Data publicării
15.08.1902
Volumul
23
Numărul
16
Turnul de veghe
Views from the Watch Tower
../literature/watchtower/1902/16/1902-16-2.html
,\ 
cG 
l:sT 
15, 
1902 
ZIONJS 
WATCH 
TOWER 
(243-244) 
expand 
and 
to 
prove 
of 
inestimable 
value 
when 
bequeathed 
to 
their 
successors. 
Our 
nobilIty 
will 
thus 
temper 
their 
exactions 
to 
an 
endurable 
lImit; 
and 
they 
will 
distribute 
benefits 
to 
degree 
that 
makes 
tolerant, 
if 
not 
satisfied 
people. 
They 
may 
even 
make 
working 
principle 
of 
Bentham's 
maxim, 
and 
after, 
of 
course, 
appropriatmg 
the 
first 
and 
choicest 
fruits 
of 
industry 
to 
themselves, 
may 
seek 
to 
promote 
the 
'greatest 
happiness 
to 
the 
greatest 
number.' 
For 
therein 
will 
lie 
their 
greater 
secqrity." 
l\Ir. 
Ghent 
considers 
"the 
present 
state 
machinery 
is 
ad· 
mIrably 
adapted 
for 
the 
subtle 
and 
extra-legal 
exertion 
of 
power 
by 
an 
autocracy" 
and 
hl'nce 
that 
neither 
new 
laws 
nor 
VIOlent 
methods 
will 
be 
invoked. 
He 
continues:- 
"The 
prevention 
of 
discontent 
Will 
be 
the 
prior 
study, 
to 
wlnch 
the 
intellect 
and 
the 
energies 
of 
the 
nobles 
and 
their 
ll'gates 
w1l1 
be 
ever 
bent. 
To 
that 
end 
the 
teachings 
of 
the 
schools 
and 
colleges, 
the 
sermons, 
the 
editoriols, 
the 
stump 
ora· 
tions, 
and 
even 
the 
plays 
at 
the 
theaters 
will 
be 
skillfully 
and 
persuasively 
molded; 
and 
the 
questioning 
heart 
of 
the 
poor, 
which 
perpetually 
seeks 
some 
answer 
to 
the 
painful 
riddle 
of 
the 
earth, 
will 
meet 
with 
multitude 
of 
mollifying 
responses. 
... 
Literature 
Will 
take 
on 
the 
hues 
and 
tones 
of 
the 
good. 
naturpd 
days 
of 
Charles 
II. 
Instead 
of 
poetry, 
however, 
the 
innocuous 
novel 
will 
flourish 
best; 
every 
flowery 
courtier 
will 
write 
romance 
and 
the 
literary 
darling 
of 
the 
renaissance 
will 
be 
an 
Edmund 
Waller 
of 
fiction. 
lienal 
descendant 
of 
the 
famous 
Lely, 
who 
... 
on 
animated 
canvas 
stole 
The 
sleepy 
eye 
that 
spoke 
the 
melting 
soul,' 
will 
be 
the 
laureled 
chief 
of 
our 
painters; 
and 
sculpture, 
ar· 
chitecture, 
and 
the 
lesser 
arts, 
under 
the 
spell 
of 
changed 
in­ 
fluencps, 
will 
undergo 
like 
transformation. 
"This, 
then, 
in 
the 
rough, 
our 
benevolent 
feudalism 
to­ 
be. 
It 
is 
not 
precisely 
Utopia, 
not 
an 
'island 
valley 
of 
Avil­ 
ion'; 
and 
yet 
it 
has 
its 
commendable, 
even 
its 
fascinating 
fea. 
tureq. 
'The 
empire 
is 
peace,' 
shouted 
the 
partizans 
of 
Louis 
Napoleon; 
and 
like 
cry, 
with 
an 
equal 
ardency 
of 
enthusi· 
asm, 
will 
be 
uttered 
by 
the 
supporters 
of 
the 
new 
regime. 
Peace 
and 
stability 
will 
be 
its 
defensive 
arguments, 
and 
peace 
and 
stability 
it 
will 
probably 
bring. 
But 
tranquil 
or 
unquiet, 
whatever 
it 
may 
be, 
its 
triumph 
is 
assured; 
and 
existent 
forces 
are 
carrying 
us 
toward 
it 
with 
an 
ever-accelerating 
speed. 
One 
power 
alone 
might 
prevent 
it--the 
collective 
pop­ 
ular 
"ill 
that 
it 
shall 
not 
be. 
But 
of 
this 
there 
is 
no 
f~ar 
on 
the 
part 
of 
the 
barons, 
and 
but 
little 
expectation 
on 
the 
part 
of 
the 
underlings." 
The 
writer 
of 
the 
above 
seems 
to 
have 
clear 
grasp 
of 
the 
qubject 
and 
presents 
it 
well. 
Our 
only 
disagreement 
with 
his 
hypothesis 
is 
that 
it 
will 
not 
work 
out 
as 
the 
wealthy 
in­ 
tl'nel 
it 
shall. 
The 
next 
great 
world-wide 
financial 
depression 
which 
we 
believe 
to 
be 
but 
few 
years 
ahead 
of 
us 
will 
dis­ 
poncert 
theqe 
plans 
and 
confound 
the 
whole 
world. 
Stock­ 
holden 
will 
demand 
dividends 
even 
on 
watered 
stocks; 
and 
managers 
however 
benpvoll'ntly 
disposed 
and 
however 
prudent 
"III 
be 
compelled 
either 
to 
advance 
prices 
or 
to 
curtail 
ex­ 
pense's 
or 
both 
and 
in 
the 
end 
the 
lower 
cllts'les 
are 
sure 
to 
be 
so 
hard 
pressed 
that 
the 
Scripture 
predictions 
respecting 
our 
timps 
wIll 
be 
fulfilled.-James 
5: 
1-5; 
Dan. 
12: 
1. 
WHAT 
WILL 
THE 
HIGHER 
CRITICS 
DO 
WITH 
PAUL? 
"Let 
the 
Gospel 
accounts 
of 
the 
resurrection 
of 
Jesus 
be 
given 
up 
as 
non-historical, 
there 
still 
remains 
the 
unquestion­ 
ably 
historic 
and 
authentic 
te~timonv 
of 
Paul." 
Thi~ 
i'l 
the 
keJ~note 
of 
an 
article 
by 
Rev. 
Dr. 
William 
Cleaver 
Wilkinson, 
of 
Chicago 
University, 
in 
which 
he 
dwells 
upon 
the 
incalcula­ 
ble' 
ne'ed 
the 
Christian 
church 
has 
for 
Paul, 
as 
one 
whose 
tes­ 
timony 
"no 
fierpest 
crucible 
fires 
of 
hi~torica 
criticl~m 
can 
poqsihly 
in 
the' 
least 
affect." 
Dr. 
Wilkinson 
(who 
writes 
in 
Thr 
!loln/letic 
Rer'ic/I', 
.June) 
does 
not 
think 
this 
importance 
of 
Paul'8 
tpstimony 
is 
adequately 
appreciated. 
He 
says:- 
"Thp 
rry, 
so 
rife' 
e'very\vhere 
about 
us, 
'Bark 
to 
Christ!' 
really 
IDPa~s, 
from 
the 
lips 
of 
many 
who 
utter 
it, 
'Away 
from 
]'alll"-I1.l\. 
P\\'IL 
,J!lIlo,t, 
'.\\\a\ 
\\Ith 
]'a1l1" 
\\ 
It 
11l11l\ 
zealously 
a'ctive 
and 
widely 
influ~ntial 
Chri~tian 
teache'rs 
and 
wntPrs, 
the 
fpe!Jng 
has 
bpen 
growmg 
~trongf'r 
pvpry 
(la~' 
for 
now 
decade 
of 
~'ears 
or 
more 
that 
the 
Apostle 
Paul 
has 
too 
long 
been 
suffered 
to 
dominate, 
too 
exclusivdy, 
our 
concep­ 
tions 
of 
Christianity. 
The' 
vipw 
has 
bee'n 
propagating 
itself 
b~- 
boldly 
declaring 
Itself 
that 
thl' 
proper 
way 
to 
regard 
Paul's 
WIlting'S 
is 
to 
H'gard 
them 
as 
setting 
forth, 
not 
authorita· 
tively 
thl' 
true 
doctrines 
of 
Chnst, 
but 
only 
as 
setting 
forth 
onp 
gre'at 
mind's 
own 
inllivdual 
way 
of 
ronceiving 
those 
doc­ 
trine'S. 
The 
doctrine~ 
themselves, 
it 
is 
urged, 
in 
the'ir 
unadul­ 
terated 
purity, 
are 
to 
be 
sought 
in 
the 
wordg 
of 
the 
living 
.JpSUq, 
as 
tho,e 
words 
are 
reported 
by 
the 
four 
evangelists. 
but 
e~pe'cially 
by 
the 
three 
synoptic 
evangelists 
so 
called, 
Matthew, 
Mark, 
and 
I"uke. 
The' 
records 
of 
these 
hi~torians, 
we 
are 
told, 
ar.e 
to 
be 
.carefully 
sifted; 
for 
the 
truth 
which 
they 
give 
i8 
nllngled 
With 
error-the 
error 
of 
Imperfect 
report 
and 
imper­ 
fect 
transmissIOn. 
Besides 
this, 
so 
we 
are 
further 
given 
to 
understand, 
there 
is 
the 
error, 
an 
uncertain 
amount 
to 
wInch 
.Je8us 
himself, 
as 
prove'd 
by 
his 
own 
admissions 
of' 
Ignorance 
on 
some 
points, 
was 
liable." 
From 
thi8 
"pitiable 
8tate 
of 
hopeless 
lUcel 
titud('," 
Pa 
ul 
reseues 
us 
by 
his 
witness 
to 
"living, 
an 
ascended, 
glonfied 
Christ." 
It 
was 
for 
the 
sake 
of 
this 
service 
that 
Christ 
waited 
until 
after 
his 
re5urrection 
and 
ascension 
before 
ealhng 
Paul 
to. 
the 
apostleship 
.. 
It 
i~ 
Pal;ll 
alone 
who 
gives 
to 
Christ's 
pre­ 
eXistence 
and 
to 
hiS 
exaltatIOn 
after 
death 
the 
proper 
promi­ 
nence, 
making 
almost 
nothing, 
in 
comparison, 
of 
the 
Lord's 
earthly 
life. 
It 
was 
not 
upon 
Jesus 
as 
man 
among 
men, 
but 
upon 
Jesus 
as 
supreme 
divine 
Lord 
over 
men 
that 
Paul 
laid 
commanding 
emphaSIS. 
Dr. 
'Vdkinson 
continueR: 
"The 
(,hn~tlau 
l'hurl'h 
('an 
not 
aHoll1 
to 
ol>P\' 
thp 
",111 
'Bal·k 
to 
l'11I 
bt 
r' 
if 
that 
('all 
hp 
undl'r~tood 
to 
n1l':lIl 
h,u'k 
to 
the 
earthly 
Christ 
of 
the 
Gospel 
histories, 
away 
from 
the 
heavenly 
Christ 
of 
the 
epistles 
of 
Paul. 
The 
tendency, 
now 
so 
strong 
and 
prevalent 
so 
widely, 
to 
deal 
with 
.Jesus 
on 
se­ 
verely 
'scientific' 
principles 
of 
historical 
criticism, 
simply 
as 
man 
who 
lived 
once 
in 
Palestine, 
and 
whose 
words 
and 
dee'ds 
were 
very 
imperfectly 
reported 
by 
very 
ill-qualified 
biogra­ 
phprs. 
blOgU\phPr~ 
that 
lIIu~t 
he' 
halt('(l 
\\ 
It 
II 
l'll,lllpl!i!" 
at 
every 
point 
and 
not 
confidently 
relied 
upon, 
unless 
they 
all 
three 
happen 
to 
relate 
the 
same 
thing 
in 
the 
sallie 
way-I 
say 
all 
'three,' 
not 
all 
four, 
because 
John 
is 
to 
great 
extent 
discredited 
and 
counted 
out 
as 
not 
John, 
but 
anothe'r 
man 
by 
the 
name 
of 
John-this 
tendency, 
however 
it 
may 
suppose 
it· 
self 
to 
be. 
peculiarly 
loyal 
to 
Jesus 
is, 
in 
deepest 
truth, 
the 
most 
specIOus 
and 
the 
most 
dangerous 
disloyalty 
to 
him 
that 
he 
has 
ever 
encountered 
in 
all 
the 
centuries 
since 
he 
finished 
the 
work 
on 
earth 
that 
was 
given 
him 
to 
do. 
"Let 
it 
be 
duly 
con..,idered, 
if 
(,hri~t 
(OIDp, 
at 
h'ngth 
to 
hp 
measured 
by 
this 
rule, 
the 
time 
will 
then 
not 
be 
distant 
when 
he 
will 
be 
still 
further 
reduced; 
and 
from 
being 
the 
pre-emlllent, 
the 
ideal, 
the 
flawles8 
man. 
wdl 
he 
fOl\lHI 
out 
to 
be 
at 
best 
man 
not 
well 
enough 
known 
to 
deserve 
such 
dis­ 
tinction, 
and, 
at 
worst, 
man 
shown 
to 
have 
had 
his 
limita­ 
tions, 
his 
weaknesses, 
his 
infatuations, 
even 
his 
faults 
of 
tem­ 
per 
in 
speech 
and 
in 
behavior, 
such 
ag 
bring 
him 
down 
after 
all 
quite 
comfortably 
near 
the 
level 
of 
the 
better 
sort 
of 
aver­ 
age 
human 
nature." 
In 
the 
opinion 
of 
Dr. 
'Vilkinson, 
however, 
"nothinO' 
even 
conceivable, 
except 
the 
actual 
literal 
resurrection 
ot 
Jesus 
Christ 
from 
the 
dead, 
can 
account 
for 
the 
undoubtedly 
histori­ 
cal 
phenomenon 
of 
the 
Apostle 
Paul, 
his 
career, 
and 
his 
writ­ 
ten 
words." 
The 
ahmp 
from 
thp 
lJ/[I('st 
i~ 
gn'at 
'atI~t.u-tiol! 
to 
lh. 
\\ 
rejoice 
that 
the 
Chirago 
University 
has 
one 
professor 
still 
sufficiently 
true 
to 
God's 
'Vord 
and 
to 
logic 
to 
acknowledge 
the 
.\.postle 
Paul's 
Round 
words, 
and 
their 
accord 
with 
the 
mind 
and 
words 
of 
our 
Lord 
,Je'sus. 
None 
who 
appreciate 
the 
divine 
plan 
of 
thp 
ages 
can 
for 
moment 
questIOn 
that 
the 
Lord 
spe'cially 
raised 
up 
the 
gre'at 
Apostle 
to 
the 
Gentilps. 
~re, 
yes, 
the 
entire 
cause 
stands 
or 
faIl8 
with 
this 
great 
mouth­ 
piecc 
of 
God. 
IS 
THERE 
CRISIS 
IN 
METHODISM? 
Rev. 
Dr. 
L. 
W. 
Munhall, 
an 
evangelist 
of 
thp 
Mpthodist 
Episcopal 
rhurch, 
i'l 
VNy 
sure 
that 
there 
is 
(Ti~i~ 
awl 
that 
he 
knows 
what 
has 
caus'ell 
it. 
The 
causp 
is 
"the 
dishonor 
put 
upon 
God's 
Holy 
\Vord" 
bv 
J\Tethodi~t 
profes~or8, 
('dit.ors, 
and 
preaell('rs.. 
He 
does 
not 
heSItate 
to 
namp 
thpm, 
and 
his 
li"t 
lllcludes 
the 
names 
of 
many 
of 
the 
most 
notablp 
in 
the 
denomi­ 
natlOn. 
Dr, 
~Iunhall's 
charge'S 
are 
not 
stridlv 
new 
Hc 
h,lS 
bren 
making 
them 
for 
at 
]e'ast 
thre'e 
years. 
'On 
June 
2:3 
he 
repeated 
thpm 
before 
l\fdhodi~t 
lIIini,tcrs' 
meeting 
in 
Phil· 
a,lplphw, 
whpre 
he 
securrd 
the' 
pa~,agc 
of 
csolutlOns 
eI,,· 
nounl'ing 
"higheT 
('ritici~m" 
a~ 
"wretchecl 
stuff." 
Ill' 
has 
nuw 
puhlblll'el 
hi~ 
\,ip\\s 
in 
pamphlet 
entitlpll 
"A 
CJi~is 
1Il 
l\1eth­ 
odi~lll." 
in 
which 
he 
as;.,prt~ 
that 
the 
spiritual 
Iifp 
of 
-:\letho­ 
(lism 
is 
dying 
out. 
He 
write;,' 
"\\'hat 
I~ 
the' 
real 
cause 
of 
our 
spiritual 
declinc 
l\Iany 
('rrusr~ 
ha\'e 
bee'n 
nameel, 
sOllle 
of 
which 
explain 
in 
part; 
but, 
for 
myRp]f, 
belipve' 
thp 
real 
cau~e 
of 
it 
all 
is 
thr 
dlRhlJ110r 
put. 
lIpon 
Goel's 
lIoly 
'VonI 
in 
many 
of 
our 
eclueational 
in,ti­ 
tutions, 
by 
som(' 
eelitors 
of 
church 
perioelicals, 
and 
not 
fel\' 
prpachpr~; 
because 
of 
\\ 
hirh 
the 
holy 
Rpirit 
has 
been 
grie\,pd 
anel 
withclrawn 
his 
po\YPr 
in 
large 
mpasure 
from 
us. 
Because' 
of 
tlwir 
commaneling 
infJupncp, 
0111' 
educational 
in~titutions 
are 
the 
chid 
offpnllrrs. 
Of 
pourse, 
know 
that 
all 
these 
institu· 
tion~ 
'11'(' 
not 
give'n 
to 
this 
mischipvous 
businp~s, 
hut 
most 
of 
the 
lrarling 
one~ 
are. 
Tn 
tIlt' 
faculties 
of 
thrse 
institutions 
are 
mpn 
who 
arr 
;.,ke'ptir~ 
awl 
rationalists; 
who 
(10 
not 
at 
alI 
be­ 
lir\'e 
thp 
nihIl' 
is 
God's 
Word 
amI 
in 
the 
doctrine's 
of 
Me'tho- 
[3057] 
Avcust 15, 1902 expand and to prove of inestimable value when bequeathed to their successors. Our nobility will thus temper their exactions to an endurable limit; and they will distribute benefits to a degree that makes a tolerant, if not a satisfied people. They may even make a working principle of Bentham’s maxim, and after, of course, appropriating the first and choicest fruits of industry to themselves, may seek to promote the ‘greatest happiness to the greatest number.’ For therein will lie their greater security.” Mr. Ghent considers “the present state machinery is admuirably adapted for the subtle and extra-legal exertion of power by an autocracy” and hence that neither new laws nor violent methods will be invoked. He continues :— “The prevention of discontent will be the prior study, to which the intellect and the energies of the nobles and their legates will be ever bent. To that end the teachings of the schools and colleges, the sermons, the editoriols, the stump orations, and even the plays at the theaters will be skillfully and persuasively molded; and the questioning heart of the poor, which perpetually seeks some answer to the painful riddle of the earth, will meet with a multitude of mollifying responses. . . . Literature will take on the hues and tones of the goodnatured days of Charles II. Instead of poetry, however, the innocucus novel will flourish best; every flowery courtier will write romance and the literary darling of the renaissance will be an Edmund Waller of fiction. A lienal descendant of the famous Lely, who ‘...on animated canvas stole The sleepy eye that spoke the melting soul,’ will be the laureled chief of our painters; and sculpture, architecture, and the lesser arts, under the spell of changed influences, will undergo a like transformation. “This, then, in the rough, is our benevolent feudalism tobe. It is not precisely a Utopia, not an ‘island valley of Avilion’; and yet it has its commendable, even its fascinating features. ‘The empire is peace,’ shouted the partizans of Louis Napoleon; and a like cry, with an equal ardency of enthusiasm, will be uttered by the supporters of the new regime, Peace and stability will be its defensive arguments, and peace and stability it will probably bring. But tranquil or unquiet, whatever it may be, its triumph is assured; and existent forces are carrying us toward it with an_ever-accelerating speed. One power alone might prevent it--the collective popular will that it shall not be. But of this there is no fear on the part of the barons, and but little expectation on the part of the underlings.” The writer of the above seems to have a clear grasp of the subject and presents it well. Our only disagreement with his hypothesis is that it will not work out as the wealthy intend it shall. The next great world-wide financial depression which we believe to be but a few years ahead of us will disconcert these plans and confound the whole world. Stockholders will demand dividends even on watered stocks; and managers however benevolently disposed and however prudent will be compelled either to advance prices or to curtail] expenses or both and in the end the lower classes are sure to be so hard pressed that the Scripture predictions respecting our times will be fulfilled —James 5:1-5; Dan. 12:1. WHAT WILL THE HIGHER CRITICS DO WITH PAUL? “Let the Gospel accounts of the resurrection of Jesus be given up as non-historical, there still remaing the unquestionably historic and authentic testimony of Paul.” This is the keynote of an article by Rev. Dr. William Cleaver Wilkinson, of Chicago University, in which he dwells upon the incalculable need the Christian church has for Paul, as one whose testimony “no fiercest crucible fires of historical criticism can possibly in the least affect.” Dr. Wilkinson (who writes in The Homiletic Reriew, June) does not think this importance of Paul’s testimony is adequately appreciated. He says:— “The ery, so rife everywhere about us, ‘Back to Christ!’ really means, from the lips of many who utter it, ‘Away from Paul —nay. even. almost, “Away with Pant’ Wath mony zealously active and widely influential Christian teachers and writers, the feeling has been growing stronger every day for now a decade of years or more that the Apostle Paul has too long been suffered to dominate, too exclusively, our conceptions of Christianity. The view has been propagating itself by boldly declaring itself that the proper way to regard Paul’s wiltings is to regard them as setting forth, not authoritatively the true doctrines of Christ, but only as setting forth one great mind’s own indivdual way of conceiving those doctrines. The doctrines themselves, it is urged, in their unadulterated purity, are to be sought in the words of the living Jesus, as those words are reported by the four evangelists, but especially by the three synoptic evangelists so called, Matthew, Mark, and Luke. The records of these historians, we are told, ZION’S WATCH TOWER (243-244) are to be carefully sifted; for the truth which they give is mingled with error—the error of imperfect report and imperfect transmission. Besides this, so we are further given to understand, there is the error, an uncertain amount, to which Jesus himself, as proved by his own admissions of ignorance on some points, was liable.” From this “pitiable state of hopeless ineaititude,” Paul rescues us by his witness to a “living, an ascended, a glorified Christ.” It was for the sake of this service that Christ waited until after his resurrection and ascension before calling Paul to the apostleship. It is Paul alone who gives to Christ’s preexistence and to his exaltation after death the proper prominence, making almost nothing, in comparison, of the Lord’s earthly life. It was not upon Jesus a8 a man among men, but upon Jesus as supreme divine Lord over men that Paul laid commanding emphasis. Dr. Wilkinson continues: “The Christian church can not afford to obey the call ‘Back to Christ’ if that call be understood to mean back to the earthly Christ of the Gospel histories, away from the heavenly Christ of the epistles of Paul. The tendency, now so strong and prevalent so widely, to deal with Jesus on severely ‘scientific’ principles of historical criticism, simply as a man who lived once in Palestine, and whose words and deeds were very imperfectly reported by very ill-qualified biographers, biographers that must be halted with challenge at every point and not confidently relied upon, unless they all three happen to relate the same thing in the same way—I say all ‘three,’ not all four, because John is to a great extent discredited and counted out as not John, but another man by the name of John—this tendency, however it may suppose itself to be peculiarly loyal to Jesus is, in deepest truth, the most specious and the most dangerous disloyalty to him that he has ever encountered in all the centuries since he finished the work on earth that was given him to do. “Let it be duly considered, if Christ comes at length to he measured by this rule, the time will then not be distant when he will be still further reduced; and from being the pre-eminent, the ideal, the flawless man, will be found out to be at best a man not well enough known to deserve such distinction, and, at worst, a man shown to have had his limitations, his weaknesses, his infatuations, even his faults of temper in speech and in behavior, such as bring him down after all quite comfortably near the level of the better sort of average human nature.” In the opinion of Dr. Wilkinson, however, “nothing even conceivable, except the actual literal resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, ean account for the undoubtedly historical phenomenon of the Apostle Paul, his career, and his written words.” The above from the Digest is a great satisfaction to us. We rejoice that the Chicago University has one professor still sufficiently true to God’s Word and to logic to acknowledge the Apostle Paul’s sound words, and their accord with the mind and words of our Lord Jesus. None who appreciate the divine plan of the ages can for a moment question that the Lord specially raised up the great Apostle to the Gentiles. We, yes, the entire cause stands or falls with this great mouthpiece of God. IS THERE A CRISIS IN METHODISM? Rev. Dr. L. W. Munhall, an evangelist of the Methodist Episeopal church, is very sure that there is a crisis and that he knows what has caused it. The cause is “the dishonor put upon God’s Holy Word” by Methodist professors, editors, and preachers... He does not hesitate to name them, and his list includes the names of many of the most notable in the denomination. Dr, Munhall’s charges are not strictly new He has been making them for at least three years. On June 23 he repeated them before a Methodist ministers’ meeting in Philadelphia, where he secured the passage of resolutions denouncing “higher criticism” as “wretched stuff.’ He has now pubhshed his views in a pamphlet entitled “A Crisis in Methodism.” in which he asserts that the spiritual life of MethoCism is dying out. He writes “What is the real cause of our spiritual decline? Many causes have been named, some of which explain in part; but, for myself, I believe the real cause of it all is the dishonor put upon God’s Holy Word in many of our educational institutions, by some editors of church periodicals, and not a few preachers; because of which the holy Spirit has been grieved and withdrawn his power in large measure from us. Because of their commanding influence, our educational institutions are the chief offenders. Of course, T know that all these institutions are not given to this mischievous business, but most of the leading ones are. Jn the faculties of these institutions are men who are skeptics and rationalists; who do not at all helieve the Bible is God’s Word and in the doctrines of Metho [8057]

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