Carmelo E. Alvarez, Santidad Y Compromiso (El Riesgo De Vivir El Evangelio), (Mexico, D.F. Casa Unida De Publicationes, 1985) 84pp

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186

Carmelo E. Alvarez,

Santidad y compromiso (El riesgo

de vivir el evangelio), (Mexico,

D.F.: Casa Unida de

Publicationes, 1985) 84pp.

Reviewed

by

David

Bundy

This volume

by

Alvarez is a study in social

ethics,

and as such is

an

important

milestone in the

development

of Pentecostal

theology.

The

work,

entitled

Sanctification

and

Compromise,

the

Risk

of Living

the

Gospel,

is the

published

version of a series of

lectures

given during

1984,

to

pastors

and leaders of Latin

American Pentecostal churches: the Union

Evangelica

Pentecostal

Venezolana,

the

Iglesia

Pentecostal de Chile and the Comunidad Teologica

de Chile. The author is a

pastor

of rhe

Iglesia

de los

Discipulos

de Cristo de Puerto Rico and director of La Pastoral de

Consolacion del

Consejo

Latino Americano de Iglesias

(CLAI).

He was

formerly

the rector of the Seminario Biblico Latinoamericano in San

Jose,

Costa Rica.

Alvarez draws

upon

a

variety

of data to make his case for an activist Christian

life-style: historical, theological, sociological

and experiential.

The

analysis

is carried out in dialogue with a number of

European,

North

American,

and Latin American

scholars,

both . Pentecostal and non-Pentecostal.

In the first three

chapters,

the author is concerned to establish the historical

theological groundwork

for a Pentecostal social ethic. Chapter

one examines the

experience

of the

Anabaptist

branch of the Reformation and of the Pietists within the Lutheran

tradition, especially Spener

and Francke. He argues that the

Anabaptists

with the

rigid

distinction between church and world and their radical ahistoricidad were able to offer a testimony of social and

political protest,

but were

rarely

able to

participate actively

in

reforming their world. The pietists, despite the emphasis on personal

responsibility, were

unable,

because of their

dualist,

conservative

theology,

to muster a coherent and concerted

response

to the social

problems

of the

epoch. However,

the

emphasis

of both

groups

on the

personal testimony

to the life of the

Spirit

as essential for renewal is seen as an

important legacy

and of prime

necessity

for a Pentecostal social ethic.

Alvarez

proceeds

to an

analysis

of the

Wesleyan

revivals of the 18th

century

with

special

reference to the socio-economic context. Nothing

that

Wesley

was

thoroughly

aware of the social

misery

and dislocation of 18th

century England

caused

by

the industrial revolution and

colonization,

he did not call his Methodists to a process

of

adaptation

to

capitalism,

but to live a

disciplined

.

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187

response

to the inevitable of the

capitalist development. Wesley

did not withdraw into theological reflection or

spiritualization

of issues,

but

actively engaged

the

problems

of his

society.

His understanding

of sanctification

(Christian perfection)

as an ongoing development

of God’s love

working

in and

through

the individual believer

propelled

him into active involvement in his world.

It is observed that a similar social

upheaval

was in process in the late nineteenth and

early

twentieth centuries in the U.S.A. as industrialization and urbanization

began

to

impact

the midwest and western sections of the

country.

Various

evangelists, especially C. Finney,

popularized

the doctrine of sanctification which combined spiritual aspirations

with dreams of moral and social reform. The Pentecostal revivals

sought

to harness the

power

of the

Spirit

for mission

activity.

Glossolalia was the demonstrable element. The early

movement saw the barriers removed between races as the oppressed minorities

found an identity and structures with which to deal with social

problems.

The theological distinctives of the Pentecostal movement

emphasizing the

Baptism

of the

Holy Spirit

with

implications

for individual living

and

evangelism

and the

impartation

of spiritual gifts for use in the Church and the

world,

as well as the Pentecostal

theological method

(oral culture) provide

the basis for a Pentecostal social ethic.

Some have

attempted

on the basis of the biblical discussions of the

Kingdom

of God to limit ethics to

personal

ethics. Not so Alvarez. He notes that the search for a just life and

community involves

dealing

with

economic,

social and

political

structures. An active social ethic has to confront institutions and social

structures, attempting

to create conditions for real

personal,

social and political liberty.

This is the

responsibility

of the Christian. There is no room for the bifurcation of world and the

“spiritual

realm.” God is

present

and active in

history.

To remove oneself from the historical

struggles

is to remove oneself from God. He warns the reader that one must avoid the double

temptation

of

making political

involvement a Christian

activity

or avoiding direct involve- ment in

political

life.

This

aggressively

Christian

lifestyle,

obedient to the directives of the

Gospel,

is to be lived under the

guidance

of the

Holy Spirit.

It is this life of sanctification which leads to

responsible

action. Here discernment becomes

important.

The Christian is

obliged

to discern the character of the world in which he is called to action. Discernment is to include

analysis

of the

political,

economic and social structures

using

all

possible

social-scientific data as well as personal

and ecclesial

piety.

There is no possibility of being neutral.

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188

This, argues Alvarez,

is the case

throughout

Latin America. Christians in these countries are confronted with a “crucial situation” which

requires

difficult decisions. It is a situation which has

developed through

the confluence of various

socio-political circumstances. It is that context in which the future must be addressed,

and

liberty brought

to the vast

majority

of the

population which lives in a situation of

oppression

and of the violation of human

rights.

To effect such

change,

a

strategy

must be

developed.

Alvarez outlines essential

components: (1)

motivation

by

the

example

of Jesus; (2)

abandon the

dichotomy

between

“public”

and

“private”; (3) develop

a community interpretation of “word and

reality”;

and (4) passage

from

disengagement

to active discernment. To discern is to

prepare

the means for concrete involvement.

This is the

argument

of Alvarez’s volume. It

provides

a helpful corrective to the usual nationalistic and individualistic

approaches of most

essays by

Pentecostal and Evangelical

theologians

on the subject

of social ethics. It also avoids the

moralizing

tendencies of the North American

neo-Evangelical

efforts. At the same

time,

it is to be

hoped

that Alvarez will have the

opportunity

to

develop

in detail

many

of the historical

analyses, theological

concerns and possibilities

for active Christian

living

which are

merely

hinted at in the all too short treatise.

However,

as it stands, the volume

presents a challenge to Pentecostal

theologians

and is an essential

starting place

for the one who would undertake to write on social ethics from a Pentecostal

perspective.

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