Howard M. Ervin, Conversion Initiation And The Baptism In The Holy Spirit, (Peabody, MA Hendrickson Publishers, Inc., 1984) 172 Pp., Paperback $9.95, ISBN 0 913573 12 4

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60

Spirit, (Peabody, paperback $9.95,

Howard M.

Ervin,

Conversion-Initiation and the

Baptism

in the Holy

MA: Hendrickson

Publishers, Inc., 1984)

172

ISBN 0-913573-12-4

pp.,

Reviewed

by

David A. Dorman

challenged

Cambridge

dissertation,

in 1970 which

together effectively

theology

on

many

of the

D. G. Dunn’s revised

Two books were

published

the

spread

of Pentecostal

world’s

seminary campuses.

James

Baptism

in the

Holy Spirit (SCM),

and F. Dale Bruner’s A

Theology of the Holy Spirit (Eerdmans),

offered

of the Pentecostal

appeal

to

Scripture

in

of a baptism in the

Spirit

for

empowerment subsequent

to

Bruner’s treatment was

deliberately theological (pp.

it leaned

heavily

on exegesis. Dunn’s

inquiry

via the

of NT

theology

was widened to

include,

as well as

the formal

separation

which exists in sacrament-

and

(confirmational)

comprehensive critiques support

regeneration.

7-8), although discipline

Pentecostal

issues, alism between endument.

together

definitively

(e.g.,

n. 2).

The continued movement has

(baptismal) regeneration

These two studies have been

acknowledged singly

or

in

many subsequent writings

as

having

attended

to the claim for a

second,

Pentecostal work of

grace C.F.D.

Moule,

The

Holy Spirit [Eerdmans, 1978] p. 85, esp.

Alternative,

great

of this book.

1968),

from the Pente- A Pentecostal

It is therefore with

studies

greet

the

was

quoted frequently

dramatic

growth

of the

Pentecostal/charismatic

indicated that not all comers are convinced. But not until 1983 was a full-scale

response forthcoming

costal side

(Harold

D.

Hunter, Spirit-Baptism:

University

Press of America). Dr. Ervin’s Conversion- Initiation and the

Baptism

in the

Holy Spirit,

which we review in this

article,

is only the second such

response.

interest that all those

engaged

in Pentecostal

publication

Ervin’s earlier These Are Not Drunken As Ye Suppose (Logos,

which traced

throughout

the NT the evidence for an empowerment subsequent

to

regeneration,

by

Dunn. Dunn’s counter-thesis set forth the claim that the NT teaches a

unitary

“conversion-initiation” of each believer which

regeneration, repentence,

and

empowerment

in one

“baptism

in the

Spirit,”

and that

that one

experience

into distinct

stages

is not

legitimate (e.g., Dunn, pp. 136-138, 228-29, passim).

Ervin’s

present

book reaffirms his earlier

position

in response to

Dunn,

that

empower- ment is always subsequent to

regeneration (pp. vii, 54, 55)

and that the

laying-on

of hands is a normative

accompaniment (pp. 49,

embraces cation, to

separate

faith,

,

64-5).

conversion,

justifi-

1

61

It will

surprise

some readers to discover that Ervin also

goes

to bat for the sacramentalists. He observes that Dunn’s

linking

of the two

groups

is

fully appropriate,

since the “world-views” of both sacramentalists and Pentecostals allow for a continuum between the numinous

Spirit

realm and the natural order-in contrast to the

dichotomy

which rationalism

prefers (pp. v, viii, 81-83). Since, then,

Ervin is

basically wanting

to refute most of what Dunn affirms,

he takes the

expedient

of patterning his book after

Dunn’s, following

it chapter by chapter,

responding

to

arguments

as Dunn presents them, “accept[ing]

the

gauntlet

wherever Dr. Dunn has thrown it down”

(p. v). A final chapter

summarizes his conclusions.

His

major

criticism of Dunn is that Dunn has allowed his presuppositions

to determine his

exegesis.

This is a

notoriously facile accusation, but Ervin’s detailed

handling

has

helped

make it stick.

Especially

in the Pauline

material,

as Ervin

points out,

Dunn tends to

discover ‘

“conversion-initiation contexts’ without

regard for ‘whatever elements are

present

or absent” ‘

(p. 162). Thus,

for instance,

Dunn states

concerning

1 Cor. 1:4-9 that “it is the thought

of the

Spirit

which lies nearest to the surface”

(Dunn, p. 117)

since

grace, knowledge, confirmation, calling,

and

fellowship are all

concepts closely

related to

“Spirit”

in Paul-and

yet

a reading

of the text itself shows that not the

Spirit

but in fact Christ is the deliberate focus here of Paul’s conversion

language.

Now if Dunn overstates his

case,

it should be understood that his thesis comes in the nature of a proposal; his

specific suggestions

are the result of the

weighing

of

probabilities,

and their effect is cumulative. Ervin’s

annoyance

with Dunn’s

language

of probability (see esp. pp. 143-44)

is an indication that he does not accept

the value of this

way

of arguing, which is in fact sometimes the most one can do with

exegesis.

But he is not alone in charging that Dunn’s

exegesis

looks

predetermined (see Ervin, p. 76,

at n. 12).

Dunn

oversteps

the bounds even

of proposal,

as when on

p.

152 .. he declares to be

implied

what can at best be

inferred,

or when he cites John 20:22 in

support

of his thesis

(p. 226)

after

having decided it to be off-limits to either

position (p. 182).

In a second broad area of criticism Ervin accuses Dunn of violating

the

methodology

of NT

theology,

most

notably

in his interpretation

of Acts: Ervin finds Dunn to be superimposing

aliens categories

onto the Lukan material

(pp. 70, 80). (It

is interesting to note that Dunn

pauses

in his discussion of Acts 2 to

give

a

plea precisely

for

maintaining

the method of NT

theology, pp. 39-40). Ervin’s

objection

is to the

point, although

for this reader the foreign grid

would seem to be Pauline rather than Johannine, as Ervin

suggests.

A rather blatant and indeed

telling

occasion is the

2

62

determinative reference to Rom. 8:9 at the

beginning

of the discussion of Acts 8 (Dunn,

p. 55).

But it would seem to be Ervin who is less at home with the world of NT

theology,

as his excursus on

“Jesus,

Son and Messiah” shows

(p. 11);

there is

simply

no cognizance

taken of any current discussion of those titles. See also his

importation

of themes from Hebrews into a discussion of the Synoptics (p. 13, bottom).

There is a danger, apparently, of being betrayed

in the

perfections

that one

preaches.

The bulk of Ervin’s book is taken

up

in

arguing specific exegetical points.

His discussion is

vigorous

and

detailed;

a summary

is not

possible

in the

scope

of this review. One is reminded how much Dunn’s

argument depends upon being supported

at almost

every point,

and how delicate is his supporting exegesis

of certain

passages-and

Ervin does

put

holes in it. Mention

may

be made of his discussion of the

meaning

of “believe” in Acts 8:12

(pp. 28-32),

of Dunn’s

psychologizing

of Paul’s conversion

experience

in Acts 9 (pp.

45-46),

and of the

identity

of the anarthrous

“disciples”

of Acts 19:1 (pp.

55-59).

If even a few of Ervin’s

many points

are

valid,

and central

passages

such as these cannot be shown to substantiate the “conversion-initiation” proposal,

Dunn loses his claim to have

presented

“the New Testament

teaching” (p. 228)

on

baptism

in the

Spirit.

Ervin’s book is not without its faults. The

positions

he takes in refuting

Dunn are

occasionally

somewhat

idiosyncratic.

One example appears

in the first

chapter–unfortunately so,

for it may have the effect of

putting

readers off.

Countering

Dunn’s inter- pretation

of John the

Baptist’s “Spirit

and fire”

message,

Ervin claims that John stood in a

prophetic

tradition of judgment on Israel which bore no relation to God’s

plan

for the Church. Jesus deliberately replaced

those

prophetic

themes with more

positive apocalyptic

ones

(Mark

13 and

parallels). “Categories appropriate to John’s

prophetic eschatology …

cannot be extended ambiguously

to refer to the Pentecostal

baptism

in the

Spirit

for power-in-mission” (p. 2).

These are new ideas for this

reader,

and much remains

unexplained

in Ervin’s brief

treatment, especially

in view of the

apostles’ joyous

identification with the

prophetic tradition

(e.g.,

Acts

2:16, 17; 3:18, 25).

Ervin’s discussions of the

significance

of the sacraments do not fully satisfy.

That Jesus is able “to turn bread and wine into his body

and blood at the Eucharistic feast of His Church”

(p. 98) sounds like a

high sacramentalism,

and Ervin elsewhere comes close to

espousing

a

baptismal regeneration (p. 158;

cf.

108,

110- 15).

And

yet

a border of some sort

separates

him from sacrament- alism

(p. 83).

At best Ervin’s

position

is unclear, and

theologically ingenuous

as it stands.

.

3

Ervin’s thesis that

empowerment

happen simultaneously

63

must

always

follow

regener- is one that not all Pentecostals

ation

chronologically (pp. vii, 54, 55)

. would wish to affirm.

Many

would

allow,

or even

prefer,

that

they ‘

in the case of new converts. Whatever

diverse

phenomena

Paul must have witnessed in his

long

career

2 Cor.

11:4),

he does seem to hold

together

in a theological

various facets of

becoming

a

Christian,

in a sort of

ideal. Ervin’s determination to find a two-

(e.g.,

unity

the

“conversion-initiation” stage pattern

dominates

the

“spirit

.

yet

of

Paul,

and leads to some

for

instance, between

and

individualisms,

scholarship:.The secondary ignored,

and

base of resources,

lexicon (not the latest

edition), the Anchor Bible volumes

his exposition

unconvincing exposition.

He

distinguishes,

of

adoption

as sons” as a reference to

regeneration the

“spirit

of sonship” as a phrase denoting

empowerment (87-88);

it is hard to see how the

language

can

support

the distinction.

A second area of weakness in Ervin’s

work,

besides

is that Dunn is not

engaged

on his own level of

literature in Dunn’s footnotes is largely

Ervin’s counter-attack is launched from a narrow

some dated. The standard

grammars,

Bauer’s Expositors’s,

the

ICC,

and the lion’s share of the

represent

references. The editions of Nestle and of the USB Greek NT he cites

material 7] chapter 2).

.

persuade

present

NT,

progress

through

are out of date

(affecting

the discussion on

p. 152).

Dunn’s other books and articles are

passed over, although

there is much relevant

in them

(e.g.,

“the filial consciousness of Jesus”

[Ervin, p.

discussed at

length

in Jesus and the

Spirit [Westminster, 1975],

It

simply

means that

despite

his

positive

contribution Ervin will not win the attention of the

readership

that is still reached

by Dunn’s achievement,

and will not be given the chance to

or dissuade all those who have found Dunn

convincing.

In his

preface

Ervin remarks, “No

attempt

has been made to

a

systematic

and

comprehensive theological synthesis

of the conclusions reached”

(p. v).

Such an

attempt may

well have been worth the effort. In

restricting

himself to the role of a sharpshooter harrying

Dunn’s

well-paced

the

Ervin

foregoes

the

advantage

of an author to

shape

his or her own work to its

greatest

effect. The force of his

argument

is diminished

by digression, repetition,

and unevenness of texture.

a sequel will

present

more

positively

and

fully

the

points which are here

suggested briefly by way

of contrast to Dunn’s thesis.

One effect Ervin’s book has on the reader is to

get

him or her to read Dunn’s work

thoroughly

once

again.

A reflection or two on this influential book after fifteen

years may

not be out of

place. Dunn

has

succeeded in getting Pentecostals to think in terms of the

Perhaps

4

64

theology

of individual

authors, although

the truer

insight

into Lukan

theology

would seem to come from the Pentecostal side. Dunn’s considerable abilities are

displayed

to greatest effect in the Pauline materials. But it is

surprising, upon re-reading,

to note how

experiential,

even

charismatic,

is the

Christianity resulting from a (Pauline) “conversion-initiation”

(e.g., pp.

137-8. Cf. Jesus and the

Spirit,

Ch.

8, 9).

The

appearance

of Dunn’s book had the effect of

supplying

a kind of relief to non-charismatic circles beleaguered by

Pentecostal claims. But the

(valid) question

of timing

in Christian

experience surely gives place

to the issue of its nature and

depth.

Can a

Christianity

that is less

dynamic

than Paul’s

lay

claim to any part of Paul’s

theology-on

Dunn’s

theory? Dunn

brings

closer to us all the

challenge

of the

early

church in their

“experience

of the

Spirit

which was like the

outpouring

of a sudden flood or rainstorm on a parched ground, and which made their lives like a well-watered

garden” (Dunn, p. 131).

Both books are

closely argued, complex, many-faceted. Professor Ervin’s book should be read

closely

as a serious contribution to a still-burning issue. One

hopes very

much that the next few

years

will see Professor Dunn

publish

a reflection on the criticism of his

Baptism

in the

Holy Spirit

which is now

beginning to accumulate.

*David A. Dorman is a Ph.D. candidate in the field of Systematic Theology

at Fuller

Theological Seminary.

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