Mathew S. Clark, Henry I. Lederle, Et Al. What Is Distinctive About Pentecostal Theology ) Pretoria University Of South Africa, 1989), 184 Pp. ISBN 0 86981 578 4

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Mathew S.

Clark, Henry tive about Pentecostal South

Africa, 1989),

I.

Lederle, Theology?)

184

pp.

ISBN 0-86981-578-4.

Reviewed

by

Peter Hocken

Theology

Henry

paper presented by Beach,

63

et al. What is Distinc- Pretoria:

University

of

of

Systematic

This book is the fruit of the Pentecostalism and neo-Pentecostalism project

launched a few

years ago by

the

Department

of the

University

of South Africa under the

leadership

of Dr.

I. Lederle. In

fact,

one of the book’s

appendices reprints

the

Dr Lederle at the SPS annual

meeting

at

Virginia

Va. in 1987.

The basic thrust of its thesis

(which

seems to be the work of Mathew Clark, though

this is not

explicitly stated)

can be seen from its main section

headings:

I. 1. Some of the

problems

involved in researching Pentecostal

theology

I. 2. The context of Pentecostal

theology

II. 3. The search for a Pentecostal hermeneutic

II. 4.’ II. 5. II. 6.

Doctrine and

experience

This outline indicates proprium

the distinctiveness

or

to find the

of

‘ ‘

doctrinal Point 7 is

renew

Experience,

commitment and emotion

Pentecostal

community

II. 7. Pentecost and

socio-political

concerns

III. 8. What is distinctive about Pentecostal

theology?

how the

starting-point,

of Pentecostal

theology,

determines and

shapes

the whole study.

It is then somewhat

surprising, though welcome,

author soon

rejecting

“the

very

Protestant belief that

comprehension the doctrinal content of a group

(its “confession”)

will allow

categoriza- tion of the

group

itself.”

(p. 13).

The

problems

endemic to any

attempt

to define the Pentecostal move- ment in terms of doctrine are clear in Chapter

2,

which seeks to identify “a common nucleus of doctrines … held

by

Pentecostals.” Of the seven points

listed

(p. 17), only

one in fact is indisputably

“Jesus is coming again, to judge the

world, and to apocalyptically creation.” The first six

points

have a doctrinal basis, but

they

are

expres- sions of Pentecostal convictions about what is important in church

prac-

of doctrines,

Christ can/ should be personally encountered as saviour of the

sincerely

in

regeneration

to a transformed life.” (p. 17)].

This

point

is

acknowledged

in the

following paragraph:

each

point

centres on a nucleus of common

experience among

be Pentecostal

primarily pre- supposes

that one

partakes

of the common Pentecostal

experience,

and

tice rather than a

catalogue

repentant

sinner, resulting

basically Pentecostals”

(p. 17).

It

concludes,

“To

[e.g.

Point

1,

“That Jesus

“However,

‘ _

1

64

Evangelical

only secondarily presupposes

commitment to a common “confession” of doctrine”

(p. 17).

In

fact,

there is a certain ambivalence in the

study concerning

the

influence on Pentecostal doctrine. On the one

hand,

there are numerous references to the

necessary originality

of Pentecostal

theology and the

problems

created

by trying

to fit this

spiritual reality

into

pre- existing theological systems (see below).

On the other hand, there are

fact, thizing gestalt,

comments such as: “classical Pentecost has

inherently

the

theological framework which is most consistent with the

experience” (p. 115).

In

the former seem more

pervasive,

with the author

evidently sympa-

with those who see Pentecostalism as a genuinely new Christian

rather than as a sub-division within

Evangelical

Protestantism. The latter comments occur more in the context of

showing

how Pente- costal affirmation of

experience

is not indifferent to revealed truth and

Christian

orthodoxy.

In the course of the

study,

a number of

very important points

are made: made:

.

Scripture sationalist,” working

(p. 27)

experience pietism

basic

approach

to

nor

dispen-

of the

1. “Yet in

practical

terms his

[the Pentecostal’s]

has been neither

evangelical,

nor

fundamentalist,

“the

distinctively

Pentecostal

experience

of the

Holy Spirit

issues in a distinctively Pentecostal view of Scripture

and

approach

to Scripture” (p. 33).

2. “What the classical Pentecostal does and

says

is often far better than what he writes”

(quoted

with

approval

from Kilian

McDonnell, p. 38). 3. “Because Pentecost takes

seriously

the

activity

of the risen

Lord, by his

Spirit,

in this world

through

his

people,

there are

implicit

in its

correctives

against

the

complacency

and introversion of

and

mysticism” (p. 46).

4. “What is peculiar to the Pentecostal notion of the

church,

and what relativises the contributions so that in the end there is a priesthood of all believers,

is a two-fold

emphasis:

contribution to make; and

(ii) every

contribution

it can be traced back to the

dynamic activity

of God”

(p. 76).

“The dualism of

body

and

spirit

is alien to Pentecostal

and for that reason the Pentecostal

gospel

has

always placed

a high val-

5.

uation on physical

reality” (p. 87).

tiveness in Pentecostal Pentecostal movement does not start from ask about the

consequences

(i) every Spirit-filled

believer has a

is only valid insofar as

ideology,

than the

necessity

In fact, its whole thrust endorses the

important point

that

any

distinc-

theology

flows from the distinctiveness of the

and its central

grace.

It is then a pity that the book

what is distinctive of the whole movement, and then

for

theology.

The actual format means that the

spotlight

is never

kept long enough

on Pentecostal distinctives, other

of

experience,

and thus their

implications

costal

theology

are

insufficiently explored (e.g.

the

physicality

above).

for Pente-

point

2

65

There are

places

where we

get glimpses

of what could have been more fully developed.

Thus,

the author remarks that “Pentecostal

emphasis

on experience

means that

theology

takes on a perspective that is absent in most other

contemporary theologies” (p. 101).

From this

point,

the author

argues:

“it is

my

conviction that the

attempt

to

integrate

Pente- costal-type experience

with

theologies

that have been formulated over centuries in which

experience

has been

neglected (even hostilely

consid- ered,

in some reformation

traditions),

is

very

much a case of

attempting to put new wine into old wineskins”

(p. 102).

With a

starting-point

in the

proprium

of Pentecost, this

point

would

surely

have needed more detailed treatment. In fact, Christian

history

has known more

theologies rooted in lived

experience

than the author

implies,

for

example

to name but

two,

Bernard of Clairvaux and the Victorine school of the 12th

century,

the

Hesychast theology among

the Orthodox.

More

importantly,

the fact that the real distinctiveness of the Pente- costal movement lies not in its

theology,

but in its total

living

character in relation to God,

Father,

Son and

Spirit,

means that Pentecostals have yet

to do justice in their

theology

to the

originality

and

vitality

of Pente- costal

life

(at

least in its first

generations).

The author indeed

recognizes that the

biggest difficulty

in this research “must be

sought

in the nature of

Pentecost itself,

the rational

description

and

understanding

of which can

convey

but a fraction of its

impact, dynamic

and

meaning” (p. 99). The focus on the proprium of Pentecostal

theology

tends to obscure the vastness of the

theological

task ahead and how little Pentecostal scholars have so far seized this kairos.

However, enough

has been

said,

I hope, to indicate that this volume is a very significant publication, full of insights, with a remarkable feel for the lived

reality

of Pentecostal

grace.

It indicates

clearly

how much the author has reflected on the ‘whole Pentecostal

phenomenon,

both

loving- ly

and

honestly,

not

always

the easiest combination. It deserves to be widely

read and

pondered.

Fr. Peter Hocken is the

Secretary

of the

Society

for Pentecostal Studies. He serves as a priest in the Mother of God

Community

in Gaithersburg, MD.

3

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