INTRODUCTION LEE ROY MARTIN *

Similar documents
Welcome to Bachelor of Arts in Leadership and Ministry!

CURRICULUM VITAE. Daniel Castelo. School of Theology Seattle Pacific University rd Ave. West, Suite 204 Seattle, WA

Yong, Amos. Beyond the Impasse: Toward a Pneumatological Theology of Religion. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker, ISBN #

Towards Guidelines on International Standards of Quality in Theological Education A WCC/ETE-Project

LETTER FROM AMERICA : A UNITED METHODIST PERSPECTIVE Randy L. Maddox

GALATIANS Lesson 23. Separation Galatians 6:11-18

Copyright 2015 Institute for Faith and Learning at Baylor University 83. Tracing the Spirit through Scripture

Frequently Asked Questions

PENTECOSTAL PERSPECTIVES ON CHARISMATIC ACTIVITY OF THE SPIRIT Dan Morrison 309

The Third Path: Gustavus Adolphus College and the Lutheran Tradition

WORLD COUNCIL OF CHURCHES International Inter-Orthodox Consultation on

Pentecostals and Divine Impassibility: A Response to Daniel Castelo *

THE SPIRIT AND THE DOCTRINE OF GOD: ON GENDERED LANGUAGE, VIOLENCE, AND THE TRINITY AND PHILOSOPHY ANDREW K. GABRIEL

LABI College Bachelor Degree in Theology Program Learning Outcomes

introduction to pentecostal hermeneutics 3

SAMPLE. Historically, pneumatology has had little influence on the. Introduction

All Scripture are from the NASB 95 Update unless noted. 1

Study Theme Eight: Mission and Unity: Ecclesiology and Mission

Catholic Health Care, The Laity and the Church. Making All Things New

The Response of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland to the LWF study document The Self-Understanding of the Lutheran Communion

Goheen, Michael. A Light to the Nations: The Missional Church and the Biblical Story. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 2011.

Further Reflections on Worship. Donald Goertz

Religion. Aim of the subject REL

C a t h o l i c D i o c e s e o f Y o u n g s t o w n

DAVID J. BOSCH, THE KOREAN CHURCH AND WORLD MISSION

Philosophy. Aim of the subject

BIBLICAL STUDIES DEPARTMENT

Spirit Baptism A Response to My Reviewers

Master of Arts in Ministry Studies

[AJPS 5:2 (2002), pp ]

September 19, Dear Members of the Candler Community,

The Shape of an Eschatological Ecclesiology: More Than Communion by Scott MacDougall

Catholic Identity Then and Now

The Marks of Faithful and Effective Authorized Ministers of the United Church of Christ AN ASSESSMENT RUBRIC

Christian Ethics for Biosphere and Context

CLASS TIME: To be arranged

[MJTM 15 ( )] BOOK REVIEW

Pastoral Counseling REFORMED THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY DISTANCE EDUCATION

Church Designations and Statements of Public Witness

V ENCUENTRO. Fifth National Encuentro of Hispanic/Latino Ministry

Relate... Begin your group time by engaging in relational conversations and prayer that may include the following elements:

THE JOY OF THE GOSPEL & CULTURAL DIVERSITY IN THE CHURCH MATTHEW 28: EDGAR RAMIREZ

PASTORAL AND MINISTERIAL THEOLOGY MASTER OF DIVINITY (BASIC PROGRAMS)

TH 504: SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY I Fall 2018; Fridays, 9:10 12:10 Dr. John Jefferson Davis, Instructor

The Directory for Worship: From the Sanctuary to the Street A Study Guide* for the Proposed Revision

Student Learning Outcomes Assessment Plan. Department of Theology. Saint Peter s College. Fall Submitted by Maria Calisi, Ph.D.

Home Create Survey My Surveys Address Book My Account Need Help? Add Report. Active Crosstab: Age: 61 & older. Total: 631 Edit Crosstab

ELEMENTS FOR A REFLECTION ABOUT OUR VINCENTIAN MINISTRY IN PARISHES (Contributions to the Practical Guide for Parishes)

4.2 Standard One: Human

[1] Society of the Sacred Heart General Chapter 2000 Introduction, (Amiens, France, August 2000) p.14.

DEGREE OPTIONS. 1. Master of Religious Education. 2. Master of Theological Studies

Rethinking the Worldwide United Methodist Church... Seeking a New Approach

SPIRITUALITY & RELIGION. What do these terms mean?

Institute for Biblical Studies Christian Worldview June 26 July 10, 2015 Instructor: Dr. Allen Yeh

Review by S. S. Ilchishin INTRODUCTION

FAITH SEEKING UNDERSTANDING (Fides Quaerens Intellectum: FQI) TF FALL 2012 Tuesdays and Thursdays, 3:00 4:20 p.m.

Messages for Building up New Believers

Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your minds...

Credit means that the work has met the standards of C work or higher; no credit means that the work falls below those standards.

Course Description: Required Course Textbooks:

A Response to Ed Stetzer s The Emergent/Emerging Church: A Missiological Perspective

OVERVIEW TABLE OF CONTENTS PASTOR AND LEADERSHIP BOARD

[MJTM 12 ( )] BOOK REVIEW

PASTORAL AND MINISTERIAL THEOLOGY MASTER OF DIVINITY (BASIC PROGRAMS)

Understanding the Multiple Levels of Maturity Becoming a Follower of Jesus - Session January 2013

Books Received. Bazyn, Ken Soul-Wrestling: Meditations in Monochrome. South Bend, IN: St. Augustine s Press. ISBN: Price: $30.00.

"The Pentecostal Evangelical Church: The Theological Self-Identity of the Assemblies of God as Evangelical 'Plus'"

Gibbs, Eddie, Leadership Next, Downers Grove, Illinois: Intervarsity Press, pp. Reviewed by Parnell M. Lovelace, Jr.

THE FOUNDATIONS OF PRESBYTERIAN POLITY

OT SCRIPTURE I Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary Fall 2012 Wednesdays & Fridays 9:30-11:20am Schlegel Hall 122

Our Paraclete, the Holy Spirit Paul Lamey, Preaching and Leadership Training, Grace Community Church. Part Five: The Spirit and the Messiah

Daniela C. Augustine Associate Professor of Theological Ethics Lee University, School of Religion, Department of Theology

RBL 02/2004 Birch, Bruce C., Walter Brueggemann, Terence E. Fretheim, and David L. Petersen

Spiritual Formation: The Pathway To Deeper Life In Christ (MS2X3 / S.E.01-G) Graduate Level Fall, 2017

[MJTM 13 ( )] BOOK REVIEW

TCDH 542: CHARISMATIC RENEWAL THEOLOGY Fall 2005

Building Your Theology

FALL 2018 THEOLOGY TIER I

ST. LUKE S EPISCOPAL CHURCH, LONG BEACH, CA

TH 504: SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY I Fall 2016; Thursdays, 2:00-5:00 p.m. Dr. John Jefferson Davis, Instructor

FALL Introduction to Old Testament. OT I. Introductory

MASTER OF ARTS in Theology,

[MJTM 16 ( )] BOOK REVIEW

In successfully completing this course, a student will be able to:

THEOLOGY IN THE CONTEMPORARY CHURCH COS #522 SYLLABUS. COURSE OF STUDY SCHOOL OF OHIO AT MTSO 3081 Columbus Pike Delaware, Ohio 43015

Home Create Survey My Surveys Address Book My Account Need Help? Response Summary. Active Filter: UPCI Ministers Only

38.5 hours in class across 14 weeks/ 6116 Arosa Street 120 hours total course hours San Diego, CA 92115

Published in Global Missiology, Review & Preview, April 2009,

The Directory for Worship: A Study Guide for the Proposed Revision

Towards a Theology of Resource Ministry December, 2008 Chris Walker

2. Regeneration (sometimes called being born again )

A Policy on How the Church Addresses Social Issues

The Ministry of the Laity in the UCA. A Christian Unity/Doctrine Working Group Discussion Paper

North American Reformed Evangelicalism

The Holiness and Pentecostal Movements in the United States

The Covenant of Grace and Infant Baptism

32. Faith and Order Committee Report

Transforming Mission. Paradigm Shifts in Theology of Mission

MINISTRY LEADERSHIP. Objectives for students. Master's Level. Ministry Leadership 1

Messiah College s identity and mission foundational values educational objectives. statements of faith community covenant.

Transcription:

INTRODUCTION LEE ROY MARTIN * Early Pentecostalism emerged from the nineteenth-century holiness movement, 1 and holiness (both in theology and practice) has been a significant, if at times contentious, feature of the Pentecostal movement throughout its brief history. When I joined the Church of God in 1972, the ministers and members in Cumming, Georgia referred to their church as a holiness church, and they expected every believer to seek after the experience of entire sanctification and to pursue a lifestyle of personal holiness. Key passages of Scripture relating to holiness were cited regularly and repeatedly. Those passages included the following: Pursue peace with everyone, and holiness, without which no one will see the Lord (Heb. 12.14). But as he who called you is holy, be holy yourselves in all your conduct; for it is written, You shall be holy, for I am holy (1 Pet. 1.14-16). let us cleanse ourselves from every defilement of body and of spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God (2 Cor. 7.1). For this is the will of God, even your sanctification (1 Thess. 4.3). For God has not called us unto uncleanness, but unto holiness (1 Thess. 4.7). * Lee Roy Martin (DTh, University of South Africa) is Professor of Old Testament and Biblical Languages at the Pentecostal Theological Seminary in Cleveland, TN, USA and Editor of the Journal of Pentecostal Theology. 1 Donald W. Dayton, Theological Roots of Pentecostalism (Studies in Evangelicalism; Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1987), pp. 38-108. Cf. Steven Jack Land, Pentecostal Spirituality: A Passion for the Kingdom (Cleveland, TN: CPT Press, 2010), pp. 37-43.

2 A Future for Holiness Unfortunately, my generation was taught a form of holiness that was sometimes equivalent to legalism. Holiness was viewed as individualistic and outwardly observable. There was little concern for institutional holiness, communal holiness, or social holiness. Pentecostals were known for their external holiness teachings no jewelry, no makeup, and no worldly amusements. Although the church was best known for what it stood against, paradoxically there was often a positive spirituality underneath the outward layer of prohibitions. The Pentecostal church advocated a holiness spirituality that exemplified what Steve Land has called a passion for the kingdom. 2 The joyful singing, exuberant shouting, and unrestrained prayer were evidence of the manifest presence of God. In every worship service we prayed at the altar; we invited sinners to be saved; we prayed for the sick; and we prayed for people to be baptized in the Holy Ghost. New believers were expected to learn biblical teachings and follow Jesus wholeheartedly. For most of the members, church attendance was not just a religious duty to be added to their schedule of diverse activities. The church was more than a peripheral element in their otherwise secular lives. Instead, the church was central to their lives, the locus of their primary experience of community. With the growth of the Charismatic movement and the spread of Pentecostalism into the mainstream, the legalistic and externally focused brand of holiness came under fierce attack. In reaction to perceived legalism, some Pentecostals began to border on libertinism, and the traditional holiness that had been taught with certainty and (unwarranted?) confidence was soon replaced by an uncertain and ambiguous doctrine. My discussions with pastors, laity, and seminary students suggests that the biblical demand for holiness is still widely recognized but is not widely understood or taught. For whatever reasons, our members cannot make sense of the biblical teaching on holiness; our pastors feel unprepared to address the doctrine of sanctification; and very few of our scholars have produced significant publications in the area of holiness theology. 3 2 E.g. the subtitle of Land, Pentecostal Spirituality: A Passion for the Kingdom, p. 2 and passim. 3 However, in biblical studies, I would point to J. Ayodeji Adewuya, Holiness and Community in 2 Cor. 6:14-7:1: Paul s View of Communal Holiness in the Corinthian Correspondence (New York: Peter Lang, 2001); and idem, Transformed by Grace: Paul s

Martin Introduction 3 In light of current trends and needs in the Church, perhaps it is time for us to evaluate the continuing importance of holiness as a doctrine and sanctification as an experience. While we can look to the past for indications of crucial Pentecostal beliefs, we must consider present and future contexts as we formulate our theology. Holiness is emphasized in the biblical text, but what should be the shape of the doctrine in today s context, both locally and globally? Is sanctification an important experience? If so, how do we teach it and facilitate its continuation? Pentecostal scholars are beginning to construct contemporary contextual theologies to meet the changing needs of this generation. I would suggest that a reconsideration of holiness should be a part of the constructive theological agenda. God is holy, and the Church is called to imitate God s holiness, but each generation must discover for itself how a commitment to holiness affects its theology and practice. It is time for us to take a fresh look at holiness in its individual, communal, institutional, and global expressions. I would encourage Pentecostal scholars to identify both opportunities and challenges for the future of holiness in Pentecostalism from the perspectives of the various academic disciplines. We should explore the implications of holiness for Pentecostal theology, peacemaking, justice, global concerns, ethics, postmodernity, ecology, ecumenism, social responsibility, ecclesial structures, ministerial practices, Christian formation, missional practices, intercultural engagements, immigration, civil society, political systems, personal relationships, and more. These explorations should proceed from biblical, theological, historical, ecumenical, practical, cultural, aesthetic, and missional perspectives. This book is an attempt to stimulate conversation regarding Pentecostal approaches to the theology of holiness. Most of the chapters are revisions of papers that were presented at the 2013 Annual Meeting of the Society for Pentecostal Studies, which met in conjunction with the Wesleyan Theological Society. I served as the View of Holiness in Romans 6-8 (Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, 2004). In theology, I would mention Daniel Castelo (ed.), Holiness as a Liberal Art (Eugene, OR: Pickwick Publications, 2012); and idem, Revisioning Pentecostal Ethics: The Epicletic Community (Cleveland, TN: CPT Press, 2012); Dale M. Coulter, Holiness: The Beauty of Perfection (Cleveland, TN: Pathway Press, 2004); R.H. Gause, Living in the Spirit: The Way of Salvation (Cleveland, TN: CPT Press, Rev. and expanded edn, 2009); and Land, Pentecostal Spirituality.

4 A Future for Holiness Program Chair for the SPS, and worked with Jason Vickers of the WTS in the planning of the program. When we chose the topic of holiness for the conference theme, we were unsure of the response that we would receive. However, we were quite thrilled with the number and quality of papers that were presented at the conference. We were also pleasantly surprised by the level of interest and the depth of dialogue that emerged from the SPS and WTS membership. Upon seeing the positive response to the conference theme of holiness, I decided to edit and publish a collection of papers from the conference. In the selection of chapters for the book, I was concerned to involve a group of Pentecostal scholars who were diverse in regard to academic discipline, gender, age, ethnic group, and nationality. The book includes three sections, based broadly upon the disciplines of biblical studies, theology, and practical theology. I deliberately excluded a section on history because, as the title of the book suggests, I wanted the studies to envision the future of holiness rather than reflect upon its past. Hopefully, this work will suggest fruitful avenues for the continued exploration of holiness and its place in the global Pentecostal movement. This volume illustrates a number of specific ways that Pentecostal scholars can contribute to future discussions of holiness. In the field of biblical studies, I would propose both the revisiting of the classic texts on holiness and the exploration of other texts that can illuminate the Bible s teaching on holiness. The biblical texts should be viewed with fresh eyes, utilizing newer hermeneutical methods, and proceeding from a diversity of global contexts. It is time that a new generation of Pentecostal biblical scholars examine the biblical foundations of our teachings on holiness and sanctification. In the field of theology, I would hope that the doctrine of holiness would find its place within the larger context of the developing Pentecostal Theologies of Frank Macchia, Steven Land, Amos Yong, Simon Chan, Kenneth Archer, and others. Perhaps our theologians can show how holiness impacts the formulation of soteriology, ecclesiology, pneumatology, and eschatology. The different streams of the Pentecostal-Charismatic movement should dialogue about holiness and explicate areas of commonality. Furthermore, we should dialogue with other Christian traditions in regard to holiness and spirituality, holiness and society, holiness and technology,

Martin Introduction 5 holiness and global concerns of materialism, militarism, and nationalism. From the perspective of practical theology several concerns come to mind, such as holiness and ministry, holiness and youth, holiness and ecclesial practices, social holiness, holiness codes, and personal, experiential holiness i.e. sanctification in the local church. We might address the future of sanctification as an experience. Is it an important experience? If so, how do we emphasis it and facilitate its continuation? Finally, I would argue that we have not wrestled sufficiently with the inherent Pentecostal tension between purity and power, and we have not constructed a theology that accounts for that tension in light of the Bible, church history, and our common experience. 4 Although the essays in this volume do not address or solve all of the issues that I have mentioned above, they nevertheless represent the kind of work that I believe we should be doing. It is hoped that they will generate interest in and further discussion of our theology of holiness. 4 The importance of this topic for Pentecostals is highlighted by Simon Chan, Pentecostal Theology and the Christian Spiritual Tradition (JPTSup 21; Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 2000), pp. 86-96. See also Lee Roy Martin, Judging the Judges: Searching for Value in These Problematic Characters, Verbum et Ecclesia 29.1 (2008), pp. 110-29.