Six Talks Based on Beliefs That Matter by William Adams Brown
[29 November 1949-15 February 1950]
[Chester, Pa.]
For the final assignment in Christian Theology for Today, Davis
required six outlines based on William Adams Brown's book Beliefs
That Matter. The first talk, "What a Christian Should Believe About
Himself," is the most notable. In discussing slave religion, King makes
one of his few references in the student papers to the African-American
experience: "as they gathered in these meetings they gained a renewed
faith as the old unlettered minister would come to his triumphant climax
saying: `you--you are not niggers. You--you are not slaves. You are
God's children.'" King
refers to Leslie Weatherhead's metaphor of the global breakfast in this
paper and returned to the metaphor throughout his life. King's second
outline, "A Christian View of the World," argues for the achievement
of social justice and thus the possibility for realizing the kingdom
of God on earth. "How a Christian Overcomes Evil" presents a theme King
would often articulate: evil is not driven out by force but crowded
out by love. Davis judged the outlines "well done. A."
"What a Christian Should Believe About Himself"
I. Each Christian should believe that he is made in the image of God.
A. The meaning of the image of God.
1. The ultimate meaning of the view that man is made in the image
of God is that man is somewhat like God. He is more than flesh and
blood.
2. God creates every individual for a purpose, to have fellowship
with him, to trust him. This is a second meaning of the image of God.
It is not that man as he is in himself bears God's likeness, but rather
that man is designated for and called to a particular relation with
God. (Brunner) It is not that there is such a thing as a divine substance
of which man is made. Rather, it is that man partakes of the divine
image in a functional way.
B. The value of the concept.
1. The concept of the image of God assures man that he is capable
of having fellowship with the divine. Unlike his animal ancestry and
the many inanimate objects of the universe, man is privileged with
a dynamic relationship with God.
2. Such a concept also keeps man aware of the fact that he is made
for that which is lofty and noble. Man, with such a concept, is able
to realize that when his actions, thoughts, and feelings are determined
by anything less than God, he fails to partake of the divine image.
II. Each Christian should believe that he is a member of a larger family
of which God is Father. Jesus expresses the view throughout the Gospels
that we are members of one family, meant to live as brothers and to express
our brotherhood in helpfulness. A failure to realize this truth is a failure
to realize one of the main tenets of the Christian religion. The Fatherhood
of God and the Brotherhood of man is the starting point of the Christian
ethic.
A. The Fatherhood of God.
1. First we might say that our view of God as Father should be in
definite agreement with Jesus' view of God as Father. Such a view
assures us that God is not a mere stern judge that sits upon the divine
bench forever ready to punish his children, but he is an all loving
Father forever willing to meet the needs of his children. He is not
the Aristotelian God who merely contemplates upon himself; not only
is God a self knowing Father, but he is an ever {other}
loving Father.
2. Secondly, the Christian view of God as Father immediately gives
the Christian a sense of belonging. When the Christian comes to believe
that he is a child of an all loving Father he feels that he counts,
that he belongs. He senses the confirmation of his roots, and even
death becomes a little thing. Let me give an illustration. During
the years of slavery in America it is said that after a hard days
work the slaves would often hold secret religious meetings. All during
the working day they were addressed with unnecessary vituperations
and insulting epithets. But as they gathered in these meetings they
gained a renewed faith as the old unlettered minister would come to
his triumphant climax saying: "you--you are not niggers. You--you
are not slaves. You are God's children." This established for them
a true ground of personal dignity. The awareness of being a child
of God tends to stablilize the ego and bring new courage.
B. The Brotherhood of Man.
1. Man's relationship to God is dependent upon man's relationship
to man. It is impossible to simultaneously love God and hate your
brother.
2. The brotherhood of man is an established fact by the findings of
modern science. There are four types of blood, called O, A, B, and
AB. These four types of blood are found in all races.
3. The destiny of each individual wherever he resides on the earth
is tied up with the destiny of all men that inhabit the globe. We
literally cannot live entirely to ourselves. Let us illustrate how
we all share in the assets of the human family. When we rise and go
to the bath, a cake of soap is handed us by a Frenchman, a sponge
is handed us by a Pacific Islander, a towel by a Turk, our underclothes
by an American or Englishman. We go down to breakfast, our tea is
poured out by a Chinese. Our toast we accept at the hads of an English
speaking farmer, not to mention the baker. We are indebted to half
of the world before we finish breakfast. The secret of all our happiness
is that we are one amid many brothers. This, every Christian should
believe.
"A Christian View of the World"
I. The world as a revelation of God.
Christians of all ages have testified that the good in nature is a
revelation of the eternal God. This means that true Christians have
no sympathy with those who think of matter as evil and the body as a
thing to be depreciated. God is in the world and he is constantly using
parts of it to reveal his nature to man. This has not led most Christians
to say that nature is God; this would be pantheism. Rather they have
said that nature is one of the avenues through which God reveals himself
to man.
A. The reality of the world.-- Unlike Buddha, Christians have always
insisted the physical universe has real existence. It is not a mere
creation of our imagination, as some philosophers have tried to persuade
us; A picture world which we have made for ourselves out of our dreams,
an illusion from which we need to wake to reality. The Christian would
not flee from the world as Gautama bids him, but he uses it, because
God has made it for his sustenance, his discipline, and his happiness.
B. God in nature.-- Throughout the ages Christians have stood in the
midst of the beauties of nature with an assurance that God is revealed
therein. Man observes the splendor of the skies, the radiancy of the
beaming sun, the fragrant {rose} ose, the melodies of the morning bird,
and from such beauty he gains a feeling that causes him to rise above
the hurly burly of everyday life and dwell in lofty atmosphere which
blows the wind of God's eternal nature. Such beauty has always caught
the mind of the affirmation mystic. Such beauty causes the poet to reach
up and pull the abstract into the concrete. Such beauty serves as a
source of reference for the musician. Whenever man is confronted with
such experiences he is aware of the fact that he stands in the presence
of the Eternal God who is forever revealed in the beauties of nature.
II. The world as a training school for the Kingdom of God.
Christians have joined in one accord in seeing the world as a place
in which God is preparing his children for membership in a society in
which all the relationship os life will be controlled by love.
A. The meaning of the Kingdom of God.
1. Political view.-- Many have seen the Kingdom in political terms
in which there would be established a theocratic kingdom on earth
which would triumph over all satanically inspired regimes.
2. Cataclysmic view.-- Others have seen the Kingdom as the day when
Jesus shall return on the clouds bringing about a cataclysmic end
of history and establishing God's eternal purpose.
3. Triumphant church view.-- Here it is held that the Kingdom will
come to realization by means of the increasing influence of the church
ultimately destined to dominate the world.
4. Jesus' view.-- Jesus took over the phrase "the Kingdom of God,"
but he changed its meaning. He refused entirely to be the kind of
a Messiah that his contemporaries expected. Jesus made love the mark
of sovereignty. Here we are left with no doubt as to Jesus' meaning.
The Kingdom of God will be a society in which men and women live as
children of God should live. It will be a kingdom controlled by the
law of love.
B. The coming of the Kingdom in the world. Many have attempted to say
that the ideal of a better world will be worked out in the next world.
But Jesus taught men to say, "thy will be done in earth, as it is in
heaven." Although the world seems to be in {a} bad shape today we must
never lose faith in the power of God to achieve his purpose. Let us
illustrate this. Imagine a building in course of construction. The place
is littered with all kinds of debris. Over there is a heap of sand.
Near by is a cement mixer, and stones of various sizes are piled up
everywhere. Let us imagine tat {that} we know nothing
of the art of building, but that we know the architect. How impossible
it would be to believe that before the building was funished the architect,
who chose the site and chose his his workmen, decided that he was already
defeated, that the builders were too stupid, and that therefore he had
decided to build elsewhere with other builders. If we believe in the
architect, we will believe that at last he will use everything in this
muddled building site to work out his plan.
God, the great architect, chose this world as a site on which to build
a wonderful structure; a global union of real brothers sharing in his
good gifts, and offering all achievement as a form of worship to him.
It would seem odd if the architect, who chose the site and intrusted
the building to beings clled {called} men, suddenly
threw up his hands, left the muddle and chose another site in another
world and other workmen. The Great Architect may be saying, "Don't be
impatient. Wait and see what I can do with this material which contains
so many splendid qualities." It is very early to give up building. One
geologist has said that if a movie film of the history of the earth
were to be produced lasting twenty-four hours, then man would not appear
until the last five seconds of the film. Let us have faith and cooperate
with God and in the next few seconds we will be able to see the Kingdom
in the world. Every Christian should believe this.
"How a Christian Overcomes Evil"
I. The first step in overcoming evil is to discover what is worst in
us.
A. Discovering the evil. This is done by an examination of that sin
to which we are most frequently tempted. It is very wrong to think that
simply because we are tempted, that therefore we are wicked. The blessedness
of temptation is that it only reveals the weak spot in our character,
thereby providing the raw material for victory.
B. Admitting the evil. One of the peculiar things about the human mind
is that it can convince itself that the wrong is right. But if we are
to overcome an evil we must first admit that it is an evil. The hidden
fault must be called by its right name, otherwise we miss seeing our
pride under fear of an inferiority complex.
II. The second stip in overcoming evil is to combat the interior defect
in cooperation with God's grace.
There are generally three ways in which this is done.
A. We must ask God's grace to overcome the evil.
B. By daily examination of conscience. As a person counts the money
in his pocket daily to determine whether the current expense of the
day can be met, so we balance our consciences to see if they are going
in debt morally and spiritually.
C. By turning the predominant fault into its opposite virtue. Goodnss
is not to be confused with passivity, but with activity in an opposite
direction.
III. The third step in overcoming evil is: Concentrate not on the eradication
of evil, but on the cultivation of virtue.
A. The difference in the two techniques of fighting evil and loving
goodness is illustrated in an ancient Greek story. Ulysses returning
from the siege of Troy, knew the danger of listening to the sirens tempting
many a salor to doom. So Ulysses put wax in the ears of his sailors,
strapped himself to the mast of the ship, so that even though he wished
to follow the appeal of the sirens, he would not be able to do so. Some
years later, Orpheus, the divine musician passed by the same sea, but
refused to plug up his sailor's ears or bind himself to a mast. Rather
he played his harp so beautifully that the song of the sirens had no
appeal. It is not a hatred of evil but a love of God which crowds out
evil, for hate is useless unless we love something else more.
B. Evil is never to be attacked directly, but indirectly. Evil is not
driven out, but crowded out. Sensuality is not mastered by saying: "I
will not sin," but through the expulsive power of something good.
"What Shall We Think About the Church"
I. The church as a religious institution for the perpetuation of a religious
tradition.
A. Religion is not a private matter.--It is intensely personal, to
be sure, but not therefore private. It is completely social as we human
beings are. The church is the institution which has gathered together
the various insights of spiritual giants through the ages and welded
them into a body of belief and conviction which has passed from one
generation to another with cumulative conviction. Without the institution
working through the centuries, these insights would have perished long
ago.
B. This does not mean that the church perfectly perpetuates the ideal
for which it stands. It is an obvious fact that the church, while flowing
through the stream of history has picked up the ends
{evils} of little tributaries, and the evils of these tributaries, have
been so powerful that they have been able to overwhelm the main stream.
But amid all of its weaknesses, we must admit that the church enlarges
our sympathy and reinforces our power by uniting us with those who have
followed Jesus before us, or who will follow him after us.
II. The church as a nucleus of fellowship.
A. It is the place of the church to make people feel at home, not in
a superficial sense but in the deep and abiding sense of finding peace
in the fellowship which we have one with another. The church must stress
fellowship as being more important than creed, and experience as being
more important than doctrinal uniformity.
B. The memory of what Christian fellowship can mean can become a strong
factor in a man's life. Let us illustrate. Dr. Leslie Weatherhead, in
one of his books, speaks of a man who had been a victim of sex temptation
and successfully resisted it over a long number of years. Only his best
friends knew what a battle this particular problem was for him. One
evening he found himself on business in Berlin with time on his hands.
As he strolled down the Friedrichstrasse, his attention was caught by
a large framed photograph of nude women. You can guess the kind of place
that was this {then} adverised. He was greatly tempted
to go in. No one would have known. His character would not have been
damaged in the eyes of his friends. His respectability would have been
unsoiled at home. Then suddenly, with great resolution, he walked away.
A hundred yards from the place he had an immense sense of relief and
spiritual power. When asked how he had found strength to make that great
decision, he answered without hesitation, "My church at home." Even
the memory of the fellowship, even the thought that he belonged to a
company who loved him and who, with him, were seeking together the high
and the lovely and the true and the beautiful thngs, strengthened him
in the hour of temptation.
III. The church as a religious communion.
A. To say that the church is a communion distinguishes it at once from
any other kind of social institution. The church is the disciples listening
to the sermon on the mount, or following Jesus along the roadways of
Palestine. It is Peter and his comrades eyeing the leaders of Judaism
and saying, "We must obey God rather than men!" It is Kagawa keeping
the spirit of the Christian group in Japan alive during the desperate
days of war.
B. The church must confront men with the fact of the living God. The
church must make this fact real in terms not alone of vision but also
of judgment and light shed on the road ahead. We are supposed to be,
to borrow Alfred Noyes' famous phrase, "the light bearers of mankind."
"What Should the Christian Do About the Bible"
I. Accept the Bible as a Spiritual Guide in finding God.
A. The Bible is a sacred book of the Christian church.--It is the record
of God's progressive self-revelation, first to the people of Israel,
afterward to the world in Jesus Christ. It tells us not only what men
have thought of God and what they have done for God but what they have
experienced of God. Thus by bringing us in touch with the men and women
who have found God before us, it encourages us to believe that we can
find God for ourselves and it shows us how to do so.
B. The Bible makes us acquainted with Jesus Christ, in whose person
the divine revelation culminates.-- The Christian religion has always
insisted that through Jesus the character of God is revealed to man.
God is like Christ. This is the basic affirmation of the Christian faith.
II. Christians should know the meaning of the Bible.
A. The Bible as a book of progressive revelation.-- Every book in the
Bible is not equally valuable. This has been made plain to us by the
modern critical method. It has proved to us that the Bible is a book
of progressive revelation. Notice the development of the great ideas
in the Bible such as God, man, sin, and immortality. To understand how
these great ideas progresssed to their final culmination is to know
the meaning of the Bible.
B. The Bible as literature.-- The Bible is not stated in abstract, universal
propositions, but in concrete applications to specific situations, it
was written in literary, not scientific or philosophical, language.
C. The Bible as the gook {[bo]ok} of life.--
The Bible is great literature because it is a great book of life. The
Bible does not merely tell about life. It grows out of life in an extraordinarily
direct and vivid way.
III. Christians should realize what the Bible can do for them.
A. The Bible helps us to realize afresh the perennial vitality of the
central convictions of the Christian life, such truths as the love of
God, the Lordship of Christ, the fact of sin, the need of redemption,
the vitalizing influence of the Spirit of God, and the hope of immortality.
B. The Bible clarifies our thinking by making us acquainted with what
the great men of the past have thought before us. It helps us to make
right decisions by introducing us to those who have lived nobly and
dared greatly for their faith.
C. The Bible can deepen and purify our emotional life. We live by our
appreciations, our hopes and our fears, our aspirations and our loyalties,
our sympathies and our affections. If we are to make our lives what
they ought to be, we must bring order into this often discordant realm.
"The Christian Faith in the Immortal Life"
I. The Wide-spread doubt of immortality.
A. The extent of the doubting.-- For our forefathers the soul's deathlessness
was as a premise to be assumed, not as a conclusion to be established.
Today we can no longer take belief in immortality for granted. Multitudes
of people, even religious people, have lost the old, unquestioning
faith in a life after death. Even where the fact is {not} denied,
it is no longer confidently affirmed.
B. Reasons for this wide-spread loss of faith in immortality in our
day.
1. The Darwinian discovery concerning the evolutionary origin of
man.
2. Men have gathered new hopes of racial progress in our day, and
at their best are increasingly inclined to sink their individual
prospects in their expectations for humanity.
3. The minds of men have been so preoccupied with the fascinating
advances of this modern age that interest has been totally lost
in anything beyond the grave.
II. How to recover lost faith in immortality.
A. The contribution of this life to faith in immortality. If we are
to make belief in immortality again a living issue to those who for
the moment have it, we must begin by making them feel that life here
is so significant that it deserves to go on. Men will recover faith
in immortality when they have recovered faith in life.
B. The creative experience as a means of recovering lost faith in immortality.
We shall recover, faith in immortality as we rediscover in ourselves
and in others the possibilities of growth and progress which Jesus,
our Lord, attributed to human beings. There are some people who make
it easy to believe in immortality.
1. Lincoln
2. Dante
3. Shakespeare.
4. David Livingstone.
5. Jesus Christ.
III. The Christian's reason for believing in immortality.
A. The resurrection of Jesus a proof of immortality. Christian belief
in immortality seems to have began with the resurrection of Jesus. Of
course there are two ways to interpret the resurrection.
1. Physical resurrection.
2. Spiritual resurrection.
B. The reasonableness of the universe as evidence of immortality.
Statement by Charles Darwin: "It is intolerable thought that man and
all other sentient beings are doomed to complete annihilation, after
such long continued slow progress." The late professor Palmer of Harvard
expressed faith in the reasonableness of the universe when he said the
following words after the death of his wife. "Though no regrets are
proper for the manner of her death, who can contemplate the fact of
it and not call the world irrational, if out of deference to a few particles
of disordered matter it excludes so fair a spirit."
C. The beneficence of God evidence of immortality. Man cannot conceive
of God as blotting out the choicest fruit of the evolutionary process.
Faith in immortality boils down to a faith in God. Christians believe
that God will conserve all values of the universe.
D. In the final analysis we believe in immortality because Jesus Christ
has revealed to us within ourselves, and in others, capacities which
require another life for their full expression. When a man of insight
demands a life to come, it is not because he seeks outward recompense
for a good life here; it is because his goodness here, if it is to be
passionate and earnest, must have the eternal chance of being better.
His value lies in what he may become, not in what he [remainder missing].
THDS. MLKP-MBU:
Box 115, folder 32.
|