31-32.
  39. Roxburgh, The Sky Is Falling, 180-87.
  40. Alan Hirsch, The Forgotten Ways: Reactivating the Missional Church (Grand Rapids: Brazos, 2006), 217-41; and Roxburgh, The Sky Is Falling, 49-56.
  41. Roxburgh and Romanuk, The Missional Leader, 105; cf. Keifert, We Are Here Now, 51.
  42. Everett Rogers, Diffusion of Innovations, 5th ed. (New York: Free, 2003), 269-91.
  43. Robert Lewis and Wayne Cordiero, Culture Shift: Transforming Your Church from the Inside Out (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2005), 155-68.
  44. Meeting neighbors was the experience in the early missional transition of Fellowship Bible Church in Little Rock, Arkansas. “Some of our staff said, ‘Let’s go meet our neighbors.’ We discovered our assumptions were dead wrong” (ibid., 159).
  45. Roxburgh and Romanuk, The Missional Leader, 155-58. For a detailed study of the biblical and historical model of Christian hospitality see Christine D. Pohl, Making Room: Recovering Hospitality as a Christian Tradition (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1999).
  46. See for example Alvin J. Schmidt, Under the Influence: How Christianity Changed the World (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2001), 125-70. See also Vincent Carroll and David Shiflett, “Christianity and Charity,” in Christianity on Trial: Arguments against Anti-Religious Bigotry (San Francisco: Encounter, 2002), 139-61.
  47. Rodney Stark, Discovering God: The Origins of the Great Religions and the Evolution of Belief (New York: HarperOne, 2008), 318-20.
  48. Julian lamented, “Why do we not observe that it is in their benevolence to strangers, their care for the graves of the dead, and the apparent holiness of their lives that they have done most to increase [Christianity]” (quoted in Paul Johnson, A History of Christianity [New York: Atheneum, 1976], 75).
  49. W. Andrew Hoffecker reconceptualizes the period of the Enlightenment, suggesting that the period around 1715-1815 should be termed “enlightenment and awakenings” and notes that each time an awakening occurred “there was a corresponding commitment to ‘involvement in public good works based on Christ’s redemptive work on the cross’ “(Revolutions in Worldview: Understanding the Flow of Western Thought [Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R, 2007], 277).
  50. John D. Woodbridge, More than Conquerors (Chicago: Moody, 1992), 245-51.
  51. Stott spells out his agenda for social action in New Issues Facing Christians Today: Fully Revised Edition (London: Marshall Pickering, 1984), 3-32. The present author has spent many hours listening to missionally based sermons delivered by Stott in All-Souls Church in London. A biblically grounded vision of social action became a primary goal of his exegetical work and is clearly evident in his preaching.
  52. Francis A. Schaeffer, How Should We Then Live? 3rd ed. (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 1983); and idem, Whatever Happened to the Human Race? (Old Tappan, NJ: Revell, 1979).
  53. The author attended a Whatever Happened to the Human Race seminar at Southern Methodist University in 1977, featuring Francis Schaeffer, his son, and C. Everett Koop. Schaeffer and Koop presented the problem in a compelling way, and they strongly suggested that social action was an option open to faithful Christ-followers.
  54. Steve Sjogren, Conspiracy of Kindness: A Refreshing New Approach to Sharing the Love of Jesus with Others—No Guilt, No Stress, Low Risk and High Grace (Ann Arbor, MI: Servant, 1993), 149-65; and idem, Servant Warfare: How Kindness Conquers Spiritual Darkness (Ventura, CA: Gospel Light, 1996).
  55. Robert Lewis, The Church of Irresistible Influence: Bridge Building Stories to Help Reach Your Community (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2001), 140-55.
  56. Lewis and Cordiero, Culture Shift, 135-68.
  57. Examples of this include Christopher J. H. Wright, The Mission of God: Unlocking the Bible’s Grand Narrative (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2006), 65-67; and Walter C. Kaiser Jr., Mission in the Old Testament (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2000), 56 n 4.
  58. Mancini, Church Unique, 103.
  59. The recent missional changes at Irving Bible Church, Irving, Texas, and Christ Chapel Bible Church, Fort Worth, Texas, reflect this. See MacIlvaine. “Selected Case Studies in How Senior Leaders Cultivate Missional Change in Contemporary Churches,” chapter 4.
  60. Howard Husock, “A Mega-Church Takes on Urban Problems: Fellowship Bible Church Comes to Midtown” (Kennedy School of Government Case Program, 2005).
  61. Ibid., 14-15.
  62. Ibid., 15.
  63. Wade Hodges and Greg Taylor, “We Can’t Do Megachurch Anymore: What Happens When an Attractional Church Is Compelled to Go in a Different Direction?” Leadership, winter 2007, 49-51.
  64. Sarah Cunningham, “Interview: Dissing Illusionment—Counter Culture Currents,” Leadership, winter 2007, 17.
  65. The feeling among younger Christians that the megachurch movement is not authentic has been exacerbated by revelations that some pastors “cook” the numbers to make their ministries look better. See Warren Cole Smith, “Numbers Racket: Survey Results on Megachurch Growth Do Not Add Up,” World Magazine, December 1, 2007, 26-27.
  66. Reggie McNeal, The Present Future: Six Tough Questions for the Church (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2003), 56-61.

What Is the Missional Church Movement?

By W. Rodman MacIlvaine III

[W. Rodman MacIlvaine III is Senior Pastor, Grace Community Church, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, and Veritas Worldview Institute Fellow, Oklahoma Wesleyan University, Bartlesville, Oklahoma.]

A few years ago hardly any books addressed North America as if it were a mission field. But that has changed. After the publication of Darrell Guder’s groundbreaking book Missional Church[1] and the rediscovery of Lesslie Newbigin’s missional ecclesiology, an explosion of books hit the market, explaining how churches can “go missional.” Missional books range from densely argued theological tomes, such as Arthur F. Glasser’s Announcing the Kingdom: The Story of God’s Mission in the Bible (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2003), to missional works with denominational slants, to highly practical field manuals that give step-by-step instructions.[2] At a recent conference, Alan Roxburgh suggested that ten new titles were either under contract or about to be published with the term “missional” in the title or subtitle.[3]

This trend has been noticed by magazines such as Christianity Today, Leadership, and Charisma, which regularly feature articles on the work of missional churches. Riveting stories are showing up in the blogosphere about churches shifting from an inward focus to an external focus, seeking to serve their cities for the advancement of the Lord’s work. Clearly missional ecclesiology is developing as a new form of ministry.

Gone is the idealism of the social gospel, in which service was done for the glory of service. In contrast the church has witnessed the emergence of energetic and informed lay leaders seeking to be conduits of God’s common grace so that they can then be conduits of God’s saving grace. As they serve, their missional theology is sophisticated enough to remind them that God is responsible for the results, and therefore they can serve with generosity and authenticity.

Some theologians, inspired by John Stott and Lesslie Newbigin, are developing comprehensive biblical theologies that portray God’s preexisting and eternal mission—His missio Dei, as the organizing principle of the Bible.[4] “Missional” has become a precise term with a growing body of scholarly and popular writings to support it.

The adjective “missional,” when applied to the church, is different from other adjectives currently in vogue. Terms such as “emergent” and “emerging” describe so-called cutting-edge churches reaching young postmoderns. But some emergent thinkers seem to be jettisoning major portions of the historic Christian faith altogether, edging toward old-fashioned liberalism with its theological double-speak.[5] The term “missional,” on the other hand, has evolved to have a precise definition, rich in theological significance in four areas: theology proper, Christology, soteriology, and ecclesiology.

Definitions

A missional church is a unified body of believers,[6] intent on being God’s missionary presence[7] to the indigenous community that surrounds them,[8] recognizing that God is already at work.[9]

Taking seriously the fact that they have been sent by the risen Christ to be the agents of God’s preexisting mission, missional churches embrace a distinctly countercultural mindset. On the one hand they engage a lifestyle of common ground with the world but without moral or spiritual compromise. On the other hand they are not afraid to challenge assumptions, even the idols within the culture that harm and enslave people.

Missional Christians generally display common ground with the world, first through generous acts of service but also through the arts[10] and at times through positions of leadership within the community or the state. Having earned the right to be heard, they lovingly invite friends to a different way of life in Christ within their transformed community.[11]

Missional churches see themselves as agents of God’s preexisting mission within their own indigenous communities, and they engage those communities on common ground without compromise.

What then is the current status of the missional church?

A Brief History Of Missional Ecclesiology

Beginnings Of Missio Dei

The modern missionary movement is generally traced to the publication in 1792 of William Carey’s book, An Enquiry into the Obligation of Christians to Use Means for the Conversion of the Heathen and to the subsequent establishment of the Baptist Missionary Society.[12] For the next 125 years the explosion of missionary activity around the globe was astounding.[13] At the time of the inauguration of the World Missionary Conference in Edinburgh in 1910 the Christian faith had moved from being a mostly European phenomenon to become a global faith.[14] Western-style Christendom, it was assumed, would continue to flourish in foreign lands unabated for years to come, while also advancing at home.[15]

This expectation was fueled both by pioneer missionaries who opened new fields and the creation of new missionary societies that often crossed denominational and confessional barriers.[16] Their passion was to unify the body of Christ and mobilize resources for worldwide evangelization. As church members back home heard stories of God’s powerful work in exotic lands, many of them sensed the missionary call and prepared for service.

However, the “long nineteenth century” of missionary advance must be understood within the framework of the prevailing worldview of the West.[17] By the close of the eighteenth century, Europe was well into the era of the Enlightenment. The wars following the Reformation (ca. 1562-1648) and the excesses of the Radical Reformation had left Europeans weary of all religion, both Catholic and Protestant. Simultaneously there was a rapid increase in scientific discovery sparked by the publication of Isaac Newton’s three-volume Principia Mathematica in 1687. Negative attitudes toward religion, coupled with intellectual advances in the sciences, led to the idea that perhaps humans can discover truth through unaided reason, bypassing divine revelation altogether.

On the European continent the Enlightenment lasted for approximately 150 years (1650-1799)[18] and culminated in the atrocities of the French Revolution. After 1799, Europe, wary of rationalism but still clinging to it, shifted into literary and artistic romanticism at best and intellectual skepticism and atheism at worst.

In Britain and America, however, the spiritual climate was different. The First Great Awakening (1730s and 1740s) prompted evangelical fervor on both sides of the Atlantic. Methodism and Pietism brought renewed interest in a personal relationship with God and a reformation of morals. Moreover, evangelicals in the decades to come, especially in Victorian England, developed a zealous commitment to social action, which was epitomized in the work of the Clapham Sect.[19]

The modern missionary movement thus began in this climate of evangelical renewal, but it was set within the broader context of post-Enlightenment romanticism.

The Enlightenment And Missio Dei

In the nineteenth century, however, remnants of the Enlightenment worldview left an indelible mark on attitudes toward missions. Pocock, speaking broadly about this period, suggests, “Christianity and Western Enlightenment principles tended to coalesce in the missionary endeavors launched from Europe and North America.”[20] Jongeneel agrees. “To understand this new development [missio Dei], it is necessary to go back to the age of the Enlightenment which, for the first time in history, did not regard mission as God’s very own work but as a purely human endeavor. Thereafter, a very anthropocentric theology emerged.”[21]

In examining the broad sweep of nineteenth-century missionary advance, Nussbaum suggests that “people became so convinced of the importance of human initiative that they hardly thought of God as being active in mission.”[22] Indeed at times missions became completely divorced from its biblical and theological underpinnings and was identified with Western imperialism and colonialism.[23]

Not all missiologists accepted the prevailing Enlightenment model in the nineteenth century. Charles Pettit McIlvaine (1799-1873), for instance, revealed a strongly God-centered missional understanding as early as 1839.[24] While not specifically using the term “missional,” the journals and letters he wrote while aiding wounded soldiers during the Civil War reflect his strong conviction that he had been sent to serve as a representative of Christ’s preexisting mission.[25]

Missio Dei After World War I

In the aftermath of World War I anthropocentric views of mission began to change because of the work of Swiss theologian Karl Barth. He played an important role in bridging the gap between the separatist Fundamentalism of the 1920s that eschewed meaningful involvement in culture and humanistic liberalism that sometimes equated culture with God.[26] Barth’s theological approach had three strengths that were particularly helpful to the revitalization of a missiology that was both Christ-affirming and culture-affirming. First, his theology is rooted in biblical exegesis, and therefore it was less dependent on preexisting theological and philosophical bias.[27] Second, his theology is thoroughly Christocentric, stressing Jesus’ role as the Revealer of God.[28] Third, his theology is highly Trinitarian.[29] While these three developments might seem like a reiteration of Reformation principles, Barth’s neoorthodox pedigree, intellectual prowess, and creative genius forced liberals and fundamentalists alike to wrestle with his ideas.[30] “At the Brandenburg Missionary Conference in 1932, Karl Barth [articulated] mission as an activity of God himself.”[31] Using the term actio Dei, Barth suggested that the Trinitarian relationship within the Godhead is the source of all mission.[32]

Bosch notes that Barth broke radically from the Enlightenment approach to mission by grounding mission first in God and not in the human endeavor of the church.[33] If Barth’s hypothesis was true, then God’s eternal and Trinitarian mission would be ontologically prior to the commands of Jesus expressed in the Great Commissions at the end of the four Gospels and in Acts 1:8, and would provide the foundation for them.[34]

The following year (1933) German missiologist Karl Hartenstein expressed similar views. However, rather than using the term actio Dei, a term coined by Barth, he employed the term missio Dei: the mission of God.[35] This emerging concept of missio Dei suggests that from eternity past the triune God has been on a mission. To fulfill that mission He engages in a series of sending acts. The Father sent the Son into the world at the Incarnation (John 1:14). The Father guides His Son during His ministry (5:31). The Son sends the church into the world after His resurrection (20:21). The Son sent the Spirit into the world at Pentecost (14:16-17; Acts 2:1-4).

The real crystallization of missio Dei, however, came in 1952 at the meeting of the International Missionary Council in Willingen, Germany, in the work of Georg Vicedom.[36] According to Vicedom, “Mission flows from the inner movement of God in personal relationship.”[37]

In the aftermath of this meeting a shift in thinking occurred—from the church as possessing a mission, to God being a missionary God and the church participating in His mission.[38] As Pachuau suggests, “Since the middle of the twentieth century, this understanding of Christian mission as missio Dei has enjoyed such popularity that it has come to be recognized almost as a theological consensus.”[39] In this concept mission is not primarily the activity of the church but of God.[40] The emphasis is not that Jesus gave the church a mission. Rather, the emphasis is that Jesus invited the church into God’s preexisting mission.

Initial Rejection By Evangelicals

Evangelicals did not immediately embrace this new theological understanding of mission for two reasons. The first reason was theological. Young suggests that the concept of missio Dei went through a thirty-year dark period, roughly from the 1960s to the 1990s, because the ecumenical movement, driven in part by process theology, hijacked the term and made it synonymous with God’s work in history.[41] Missio Dei was associated with a social gospel that met needs but did not stress personal salvation. It “was used as a way of showing how all religions were advancing God’s work, and evangelicals were rightly suspicious.”[42]

The second reason was cultural. From the 1920s through the mid-1940s evangelicals, especially in the United States, were placed on the defensive. Confronted with problems such as denominational liberalism, the fundamentalist-modernist controversy, and the Scopes Trial, many Christian leaders led their flocks into a shell of legalism and cultural isolationism that lasted well into the 1970s. During this time in some traditions radical separation from culture was seen as evidence of Christian spirituality.[43]

The Evangelical Reappraisal

John R. W. Stott (and Christopher J. H. Wright). In his works Christian Mission in the Modern World (1975) and New Issues Facing Christians Today (1984) Stott, an active participant in the emerging missio Dei conversation and a founding leader in the Lausanne Movement, affirms the God-centeredness of mission. “The primal mission is God’s, for it is he who sent his prophets, his Son, his Spirit. Of these missions the mission of the Son is central, for it was the culmination of the ministry of the prophets, and it embraced within itself as its climax the sending of the Spirit. And now the Son sends [believers] as he himself was sent.”[44]

While Stott correctly roots mission in the proper place (God, not man), his work at times seems to suggest that evangelism and social action are the only two essentials of mission. Evangelism has traditionally been considered the cornerstone of mission, and the inclusion of social action seemed a valuable emphasis as Stott provided leadership at the initial Lausanne Conference in 1974. But in the following years evangelical missional theology has evolved with a fuller conception of mission.

Stott’s protégé, Christopher J. H. Wright, updates his mentor’s thinking in his groundbreaking theological work The Mission of God: Unlocking the Bible’s Grand Narrative. Like other missional authors, Wright grounds mission in the triune God, but rather than limiting mission to evangelism and social action, he looks to the saving acts of God in the Bible as the example of mission. “A missional hermeneutic of the Bible is not limited to the Great Commission passages in the Gospels and Acts. Rather those great imperatives are set within the truths that the Bible affirms about God, creation, human life in its paradox of dignity and depravity, redemption in all its comprehensive glory, and the new creation in which God will dwell with His people.”[45]

Some suggest Wright may be subject to the criticism that “if everything is mission, then nothing is mission.”[46] But Wright avoids this problem by carefully categorizing God’s missional acts toward His creatures and then constructing a specific missional agenda, including such practical things as responding to the AIDS crisis.[47] But the man who, more than anyone else, is seen as the father of missional ecclesiology is Lesslie Newbigin (1909-1998).[48]

Lesslie Newbigin. After his theological education in Cambridge University, Newbigin became a missionary to India under the auspices of the Foreign Mission Committee of the Church of Scotland, eventually becoming a bishop in 1947. When Newbigin first arrived in India, he was firmly entrenched in the view that the missionary venture involves a concomitant importation of Western values and culture along with the gospel. But as his ministry progressed, he recognized that this view was inadequate, and he adopted a model of engagement with the world based on Paul’s example of common ground without compromise (1 Cor. 9:19-23). Once common ground was established and trust earned, Newbigin proposed challenging the prevailing cultural assumptions and presenting a better way in Christ.[49]

When he returned to England in the mid-1950s, Newbigin realized that England had changed dramatically and had become a more difficult mission field than India.[50] England and indeed the West had become post-Christian and postmodern. Therefore the missionary principles he had used for decades in India needed to be used in England.

Newbigin’s protégé, Michael Green, suggests that Newbigin at this time began to reject the Enlightenment rationalism that sought to prove Christianity through reason alone. Newbigin’s emerging apologetic was rooted in experiencing the person of Jesus in the context of a countercultural community.[51] He affirmed that a gospel of reconciliation can be communicated only by a reconciled fellowship.[52]

Newbigin’s extensive bibliography of articles and books, beginning in 1933 and continuing till his death in 1999, displays intellectual vigor on many fronts. He was especially strong as he proposed his philosophy of crossing cultures with the gospel message. In missional ecclesiology he proposes being culturally sensitive and yet radically countercultural at the same time. Newbigin’s presentation of this biblical tension presented an exciting field of exploration to a new generation of missiologists increasingly concerned that North America had become a mission field.

The gospel and culture network. In the mid-1980s “The Gospel and Our Culture Network”[53] was founded largely in response to Newbigin’s The Other Side of 1984: Questions for the Churches.[54] The founders claimed that “Bishop Newbigin and others have helped us to see that God’s mission is calling and sending us, the church of Jesus Christ, to be a missionary church in our own societies, in the cultures in which we find ourselves. These cultures are no longer Christian.”[55]

While fresh works on missional themes began to appear in the 1980s and 1990s—most notably by DuBose and Van Engen[56]—the work of Darrell Guder in 1998 (Missional Church: A Vision for the Sending of the Church in North America) set the stage for the extensive interest in missional ecclesiology today. Guder, then professor of evangelism and church growth at Columbia Theological Seminary, was convinced that a theological revolution was needed in the area of ecclesiology that answered the question, “What would the church look like if it were truly missional in design and definition?”[57]

The Explosion Of Literature Since Guder

Guder’s book Missional Church (1998) has become a surprise best-seller and the fountainhead of a new genre of books addressing missional themes. Missional literature falls into six categories.[58]

Seven works stand out in the first category on biblical and theological foundations for missons. Works by Wright, Kaiser, and Glasser trace God’s mission through the Bible.[59] Bosch’s Transforming Mission combines biblical-theological methodology with historical theology. While he only scratches the surface on missional themes, his protégé Stan Nussbaum updates Bosch’s work in A Reader’s Guide to “Transforming Mission” and delves more deeply into missio Dei concepts. The Dictionary of Mission Theology: Evangelical Foundations weaves concepts in missional ecclesiology and missio Dei into its more than 160 articles.

Of these five books Wright’s is most practical in applying God’s mission to current issues such as the AIDS crisis and the stewardship of God’s creation. And Michael Goheen’s dissertation is the finest study on the missionary ecclesiology of Lesslie Newbigin.[60]

Other books examine how this concept is applied to denominations and parachurch contexts. Minatrea writes from a Southern Baptist perspective,[61] and Van Gelder and Kiefert address how missional churches operate in a Lutheran context.[62] Van Gelder also notes that since the 1960s Catholic theologians have been wrestling with a missional understanding of the church along with missional praxis.[63] Roxburgh offers helpful insights about missional transitions in a Presbyterian context.[64] Lewis shows how churches in the Bible church movement have transitioned toward missional ministry.[65] Hirsch and Frost write as Australians addressing how churches in the West can transition to missional ministry.[66] In this category Hirsch is the most engaging writer but is more theoretical than practical. Gibbs and Bolger’s work Emerging Churches, while not missional as such, addresses missional praxis themes in their chapter “Serving with Generosity.”[67]

A third category of books with missional themes consists of the polemic against churches that have decided to withdraw from active engagement with the culture. McNeal’s work The Present Future is a prophetic call for the North American church to reject the Christendom model and embrace missional ministry. His follow-up book Missional Renaissance shows specific examples of how churches are actually doing this.[68]

The fourth category consists of books that train leaders to provide leadership in a missional context. Roxburgh and Romanuk’s The Missional Leader, while highly theoretical, is superb, as is Mancini’s work Church Unique, and Stetzer and Putnam’s Breaking the Missional Code.[69]

A fifth category consists of periodical articles and Internet resources about mission. New websites are popping up almost monthly, purporting to help churches move in a missional direction, such as Friendofmissional.com. Many of these Internet sites link to articles on what churches are learning through their missional transitions. One site links to a case study on the missional transitions taking place at College Hill Presbyterian Church (PCUSA) in Cincinnati, Ohio, a church that found new missional life after a painful crisis.[70]

A sixth category includes books that discuss missional methodology from other disciplines. The books by Baylor University sociologist Rodney Stark have been useful to missional writers who ask, “What was Christianity like during its pre-Constantinian days, and how can we learn from its experience?”[71]

Practical Benefits Of The Missio Dei Construct

One might ask, “What practical benefit did the missio Dei construct give to conservative theologians and missiologists? And why in the post-Newbigin era is missional ecclesiology embraced so passionately?”

The answer seems to lie in the profound encouragement that the missio Dei concept gives to those on the forefront of mission in godless cultures, especially those who are engaged in mission in the North American context. If God is already at work, showering His creatures with His common grace, and if God the Holy Spirit is already at work convicting unbelievers of their need for saving grace, then believer-priests can have confidence that God has preceded them in mission.

The believer’s role, then, is not to do the “heavy lifting”; God is doing this already. The believer’s role is to discern prayerfully where and how God is working and to come alongside Him in the work He is already doing. This theological construct empowers risk-taking faith in the process of fulfilling the mission.[72] Furthermore missional theology seems to provide a motive for compassionate service rooted in the nature of God. If God is continually at work in extending common grace as part of His mission, then believers can extend themselves in common grace as well, as they seek to fulfill Jesus’ Great Commission.

Essential Characteristics Of Missional Churches

In essence a missional church is a highly unified body of believers, passionately committed to being God’s missionary presence to the community that surrounds them, recognizing that God has already been at work in that location and has a specific agenda for it. Christians in a missional church will embrace a particular set of activities consistent with missional ministry.

The Self-Identity Of Missional Christians

Toward God. Missional Christians take seriously the notion that they have been sent by Christ into their particular culture (John 20:21), and they learn to love the diverse people in that culture as Christ does (Matt. 9:35-36).

Toward themselves. They embrace the mindset that they are exiles (Heb. 11:13) and resident aliens (1 Pet. 1:1) whose citizenship is firmly rooted in heaven (Phil. 3:20). They therefore seek to live a countercultural lifestyle in ways meaningful to that culture (Dan. 1:4-8). This mindset empowers consistent, humble, and sometimes sacrificial service (Mark 10:45).

Toward their local church. They believe their local church is not an end in itself that must be growing constantly into an ever more powerful institution. Rather their local church is a means to an end, namely, to advance God’s work. The church is a beachhead within the culture. They therefore pursue godly goals even if it means their church might not grow as fast. They are willing to partner with other churches and parachurch organizations to advance the cause of Christ.

Missional church leaders measure the effectiveness of their church, not by counting the number of people attending the main weekend service but by assessing the number of people serving significantly in the city.

Missional church members do not enter corporate worship for the purpose of being entertained or for having their felt needs met. Nor is their worship energized because of an implied promise of prosperity. They go to connect with God, who calls His people into mission, and with their fellow soldiers who are also on mission. They see the main worship event as a context in which they may glorify God and hear from Him.

Toward Christendom. They recognize that organized religion has often posed a problem for many postmodern people. Therefore they eschew all forms of legalism and ecclesiastical control, passionately exuding God’s grace to all. They seek to major on the essentials of the faith.

Toward the world. Remembering that God works locally, they concentrate on the needs of their city. They know its distinct regions and cultures. They seek the welfare of their city, knowing that their own welfare depends on its welfare (Jer. 29:4-7).

Toward pain and brokenness. Missional churches recognize that Jesus was a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief (Isa. 53:3), and that He learned obedience through the things He suffered (Heb. 5:8). Missional churches are therefore generally opposed to idealistic expressions of a health-and-wealth gospel that minimizes or perhaps denies the very thing that brings believers into mission.

The Actions Of Missional Christians

With respect to worship. Missional Christians view corporate worship as an event that celebrates God’s eternal mission and the work that His people have done during a given week. They also view it as a time to strengthen their biblical worldview so that they can continue to live effectively for Christ as exiles and aliens in the world. As they come to a corporate worship event, they come with the intent to connect, minister, and be equipped—not to be entertained or seen.

With respect to the world. They practice the principle of cultural flexibility without moral or spiritual compromise as a way to express God’s common grace (1 Cor. 9:19-23). In a missional church, expressing common grace involves six qualities: showing hospitality to strangers (Heb. 13:1); loving those of diverse races, political orientations, and sexual preferences without sacrificing biblical principles (Mark 8:1-9); serving those who cannot pay them back (James 1:26-27); being wisely generous with financial and material resources, even to the point of sacrifice (2 Cor. 8:1-3); taking a collaborative role among the arts community within a given culture (Exod. 31:1-6); and taking a collaborative role, even a leadership role, in the civic structures within a given culture (Dan. 6:1-3; Jer. 29:4-7).

With respect to the gospel. Once they have built a bridge of common ground through common grace, missional Christians find ways to express the gospel. Sometimes this takes place in the context of a serving event (Acts 9:36, 39). Other times this takes place as a believer exposes friends to the destructive idols of culture (17:22-23). At some point the believer invites his friends into the context of the redeemed community, where Christ is experienced and His message is seen in action (9:17-19).

With respect to ordinary life. Missional Christians are always mindful that they are living in the presence of the risen Christ and are on mission at all times. This mindfulness prompts them to ask many questions. “What is God doing in this situation? How is God directing me? Does this person need prayer? How might I be helpful right now?” In general the missional Christian realizes that he leads best through prayer, often asking a person if he or she can pray about a matter at that very moment.

With respect to discipleship. Missional churches take spiritual growth seriously but with a missional bent. They do not disciple for the purpose of increasing head knowledge. They disciple for the purpose of missional life change, realizing that if a Christ-follower determines to be “on mission,” he or she will become highly motivated to grow and change. This discipleship also recognizes the powerful influence of spiritual warfare. Because the evil one aggressively seeks to sidetrack Christians from this kind of lifestyle, missional Christians encourage high levels of accountability and supportive prayer (Eph. 6:10-20).

With respect to cultural trends. Missional Christians recognize that much of North American culture is postmodern and post-Christian and in many ways is anti-Christian. They are committed to studying and learning about the culture so that they can be more effective in reaching people in it.

Conclusion

As the North American culture continues its drift into the murky waters of postmodernism, the missio Dei construct encourages pastors and laypeople seeking to engage in authentic and life-changing ministry. They are encouraged to reach boldly into their respective indigenous cultures, seeking common ground without compromise, challenging idolatrous practices, and trusting that God will use them to lead others to Christ and to bring about change that honors Him.

Notes

  1. Darrell L. Guder, Missional Church: A Vision for the Sending of the Church in North America (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1998).
  2. For example Rick Rouse and Craig Van Gelder, A Field Guide for the Missional Congregation: Embarking on a Journey of Transformation (Minneapolis: Augsburg Fortress, 2008), 43-44.
  3. Alan J. Roxburgh, “Beyond the Church Doors: Developing a Missional Culture in Your Congregation” (Center for Christian Leadership, Dallas Theological Seminary, Dallas, Texas, March 31–April 1, 2008).
  4. A case in point is Christopher J. H. Wright, The Mission of God: Unlocking the Bible’s Grand Narrative (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2006).
  5. This is a criticism leveled against Brian D. McLaren, especially his book A Generous Orthodoxy: Why I am a Missional, Evangelical, Post/Protestant, Liberal/Conservative, Mystical/Poetic, Biblical, Charismatic/Contemplative, Fundamentalist/Calvinist, Anabaptist/Anglican, Methodist, Catholic, Green, Incarnational, Depressed-Yet-Hopeful, Emergent, Unfinished Christian (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2004). Some younger pastors feel emerging churches are sacrificing doctrine to accommodate culture (see, e.g., Kevin De Young and Ted Kluck, Why We’re Not Emergent: By Two Guys Who Should Be (Chicago: Moody, 2008).
  6. The importance of unity, which shows up consistently in missional literature, is rooted in Trinitarian theology. The triune God is eternally unified in His mission, and believers under the headship of Christ must be unified in the accomplishment of His mission as well. See Alan Hirsch, The Forgotten Ways: Reactivating the Missional Church (Grand Rapids: Brazos, 2006), 217-41. This concept of unity was also championed by Lesslie Newbigin in a work based on his Kerr Lectures at the University of Glasgow called, The Household of God: Lectures on the Nature of the Church (New York: SCM, 1953; reprint, London: Paternoster, 1998). See also Alister E. McGrath, Theology: The Basic Readings (Oxford: Blackwell, 2008), 31. In his latter years Newbigin decried the privatization of the church in modernity and felt it was antithetical to the spread of the gospel. See Michael W. Goheen, “As the Father Has Sent Me, I Am Sending You: J. E. Lesslie Newbigin’s Missionary Ecclesiology” (Ph.D. diss., University of Utrecht, 2000), 420.
  7. This is based on Jesus’ statement in John 20:21, “As the Father has sent me, I also send you.” This was an important cornerstone to Newbigin’s missional ecclesiology (Goheen, “As the Father Has Sent Me, I Am Sending You,” 277).
  8. The needs of the indigenous culture have always been taken seriously by biblical writers, as evidenced, for example, by Paul’s message to the Athenian philosophers on Mars Hill in Acts 17:16-34. Rodney Stark asserts that Christianity was an urban movement in the first century, with Christians especially concerned about serving specific needs in their cities (Cities of God: The Real Story of How Christianity Became an Urban Religion and Conquered Rome [New York: HarperOne, 2007], 30-31). See also idem, The Rise of Christianity: How the Obscure, Marginal Jesus Movement Became the Dominant Religious Force in the Western World in a Few Centuries (San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1997), 76-94, 161.
  9. Wright, The Mission of God, 22-23.
  10. The importance of the arts has been recognized by many in the missional movement not only as a basis for common ground with the culture, but also as a way of awakening the culture to the reality of Christ (Andy Crouch, “Creating Culture: Our Best Response to the World Is to Make Something of It,” Christianity Today, September 2008, 25-29; and Tim Stafford, “Re-Imagining Reality: Artist Makoto Fujimura Launched the International Arts Movement to ‘Re-Humanize’ the World,” Christianity Today, September 2008, 31).
  11. Newbigin’s philosophy of cultural engagement has been crucial to the movement and is concisely summed up by Goheen. “The church is part of the cultural community that embodies idolatrous faith commitments. On the other hand, the church is called to be part of a new humankind that embodies a different story. The incompatible stories intersect in the life of the church, producing an unbearable tension; the church must separate itself from the idolatrous story that shapes its culture and yet participate in the ongoing development of the cultural community. Living in this tension, the church challenges the idolatrous story of the culture with an alternative way of life. . . . The church is called to embody the cultural forms yet at the same time subvert them and give them new meaning shaped by the gospel. In this way, the church is both for and against its culture. It identifies with the form of its culture but stands against the idolatry that gives meaning and direction to [it]” (“As the Father Has Sent Me, I Am Sending You,” 423-24).
  12. Paul Johnson, A History of Christianity (New York: Atheneum, 1976), 306.
  13. Kenneth Scott Latourette called the period between 1815 and 1914 “the great century” because every time the growth of the church was repudiated by modernism, it responded with vibrant expansion (A History of Christianity: Reformation to the Present [Peabody, MA: Prince, 1975], 2:vii, 1063).
  14. Ruth Tucker, “William Carey: Father of Modern Missions,” in Great Leaders of the Christian Church, ed. John D. Woodbridge (Chicago: Moody, 1988), 307.
  15. This was the assessment of Charles Clayton Morrison, editor of the Christian Century, reporting on the World Missionary Conference. “Everyone feels the presence in the conference of a power not ourselves, deeper than our own devices, which is making for a triumphant advance of Christianity abroad. And not less are the delegates thrilled by the sense that the conference foreshadows a new era for the church at home” (“The World Missionary Conference,” Religion Online [1910] http://www.religion-online.org/showarticle.asp?title=471 [accessed January 13, 2008]).
  16. Justo Gonzalez, The Story of Christianity: Complete in One Volume (Peabody, MA: Prince, 1999).
  17. The “long nineteenth century” describes either the period from 1789 to 1917 (the French Revolution through World War I), or the period from 1815 to 1914 (post-Napoleonic Europe to World War I). See Robert Weiner, The Long 19th Century: European History from 1789-1917 (Chantilly, VA: Teaching, 2003); http://www. teach12.com/ttcx/coursedesclong2.aspx?cid=8190&pc=History%20%20-Modern (accessed December 8, 2007). See also Latourette, A History of Christianity, 1063.
  18. This period spans from the Treaty of Westphalia (1648) to the French Revolution (1789-1799).
  19. Johnson, A History of Christianity, 445.
  20. Michael Pocock, Gailyn Van Rheenen, and Douglass McConnell, The Changing Face of World Missions: Engaging Contemporary Issues and Trends (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2005), 11. Following David Bosch, Stan Nussbaum develops this further (A Reader’s Guide to “Transforming Mission” [Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 2005], 78-79).
  21. This assessment of Jan Jongeneel is mentioned in Goheen, “As the Father Has Sent Me, I Am Sending You,” 420.
  22. Nussbaum, A Reader’s Guide to Transforming Mission, 95.
  23. David J. Bosch suggests that the missionary drive during this period was rooted in four motivations: soteriology, saving individuals from damnation; culture, introducing people to the Christian West; ecclesiology, expanding the church or a denomination; postmillennial theology, hastening the kingdom through the Chris-tianization of the world (Transforming Mission: Paradigm Shifts in Theology of Mission [Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1991], 389).
  24. Charles P. McIlvaine, “The Missionary Character and Duty of the Church,” in A Series of Evangelical Discourses Selected for the Use of Families and Destitiute Congregations (Columbia, OH: Isaac N. Whiting, 1839), 2:309-28.
  25. Charles P. McIlvaine engaged in missional activities on both sides of the Atlantic. He has the distinction of being the only American to lie in state in Westminster Abbey (a plaque commemorates the spot). A friend of Charles Simeon of Cambridge, University, McIlvaine’s life story was compiled by William Carus, Simeon’s successor (Memorials of the Right Reverend Charles Pettit McIlvaine, 2nd ed. [London: Eliot Stock, 1882], 7, 249-51, 269-71).
  26. Roger Olson, The Story of Christian Theology: Twenty Centuries of Tradition and Reform (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity, 1999), 577-79.
  27. Ibid., 578.
  28. Ibid., 588.
  29. Peter Toon, Our Triune God: A Biblical Portrayal of the Trinity (Wheaton, IL: Victor, 1996), 46-47.
  30. Alister E. McGrath, Historical Theology: An Introduction to the History of Christian Thought (Oxford: Blackwell, 1998), 238.
  31. Bosch, Transforming Mission, 389. There is some disagreement about precisely when Barth first suggested this. Following Hoedemaker, Wright suggests that Barth first proposed this in a lecture in 1928 (Wright, The Mission of God, 62-63). See also L. A. Hoedemaker, “The People of God and the Ends of the Earth,” in Missiology: An Ecumenical Introduction, ed. A. Camp, L. A. Hoedemaker, and M. R. Spindler (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1995), 165.
  32. In Barth’s view the Trinity is “the first principle of all Christian faith and thought and life.” Thus Barth set the stage for a Trinitarian view of mission (Toon, Our Triune God, 47).
  33. Bosch, Transforming Mission, 390.
  34. The biblical justification for this is John 20:21.
  35. Karl Hartenstein, quoted in Wright, The Mission of God, 62-63.
  36. Wright, The Mission of God, 63. See also David Claydon, “Aims of Mission: Missio Dei,” in Dictionary of Mission Theology: Evangelical Foundations, ed. John Corrie, Samuel Escobar, and Wilbert Shenk (Downers Grove: IL: InterVarsity, 2007), 16-17.
  37. Georg Vicedom, quoted in Wright, The Mission of God, 63.
  38. Craig Van Gelder, The Ministry of the Missional Church: A Community Led by the Spirit (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2007), 183 n. 9.
  39. Lalsangkima Pachuau, “Missio Dei,” in Dictionary of Mission Theology: Evangelical Foundations, 232-33.
  40. Bosch, Transforming Mission, 390.
  41. Mark S. Young, “Turning Theology Inside Out: Missio Dei (Part I)” (chapel message, Dallas Theological Seminary, Dallas, TX, November 1, 2005). See also Stott’s historical assessment of Walter Rauschenbusch’s social gospel claim that “the Kingdom of God is the Christian transfiguration of the social order” (A Theology for the Social Gospel [New York: Macmillan, 1918], 145, quoted in John R. W. Stott, New Issues Facing Christians Today, 3rd ed. [London: Marshall Pickering, 1999], 9). Also the missional language in Vatican II, though biblically accurate, certainly did not endear Protestant evangelicals to the missional cause in the middle 1960s: “The Church on earth is, by its very nature, missionary since according to the plan of the Father it has its origin in the mission of the Son and of the Holy Spirit” (quoted in Darrell Guder, “The Worthy Walk of the Missional Congregation,” in Walking Worthily: Missional Leadership after Christendom (Peyton Lectures, Fuller Theological Seminary, Pasadena, CA, May 2, 2007).
  42. Young, “Turning Theology Inside Out: Missio Dei.”
  43. In his memoirs Frank Schaeffer depicts the painful consequences of these extreme views of separation (Crazy for God: How I Grew Up as One of the Elect, Helped Found the Religious Right, and Lived to Take All (or Almost All) of It Back (New York: Carroll and Graf, 2007). And yet ironically his father Francis Schaeffer paved the way for a renaissance of appreciation for the arts and philosophy among evangelicals.
  44. John R. W. Stott, Christian Mission in the Modern World (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity, 1975), 22.
  45. Wright, The Mission of God, 61.
  46. This was the criticism evangelicals often leveled against proponents of the social-gospel movement who did not distinguish between the world (Eph. 2:2) and God’s kingdom goals (Matt. 6:33). However, social-gospel adherents had a much deeper problem. In reality, most were embracing some form of the non-Christian worldview of panentheism.
  47. Wright, The Mission of God, 535.
  48. Ruth Tucker calls Newbigin the premier missiologist of the late twentieth century. She credits the strength of his particular missiological understanding (in contrast to McGavran’s homogenous unit principle) to his conviction about community. Newbigin taught that diverse communities displaying the supernatural headship of the risen Christ help people to “see” God. This understanding of unity amidst diversity plays a profound role in missional church ecclesiology (Ruth Tucker, From Jerusalem to Irian Jaya: A Biographical History of Christian Missions [Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2004], 455-57). See also Will Mancini, Church Unique: How Missional Leaders Cast Vision, Capture Culture, and Create Movement (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2008), 29-35.
  49. Goheen, “As the Father Has Sent Me, I Am Sending You,” 423-24.
  50. Tucker, From Jerusalem to Irian Jaya, 456.
  51. Michael Green, “The Apologetics of Lesslie Newbigin,” in The Lord Is My Light (Oxford: Zacharias Trust, 2005), 3.
  52. Newbigin, The Household of God, quoted in McGrath, Theology: The Basic Readings, 131.
  53. “The Gospel and Our Culture Network” is a “network of Christian leaders from a wide array of churches and organizations, who are working together on the frontier of the missionary encounter of the gospel with North American assumptions, perspectives, preferences and practices” (see www.gocn.org [accessed November 15, 2008]).
  54. Geneva: World Council of Churches, 1983.
  55. Guder, Missional Church, 5.
  56. Francis DuBose, God Who Sends: A Fresh Quest for Biblical Mission (Nashville: Broadman, 1983); and Charles Van Engen, God’s Missionary People: Rethinking the Purpose of the Local Church (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1991).
  57. Guder, Missional Church, 7.
  58. See also the survey by Alan Hirsch, “Defining Missional: The word is everywhere, but where did it come from and what does it really mean?” Leadership (fall 2008): 20-21.
  59. Wright, The Mission of God, 21-22; Arthur Glasser, Announcing the Kingdom: The Story of God’s Mission in the Bible (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2003); and Walter C. Kaiser Jr., Mission in the Old Testament: Israel as a Light to the Nations (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2000).
  60. Goheen, “As the Father Has Sent Me, I Am Sending You.”
  61. Milfred Minatrea, Shaped by God’s Heart: The Passion and Practices of Missional Churches (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2004).
  62. Van Gelder, The Ministry of the Missional Church; and Patrick Keifert, We Are Here Now: A Journey of Missional Discovery (Eagle, ID: Allelon, 2006). Lutheran missional works all display a strong emphasis on the role of the Holy Spirit to lead congregations in their missional ministries. This Spirit-led emphasis is not a prominent feature outside this denominational emphasis.
  63. Van Gelder, The Ministry of the Missional Church, 87 n. 187.
  64. Alan J. Roxburgh, The Missionary Congregation: Leadership and Liminality (Harrisburg, PA: Trinity, 1997).
  65. Robert Lewis, The Church of Irresistible Influence: Bridge Building Stories to Help Reach Your Community (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2001).
  66. Alan Hirsch, The Forgotten Ways: Reactivating the Missional Church (Grand Rapids: Brazos, 2006); and Michael Frost, Exiles: Living Missionally in a Post-Christian Culture (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 2006).
  67. Eddie Gibbs and Ryan K. Bolger, Emerging Churches: Creating Christian Community in Postmodern Culture (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2005).
  68. McNeal, The Present Future, xv–xvi; and idem, Missional Renaissance (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2009).
  69. Alan J. Roxburgh and Fred Romanuk, The Missional Leader: Equipping Your Church to Reach a Changing World (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2006); Mancini, Church Unique; and Ed Stetzer and David Putnam, Breaking the Missional Code: Your Church Can Become a Missionary in Your Community (Nashville: Broadman and Holman, 2006).
  70. After years of cutting-edge evangelical ministry in the Cincinnati area, College Hill Presbyterian Church encountered a theological crisis in their confrontation with the more liberal PCUSA denomination. In the crisis they sensed God’s movement into missional ministry (Stephen Eyre, “Can the Church Be Converted: How ‘Missional’ Came to College Hill Presbyterian Church,” Theology Matters: A Publication of Presbyterians for Faith, Family and Ministry [September–October 2004]: 6-10).
  71. Rodney Stark, The Rise of Christianity: How the Obscure, Marginal Jesus Movement Became the Dominant Religious Force in the Western World in a Few Centuries (San Francisco, CA: HarperSanFrancisco, 1996); idem, Cities of God: The Real Story of How Christianity Became an Urban Movement and Conquered Rome (San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 2006), and “The Rise of Christianity,” in idem, Discovering God: The Origins of the Great Religions and the Evolution of Belief (New York: HarperOne, 2007), 282-338.
  72. This was the experience of Don Richardson in his work with the Sawi people in Irian Jaya (Peace Child [Ventura, CA: Regal, 1975]).

God's Sovereignty over Time | James White

The Theology Of Charles Finney: A System Of Self-Reformation

By Jay E. Smith

[Jay E. Smith is a Ph.D. candidate in New Testament at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School.]

According to Mark Noll, Charles Finney “stands by himself as the crucial figure of American evangelicalism since Jonathan Edwards.”[1] Sydney Ahlstrom apparently agrees, calling him “an immensely important man in American History by any standard of measure.”[2] Similarly, Richard Hofstadter feels that he “must be reckoned among our great men.”[3] Importance, however, must never be confused with respect and admiration, and this American revivalist, theologian, and educator of the nineteenth century, though admired by many, is not without his detractors.[4] In recent years, Finney’s theological views increasingly have become the focal point of a debate over his stature within evangelicalism.

Appraisals of the value and emphasis of Finney’s theology fall into one of two camps. His theology has been judged either as “true to Scripture”[5] or as “a system of morals [from which] God might be eliminated … entirely without essentially changing its character.”[6] This debate over Finney’s theology should not be relegated to the antiquarian interests of the church historian, for American evangelicalism is currently experiencing a significant “revival” of interest in Finney and his theology.[7] This makes a fresh evaluation of Finney’s theology all the more important.

In attempting to provide such an evaluation, this essay agrees with the latter view and contends that Finney’s theology is more morality than theology.[8] It will seek to defend this position by showing that collectively (1) the formative influences behind Finney’s theology, (2) the actual content of that theology, and (3) the results of his theology (how Finney’s theology manifested itself in his ministry) point unequivocally to the conclusion that Finney’s theology is primarily a system of morals based upon human effort with little need for God.

In seeking to accomplish this task, the formative influences, content, and results of his theology will be examined in order. The formative influences behind Finney’s theology are discussed first, not as a subtle attempt to prejudice the issue at hand by assuming the thesis to be proven, but as a means to understand the chronological and logical development of his theology. Rather than prejudging Finney’s theology, this initial section anticipates much of the later discussion concerning the content of his theology. Moreover, the identification of the formative influences and results of Finney’s theology is incapable of proving the thesis directly and can show only that these factors are consistent with the thesis. As a result, these factors will be subsidiary, serving only to confirm and illuminate the thesis. The burden of proof rests with the actual content of Finney’s theology.[9]

Finney wrote voluminously, and his theological thought is scattered throughout myriads of documents. This poses a potential problem in trying to present the basic content of his theology. Fortunately his Lectures on Systematic Theology, representing a systematic and reasonably late presentation of his thought, seems to capture his mature thinking accurately.[10] Therefore the source material used in this essay will be restricted primarily to this work.[11] Also, the examination of the Lectures does not intend or even need to be exhaustive, only even-handed and representative,[12] to substantiate the thesis that, for Finney, the self-reformation of one’s moral behavior constitutes the essence of Christianity.

I. Influences Behind Finney’s Theology

A. Social And Cultural Influences

Jacksonian America. During the “Age of Jackson”[13] the American people possessed unlimited optimism both nationally and personally.[14] After all, the United States, against all reasonable odds, had wrested its independence from the most powerful nation in the world. The American people had created a new nation, expanded across the Appalachians, subdued the Indians, and defeated the British for a second time. During the years of westward expansion after the War of 1812, America enjoyed a period of unparalleled prosperity. Surely reason and experience indicated that America’s self-accomplishment had been and would continue to be nothing short of amazing. Later, Andrew Johnson would crystallize this self-reliant optimism in creed-like fashion:

I believe man can be elevated; man can become more and more endowed with divinity; and as he does he becomes more God-like in his character and capable of governing himself. Let us go on elevating our people, perfecting our institutions, until democracy shall reach such a point of perfection that we can acclaim with truth that the voice of the people is the voice of God.[15]

The Jacksonian era also marked the “rise of the common man.” Led by Jackson himself, this movement, which championed the rights of the ordinary citizen, emphasized a more democratic way of life, opposed any signs of aristocracy in the nation, and extolled the virtues and ability of the average individual.[16]

Earlier, Jeffersonian republicanism had emphasized the need for leadership by those of greatest ability. Now Jacksonian democracy, stressing a more democratic philosophy, held that the ordinary citizen was capable of governing himself or herself.[17] Although Jefferson believed in the sovereignty of the people, he did not assume that untrained individuals could handle the responsibilities of important administrative positions. He did believe, however, that ordinary people could be educated to determine what was good and right. Jackson, on the contrary, “insisted that they knew what was right by instinct.”[18] “Never for a moment believe,” said Jackson, “that the great body of the citizens … can deliberately intend to do wrong.”[19]

Self-reliant optimism, a democratic way of life, and rugged individualism characterized the Jacksonian democracy.[20] Horatio Alger would soon embody this sentiment and become a national symbol of self-effort and determination leading inevitably to success.[21] The American people were ready for a faith of action through self-accomplishment.[22] Democratic principles suggested that one’s destiny was in one’s own hands—punishment or reward depended solely upon self-effort. Within this milieu, Finney developed his theology, and he “was not immune to the demands that the historic evangelical theology should be brought into harmony with the concepts of the democratic philosophy.”[23] Consequently, Finney “reworked Christian orthodoxy to suit the times” and “his theology had a message … which fitted perfectly the ebullient optimism of the 1830’s.”[24] In short, “Finney’s theology was the Christian counterpart of Jacksonian democracy.”[25]

The Burned-Over District of Upstate New York. Upstate New York, where Finney grew up, was particularly suited to the development of his theology. Living on the western frontier demanded a spirit of self-reliance, and separation from the East loosened ties to tradition, including Calvinism. Finney’s day also represented the second generation of Yankee settlers to this region.[26] This second generation was more settled and prosperous and consequently had more confidence in humanity’s ability than their parents had.[27]

There was more to upstate New York, however, than the transplanting of a few Yankee settlers, for this region found itself in the throes of a cultural crisis.[28] The region was transformed by rapid industrial development, led by the completion of the Erie Canal in 1825. This development attracted thousands of enthusiastic new immigrants to the region, creating what Cross calls a “psychic highway.”[29] In turn, “New Yorkers watched the crumbling of certain eternal verities—fixed land tenure, stable populace, small class distinctions, isolation for [sic] the outside world.”[30]

Enthusiastic religion often provided the needed stability, and so often had the region been scorched by the heat and fervor of various religious revivals that it was dubbed the “burned-over district” before Finney’s time.[31] “All this made the area a fertile seedplot,” says Sweet, “not only for sane and progressive social and religious movements but also for fads and extravagances.”[32] In fact, during this period, upstate New York produced a remarkable array of perfectionistic, spiritualistic, and chiliastic sects, including the Mormons, the Millerites, the Fox sisters, and the followers of John Humphrey Noyes; as well as the anti-Masonic, Liberty, and Free-Soil political parties.[33] Thus by Finney’s day, upstate New York had assembled the socioeconomic and religious machinery conducive to the development of an aberrant theology.

B. Religious And Philosophical Developments

The Enlightenment, Common Sense Realism, and New England Theology. In America at the beginning of the nineteenth century, the rationalistic ideals of the Enlightenment, particularly the belief in the dignity of humanity, had been strengthened by the American and French revolutions.[34] The reinforcement of these ideals, coupled with the rise of Scottish Common Sense Realism, made traditional Calvinism seem unreasonable and unattractive.[35] The rationalistic arguments of the Deists, skeptics, and Unitarians “made sense,” as did the more optimistic theology of Universalism.[36] It seemed that Christianity in general and Calvinism in particular needed to adjust to this changing world view.

The need to make this adjustment was felt acutely among New England’s Calvinistic theologians. Jonathan Edwards’s successors attempted to prove the compatibility of Calvinism with the prevailing common sense notion of humanity’s ability. Hannah notes:

To demonstrate the defendability [sic] of Christianity, clergymen attempted to delineate its rationality. In reality, historic Calvinism, being subjected to rationalism, was altered; that is, the “gross absurdities” were “pared off true Calvinism.” In their attempt to defend Calvinism by “restoring” it to purity and simplicity, New England divines drastically changed its structure and New England Theology was born.[37]

Three main issues occupied the attention of the New England theologians of the post-war period: the “means” of regeneration, the question of universal salvation, and the nature and extent of sin.[38] After numerous developments by a series of New England divines,[39] including Joseph Bellamy (1719–1790), Samuel Hopkins (1721–1803), Jonathan Edwards, Jr. (1754–1801), Nathanael Emmons (1745–1840), and Timothy Dwight (1752–1817), New England theology reached its zenith[40] under Nathaniel Taylor (1786–1858) and became identified with New Haven where Taylor taught for over thirty years.[41] While rejecting the concept of original sin, Taylor argued that moral depravity consisted in a person’s free, voluntary choices. Therefore, sin consisted in voluntary sinning with no real or symbolic connection to Adam. Taylor also taught a governmental theory of the atonement, free will, real human ability, that humans effected their own regeneration, and that conversion was a result of education.[42] In essence, Taylor reduced “Calvinism” to a secular system of morals.[43]

The similarity between Finney’s and Taylor’s theologies is remarkable, raising the question of Finney’s dependence on New England theology in general and on Taylor in particular.[44] Finney claimed that his theology evolved independently.[45] Albert Swing, taking Finney at his word, agrees:

Oberlin theology … is not to be thought of as an offshoot of the New England theology, but as largely an independent development from its own root. What in New England theology had been gradually evolved from Old Calvinism through two generations of theological reform was substantially wrought out independently of them by President Finney’s rational revolt.[46]

Finney’s theology was not, however, entirely independent of all historical connections. The affinity between Taylor and Finney is far too close to be accounted for by a purely accidental parallel of thought.[47] Foster observes:

He [Finney] was not so completely independent as he was sometimes thought to be. Various underground currents set from New Haven westward, and some of them bore theological ideas into the region where Finney was. Subsequently he had personal association with the great New Haven theologian… Finney’s system … may be dismissed in the one word “Taylorism,” independent as it was, and vigorously as its author had impressed upon it the marks of his own pronounced individuality.[48]

Warfield, commenting on these underground currents, agrees:

We do not need, however, to raise the question as to the channels of communication by which Taylorism was brought to Finney. Intercourse between Connecticut and Western New York was constant; Finney received part of his education in Connecticut and his was the common case; all ministers of his acquaintance were trained in the East and came from the East and maintained connection with the East; and Taylorism was, at the moment, the vogue.[49]

This direct linkage between Taylorism and Finney, however, should not be emphasized to the neglect of the influence of their common religious heritage.[50] As Rosell suggests, “The parallels between the men were not so much the product of direct contact in later life as the fact that [they] had drawn in earlier years upon the same well of religious thought—Connecticut Congregationalism.”[51] Even Foster is careful to note that Taylor influenced the future developments of the views already held by Finney.[52] Thus in summary, it seems best to say that, although unaware of it himself, Finney, nevertheless, was influenced heavily by a New England theology that was bearing more and more the imprint of Nathaniel Taylor and his anthropocentric system of moral philosophy.

Transcendentalism. Rationalism and Common Sense Realism were not the only forces at work in New England during Finney’s day. Romanticism, with its emphasis on feeling and intuition, was beginning to express itself in the Transcendentalist movement. Although Transcendentalism did not emerge as an identifiable school of thought until the 1830s,[53] this movement away from the philosophy of the Enlightenment began much earlier.[54]

Ralph Waldo Emerson, the leading figure behind Transcendentalism, through his essays and lectures, inspired countless Americans with his themes of self-reliance, the limitless potential of humanity, and the individual’s innate goodness.[55] He also advocated progress and favored change, contributing to the country’s climate of social reform and moral uplift.[56] Primarily through Emerson’s influence, “the glorification of man [became] the central theme of Transcendentalism.”[57]

Though Transcendentalism’s influence on theology was not as pervasive as the Enlightenment’s impact, it significantly shaped the intellectual climate of New England.[58] Garraty and McGaughey observe, “By the second quarter of the 19th century few intellectuals were unmarked by it.”[59] This seems to have included Finney, for “he was familiar with the standard authors in both philosophy and theology,”[60] and his thought reflected “the self-reliant intuitionism of the American transcendental school.”[61]

Transcendentalism’s impact was not confined to a group of New England intellectuals, however. Through an ideological alliance with the democratic philosophy of the Age of Jackson, it encouraged the reinterpretation of Christianity among all social classes throughout the United States. Singer writes,

Because the Transcendentalists spoke to the emerging democratic way of life with great appeal, they became a part of the Jacksonian era and played an important role in the rise of the common man, even though they, for the most part, were most uncommon men. Thus, their philosophy was important in the democratizing of American Christianity. It is at this point that we see the importance of the movement in the religious life of the nation rather than in the relatively small number of converts Transcendentalism was able to gain unto itself.[62]

C. Personal Influences

Conversion. Finney’s detailed recollection of his conversion, though recorded in his memoirs when he was in his mid-seventies, suggests that his conversion strongly influenced his theological views.[63] In his conversion, Finney was supremely conscious of his seeking after salvation rather than of God drawing him. “On a Sabbath evening,” he recalled, “just at this time of my history I made up my mind that I would settle the question of my soul’s salvation at-once, that if it were possible I would make my peace with God.”[64] Concerning this incident Johnson notes, “In this manner he became convinced that the only inability of man was his voluntary unwillingness to do what he ought to do about his sins.”[65] Two days later Finney stopped in the middle of the street and said to himself, “I will accept it [the gospel] to-day, or I will die in the attempt.”[66] Weisberger observes, “Charles Finney had decided in that moment that salvation was up to him. He was now going to pound at the gate of heaven until he gained admittance.”[67] Finney recalled that at the very instant of his conversion a “passage of Scripture seemed to drop into my mind with a flood of light: ‘Then shall ye go and pray unto me, and I will answer you. Then shall ye seek me and shall find me, when you search for me with all your heart.’”[68] Thus beginning with his conversion, Finney began to construct a system of free will and moral responsibility.[69] All the sinner had to do to receive salvation was exactly what Finney himself found necessary, that is, “to get my own consent to give up my sins, and give myself to Christ.”[70]

Natural Ability and Self-Confidence. William Cochran describes the young Charles Finney as a “splendid pagan—a young man rejoicing in his strength, proudly conscious of his physical and intellectual superiority to all around him.”[71] At six feet two inches and 185 pounds he was striking and handsome—the most eligible bachelor of Jefferson County, New York.[72] He was well-known for his dancing, musical skills, and athletic prowess.[73] A student he taught in grammar school declared,

There was nothing which anyone else knew, that Mr. Finney didn’t know, and there was nothing which anyone else could do that Mr. Finney could not do—and do a great deal better. He was the idol of his pupils… He was very dignified and kept perfect order. Should any boy attempt to create a disturbance, one flash of Mr. Finney’s eye would quell the sinner at once. Oh, I tell you, they all loved and worshipped him, and all felt that some day he would be a great man.[74]

Intellectually, Finney had few peers. He contemplated attending Yale, but one of his teachers advised him against it, claiming that he could master the entire curriculum by himself in two years.[75] In his mid-twenties Finney, fully able to meet the intellectual demands of the legal profession, turned his attention to a career in law and began his studies under the tutelage of a local lawyer, as was customary.[76]

Finney’s “remarkable natural abilities”[77] developed within him a self-confidence, bordering on arrogance.[78] So self-assured was Finney that when the local presbytery suggested he enroll at Princeton to study theology, he refused to go, informing this prestigious body that:

I would not put myself under such an influence as they had been under. That I was confident they had been wrongly educated; and they were not ministers that met my ideal at all of what a minister of Christ should be.[79]

After the members of the presbytery regained their composure, they agreed to allow Finney to pursue his theological studies under the local pastor’s direction. Although by his own admission “being no theologian,”[80] his confidence resurfaced as he repeatedly challenged and rejected his mentor’s theological positions. Consequently, his training degenerated into “little else than controversy.”[81] In fact, he would later come to the conclusion that his mentor’s education was “entirely defective,” his theological views were “crippl[ing],” and his “practical views were equally erroneous.”[82]

Finney’s self-confidence and ability had taught him that success was a question of natural ability and determination. Now as a young theologian, his self-confidence and natural talent convinced him that the gospel was also a matter of one’s ability and effort.[83] In addition, his early success as an itinerant preacher served to confirm this idea.[84] Thus, humanity’s spiritual problem was not one of ability but one of obstinacy and lack of determination.

Legal Training. In 1818 at the age of twenty-six, Finney began his career in law as the apprentice of Benjamin Wright in Adams, New York. Under Wright’s tutelage, Finney read a great deal from William Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England, the main source of a country lawyer’s education.[85] In Blackstone’s discussions the concept of free will played a crucial role. He argued that only those violations committed voluntarily, as an act of free will, could be punished justifiably.[86] Culpability depended upon a will that was completely free.

Inculcated with Blackstone, Finney developed the presuppositions and categories that would force him to reject the Reformers’ conviction that the human will was in bondage, burdened with inherited guilt, and unable to obey God.[87] That an individual was the passive victim of necessity was patently false, and that the will was completely free was self-evident.[88] As Rosell notes, “this possibility of choice at once became the essence of Finney’s theology and preaching.”[89]

Blackstone was not the sole legal influence on the development of Finney’s theology. His entire legal training “took the mystery out of theology.”[90] Rigorous legal reasoning eliminated, among other things, the notions of inherited depravity, substitution, imputation, and the tensions between divine sovereignty and free will and the “already” and “not yet.”[91] Furthermore, the choice presented to a jury for its deliberation suggested to Finney a parallel with the sinner’s consideration of the gospel that vitiated the notions of depravity and the bondage of the will.[92]

In short, Finney’s training in law permeated his understanding of theology.[93] As Weddle observes, “The key to his theology is the unshakeable conviction, gained in the study of law, … that conversion is a reasoned decision to submit to God’s moral government, as an act entirely within the sinner’s natural powers.”[94]

II. The Content Of Finney’s Theology

The recent supporters of Finney have not defended his specific theological views in a detailed or systematic fashion.[95] Rather, they prefer to applaud his career as a revivalist and to assert, in only the most general terms, that his theology is faithful to Scripture. This assessment of Finney’s theology is based on the assumption that his repeated references to Scripture and his success as a revivalist are indicative of a sound theology.[96] Unfortunately, neither the use of Scripture nor revivalistic success is incompatible with an aberrant theology.

Finney’s current advocates seek to explain the controversy surrounding Finney’s theology as the result of (1) an incomplete or cursory reading of his discussions,[97] (2) the defamation of his theology by “those less informed in matters of sound theology,”[98] (3) the incomplete nature of his Lectures on Systematic Theology,[99] and (4) an uncritical acceptance of Charles Hodge’s criticisms.[100] Though there may be an element of truth in these explanations, in the final analysis, they ignore the real point at issue: the content of Finney’s theology—what Finney affirmed, and what he affirmed repeatedly with clarity and dogmatism.

A. Finney’s Doctrine Of Moral Depravity [101]

In discussing depravity, Finney distinguishes between physical and moral depravity. Physical depravity refers to the physiological states of disease, decay, and degeneration. It consists in “a physical departure from the laws of health; a lapsed, or fallen state, in which healthy organic action is not sustained.”[102] Physical depravity has “in no case any moral character, because it is involuntary.”[103] The involuntary nature of physical depravity results from the fact one inherits it from one’s progenitors.[104]

Moral depravity, on the other hand, has a moral character and consists in a person’s free, voluntary choices. It can be produced only by one’s free moral choice. “Moral depravity is the depravity of free-will, not of the facility itself, but of its free action… Moral depravity is depravity of choice. It is a choice at variance with moral law, moral right.”[105]

Moral depravity does not consist in an inherent sinful nature. Sin falls strictly within the limits of voluntary choice.[106] “Moral depravity, as I use the term, does not consist in, nor imply a sinful nature… It is not a constitutional sinfulness. Moral depravity … consists … in a state of voluntary committal of the will to self-gratification.”[107] “Moral depravity is not then to be accounted for by ascribing it to a nature or constitution sinful in itself.”[108] Thus for Finney, moral depravity consists in voluntary sinning with absolutely no direct connection to Adam or his sin.[109]

Finney argues that moral depravity is universal. By this he means that “every moral agent of our race is, from the dawn of moral agency to the moment of regeneration by the Holy Spirit, morally depraved.”[110] Without the doctrine of original sin, Finney is forced to account for the universality of moral depravity with various alternatives. This universality is to be accounted for “by ascribing it to the influence of temptation, or to a physically depraved constitution.”[111] He also suggests that the circumstances surrounding normal childhood development are responsible for the universality of moral depravity.[112] In this theory he argues that the sensibilities or feelings in a child develop faster than moral reason, and therefore self-gratification becomes the rule of action before the development of moral reason. By the time children come to the place of exercising moral reason, they are so in the habit of self-gratification that they can do nothing else. The will rejects the bidding of reason and clings to self-indulgence. The demands of self-gratification become more and more despotic, and selfishness strengthens and perpetuates itself by this natural process.

Adam’s contribution to the moral depravity of the race is indirect and parallels the causes given by Finney for moral depravity’s universality. Thus Adam’s sin, by generating physical deterioration in his descendants and by creating environmental havoc, exposed “his posterity to aggravated temptation,” damaged the “physical constitution in all men,” and corrupted “the influences under which they [all people] first form their moral character.”[113]

B. Finney’s Doctrine Of The Atonement

Shortly after Finney’s conversion he had the opportunity to debate a Universalist minister on the subject of the atonement of Christ. The Universalist argued, “The Atonement of Christ was the literal payment of the debt of the elect, a suffering of just what they deserved to suffer; so that the elect were saved upon the principle of exact justice… ”[114] The Universalist merely had to show that the payment was made for all people, rather than for only the elect, to find, in this penal-substitution theory, support for the doctrine that all people would be saved. Realizing that the Universalist was swaying the audience, Finney countered with his so-called governmental theory of the atonement:[115]

The Atonement did not consist in the literal payment of the debt of sinners, in the sense in which the Universalist maintained. That it simply rendered the salvation of all men possible; and did not of itself lay God under any obligation to save anybody. That it was not true that Christ suffered just what those for whom he died deserved to suffer. That no such thing as that was taught in the Bible; and no such thing was true. But on the contrary, that Christ died simply to remove an insurmountable obstacle out of the way of God’s forgiving sinners; so as to render it possible for him to proclaim a universal Amnesty, inviting all men to repent, to believe in Christ, and to accept salvation. That instead of Christ’s having satisfied retributive justice, and borne just what sinners deserve, he had only satisfied public justice, by honoring the law both in his obedience and death; and therefore rendering it safe for God to pardon sin, and to pardon the sins of any man, and of all men, who would repent and believe in Christ. I maintained that Christ in his Atonement merely did that which was necessary as a condition of the forgiveness of sin; and not that which cancelled sin, in the sense of literally paying the indebtedness of sinners.[116]

In developing his understanding of the atonement, Finney reasoned that God was capable of forgiving people simply by an act of good will, without requiring any payment for sin.[117] “Theology can teach … that no atonement could be needed to satisfy any implacable spirit in the divine mind; that he was sufficiently and infinitely disposed to extend pardon to the penitent, if this could be wisely, benevolently, and safely done.”[118] God, however, could not pardon freely the repentant sinner, for that would mean that God had disregarded totally his moral law, which demands punishment for sin.[119] Furthermore, such pardon also would lead to antinomianism, since people would think that they could now sin with impunity.[120] In the end, the law’s authority and its effectiveness in deterring sin would be undermined, resulting in the dissolution of the very moral fiber of the universe.[121] God somehow had to sustain the authority and influence of his moral law while not exacting its penalty on the sinner.[122] Ultimately, God was able to sustain his moral law, despite suspending its penalty, through a public demonstration of his moral government, in the death of Christ. “The atonement … was a governmental expedient to reconcile the pardon of sin with a wholesome administration of justice.”[123] Christ’s death demonstrated publicly that God had not abandoned his law and that he was determined to support it. From Christ’s death it was clear that God abhorred all violations of his precepts and that he would punish disobedience. In short, Christ’s death allowed God to dispense with the law’s penalties, and yet publicly affirm his commitment to his moral law. Consequently, the atonement acted to deter sin. Forgiveness was available for the repentant, but God’s moral law and its accompanying penalty remained in force for the impenitent, as Christ’s death graphically illustrated.

Understanding the atonement as a deterrent to sin was the natural outgrowth of Finney’s view of moral depravity.[124] Since people's liability before God results from their choices rather than their nature, they need only something that will motivate them to righteousness and deter them from sin. The atonement, which publicly reaffirms God’s moral government, provides such an impetus.

C. Finney’s Doctrine Of Regeneration

Finney defines regeneration as “a radical change of the ultimate intention.”[125] “Regeneration,” he says, “must consist in a change in the attitude of the will, or a change in its ultimate choice, intention, or preference.”[126] Regeneration then is a change from “a state of entire consecration to self-interest … to a state of entire consecration to God, and to the interests of his kingdom” and thus is “a change from entire sinfulness to entire holiness.”[127] As Warfield correctly notes, “The effect of the change thus brought about is that the sinner ceases to be a sinner, and becomes, at once on the change taking place, perfect.”[128]

Such a radical change in purpose[129] is accomplished by human and divine agencies working in tandem.[130] For Finney, the term regeneration implies “the simultaneous exercise of both human and Divine agency.”[131] Moreover, “the fact that a new heart is the thing done, demonstrates the activity of the subject; and the word regeneration, or the expression ‘born of the Holy Spirit,’ asserts the Divine agency.”[132]

The divine side of this equation is the specific responsibility of the Holy Spirit.[133] The work of the Holy Spirit is not that of creating new life in the sinner;[134] rather the Spirit’s efforts are confined exclusively to persuasion.[135] Finney believed that the Holy Spirit’s function was to persuade individuals to make right choices.[136] People “will not, unless they are divinely persuaded, by the gracious influence of the Holy Spirit, in any case turn and consecrate their powers to the service of God.”[137] Sinners were to be regenerated “by the influence of truth, argument, and persuasion,” as the Holy Spirit “urged and pressed” on them “the end to be chosen.”[138]

Since Finney does not permit the Spirit to go beyond persuasion and motivation in securing a person’s salvation, the real agent behind regeneration is the individual.[139] “We have said that regeneration is synonymous, in the Bible, with a new heart. But sinners are required to make to themselves a new heart, which they could not do, if they were not active in this change.”[140] “The sinner has all the faculties and natural attributes requisite to render perfect obedience to God. All he needs is to be induced to use these powers and attributes as he ought.”[141] Regeneration then “consists in the sinner changing his ultimate choice, intention, or preference”[142] and “neither God, nor any other being, can regenerate him, if he will not turn. If he will not change his choice, it is impossible that he should be changed.”[143] “God cannot do the sinner’s duty, and regenerate him without the right exercise of the sinner’s own agency.”[144]

The precise interplay between persuasion and the sinner’s choice in effecting regeneration is illustrated graphically by Finney in his sermon “Sinners Bound to Change Their Own Hearts”:

Now, in speaking of this change, it is perfectly proper to say, that the Spirit turned him, just as you would say of a man, who had persuaded another to change his mind on the subject of politics, that he had converted him, and brought him over. It is also proper to say that the truth converted him; as in a case when the political sentiments of a man were changed by a certain argument, we should say, that argument brought him over. So also with perfect propriety may we ascribe the change to the living preacher, or to him who had presented the motives; just as we should say of a lawyer who had prevailed in his argument with a jury; he has got his case, he has converted the jury… Now it is strictly true, and true in the most absolute and highest sense; the act is his own act, the turning is his own turning, while God by the truth has induced him to turn; still it is strictly true that he has turned and has done it himself. Thus you see the sense in which it is the work of God, and also the sense in which it is the sinner’s own work. The Spirit of God, by the truth, influences the sinner to change, and in this sense is the efficient cause of the change. But the sinner actually changes, and is therefore himself, in the most proper sense, the author of the change.[145]

Finney’s understanding of regeneration also must be seen as the result of his view of moral depravity. If a person’s guilt before God rests solely in one’s choices rather than in one’s nature, then an individual needs to use only his or her natural ability to make different choices.[146] Fortunately, one is not left unassisted in this, for the Spirit of God and faithful preachers of the gospel are in the business of persuading people to make those very choices.

D. Finney’s Doctrine Of Natural Ability

The ultimate reason Finney confines the regenerating work of the Holy Spirit to persuasion is his conviction that nothing more is needed.[147] This conviction rests on one of the most fundamental beliefs of Finney: the plenary ability of humanity.[148] Every person, possessing a will that is absolutely free, is able to do all that God requires.[149] “The moral government of God everywhere assumes and implies the liberty of the human will, and the natural ability of men to obey God. Every command … in the Bible implies and assumes this.”[150] “But I maintain this upon the ground, that men are able to do their duty, and that the difficulty does not lie in a proper inability, but in a voluntary selfishness, in an unwillingness to obey the blessed gospel.”[151] “I admit the ability of man, and hold that he is able, but utterly unwilling to obey God.”[152]

This plenary ability is a natural, innate ability and not a special ability graciously given by God.[153] “The sinner has all the faculties and natural attributes requisite to render perfect obedience to God.”[154] “He must therefore … possess the power in himself directly to will as God commands.”[155] “He must possess this power in himself as essential to his own nature … to will in every instance in accordance with moral obligation.”[156]

The strong language often found in scripture upon the subject of man’s inability to obey God, is designed only to represent the strength of his voluntary selfishness and enmity against God, and never to imply a proper natural inability. It is, therefore, a gross and most injurious perversion of scripture, as well as a contradiction of human reason, to deny the natural ability, or which is the same thing, the natural free agency of man, and to maintain a proper natural inability to obey God, and the absurd dogma of a gracious ability to do our duty.[157]

Finney’s rejection of a doctrine of gracious ability goes beyond a simple repudiation of traditional Calvinism—with its view of irresistible grace extended only to the elect—to include a rejection of the Arminian doctrine of prevenient grace given to all members of the race.[158] Finney’s description of the doctrine of gracious ability advocated by other theologians shows that he understood their doctrine clearly in Arminian terms:

By a gracious ability they intend, that in consequence of the atonement of Christ, God has graciously restored to man ability to accept the terms of mercy, or to fulfill the conditions of acceptance with God; in other words, that by the gracious aid of the Holy Spirit which, upon condition of the atonement, God has given to every member of the human family, all men are endowed with a gracious ability to obey God. By a gracious ability is intended, then, that ability or power to obey God, which all men now possess, not by virtue of their own nature or constitutional powers, but by virtue of the indwelling and gracious influence of the Holy Spirit, gratuitously bestowed upon man in consequence of the atonement of Christ.[159]

This doctrine of prevenient grace Finney calls an “absurdity.”[160]

The reason for Finney’s belief in the plenary ability of humanity, even without the aid of prevenient grace, is his insistence that obligation is limited by ability: “The Bible expressly limits obligation by ability.”[161] “With strict propriety, it cannot be said that … he [God] requires … any more than we are able … to do.”[162] “A just command always implies an ability to obey it.”[163]

This principle is no metaphysical quibble for Finney but is an essential point upon which he insists. God would be unjust if he were to command as duty that which humans could not do, or if he were to punish them for not doing what they could not do.[164]

Finney’s doctrine of natural ability also must be seen as closely related to his view of moral depravity. Since a person’s nature is untainted by Adam’s sin, there is nothing preventing a person from meeting all the requirements of God by his or her own innate ability.

E. Finney’s Doctrine Of Faith

Though Finney accepts the principle of solafideism,[165] he goes beyond the traditional distinction of assensus and fiducia in defining saving faith. In harmony with his understanding of justification,[166] Finney views faith as a virtue and as equivalent to a state of sinless perfection.[167] “It [faith] is always regarded as a virtue.”[168] “Faith may be contemplated either as a distinct form of virtue, and as an attribute of love, or as comprehensive of all virtue.”[169] Faith “implies a state of present sinlessness.”[170] It “implies the reception and the practice of all known or perceived truth.”[171] In short, rather than reject the Reformation principle of sola fide, Finney redefines faith so that it becomes “a cardinal form of virtue,”[172] or “comprehensive of all virtue,”[173] in a system of morals that requires total obedience for salvation.[174] According to Finney, the reason “faith is often spoken of in scripture as if it were the sole condition of salvation, [is] because, as we have seen, from its very nature it implies repentance and every virtue.”[175]

F. Finney’s Doctrine Of Justification

After indicating that “there is scarcely any question in theology that has been encumbered with more injurious and technical mysticism than that of justification,” Finney proceeds to define justification as simply a decree of pardon, or amnesty.[176] Justification “consists not in the law pronouncing the sinner just, but … consists in a governmental decree of pardon or amnesty.”[177]

Finney distinguishes between the basis or ground of justification and the conditions or requirements that have to be met for justification. The basis of justification is the “benevolence and merciful disposition of the whole Godhead.”[178] In other words, God justifies (grants amnesty to) sinners simply as an act of mercy without requiring any payment for sin.[179] As his doctrine of the atonement makes clear, Finney felt that such an action by God would jeopardize his entire moral government of the universe.[180] Therefore to “reconcile the pardon of sin with a wholesome administration of justice,” God established certain conditions, or requirements, for justification.[181] The atonement was the first condition, and it was naturally God’s responsibility. Four other requirements, all of which are the sinner’s responsibility to meet, are outlined by Finney: repentance, faith, sanctification, and perseverance.[182]

Finney’s exposition of these last two requirements is particularly significant, for it clearly reveals his rejection of forensic justification in favor of spiritual renewal or moral transformation.[183] Concerning the requirement of sanctification he states, “Present sanctification, in the sense of present full consecration to God, is another condition … of justification.”[184] “Present, full, and entire consecration of heart and life to God and his service, is an unalterable condition of present pardon of past sin, and of present acceptance with God.”[185] That justification requires a completely sinless life is made clear by Finney:

But again, to the question, can man be justified while sin remains in him? Surely he cannot, either upon legal or gospel principles, unless the law be repealed. That he cannot be justified by the law, while there is a particle of sin in him, is too plain to need proof. But can he be pardoned and accepted, and then justified, in the gospel sense, while sin, any degree of sin, remains in him? Certainly not.[186]

Concerning the condition of perseverance, Finney argues that one must persevere not only in faith but also in this complete obedience. “Perseverance in faith and obedience, or in consecration to God, is also an unalterable condition of justification, or of pardon and acceptance with God.”[187] “The penitent soul remains justified no longer than his full-hearted consecration continues.”[188] “I am not here calling in question the fact, that all true saints do persevere in faith and obedience to the end; but am showing that such perseverance is a condition of salvation, or ultimate justification.”[189]

Finney’s rejection of forensic justification is not merely implicit. He explicitly rejects the concept of forensic righteousness, calling the notion “impossible and absurd” and equating it with “antinomianism.”[190] Finney’s position is unequivocal:

The doctrine of a literal imputation of Adam’s sin to all his posterity, of the literal imputation of all the sins of the elect to Christ, and of his suffering for them the exact amount due to the transgressors, and of the literal imputation of Christ’s righteousness or obedience to the elect, and the consequent perpetual justification of all that are converted from the first exercise of faith, whatever their subsequent life may be—I say I regard these dogmas as fabulous, and better befitting a romance than a system of theology.[191]

Finney, in understanding justification as moral transformation plus pardon, adopts essentially a Tridentine definition of justification.[192] This stands in sharp contrast to the views of the Reformers, who held that justification equaled pardon plus the imputation of Christ’s righteousness.[193]

Finney’s Tridentine definition of justification follows naturally from his doctrines of moral depravity and natural ability. If a person’s nature is not corrupted by sin and if that person is able to obey God completely, then the Christian’s “full obedience” as a condition for justification is both natural and reasonable.[194]

G. Finney’s Doctrine Of Sanctification [195]

According to Finney, regeneration results in “a state of entire and supreme consecration to God,” that is, “a change from entire sinfulness to entire holiness” in which there is no “sin remaining in the regenerate heart.”[196] Finney calls this state of sinless perfection, sanctification.[197] “Sanctification, then, is nothing more or less than entire obedience, for the time being, to the moral law.”[198] “Its simple and primary meaning is a state of consecration to God.”[199]

Thus the regenerate person is sanctified fully—for the moment. After regeneration, however, the Christian might fall back into sin and need to be regenerated again. This individual is not sanctified entirely. This state of entire sanctification not only consists in “perfect obedience”[200] but also in “continued obedience to the law of God”[201] in which a person “does not, and will not sin.”[202] Consequently, a more accurate label for the state of entire sanctification is permanent sanctification, and Finney often uses this latter phrase.[203]

For Finney, the real question at issue is not whether a state of sinless perfection is attainable in this life, but whether such a state can be maintained. Sinless perfection is clearly possible, for it is the essence of saving faith and is the direct result of regeneration.[204] The real issue is whether such a state can be sustained: “Is a state of entire, in the sense of permanent sanctification, attainable in this life?”[205]

Finney answers this question in the affirmative with familiar logic: the law of God demands only what people are able to do; therefore, permanent sanctification can be attained on the grounds of natural ability.[206] “The law requires nothing more than the right use of whatever strength we have, it is, of course, forever settled, that a state of entire sanctification is attainable in this life, on the ground of natural ability.”[207] Accordingly, Finney reduces the Holy Spirit’s role in sanctification simply to persuasion.[208]

It is true that few have attained this goal, but this, according to Finney, is not a reflection of humanity’s inability. Rather, it reflects the low expectation set for professing Christians and the erroneous belief that such attainment is impossible.[209] Finney felt that if he could convince people that permanent sanctification was attainable in this life, they would rise to the occasion and meet this new standard.[210] Permanent sanctification, lying within the grasp of one’s natural ability, was available for the taking.

III. The Results of Finney’s Theology

A. “New Measures” [211]

Finney’s adoption of a theology of self-reformation based upon natural ability led inevitably to attempts to influence the sinner’s will.[212] With time, Finney perfected numerous innovative revivalistic techniques that were designed to compel people to repent and accept the gospel.[213] These innovative techniques or “new measures,” included:[214]

  1. Praying by name for sinners present at public meetings.
  2. Allowing women to pray and testify in public meetings.
  3. Encouraging persons to come forward to an “anxious seat,” a front pew for those under conviction, where attention was centered upon them as they dramatized for the audience the struggle between heaven and hell. At the “anxious seat” conversions became grand public spectacles that generated revivalistic momentum.
  4. Mobilizing the entire community through bands of workers who canvassed the homes of “sinners.”
  5. Displacing the regular services of the church by “protracted meetings.” These special services, often conducted late into the night for up to several weeks at a time, were “designed to marshall the group pressure in settled areas that the camp meeting had been so effective in fostering on the frontier.”[215]
  6. The use of “inquiry meetings” for personal conversations with the “anxious.”
  7. “Invasions” of towns by revivalists without invitations from local pastors, and the mutiny of parishioners against their “unconverted” ministers.
  8. The use of music and an organized choir “to give the audience a sense of participation and to put them in the proper frame of mind.”[216]
  9. Preaching “hellfire and damnation” with a great sense of urgency, often singling out a notorious sinner by name.

The philosophy behind these new measures is stated bluntly by Finney: “It [a revival] is not a miracle, or dependent on a miracle, in any sense. It is a purely philosophical [i.e. scientific][217] result of the right use of constituted means—as much so as any other effect produced by the application of means.”[218] This philosophy, with its emphasis on the human production of revivals and conversions, suggests that the only thing needed to save a sinner is the sinner’s permission. Salvation no longer requires divine intervention. Moral effort, which can be induced through human engineering and coercion, is all that is necessary. Individuals are in absolute control of their destinies. Thus people are, for all practical purposes, omnipotent in effecting their conversions, creating revivals, and growing in holiness.

B. Social Reform

During the first half of the nineteenth century, Christians organized hundreds of benevolent societies into an “empire of benevolence” devoted to eliminating every vice and social ill.[219]

Social crusades, based on a naive optimism about human nature, left almost no area of American life unaffected. Temperance, women’s rights, education, world peace, abolition, the humane treatment of criminals and the insane, and the promotion of many other virtues became the goal of countless reformers.[220]

Finney too believed that Christians should be actively involved in reforming all aspects of their society.[221] He insisted that his converts “set out with a determination to aim at being useful in the highest degree possible.”[222] It was not a matter of choice but of duty. If one refused to work for the betterment of society, his or her salvation was in question. Finney argued,

No one who does perform duty to God will neglect duty towards man. His sense of obligation to God and his practical submission to that sense of duty will certainly ensure his obedience in the lesser duties due towards his fellow-beings. If the doctrine of this text be true, he cannot be pious without being philanthropic also. If he performs his duty towards God, he will also towards man. If he neglects his duty towards God, he will also neglect duty towards man.[223]

Naturally, Finney was involved personally in numerous reform movements. He participated in the antislavery and temperance movements.[224] Other reforms also captured his energy, including health and diet reform, school reform, and a society devoted to the rehabilitation of prostitutes, the Female Reform Society of New York.[225]

Finney’s advocacy of and participation in social reform was a natural extension of his theology of self-reformation.[226] The belief that society could reform itself was simply Finney’s conviction, on a larger scale, that the individual could reform himself or herself.[227] If the individual Christian’s task is to abandon every sin, then surely, “the great business of the church is to reform the world—to put away every kind of sin … to reform individuals, communities and governments … until every form of inequity shall be driven from the earth.”[228] If individually people can obey God by their own natural ability, then collectively they can do the same.

IV. Conclusion

The formative influences behind Finney’s theology, the actual content of that theology, and the results of his theology point unmistakably to the conclusion that Finney’s theology is “a system of morals [from which] God might be eliminated … entirely without essentially changing its character.”[229] Furthermore, in Finney’s scheme “man is quite able to save himself and in point of fact actually does, in every instance of his salvation, save himself.”[230] In short, Finney’s “theology” is one of self-reformation. This radical shift away from historic orthodox Christianity is explained by McLoughlin: “The difference between Edwards and Finney is essentially the difference between the medieval and modern temper. One saw God as the center of the universe, the other saw man.”[231]

There is little question that Finney is an extremely important and popular figure in American church history. Neither his historical importance nor the admiration of his many present-day followers should blind one, however, to the heretical nature of his theological views. Although Finney was not heretical at all points, the few remnants of orthodox Christian doctrine left in his system are hardly enough to cover its nakedness. Instead of clothing believers with the righteousness of Christ, Finney’s theology leaves them wearing the emperor’s new clothes—which Isaiah pointedly says are “filthy rags” (Isa 64:6).

Notes

  1. M. Noll, “Glimpses of Finney,” The Reformed Journal 36 (1988) 22.
  2. S. Ahlstrom, A Religious History of the American People (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1972) 461.
  3. R. Hofstadter, Anti-Intellectualism in American Life (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1962) 92.
  4. J. Gerstner, fully aware of Finney’s historical importance, argues that he “became the greatest of nineteenth-century foes of evangelicalism.” (“Theological Boundaries: The Reformed Perspective,” in The Evangelicals: What They Believe, Who They Are, Where They are Changing [rev. ed., ed. D. Wells and J. Woodbridge; Grand Rapids: Baker, 1977] 27).
  5. L. G. Parkhurst, Jr. “Finney’s Theology. True to Scripture, True to Reason, True to Life” (Edmond, OK: Revival Resources, 1990) 2, 13. Cf. id., “Charles Grandison Finney Preached for a Verdict,” Fundamentalist Journal 3 (1984) 41–43; J. E. Hamilton, “Finney: An Appreciation,” Christianity Today 19 (1975) 13–16; H. Conn, foreword to Finney’s Systematic Theology, by C. G. Finney (reprint; Minneapolis: Bethany, 1976).
  6. B. B. Warfield, Perfectionism (2 vols.; New York: Oxford, 1931) 2.193. Cf. C. Hodge, “Finney’s Lectures on Theology,” The Biblical Repertory and Princeton Review 19 (1847) 237–77; J. Hannah, “The Doctrine of Original Sin in Postrevolutionary America,” BSac 134 (1977) 25–53; D. O. Beale, In Pursuit of Purity: American Fundamentalism Since 1850 (Greenville, SC: Unusual Publications, 1986) 73–75.
  7. The “Charles G. Finney Legacy of Revival” conference at Wheaton College in 1990, the “Charles G. Finney Conference on Theology” in Ft. Worth in 1991, the reprinting of many of Finney’s works by Bethany House, two recent biographies by K. Hardman (Charles Grandison Finney 1792–1875: Revivalist and Reformer [Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1987]) and L. Drummond (The Life and Ministry of Charles G. Finney [Minneapolis: Bethany, 1985]), and an entire fascicle of Christian History (vol. 7, no. 4, 1988) devoted to Finney are examples of the renewed interest. J. E. Johnson also refers to a “Finney cult” in America (“Charles Grandison Finney. Father of American Revivalism,” Christian History 7 [1988] 9).
  8. Special thanks are due to J. Hannah, for the genesis of this essay is found in his lectures on American church history.
  9. The goal is not to analyze and refute each element of Finney’s theology but only to show that the basic content of his theology supports the thesis.
  10. J. E. Johnson, “Charles G. Finney and a Theology of Revivalism,” CH 38 (1969) 350. Finney’s Lectures on Systematic Theology was published in 1846–47 and then revised in 1851. At the time of the revision, Finney was in his late fifties and had been teaching at Oberlin for over fifteen years. Parkhurst, the editor of many of Finney’s works, indicates, “As far as I can tell, Finney never changed the substance of any of his central teachings” (L. G. Parkhurst, Jr., appendix to Principles of Consecration, by C. G. Finney [Minneapolis: Bethany House, 1990] 237). Finney himself maintained, “On the strictly fundamental questions in theology, my views have not, for many years, undergone any change, except as I have clearer apprehensions of them than formerly, and should now state them, perhaps, in some measure, differently from what I should then have done” (Finney’s Systematic Theology, xiii). Cf. G. Rosell, “Charles Grandison Finney and the Rise of the Benevolence Empire” (Ph.D. diss., University of Minnesota, microfilm, 1971) 100; W. G. McLoughlin, Jr., introduction to Lectures on Revivals of Religion, by C. Grandison Finney (Cambridge: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1960) lii.
  11. Numerous editions of Finney’s Lectures on Systematic Theology have been published. Bethany House’s 1976 abridged reprint (hereafter, Theology) is the most readily available, and all quotations are taken from it unless otherwise indicated.
  12. This essay accurately and fairly represents Finney’s views as evidenced from a comparison with Oberlin Professor G. F. Wright’s sympathetic and landmark biography of Finney (Charles Grandison Finney [New York: Houghton, Mifflin, 1891]) and Professor A. T. Swing’s sympathetic treatment of Finney’s theology (“President Finney and an Oberlin Theology,” BSac 57 [1900] 465–82).
  13. Andrew Jackson was president from 1829 to 1837, but the trends of the “Age of Jackson” cannot be restricted exclusively to his administration.
  14. W. G. McLoughlin, Jr., “Charles Grandison Finney: The Revivalist as Culture Hero,” Journal of American Culture 5 (1982) 85 (an excellent, concise discussion to which the following is heavily indebted); id., Modern Revivalism: Charles Grandison Finney to Billy Graham (New York: The Roland Press, 1959) 76, 100; Hannah, “Doctrine of Original Sin,” 253; W. Cross, The Burned-Over District: The Social and Intellectual History of Enthusiastic Religion in Western New York, 1800–1850 (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1950) 79, 168, 199; Johnson, “Theology of Revivalism,” 357; L. I. Sweet, “The View of Man in New Measures Revivalism,” CH 45 (1976) 206–7.
  15. Quoted in D. Wecter, The Saga of American Society: A Record of Social Aspiration, 1607–1937 (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1937) 100. The original source of this excerpt is unknown; however, Johnson’s first inaugural address as the governor of Tennessee in October 1853—his famous “Jacob’s Ladder” speech—bears a striking resemblance to this quotation.
  16. K. M. Stampp, “Politics for the Common Man,” in The National Experience (2d. ed.; ed. J. M. Blum; Chicago: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1968) 223; S. E. Morison, H. S. Commager, and W. E. Leuchtenburg, The Growth of the American Republic (7th. ed., 2 vols.; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1980) 1.419–20; O. Handin, The History of the United States (2 vols.; Chicago: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1967) 1.506; J. A. Garraty and R. A. McCaughey, The American Nation (2 vols.; 6th. ed.; New York: Harper & Row, 1987) 1.266.
  17. For a brief discussion of the Jeffersonian and Jacksonian philosophies, see K. M. Stampp, “Jeffersonian Republicanism,” in The National Experience, 167; id., “Politics for the Common Man,” 223; Garraty and McCaughey, The American Nation, 1.266.
  18. Garraty and McCaughey, The American Nation, 1.266.
  19. A. Jackson, “Farewell Address” (March 4, 1837), A Compilation of the Messages and Papers of the Presidents (20 vols.; ed. J. D. Richardson; New York: Bureau of National Literature and Art, 1897) 4.1515.
  20. Johnson, “Theology of Revivalism,” 357.
  21. W. G. McLoughlin, Jr. The American Evangelicals, 1800–1900 (New York: Harper & Row, 1968) 13.
  22. Hannah “Doctrine of Original Sin,” 253.
  23. C. G. Singer, A Theological Interpretation of American History (2d. ed.; Phillipsburg: Presbyterian and Reformed, 1981) 65.
  24. McLoughlin, Revivalism, 120–21, 100. Weisberger observes that Finney “did not study the popular mind; he had it” (B. A. Weisberger, They Gathered at the River: The Story of the Great Revivalists and Their Impact upon Religion in America [Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1958] 88).
  25. McLoughlin, Revivalism, 100. Similarly, P. Miller notes, “The kind of revival stimulated by Finney in upstate New York … was … an expression of that energy we call Jacksonian America” (The Life of the Mind in America [New York: Harcourt, Brace, & World, 1965] 30). Cf. Sweet, “View of Man,” 206–7, 221; Johnson, “Father of American Revivalism,” 9.
  26. Finney’s father moved the family to upstate New York from Connecticut, making Charles a second-generation settler.
  27. McLoughlin, Revivalism, 21–22.
  28. Cross, The Burned-Over District, 55–109; P. Johnson, A Shopkeeper’s Millennium. Society and Revivals in Rochester, New York, 1815–1837 (New York: Hill and Wang, 1978) 13–38; Weisberger, They Gathered at the River, 108.
  29. Cross, The Burned-Over District, 3.
  30. Weisberger, They Gathered at the River, 108.
  31. G. Rosell and R. Dupuis, eds., The Memoirs of Charles G. Finney: The Complete Restored Text (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1989) 78 n. 24.
  32. W. W. Sweet, Religion in the Development of American Culture 1765–1840 (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1952) 282.
  33. K. J. Hardman, The Spiritual Awakeners (Chicago: Moody, 1983) 177; J. E. Johnson, “Charles Finney and Oberlin Perfectionism,” Journal of Presbyterian History 46 (1968) 43; Cross, The Burned-Over District, 30–40, 113–25, 138–50, 287–352; Morison, et al., The Growth of the American Republic, 487–88; Weisberger, They Gathered at the River, 109. The Shakers, Fourierists, and the “Universal Friends” also had numerous communities throughout the region.
  34. McLoughlin, Revivalism, 12.
  35. S. Ahlstrom, “The Scottish Philosophy and American Theology,” CH 24 (1955) 269; M. Noll, “Common Sense Traditions and American Evangelical Thought,” American Quarterly 37 (1985) 225–26. For Finney and his commitment to Common Sense Realism see J. L. Gresham, Charles G. Finney’s Doctrine of the Baptism of the Holy Spirit (Peabody: Hendrickson, 1987) 5; Hamilton, “Finney: An Appreciation,” 13; D. C. Weddle, The Law as Gospel: Revival and Reform in the Theology of Charles G. Finney (Studies in Evangelicalism no. 6; Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow, 1985) 2–3; M. Noll, ed., The Princeton Theology 1812–1921 (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1983) 35; McLoughlin, Revivalism, 69.
  36. McLoughlin, Revivalism, 21–22.
  37. Hannah, “Doctrine of Original Sin,” 244–45.
  38. Ibid., 250; cf. Johnson, “Theology of Revivalism,” 339 n. 3; J. Buckham, “The New England Theologians,” AJT 24 (1920) 19.
  39. Ahlstrom, Religious History of the American People, 406–22.
  40. J. Haroutunian, Piety Versus Moralism: The Passing of the New England Theology (Hamden: Archon, 1932) xxii.
  41. Taylor’s development of New England theology is often known as New Haven theology or Taylorism.
  42. For Taylor’s views see N. Taylor, “Concio ad Clerum: A Sermon on Human Nature, Sin, and Freedom,” reprinted in S. Ahlstrom, ed., Theology in America: The Major Protestant Voices From Puritanism to Neo-Orthodoxy (New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1967) 213–49; Hannah, “Doctrine of Original Sin,” 249–50; S. E. Mead, Nathaniel William Taylor 1786–1858: A Connecticut Liberal (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1942) 119–20, 229–30; D. Wells, “The Collision of the Views on the Atonement,” BSac 144 (1987) 369–74; G. Marsden, The Evangelical Mind and the New School Presbyterian Experience (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1970) 49–51.
  43. Johnson, “Theology of Revivalism,” 339; Haroutunian, Piety Versus Moralism, xvi-xxii, 282; M. Noll, N. Hatch, G. Marsden, D. Wells, and J. Woodbridge, eds., Eerdmans’ Handbook to Christianity in America (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1983) 191. Hannah claims that evangelism at this time had “a stress on moral action in the context of a virtuous environment” (“Doctrine of Original Sin,” 251).
  44. F. Foster, The Genetic History of New England Theology (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1907) 453, 467; Hannah, “Doctrine of Original Sin,” 251–52.
  45. Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 9, 41–61, 87, and especially 57.
  46. Swing, “Oberlin Theology,” 465.
  47. Foster refers to “the minute correspondence between the two thinkers” (New England Theology, 467); Finney’s biographer Wright finds “clear evidence of the influence … of Dr. N. W. Taylor” (Finney, 25); A. H. Strong agrees: “Mr. Finney derived his theology from Taylor as much as from any other man” (Christ in Creation and Ethical Monism [Philadelphia: The Roger Williams Press, 1899] 383); Hollon also concedes that Taylor had a “strong though subtle impact [on Finney]” (D. L. Hollon, “Love as Holiness: An Examination of Charles G. Finney’s Theology of Sanctification, 1830–1860” [Ph.D. diss., Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, 1984, microfilm] 50–52); cf. Johnson, “Theology of Revivalism,” 342; Gresham, Baptism of the Spirit, 5; M. Vulgamore, “Charles G. Finney: Catalyst in the Dissolution of American Calvinism,” The Reformed Review 17 (1964) 41.
  48. Foster, New England Theology, 453, 467. Foster is basically restating the view expressed earlier by Finney’s biographer G. F. Wright: There was, moreover, less of originality in his views than some of his admirers are accustomed to suppose, and than some of his opponents would be glad to believe… They (Finney and his students at Oberlin) together sunk an artesian well at Oberlin, and found an abundant supply of refreshing water. Analysis, however, shows that this water filtered into its subterranean channels from New England. (“President Finney’s System of Theology in its Relations to the So-Called New England Theology,” BSac 34 [1877] 740–41). For Finney’s personal association with Taylor see Wright, Finney, 179; Mead, Taylor, 167; McLoughlin, Revivalism, 45–47; and Hollon, “Love as Holiness,” 50–52.
  49. Warfield, Perfectionism, 2.19. For a summary of Finney’s contact with various New England theologians see G. Salstrand, “C. G. Finney, Evangelist, Educator, Theologian” (Th.M. thesis; Northern Baptist Theological Seminary, 1942) 104–5; Wright, Finney, 179–81; Rosell, “Finney,” 100–104; Vulgamore, “Finney,” 41.
  50. This “common heritage” shared by Taylor and Finney is stressed by Rosell (“Finney,” 100–101) and A. Guelzo (“The Making of a Revivalist: Finney and the Heritage of Edwards,” Christian History 7 [1988] 30); cf. Hollon, “Love as Holiness,” 50.
  51. Rosell, “Finney,” 101. Rosell outlines the formative influences to which Finney was exposed while attending the Warren Academy in Connecticut from 1812–14. There he was exposed to “a generous understanding of human ability” by the preaching of Peter Starr, who had in turn been influenced by Joseph Bellamy (ibid., 100–104). Cf. Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 6–9; Hardman, Finney, 32–33. Wright also suggests that Finney’s Connecticut roots were significant: Theological ideas are transported by a thousand different methods. President Finney himself was born in Connecticut. In the region where preaching is the pre-eminent influence, the language of common life becomes impregnated with its philosophical conceptions, and its forms of expression are transported with the other household furniture. The impressions of childhood are much more permanent than the memory of them(“President Finney’s System of Theology,” 741).
  52. Foster, New England Theology, 453.
  53. The Transcendental Club, an informal discussion group in Boston, began meeting in 1836, the same year Emerson published Nature.
  54. Transcendentalism’s roots lay in Romanticism, which, in its earliest forms, extended at least as far back as 1815 in the United States and the 1760s in Europe (L. Krieger, Kings and Philosophers, 1689–1789 [New York: W. W. Norton, 1970] 218–37; Ahlstrom, Religious History of the American People, 583–614).
  55. K. M. Stampp, “An Era of Reform,” in The National Experience, 254–55; Garraty and McCaughey, The American Nation, 1.328; Morison, et al., The Growth of the American Republic, 494–96.
  56. Stampp, “Era of Reform,” 251; Garraty and McCaughey, The American Nation, 1.328; Singer, Theological Interpretation, 71–72.
  57. Singer, Theological Interpretation, 62.
  58. Ibid., 52.
  59. Garraty and McCaughey, The American Nation, 1.327.
  60. Wright, “President Finney’s System of Theology,” 740; cf. Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 546 n. 41.
  61. McLoughlin, Revivalism, 69. McLoughlin calls special attention to Finney’s sermon, “Sinners Bound to Change Their Own Hearts” (Sermons on Important Subjects [New York: John S. Taylor, 1836] 3–42); cf. the discussion below on Finney’s doctrine of natural ability.
  62. Singer, Theological Interpretation, 65.
  63. It is possible that Finney read his mature theology back into his conversion experience; however, the vividness of his recollection seems to suggest otherwise. Cf. Hardman, Finney, 443–44.
  64. Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 16.
  65. Johnson, “Theology of Revivalism,” 344.
  66. Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 18.
  67. Weisberger, They Gathered at the River, 91.
  68. Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 20. The passage of Scripture is Jer 29:12–13.
  69. For a brief discussion of the effects of Finney’s conversion on the development of his theology see, F. Whitesell, “Finney and His Theology,” (Th.D. diss., Northern Baptist Theological Seminary, 1931) 17–19.
  70. Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 18.
  71. W. C. Cochran, Charles Grandison Finney (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1908) 13.
  72. Hardman, Spiritual Awakeners, 167; McLoughlin, Revivalism, 17.
  73. Hardman, Finney, 35–36; McLoughlin, “Finney,” 82.
  74. Cochran, Finney, 17–18.
  75. McLoughlin, Revivalism, 15; Hardman, Finney, 33; Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 7.
  76. Hardman, Finney, 36; Rosell, “Finney,” 105.
  77. Wright, Finney, preface.
  78. Weisberger, They Gathered at the River, 90; C. C. Cole, The Social Ideas of the Northern Evangelists 1826–1860 (New York: Octagon Books, 1954) 69; Hardman, Finney, 33.
  79. Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 47.
  80. Ibid., 55.
  81. Ibid., 48.
  82. Ibid., 55, 57, 57.
  83. Hardman, Spiritual Awakeners, 173; McLoughlin, “Finney,” 84.
  84. Noll, Princeton Theology, 165; Drummond, Finney, 218; Weddle, The Law as Gospel, 6; Beale, In Pursuit of Purity, 73–74. Finney argued that his success as a revivalist vindicated his theology; cf. Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 53, 83, 87.
  85. Weddle, The Law as Gospel, 50; Hardman, Finney, 36.
  86. W. Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (4 vols.; Oxford: Clarendon, 1769) 4.20–21; cf. J. S. Mattson, “Charles Grandison Finney and the Emerging Tradition of ‘New Measure’ Revivalism” (Ph.D. diss., University of North Carolina, 1970, microfilm) 183–84.
  87. Mattson, “‘New Measure’ Revivalism” 154–92, esp. 164–69; Hardman, Finney, 38. Weddle notes, “Finney came to Christianity as a mature adult, with a clearly defined sense of identity and a well-formed world view” (The Law as Gospel, 5). Similarly, Mattson argues that Finney’s “study of Common Law … provided him with a well-developed set of assumptions with which to interpret that which he read” (ibid., 166).
  88. Rosell, “Finney,” 110.
  89. Ibid.
  90. Weddle, The Law as Gospel, 5; cf. Drummond, Finney, 220.
  91. Cf. Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 60–61; Drummond, Finney, 220.
  92. Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 16; Finney, “How to Preach the Gospel,” Lectures on Revivals of Religion, 213–14; Rosell, “Finney,” 111; Miller, The Life of the Mind in America, 24–25; Foster, New England Theology, 453.
  93. Rosell, “Finney,” 110–11.
  94. Weddle, The Law as Gospel, 6.
  95. V. R. Edman, Finney Lives On: The Man, His Revival Methods, and His Message (New York: Fleming H. Revell, 1951) 189–90; Parkhurst, “Finney’s Theology,” 1–13; id., “Finney Preached for a Verdict,” 41–43; Hamilton, “Finney: An Appreciation,” 13–16; Conn, foreword to Finney’s Systematic Theology; J. W. Jepson, ed., A Digest of Finney’s Systematic Theology (Lyons, OR: By the author, 1970) i. Although Drummond outlines Finney’s theology in a systematic fashion and is not critical of his views, his work cannot be viewed as an endorsement of Finney’s theology (Finney, 220–34). Gresham, though offering a more positive assessment, likewise does not give Finney’s theology a blanket endorsement (Baptism of the Spirit, 86–91).
  96. Edman, Finney Lives On, 190; Parkhurst, “Finney’s Theology,” 5–6; Conn, foreword to Finney’s Systematic Theology; Jepson, Digest, i.
  97. Jepson, Digest, i; cf. G. Redford, preface to Lectures on Systematic Theology, by C. G. Finney (New York: George Doran, 1878) vii.
  98. Parkhurst, “Finney’s Theology,” 8.
  99. Parkhurst, “Finney Preached for a Verdict,” 43; cf. Noll, Princeton Theology, 166.
  100. Parkhurst, “Finney’s Theology,” 5–6 n. 9; cf. G. F. Wright, “Dr. Hodge’s Misrepresentations of President Finney’s Systematic Theology,” BSac 33 (1876) 381–92. Hodge criticizes Finney’s theology in The Biblical Repertory and Princeton Review; see note 6 above.
  101. The analysis here follows Finney’s order of presentation in his Lectures on Systematic Theology.
  102. Finney, Theology, 164.
  103. Ibid., 166.
  104. Ibid., 165, 177, 186, 191.
  105. Ibid., 165.
  106. Gresham, Baptism of the Spirit, 31; Johnson, “Theology of Revivalism,” 352, 355; Swing, “Oberlin Theology,” 467, W. Unger, “The Social Views of Charles Grandison Finney” (Th.M. thesis; Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, 1969) 29.
  107. Finney, Theology, 167.
  108. Ibid., 172. Finney refers to the “dogma of a sinful constitution” as “antiscriptural and nonsensical,” “a relic of heathen philosophy,” “infinitely dishonorable to God,” “an abomination alike to God and human intellect,” and “a grossly false and heathenish philosophy” (ibid., 179, 188, 192).
  109. Ibid., 176–77, 185–86, 189. Cf. 275, 293; Johnson, “Theology of Revivalism,” 355; E. Cairns, An Endless Line of Splendor: Revivals and Their Leaders From the Great Awakening to the Present (Wheaton: Tyndale House, 1986) 135; Unger, “The Social Views of Finney,” 29; Warfield, Perfectionism, 2.179, 181; Hardman, Finney, 390–91. Finney only briefly mentions Rom 5:12–19 and then only after generating a great deal of doubt and uncertainty about the meaning of the text: The Bible once, and only once, incidentally intimates that Adam’s first sin has in some way been the occasion, not the necessary physical cause, of all the sins of men. Rom. v. 12–19. It neither says nor intimates anything in relation to the manner in which Adam’s sin has occasioned this result. It only incidentally recognizes the fact, and then leaves it, just as if the quo modo was too obvious to need explanation (Theology, 189). Finney’s views represent the culmination of the New England theologians’ drift from the traditional Reformed view that the relationship of Adam’s sin to his posterity was real, transferable, and penal. Timothy Dwight, for example, viewed sin as strictly personal and nontransferable. To explain the universality of sin he maintained a “divine constitution” view of inherent sin. This view held that in Adam all persons were given an assured propensity to sin and were constituted as sinners because they sin, not because of their connection with Adam. Nathaniel Taylor and Finney went the final step by rejecting the divine constitution view of inherent sin and by placing sin strictly within the limits of voluntary choice. For a full discussion of this drift, see Hannah, “Doctrine of Original Sin,” 245–50.
  110. Finney, Theology, 169; According to Finney, infants have no moral nature, that is, they cannot be moved to action through inducements addressed to their moral judgment. Only later do children awake to moral values and become moral agents.
  111. Ibid.,174, cf. 178, 181, 190. According to Finney, the weakened state of physical depravity fosters moral depravity.
  112. Ibid., 189–90, 193–94; cf. 294–95, 298. Cf. Whitesell, “Finney and His Theology,” 32; Mattson,“‘New Measure’ Revivalism,” 208. For a criticism of this position see Warfield, Perfectionism, 2.182–85.
  113. Finney, Theology, 191. According to Finney, since “physical depravity [is] depravity of substance as opposed to depravity of the actions of free-will” (p. 165), Adam is responsible for the physical depravity of his posterity but not the moral depravity, which Finney insists must be a free, voluntary choice. As Warfield notes, “The one we may receive from our progenitors, the other can be produced only by our own moral action” (Perfectionism, 2.179).
  114. Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 50.
  115. Finney’s view of the atonement is virtually identical with that of Hugo Grotius (1583–1645), the Dutch jurist and theologian.
  116. Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 51. Cf. Finney, Theology, 334–35.
  117. Swing, “Oberlin Theology,” 476; Wright, Finney, 236–37.
  118. Finney, Theology, 199; cf. 322, 336–37.
  119. Johnson, “Theology of Revivalism,” 355. Finney argues, “The head of every government is pledged to sustain the authority of law, by a due administration of rewards and punishments, and has no right in any instance to extend pardon, except upon conditions that will as effectually support the authority of law as the execution of its penalty would do” (Theology, 200).
  120. Johnson, “Theology of Revivalism,” 355. Finney indicates, “Sin cannot be pardoned unless something is done to forbid the otherwise natural inference … that no one need fear punishment, in any case, as his forgiveness was secure, however much he might trample on the divine authority, upon a single condition which he could at will perform [i.e. repentance] ” (Theology, 199–200).
  121. Johnson, “Theology of Revivalism,” 355. Finney claims that forgiveness on such a basis “would be a virtual repeal of the divine law” (Theology, 200, cf. 322).
  122. Swing, “Oberlin Theology,” 467.
  123. Finney, Theology, 322–23.
  124. Johnson, “Theology of Revivalism,” 355; Hannah, “Doctrine of Original Sin,” 247. Cf. L. Berkhof, Systematic Theology (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1941) 389.
  125. Finney, Theology, 223.
  126. Ibid.
  127. Ibid., 223, 227.
  128. Warfield, Perfectionism, 2.203. Finney maintains that selfishness (which is the essence of sin) and benevolence (which is the essence of holiness) cannot coexist in the same mind. Selfishness implies a state of supreme and entire consecration to self, while benevolence implies a state of entire obedience and supreme consecration to God and the good of the universe. Therefore one must be completely holy or completely sinful. There can be no gradations or degrees. Every person is either perfectly sinful or perfectly holy (Finney, Theology, 32–50, 86–90). Cf. Hardman, Finney, 389–90; Whitesell, “Finney and His Theology,” 40; Gresham, Baptism of the Spirit, 29–30; Swing, “Oberlin Theology,” 477; Wright, Finney, 210, 234; G. N. Boardman, A History of New England Theology (New York: A. D. F. Randolph, 1899) 281–82.
  129. This characterization seems to reflect accurately Finney’s view of regeneration and is made by H. O. Wiley (Christian Theology [3 vols.; Kansas City: Beacon Hill, 1952] 2.421), Whitesell (“Finney and His Theology,” 38), and Warfield (Perfectionism, 2.192).
  130. According to Wright, “Finney held … that regeneration and conversion are practically synonymous terms, designating an occurrence in which God and the sinner are coagents” (Finney, 230). Cf. Finney, Theology, 218, 223.
  131. Finney, Theology, 220.
  132. Ibid.
  133. Ibid., 223.
  134. Such creation of new life is usually seen in regeneration; cf., e.g., Berkhof, Systematic Theology, 468–69; M. Erickson, Christian Theology (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1983–1985) 945; J. T. Mueller, Christian Dogmatics (St. Louis: Concordia, 1955) 363; C. Ryrie, Basic Theology (Wheaton: Victor, 1986) 326; Wiley, Christian Theology, 3.419. Finney calls such views, “false and pernicious,” “the greatest and most abominable and ruinous of falsehoods,” “subversive of the gospel and repulsive to human intelligence,” and aberrations that “should be laid aside as relics of a most unreasonable and confused philosophy” (Theology, 221, 226, 236).
  135. A. H. Strong, Systematic Theology (Philadelphia: Judson, 1907) 818; Whitesell, “Finney and His Theology,” 41; Warfield, Perfectionism, 2.167, 171–74, 203–4, 206–8; McLoughlin, Revivalism, 71–72, 74–75; Unger, “The Social Views of Finney,” 26; Wright, Finney, 231–32; Boardman, New England Theology, 290; S. J. Baird, A History of the New School (Philadelphia: Claxton, Remsen & Haffelfinger, 1868) 223–24.
  136. Johnson, “Theology of Revivalism,” 353. Strong, commenting on Finney’s view, notes, “The influence of the Holy Spirit differs from that of the preacher only in degree,—both use only moral suasion; both do nothing more than to present the truth; both work on the soul from without. ‘Were I as eloquent as the Holy Ghost, I could convert sinners as well as he,’ said a popular preacher of this school” (Systematic Theology, 818). This description by Strong seems to represent Finney accurately; cf. Finney, Theology, 224; Boardman, New England Theology, 290.
  137. Finney, Theology, 278. Warfield notes, “How shall we account for the asserted fact that the will, inalienably able to turn at its option from its sins to God, in point of fact never does and never will so turn, except under the persuasive action of the Holy Spirit? A universal will-not, like this, has a very strong appearance of a can-not” (Perfectionism, 2.177).
  138. Finney, Theology, 235, 234, 224.
  139. Baird, History of the New School, 219–21.
  140. Finney, Theology, 220.
  141. Ibid., 221. Baird, describing Finney’s view, observes, “‘Why does he [the sinner] need the Spirit of God?’ For the same reason that a man who can pay his debts, but will not, needs the appliances of the law, to make him willing, …” (History of the New School, 220). Similarly, McLoughlin notes: The heart, or soul, of man was not depraved by Adam’s sin but prejudiced by self-interest and ignorance. It did not need a supernatural electric shock, but a humanly engineered reorientation. To alter the heart the preacher merely had to jar it out of its prejudice for evil (Revivalism, 69).
  142. Finney, Theology, 224.
  143. Ibid., 226.
  144. Ibid., 236
  145. Finney, “Sinners Bound to Change,” 21–22. Cf. Finney, Theology, 235, 286. Finney’s famous illustration about the dreamer walking along the bank of the Niagara River is also quite illuminating: Suppose yourself to be standing on the bank of the Falls of Niagara. As you stand upon the verge of the precipice, you behold a man lost in deep reverie, approaching its verge unconscious of his danger. He approaches nearer and nearer, until he actually lifts his foot to take the final step that shall plunge him in destruction. At this moment you lift your warning voice above the roar of the foaming waters, and cry out, Stop. The voice pierces his ear, and breaks the charm that binds him; he turns instantly upon his heel, all pale and aghast he retires, quivering from the verge of death (“Sinners Bound to Change,” 20–21). McLoughlin, commenting on Finney’s illustration, wonders, The man in the reverie, said Finney, was the careless sinner on his way to hell. The observer who shouted to him was the revival preacher or the soul-winning Christian. And the word ‘Stop’ was the ‘word of life,’ the truth of the gospel… Now the agency of the sinner in turning himself, and the agencies of the preacher and the Word were clear enough, but where was the agency of God or the Holy Spirit?(Revivalism, 71). Finney explains, “The Spirit of God forces the truth home upon him with such tremendous power as to induce him to turn” (“Sinners Bound to Change,” 21).
  146. Johnson, “Theology of Revivalism,” 356.
  147. Warfield, summarizing Finney’s position, notes, “We need from Christ only an adequate inducement to use our own strength aright” (Perfectionism, 2.206.)
  148. For an extended discussion of Finney’s views of natural ability and free will see Mattson, “‘New Measure’ Revivalism,” 193–239.
  149. Hannah, “Doctrine of Original Sin,” 253; Hardman, Finney, 389; Whitesell, “Finney and His Theology,” 29; Swing, “Oberlin Theology,” 466–67; Gresham, Baptism of the Spirit, 28; Unger, “The Social Views of Finney,” 24. McLoughlin maintains that Finney “exalted man’s free will to virtual omnipotence” (Revivalism, 70).
  150. Finney, Theology, 261; Swing noted, “Finney stands as one of the most earnest preachers of human ability” (“Oberlin Theology,” 467).
  151. Finney, Theology, 288.
  152. Ibid.
  153. Warfield, Perfectionism, 2.206.
  154. Finney, Theology, 221.
  155. Ibid., 261.
  156. Ibid.
  157. Ibid., 286.
  158. Noll, “Glimpses,” 23; Boardman, New England Theology, 288–89.
  159. Finney, Theology, 277–78, emphasis added.
  160. Ibid., 278, 281, 288. Finney has been correctly labeled as a Pelagian. Cf. Hardman, Finney, 46, 48, 100, 289, 334; Whitesell, Finney and his Theology, 31; Warfield, Perfectionism, 2.188, 189, 202, 208; C. Hodge, Systematic Theology (3 vols., New York: Charles Scribner, 1878) 3.257; Salstrand, “Finney,” 103; Boardman, New England Theology, 287.
  161. Finney, Theology, 275. Cf. Gresham, Baptism of the Spirit, 28; Hodge, Systematic Theology, 3.9.
  162. Finney, Theology, 276.
  163. Ibid., 281.
  164. Ibid., 281–82; cf. Swing, “Oberlin Theology,” 466; Warfield, Perfectionism, 2.173; Boardman, New England Theology, 288; Baird, History of the New School, 222. For a brief response to this proposition see Berkhof, Systematic Theology, 249–50.
  165. Finney, Theology, 313.
  166. See the discussion below on Finney’s view of justification.
  167. F. D. Bruner, A Theology of the Holy Spirit (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1970) 333–34; Hannah, “Doctrine of Original Sin,” 252.
  168. Finney, Theology, 309.
  169. Ibid., 313.
  170. Ibid.
  171. Ibid.
  172. Ibid., 310
  173. Ibid., 313.
  174. Bruner, Theology of the Holy Spirit, 333–34; cf. the discussion below on Finney’s view of justification. With one word, Bruner, in complete amazement, derides Finney’s comment in his Memoirs that no one had impugned his orthodoxy: “incredible.” Cf. Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 405.
  175. Finney, Theology, 326.
  176. Ibid., 318.
  177. Ibid., 319–20.
  178. Ibid., 322.
  179. Cf. notes 117–18 above.
  180. Finney, Theology, 322.
  181. Ibid., 323.
  182. Ibid., 320–34.
  183. Swing, “Oberlin Theology,” 476; Wright, Finney, 235–38.
  184. Finney, Theology, 327.
  185. Ibid., 328. Cf. Wright, Finney, 238, 250.
  186. Finney, Theology, 57; cf. 46–47, 59–60, 206, 338; Bruner, Theology of the Holy Spirit, 333.
  187. Finney, Theology, 328. This state of consecration is the same as sinless perfection; cf. note 128 above.
  188. Ibid.
  189. Ibid., 331.
  190. Ibid., 320, 329, 332.
  191. Ibid., 333.
  192. The Council of Trent defined justification as “not only a remission of sins, but also the sanctification and renewal of the inward man” (Canons and Decrees of the Council of Trent [trans. H. J. Schroeder; St. Louis: B. Herder, 1941] Session VI, chap. vii).
  193. A. E. McGrath, Justification by Faith (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1988) 47–61; L. Berkhof, The History of Christian Doctrines (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1937) 220.
  194. Bruner, Theology of the Holy Spirit, 333; Finney, Theology, 338.
  195. In the 1840s Finney’s doctrine of sanctification underwent modification, and its Wesleyan emphasis on a second blessing diminished (Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 403 n. 89; Drummond, Finney, 230–31; Johnson, “Finney and Oberlin Perfectionism,” 51; cf. T. L. Smith, “The Doctrine of the Sanctifying Spirit: Charles G. Finney’s Synthesis of Wesleyan and Covenant Theology,” Wesleyan Theological Journal 13 [1978] 98–108; id., “The Blessing of Abraham: Finney’s Christian Perfection,” Christian History 7 [1988] 24–26; Gresham, Baptism of the Spirit, 8–26, 36–38, 53).
  196. Finney, Theology, 227. Cf. Wright, Finney, 239.
  197. Johnson, “Finney and Oberlin Perfectionism,” 50–52. As has been seen above, Finney also identifies this state of sinless perfection with faith.
  198. Finney, Theology, 341.
  199. Ibid., 340; This state of consecration is the same as sinless perfection; cf. note 128 above.
  200. Ibid., 343.
  201. Ibid., 342, emphasis added.
  202. Ibid.
  203. Ibid., e.g. 342, 352. Finney indicates that the expression “entire sanctification” can be used in two senses: “(1.) In the sense of present, full obedience, or entire consecration to God and (2.) In the sense of continued abiding consecration or obedience to God” (341). Finney generally used the term “sanctification” in the first sense and the phrase “entire sanctification” for the second meaning. For a further discussion, see Gresham, Baptism of the Spirit, 34.
  204. Finney, Theology, 223, 227, 252–54; Hardman, Finney, 390. This position is in perfect harmony with Finney’s view of justification. Cf. Smith, “The Blessing of Abraham,” 26.
  205. Finney, Theology, 342.
  206. J. E. Johnson, “The Life of Charles Grandison Finney” (Ph.D. diss., Syracuse University Press, 1959) 325; id., “Finney and Oberlin Perfectionism,” 54–55; Gresham, Baptism of the Spirit, 28; Hodge, Systematic Theology, 3.256–57.
  207. Finney, Theology, 343, cf. 369–70.
  208. Ibid., 375–84, 410; cf. Warfield, Perfectionism, 2.208; Gresham, Baptism of the Spirit, 36–38.
  209. Finney, Theology, 354. Cf. Wright, Finney, 248; Gresham, Baptism of the Spirit, 32–33.
  210. Finney, Theology, 359; Swing, “Oberlin Theology,” 478; Wright, Finney, 248–49.
  211. Although Finney’s use of the new measures preceded the publication of his Lectures on Systematic Theology, these techniques were, nevertheless, the logical result of his developing theological views that were later crystallized in his systematic theology. According to D. Wells, Archibald Alexander viewed Finney’s new measures as the outgrowth of his theology (“American Society as Seen from the 19th-Century Pulpit,” BSac 144 [1987] 142).
  212. Baird, History of the New School, 223–25; J. H. Morehead, “Charles Finney and the Modernization of America,” Journal of Presbyterian History 62 (1984) 102.
  213. McLoughlin indicates that “few of the ‘new measures’ were entirely original with Finney, nevertheless he did modify them and amalgamate them into a completely new approach to revivals, an approach which later revivalists adapted to the changing times but never basically altered” (Revivalism, 99–100).
  214. Hardman, Spiritual Awakeners, 178; McLoughlin, Revivalism, 29–30, 57, 73, 95–99; id., Revivals, Awakenings, and Reform. An Essay on Religion and Social Change in America, 1607–1977 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1978) 125; J. E. Johnson, “Charles Grandison Finney and the Burned-Over District,” Eerdmans’ Handbook, 176; W. S. Hudson, Religion in America (4th. ed.; New York: MacMillan, 1987) 136–37; Weisberger, They Gathered at the River, 96–103; Miller, The Life of the Mind in America, 24; Johnson, A Shopkeeper’s Millennium, 95–102; Rosell, “Finney,” 48–91; Mead, Taylor, 204; Wright, Finney, 69, 76–79; Baird, History of the New School, 226–34; Finney, “Measures to Promote Revivals”; Lectures on Revivals of Religion, 254–69.
  215. Hudson, Religion in America, 137.
  216. McLoughlin, Revivalism, 99.
  217. McLoughlin, Revivalism, 84; Ahlstrom, Religious History of the American People, 460.
  218. Finney, “What a Revival of Religion Is,” Lectures on Revivals of Religion, 13.
  219. Hardman, Spiritual Awakeners, 184; Stampp, “Era of Reform,” 257–67; Eerdmans’ Handbook, 188–91; Hudson, Religion in America, 144–45; B. Bailyn, D. Davis, D. Donald, J. Thomas, R. Wiebe, and G. Wood, The Great Republic: A History of the American People (Lexington, MA: D. C. Heath, 1977) 530, 541–48; Rosell, “Finney,” 144–78.
  220. Hardman, Finney, 253; Stampp, “Era of Reform,” 257–67; Garraty and McCaughey, The American Nation, 1.306–14.
  221. Ahlstrom, Religious History of the American People, 460–61; Unger, “The Social Views of Finney,” 55; Cole, Social Ideas, 204–5; Morehead, “Charles Finney and the Modernization of America,” 95, 105; D. Dayton, Discovering An Evangelical Heritage (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1976) 18–19. Cf. Finney, Theology, 247–50.
  222. Finney, “Instructions to Converts,” Lectures on Revivals of Religion, 404.
  223. C. Finney, “On Sinning,” Oberlin Evangelist 14NS (1857) 121. The text mentioned by Finney is Jas 4:17.
  224. Cole, Social Ideas, 60, 123, 204–20; Wright, Finney, 139–52; Rosell and Dupuis, Memoirs, 362–63; Finney, “Hindrances to Revivals,” Lectures on Revivals of Religion, 286–88, 300–303; Unger, “The Social Views of Finney,” 57–87; McLoughlin, Revivalism, 108–12. Cf. Finney, Theology, 163–64.
  225. Johnson, “Life of Charles Grandison Finney,” 245–54. For an extended discussion of Finney’s personal involvement in social reform see Hollon, “Love as Holiness,” 190–208.
  226. Unger, “The Social Views of Finney,” 54. Cf. W. W. Sweet, Revivalism in America: Its Origin, Growth, and Decline (Gloucester: Peter Smith, 1965) 160. For Finney’s contribution to the popularization of benevolent societies see G. Rosell, “Charles G. Finney: His Place in the Stream of American Evangelicalism,” in The Evangelical Tradition in America (ed. L. I. Sweet; Macon: Mercer University Press, 1984) 142–47. For the causal relationship between the theology of revivalism and social reform see T. L. Smith, Revivalism & Social Reform in American Protestantism on the Eve of the Civil War (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1980); G. H. Barnes, The Antislavery Impulse 1830–1844 (New York: Harcourt, Brace, & World, 1933) xxxiii, 11, 16; Sweet, Revivalism in America, 152–61; Rosell, “Finney,” 121–43.
  227. McLoughlin, Revivalism, 101; Hardman, Finney, 255; Dayton, Discovering An Evangelical Heritage, 18; Unger, “The Social Views of Finney,” 54; Weddle, The Law as Gospel, 7.
  228. C. Finney, “The Pernicious Attitude of the Church on the Reforms of the Age,” reprinted in Dayton, Discovering An Evangelical Heritage, 21.
  229. Warfield, Perfectionism, 2.193. Hodge indicates, “It is altogether a misnomer to call such a book ‘Lectures on Systematic Theology.’ It would give a far more definite idea of its character, to call it, ‘Lectures on Moral Law and Philosophy’” (“Finney’s Lectures on Theology,” 241). Similarly Strong indicates, “Mr. Finney’s ‘Systematic Theology’ is little more than a treatise on moral government under another name” (Christ in Creation and Ethical Monism, 383).
  230. Warfield, Perfectionism, 2.178. Warfield adds, “It [is] clear that all God does toward saving man is directed to inducing the objects of salvation to save themselves” (2.167).
  231. McLoughlin, Revivalism, 11.