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| PentecostalTheology.comA CHRONOLOGY
3
OF PEACE:
A CHRONOLOGY OF PEACE:
Attitudes Toward War and Peace in the Assemblies of God: 1914 – 1918
by Roger
Robins*
The
present
early
Assemblies of God attitudes trajectories,
one
primary trajectory
consists in
following emerged
in the official
periodical God from the
beginning
article aims to secure a clearer
understanding
and the other
of toward warfare
by tracing
two
secondary.
The first the
war/peace dialogue
as it organs
of the Assemblies of
and
secondary trajectory
of the
organization up
to and
including the first World War. The
second,
of relevant allusions to the
question
consists in an examination in the General Council minutes
excerpts
during
this time.
An
auxiliary
sources can we
aim of this
paper
is to make available to a wider
reading public
of
primary
materials which are not
readily
accessible. Only by
constant reference to the
primary
feel the
pulse
of
early
Assemblies of God
thoughts
genuinely on war and
peace.
document
Evidence of
pacifist dialogue
in Pentecostal circles is hard to
prior
to 1914 and the Assemblies
fact is not due to
any peculiar theological
touched off
by
the formation
of God era. That
or ethical
dynamics of the Assemblies of
God,
to be
with
sure. Rather it is due to the coincidence of that formation the outbreak of what was at that time called “the
European
of
pacifism
was not a
primary Early periodicals
Articles
usually
dealt
War.”
Presumably,
the
question concern for Pentecostals such as The Apostolic
to testimonials
with
questions
with this new “Latter
questions
were indeed marriage, adultery,
prior
to this time.
Faith (Azusa
St., LA.) were largely
devoted
and
missionary reports.
about the charismatic manifestations associated
Rain.” Other
discussed,
and the
sacraments,
pacifism
seems
rarely
if ever to have been raised.
theological
and ethical such as divorce and re-
but the
question
of
1
4
Even with the outbreak of the
European interest in the war did not focus around
legitimacy
or of the
legitimacy European
War was first understood purely apocalyptic/prophetic
War,
Pentecostal
questions
of the war’s of Christian
military
service. The
by American
Pentecostals in
terms. The
looming
clouds of war were taken to indicate the imminent Great Tribulation and the rapture
of the saints. An article
by
E.N. Bell in the
September
Evangel’
Coming
War.” So
great
was the faith of
many
in this
prophetic
1914 issue of The Christian
vision pouring
(certainly
understandable
Given this conviction,
was
entitled,
12, “The Second
in
light
of the recent out-
in the October
10,
1914
in reference to the
war,
to
escape
all l
nigh.” to see how American
of the
Spirit)
that an article
issue of The Christian
Evangel
exclaimed
“Thank God. His
people
will have the
opportunity
those
things
and to be with the Son of Man while on earth is in pains
of
travail, for
the
coming
of the Lord draweth
it is
easy
Pentecostals could fail to consider the war within the framework
at the war’s outset. A certain
allowed
vivid cosmic
metaphor
quality
of
American Pentecostals to If the war was
personalized
as
for the Christian’s
spiritual
of
personal
ethics
“apocalyptic
detachment” avoid concrete ethical
questions. a particularly
warfare
against
sin and Satan.2
Significantly,
Evangel
which
probed personal
terms
originated editorials
reprinted
Confidence. The editorials of The Christian
Evangel Justifiable?” European afforded the ethical detachment parts enjoyed.
The editorials head-on,
the first article to be carried
the
morality
in
Europe.
from the British
Pentecostal
ran in the December
under the
title,
Pentecostals,
and were almost
unanimously supportive war effort. One of the first editorials
the conflict and concluded:
help.
editorial
in The Christian
of the
European
War in
It was a collection of
newspaper,
12, 1914
issue
“is
European
War
of
course,
were not
which their American counter- confronted the ethical
question
of the Allied
absolved the British side in
Awful as war is, it would be worse to stand
by and make no
effort to
protect
the weak. Better to fall as a nation than to
stand
by and see those crushed whom we have our promised
to
We can
pray
for dear sailors and soldiers with a
clear conscience in God’s
sight.
We will
pray
for
victory. A following was more
While the
powers
from below are manifesting
pacific:
in this war, the
time has come for the Church of God to get the full spiritual
armour of God and rise out of her
sleep
and
get ready
for
2
waiting… country,
5
Spirit. The
remaining
Christ’s
coming,
and
bring
in the souls for who the Lord is
While
many thousands give up their lives for their we
may
rise above this and
yield
ourselves so to God that he can use us at this time to
preach
the
Gospel
of the
Kingdom
of God in manifestation and ‘
power
of the
Holy
editorials, however,
To say “war entirely gations
picked up
the militaristic
,
theme of the earlier editorial:
is of the devil and in principle and
practice
is
anti-Christ,” is to take (refuge) from one’s obli-
behind a generalization which is half a truth and half
a lie. To ask “Should a Christian
go
to war” is to raise a
of considerable
importance,
but one which too
often is answered within much too limited an area of thought
question
Another
editorial
objected insisting
that:
scope
Yet another
to the
pacifistic
use of the sixth
‘
The
polemical British Pentecostals debate
regarding war.
commandment,
The
application
to the
present
situation of the command,
“Thou shalt not kill,” shows a singular inability to judge the
of a passage, when it is remembered that all the wars
of Israel, under Divine sanction and
command, were carried
out after that
injunction
was The sixth command-
ment, therefore, does not apply to warfare without distinction
given …
or reserve.
Every case must be judged
on its own merits ….
editorial concluded with this scenario:
If a wild
hooligan
entered
my house,
and
began
to beat
my
child and assault
my wife, in my heart I would cry to God,
but
I would do something more. I would
what
might happen
in a house has happened
go for the brute. Now
on a continent;
and there are some
people wondering
if the nation
ought
to
do
anything.
tone of these editorials demonstrates that
were at the time involved in considerable
the
appropriate
Christian
posture
toward the
This collection must have served as a kind of
testing
of the
Pentecostal Christian
waters
in America.
It is indeed
striking
that The
Evangel’s
first direct treatment of the
morality
of the war should so
heartily
endorse the Allied
article in no
way discouraged war.
The first
published appeared just
Pentecostal
military campaign.
The
youth
from
going
to
response
over a month later in the January
The Christian
Evangel.
The
article,
written
by
Burt
McCafferty
Fort Worth, Texas, was entitled, Whereas the
European
articles had
evidently presumed
to the
European
editorials
16, 1915
issue of
of “Shall Christians Go to
War?”
that the
3
6
heart of the
pacifist objection decalogue, McCafferty
countered New Testament
called attention to Luke 22:49, military question,
then
appealed
place.”
For
McCafferty,
and the
teaching
weapons
,
against up thy
to war was rooted in the by
a trenchant
appeal
to the
of
Jesus. McCafferty first where the
disciples
ask the
related
directly
“Lord, shall
we smite with the sword?” He
to
Jesus’ reply:
“Put
up again thy
sword into his
this biblical
exchange
to himself and his
This is what God is contemporaries: saying to the Christian of
today,
“Ye
followers of the Prince of Peace, disarm
yourselves”
for “the
of our warfare are not carnal”… And we are not
contending
with flesh and blood. Our warfare is
the host of spiritual darkness … Oh
waged
Christian, “Put
sword into his place, for all they that take the sword
shall
perish
with the sword.” Matt. 26:52.
McCafferty
which he built his wider
argument against
warfare and violence:
Lord, shall we smite with the sword? Thou art weak,
shall we
Throughout
the article homiletical
motif,
around
teaching
leaving
used Luke 22:49 as a
defend thee
against
the
strong?
Thou art in the
right,
shall we defend thee the Shall we smite with the sword? The
against wrong?
argument
that we must
go to war in behalf of the weaker nation because of its
being
in the
right,
is not consistent with the doctrine of Christ. It is also
of
against
the
Christ to
fight
in self-defense. “For even hereunto were we called, because, Christ also suffered
us an example that we should follow his steps, who did no sin (violence, Isa. 53:9) who, when he was
reviled, reviled not
again,
when he
suffered, threatened not, but committed himself to Him that judgeth
righteously.”
McCafferty completed Christians to
recognize ative to
reject
carnal warfare.
his
their
heavenly citizenship
argument
by calling upon
as an
imper-
rebuttal
to the earlier
non-pacifist
editorials. which
McCafferty’s persuasion
relegated McCafferty’s
front and center,
soliciting new
printing plant. By
contrast enjoyed prominent
The article itself stood as an effective
Yet there were
telling
conditions under
article
appeared
of the editors. First of all, editorial
article to a side column
page,
where it was somewhat obscured
contributions for the
newspaper’s
which
gave insight
into the
decision had
on the front
by
a bold
advertisement,
the
European
editorials had
The
McCafferty
article
small
front
page billing.
was made even less
conspicuous by
virtue of its
relatively
this
again
in stark contrast to the
large print headlining
caption, the
European
editorials.
More
importantly,
the
McCafferty
4
7
article was followed The disclaimer
necessarily represented rather had been
published many
of the brethren Nevertheless,
the editors European
editorials:
up
on
page
three
by an editorial disclaimer. first stated that the
original
the views of the editorial
because “it showed the attitude
in
England
are
taking
toward
betrayed
a certain
article had not
staff,
but
that
the war.” sympathy
for the
entirely hostil.ities
It is one thing to be away off here in America and look on the situation in Europe and say what ought to be done… and it is
a different matter to be located
right on the scene of and then to find the
right thing
to do under the circumstances.
The disclaimer went on to
express
the
pacifism
the editors’ resolute controversy
from
causing After
stating
a commitment
intention to
prevent
dissention
among
the
readership.4 to
harmony and toleration, critique
of
McCafferty’s
article:
the editors offered a brief
theological
example captured
living
There is a
question
whether
Jesus can be used as a
of non-resistance, as Jesus was foreordained to be good
and offered
up as a lamb without spot
or blemish. What if Jesus had been foreordained to live and
and monarch on earth… and
reign
as a
righteous
the soldiers had come to take him… ? Of course, the
question
cannot be answered, as that was not
in the
purpose
of God….
It is evident that the
European
the reaction to the
European editors’ interest
perspective
editorials
had created
quite
a
However,
it
especially
in light of the
Yet, by way
of
schism over this
.
proportions
the “new issue” (the
baptismal trinitarian
controversy). Indeed,
stir
among
Pentecostals on this side of the Atlantic.
is difficult to
gauge
either the extent or the
precise
character of
editorials,
in
subduing controversy.
we can note that efforts to
prevent
issue were successful. This in itself indicates that even in the face of the World War the
pacifism
of the sanctification debate or of the debate over
question
of
pacifism
position
debate never attained the
formula and the
subsequent the role of these other issues
Both the absence of and the fact that the
a
clearly
articulated pacifism controversy zation
must not be overlooked in our evaluation of the
place
which ..;-¡e
would come to hold in the
theological/ ethical forum of the A.G.
during
this
period.
on
pacifism
did not threaten the
unity
of the
organi-
may
be due to the
great expenditure
of
spiritual
and
5
8
crisis.
by
these and other
issues,
in
Evangel began
to move
guardedly
of
pacifist/militarist debate,
The
toward a
pacifist
The
February 27,
1915 issue
Breaking
to
intellectual resources exacted particular the “Jesus-only’
After this initial
exchange Christian
witness in its editorial
policy. carried an article
entitled, Down?”
It was
primarily
a prophetic of all the nations involved, recompense.
This
prophetic most Pentecostals
exhibited in the
European the war was an occasion Europe, including England. conclusion, go beyond specifically pacifist
statement. ed the
“Christianity
“is Christian Civilization
The article was a “safe” one for the editors, to be sure.
condemnation of the moral offenses
for which the war was seen as a just
theme was
readily acceptable
during
this time. Even the militaristic voices
editorials had
readily
conceded that
of
judgement against
Yet the
present
this theme of
judgement
the whole of
article did, in its
to make a Earlier the author had comment-
has not broken down, but men have failed to be Christian.” He then went on to
ask,
Who would dare
say
that this is Christian Civilization?
Where between the covers of the Word of God… is there
those
one word of warrant for attaching the name of “Christian” to
such a society and to such a state? On the other hand, our
Lord Jesus Christ
taught
the blessedness of the
peacemaker,
that violence should not be resisted with violence, that
who take the sword shall
perish
with the sword. That
is Christianity, and
only a civilization
built
upon
the basis of
the
teaching
of Jesus Christ can bear the name “Christian.” No other article
dealing
with the moral character of the war
appeared newspaper Missouri,
in the
newspaper
and had
changed
until
June.
By
this
time,
the
had moved its offices from
Findlay, Ohio,
to St. Louis,
its name to the
Weekly Evangel.5
On June S, 1915,
The
Weekly Evangel
carried the first of three
which would run over the course of the next two months. Bartleman was a well-known and
highly
articles
by
Frank Bartleman
regarded
Pentecostal
pioneer with among
which was his
vigorous tendencies in the
young tendencies the Assemblies respect
to our
purposes Bartleman,
while
deeply blies of God fold.
Evangel
was a testament Bartleman and to the
openness
Pentecostal movement
of God was a
prime example).
it is
important
respected,
That his articles
to the
reputation
uncompromising
convictions opposition
to
organizational
(of which
With
to
recognize
that
was not one of the Assem-
appeared
in the
Weekly
and character of and interaction within the
6
Pentecostal movement.
The June
5 article, entitled, to be circulated
statement,
parties implicated
in the fashion Bartleman recounted
9
“Present
Day Conditions,”
no
explicit
(later pacifist
war. In true
prophetic
forget
God. The Congo atrocities, Germany hypocrisy, bullyism whelming pride.
in tract form) contained
but was
primarily
a scathing judgement against those
European
the offenses of the nation: The wicked shall be turned into hell, with all the nations that
nations are
being judged. Belgium for her
France for her infidelity and devil worship,
for her materialism and militarism,
England for her
over weaker nations, and her over-
outrage
American The
ship
had been
Bartleman
marked
Bartleman went on to denounce the
hypocritical
over the
sinking
of the Lusitania.
carrying
ammunition from the United States “for the destruction
when it was
torpedoed.
struck the American
ammunition,
exploded.
It turned into an American
of the Germans”
the
irony.
A German
torpodo so that “The ammunition torpedo.”
Bartleman’s
was
epitomized
apocalyptic-prophetic perspective by
the conclusion
Belgium
whiskey
inequality
on the war of his
litany
of
judgement
against
the nations:
is an atheistic nation,
practically
without
marriage
rites or religion. France is even more
guilty than Sodom
and
Gomorrah. She is more
responsible.
has almost
ruled
religion
out of her
churches,
and the admission of God Germany
out of her schools. The German babies are
brought up
on
beer in the bottle. The
English
children are
kept
alive on
mixed with
strong
tea. Extreme
poverty
forbids
sufficient food for
poor
children even in peace times. The
betweem the rich and the
poor
is simply awful.
And so the world
groans
under the
oppression
of sin. It
to be delivered. The earth is heaving in war throes to
rid of its tyrant and
oppressor
man.
To be
sure,
this framework of
categorical, prophetic
translate into
pacifism.
did,
but it is
very (ikely
that his readers could have
groans get
nation did not
necessarily it
certainly
acknowledged
his
judgement
condem- For Bartleman.
as correct without
did.
drawing
the
same
pacifist
conclusions that Bartleman
Two weeks later the
Weekly Evangel
devoted its front
page
to an article
British Pentecostal.
the
paper
from which the notorious
editorials in 1914 had been
reprinted.
headlines and
copy space known
non-pacifist of Confidence,
by
A.A.
Boddy,
a well- Boddy
was the
publisher
collection of The headline
read,
“A.A.
7
10
Boddy
Goes to the Front.” one contained
evangelistic report
of the work
I n contrast to the earlier
article,
this no endorsement of the war. It
simply gave
an
Pentecostals were
doing
in wartime
evangelism.
fear of
reprisal
led the editors to
a disclaimer
the article. The editorial was
entitled,
to
War,”
and was the clearest
pacifism
that would ever be made
by
the editorial staff of the
following Saints
Opposed
It read:
opposed
knowledge people…
Boddy
and other
European
Nevertheless,
immediately
“Pentecostal
statement of
The editorial Blood,
a book written absolute
pacifism.6 you purchase
contents,
in a
complete the
shedding
of blood.”
The
importance mining
the
general
Weekly Evangel.
The Pentecostal
people,
as a whole, are
to
uncompromisingly
war, having much the same spirit as the
early
Quakers,
who would rather be (sic) shot themselves than
that
they
should shed the blood of their fellowmen. Because
we have this bit of war news is no reason that we are in
favor or given war, but rather that our readers
may
have some
of how the war is
actually
some have already
affecting
our own
Indeed, urged us to arrange for
a great
peace
council
among
the Pentecostal
saints,
to
ourselves record as
put
on
being opposed
to war at home or
abroad.
closed with an advertisement for Blood
Against
by
A.S. Booth-Clibborn which called for
The editors advised:
it and become involved with the
spirit
of its
opposition
“We recommend
that
and
protest against
war and
of deter-
the articles
which had
appeared to
represent
the
opinion segment
of the
Evangel’s presumed
to
speak
of this editorial for the
purpose
convictions of
early
Assemblies of God constituents should not be overlooked. Unlike
to this
time,
the editorial could not be said
of an individual
readership.
for Pentecostals “as a
whole,”
composed by
editors who had
previously
author or of a limited
Rather,
the editorial
and was
shown
great personal Indeed,
if
anything
their
.
reluctance to endorse
any position. sympathy
with the Confidence non-pacifist leanings.
ment
emerged
in the wake of that Confidence
Three weeks
article
appeared.
It was
entitled,
reprint
of 1914 would indicate
We can be sure that this editorial state- out of the editors’
dialogue
with their
readership
reprint..
later
(July 10,
1915)
the second Bartleman “The
European War,”
and in it
in the war and to contradict
Bartleman
sought
to
expose
the
duplicity
of the nations involved
their
propoganda:
8
.
11
Each one is after
spoils.
There is no honor or principle in the
matter… How shallow and
hypocritical
are all their
at honor and
principle. They gull
the
with such
simple
nonsense.
In this article Bartleman also took the United
pretensions people
for its economic
States to task
in the war:
flag
Hence we are a nation complicity of hypocrites when we claim to be neutral. Our
neutrality
does not deliver us from our for the dollar. We are
greed
willing
to receive these millions of blood
money.
We had better
pluck
out the stars from our
and instate dollar marks in their
place.
passion upon
glorify development
the
tragic absurdity
of warfare:
Bartleman went on to
Patriotism has been fanned catalogue into a flame. The
has been
religious
invoked, and all the national gods called
for defense in each case. What
blasphemy!
Men who
before lived in peace and satisfaction now hate one another
into murder. It is simply wholesale murder… and
it… all beautiful
yet they
Truly,
theories about the
rapid
of the human race
through
their own efforts
are now fallen.
They are using all progress
and development
in science, etc., to blow men into hell…
It is all madness. Man cannot save himself. The Prince of
.
murdering They
.
,
Peace must do it. There is no possible excuse for the murder
of these
people.
Hundreds of thousands of innocent ones
are
being
slain on the battlefields of Europe
today.
Men are
one another with
absolutely nothing
to
are
gain.
losing all.
have no
and one another. They
possible
reason for
hating
killing Why
should
and
they
create widows
orphans
for one another? What crimes have all these
innocent ones committed? None whatever.
blinded and controlled
They are simply
by their leaders.
Bartleman’s third article aired
August 7, 1915,
and with its
as if the editors of the
Weekly Evangel
behind the
pacifist
resistance to the
war. There would soon be evidence
of the first two articles.
that the facts
“What Will the Harvest Be?”
Only here, to Whom Honor is Due,” as he By this he meant to show that
was victim to a
publication
it
appeared were now
wholeheartedly European
were not so
simple.
The third Bartleman
article, elaborated the
points Bartleman
sought
to
give “Honor titled a section of his article. Germany, although
supremely
effective
interests.
According
controlled
by
these
interests,
she was not
blameless,
propaganda ploy supervised by
British to
Bartleman,
to tell her side of the
story
to the American to a recent return from
England commented,
the American
press
was so that
Germany
was not allowed
public.
I n reference
“When I reached
9
12
London.”
Throughout
New York and read the
morning papers
the article
Germany than her enemies. It was
England
criticism.
Bartleman
concluded
consequences.
I thought
I was back in
fared much better
which drew the harshest his third article with a fervent
call to
repentance: We are
living on blood money today
and
trying
to wash our
hands in innocency in the matter. But it will not come off.
Sin has blinded our nation. Yet, we
hope
to
escape
the
It is madness. Whom God would
destroy
he
first renders foolish… there is no
seeming escape
but
by
to God, through the narrow
gate
to a true
repentance.
fleeing
The
response coming.
to Bartleman’s
The
very
next week the editors for their
having
carried the article.
“What Will the Harvest Be? Article
Just
Criticism.” In it the editors
third article was not
long
in
printed
an
explanation
The editorial was
captioned,
in Last Week’s
Evangel
apologized
for explaining
that
they
had
recog-
and its
Receiving
printing
the Bartleman
article, nized the article’s
antipathy
educated,
had
published wanting
Secondly,
the editors
explained Flower
using
the editorial
“strong leaning
to German
sympathy, to
England
and her
allies,”
but that
they, being
British-
it in the interest
to discard it on the basis of their own British bias.
editors
stated
previously perspective
of fairmindedness,
not
(the
plural may
be the
singular
“Brother Bell was still
away
Finally,
the
the article out of concern
since
they
had
portraying
the
“we”),
from the office and we could not advise with him.”
that
they
had
printed
“to be
just
to all sides of the
controversy,”
carried the
reprint
from Confidence
of British Pentecostals toward the war. The editorial next
quoted
from one of the letters of
complaint
received. The letter criticized the Bartleman
and for its almost total lack of
“spiritual application.”
concluded with this comment:
my
undoubtedly
The letter was rendered so
regarded
which had been article for its bias
It
of course, and was
The article is a gross injustice to our own
government
at a
critical time when it is honestly
striving
to DO RIGHT and in
humble
judgement
IS doing right to be
impartial
and
offer to sell to ALL alike,
being
in NO WISE responsible for
the fact that the Germans cannot
buy war materials as they
would do if they could.
in all
seriousness,
by
the editors. The editorial closed with an
appeal to
neutrality, urging
that Christians
lose their national
preference
and
prejudices.
citizens of this world, but citizens of a better
country…
We
made a mistake in publishing the aforesaid article which was
should:
We are not
10
‘
13
decidedly
not neutral in character, and we purpose to keep these articles out of our column in the future
by the Lord’s
help.
pacifism
did not
represent
response,
the reaction
to
Bartleman was
considerably to the Confidence
reaction to Bartleman ortionate condemnation was not
simply
a
question article would have offended leaning
reveal
something
It was
clearly
evident from this that the Bartleman mode of
the views of the
Weekly Evangel’s readership. Judging by
the editorial
more vociferous than the reaction
reprint eight
months earlier. It is true that the
was
primarily
a reaction to his
disprop-
of
England
in
respect
of
pacifism.
to
Germany.
It
Certainly
Bartleman’s many pacifists
of a more
patriotic
to Bartleman does
than Bartleman. Yet the reaction
concrete about the
way
readers of the
Weekly Evangel
were
beginning
to view the war. Whether
of the
Weekly Evangel readership
tive of the allied cause in general and of U.S.
policy
toward the
a strong segment
war in
particular.
pacifist
or not, was
suppor-
The next issue of the
Weekly Evangel
to touch on the war
question gave,
in
my opinion,
a quite accurate reflection of the
status of the
question among
the Assemblies of God
constituency.
The headline of the
September devoted to the
reproduction distributed
11,
1915
Weekly Evangel
was of a tract which was
being
It
began:
among
the soldiers in
Europe.
ARE YOU OFF TO THE FRONT?
We are all very proud of our soldiers and our sailors, and of
all those who have so nobly responded to their
country”
call
to arms; but have
you forgotten, young man, that it may also
mean for you a call into
eternity…
”
The tract and the
accompanying
article were
honest, straight- And,
to be
sure,
if
you
want a
ear it is better to flatter his vocation than to condemn it.
was that “God’s children should take of every circumstance to
preach
the
gospel
of Christ.”
later a
strongly
worded interacted
forward
evangelistic
efforts. soldier’s
The conviction
expressed advantage
Yet two
pages
written
by Stanley Frodsham, editorial
article:
apology
which had followed Bartleman’s
neutrality
pacifistic article, directly
with the
third and final
In a recent issue of the
Evangel
it was emphasized that the children of God should
preserve
an attitude of strict
to the
warring
nations in Europe. But it seems to the writer that the Word of God teaches
something deeper than that.
11
14
The article went on to
develop
a clear
pacifist position
on the
basis of the believer’s suggested.
In addition though
heavenly
citizenship,
as the title had
war,
it
flatly
condemned the
European less
vehemently
than Bartleman:
When seen from the
heavenly viewpoint,
how the
present
conflict is illuminated. The
policy
of our God is
plainly
declared in the Word, “Peace on earth,
goodwill
toward
men.” The nations who have drawn the sword to kill those of
against
Scripture,
the same blood in other nations… are not
merely fighting
one another, but with their
policy
of “War on earth
and ill will toward men,”
they
are… the
“The
again fulfilling
Kings of the earth set themselves and the
rulers take counsel
together, against
the Lord and
against
His annointed.” Is any child of God going to side with these
belligerent kings?
Will he not rather side with the Prince of
Peace under whose banners of love he has chosen to serve? While it is true that the first and third
pages
of this issue need
not be
regarded
as
altogether sharp
thematic disconsonance alence,
evidenced in
capsule
Weekly Evangel,
would seem to
capture
Pentecostals in the Assemblies nearer to its involvement hand, a definite pacifistic predominant
contradictory,
there is at least a
being
sounded. This ambiv- here within a
single
issue of the
accurately
the mood of of God as the United States drew
have been but which
there was
present
an
evangelistic take
every opportunity
available
in the First World War. On the one
sentiment seems
within the Assemblies of God ranks.
Alongside this there coexisted a strand of
patriotic
was not
necessarily
ization.
to have been
of
sentiment which
may
pacifistic. Finally, vision which wished
only
to to win souls for Christ.
for the
fledgling organ-
would have to
In
particular,
it
issue came to boil.
At the 1916 General
1916 was to be a
year
of
upheaval
During
this
year
the
pacifism controversy
take a back seat to
other,
more
urgent agenda.
1916 that the
“Jesus-Only”
had fallen
through.
the battle lines were drawn
by
the formulation
of Fundamental Truths. 7 The Statement
schism,
it alienated
Assemblies of God constituents
Statement was a much
feared “creed,”
was
during
Efforts at
diplomacy Council
meeting of A Statement
finalized the
“Jesus-Only” “orthodox”
back into the
religious carnality movement had
emerged.
The
priority granted General Council
during this
to the
pacifism time is witnessed
not
only
a number of other
as wel I. To them the
and was seen as a
step out of which the Pentecostal
controversy by
the to
by the complete
12
absence
15
of
any
recorded discussion of the
topic
in the Minutes of the 1916 General Council
meeting,
and it is here that we
may
trajectory,
General Council
consisting
in the General
issue was recorded in the Minutes
they
had discussed
pick up
this
secondary
Council Minutes.
The two
previous
up any
doctrinal
statements, resolutions. It is not so
surprising pacifism
meetings.
Indeed
rights,
and
marriage
and
divorce, of reference
however,
a doctrinal statement
to
pacifism
was not
overly conspicuous.
had been drawn
up,
and not one item was devoted
meetings
had not drawn and had
passed only
a few
then that no mention of the
covering
those
eating
meats, women’s
but nevertheless the absence
In
1916, involving
some
twenty points
to the
subject Ironically, although questions periodically
since 1914 in the
on the
during
this time. In the
of
pacifism
or
military
service. posed by
the war had aired denominational
newspapers, subject
following year developments contrast between the treatment versy
in the denominational
nothing
had ever
appeared in the General Council Minutes
would accentuate this
paradoxical
his
“Questions
and Answers” into war, could a Christian Both the
question
passed through
afforded the
pacifism
contro-
(and elsewhere) and
Bell
replied:
newspapers
that
given
to it
by
the General Council.
In the
April 14,
1917 issue of The
Weekly Evangel
(the “the” seems now to be a part of the official title), E.N. Bell was asked
in
column,
“If the United States
gets
go
to war and hold his
experience?”
and the answer are
revealing.
War is wrong, and no Christian should
and
lawfully keep
out of it.
go who can honorably
It is very difficult to live for God
in the
army.
Most who start in Christians, backslide. But
Daniel lived for God in the lion’s den and the three Hebrew
children did the same in the
fiery
furnace. A few have
the wars true to God. God has some
bright
Pentecostal soldiers in both the British and German armies
today.
It is possible, but
very, very
unsafe to try it. I would
not join the army until
compelled
to do so, either
by law or in
defense of our mothers, wives, and children.
and the answer are concerned
ability
to “hold his
experience”
Both the
question Christian’s
point
that one
might
kill another
with the
in the
army.
The human
being
is never belabored.
Pentecostal soldiers”
each other
Rather,
one could backslide. That
“bright
in the British and German armies
might
be
shootingat
as
long
as a! “pass through the war true to God.”
Evidently,
sin in the barracks was considered
is no cause for
soul-searching
to be
13
16
by
law.
Secondly,
“mothers, wives,
and children.” called
pacifistic.
more fearsome than sin in the battlefield.
Finally,
there are at least two conditions under which one may join
the
army.
First of all, one
may join
if compelled
one
may join
if called
Bell’s
response
to do so upon
to defend could
hardly
be
The
Weekly by
S.H. Booth-Clibborn
which would
appear
carried
April 28,1917,
Too Late?” Within this article dispensational
of the writers who had
appeared time:
Two weeks after Bell’s answer to this
question,
Evangel
carried the first of two articles
over the next month. This first
article,
was entitled,
foundation for
pacifism
John
morally ment where Christ
“The Christian and War. Is it Booth-Clibborn
developed
a
more
carefully
than
any in the
Evangels prior
to this
Booth-Clibborn
dispensation
cheek
also,”
and listed
scriptures
We find recorded in the 17th verse of the 1 st Chapter of
that “the law was given
by Moses,
but Grace and Truth came
by Jesus
Christ.”
God ordered Israel to
wipe
out in direct
judgement
the
rotten Canaanites; but find me in the New Testa-
ever sent his followers on such a mission? On the
contrary,
He sent them out to save men – not to butcher them like cattle.
went on to stress that the
“eye
for an
eye”
had
given place
to that of “turn to him the other
sation of Israel with that if the Church.
Clibborn answered a hypothetical in human form attacked
which contrasted the
dispen-
Following
this Booth- objection: “Suppose
a brute
your
wife and children. Would
you stand
by
and allow it?” (Note that this is
precisely
reasons for which Bell would allow Pentecostals
Booth-Clibborn
spectators reaping
one of the to
go
to war.)
response:
these latter with the “neutral”
In the second
place…
“An
English
Conscientious
a three-fold
In the first gave
place,
the illustration does not fit the case at all
(of war)… A more fitting picture of the situation would be
found in a
Spanish
American
cock-fight,
where the
birds scatter each other’s blood and feathers at poor
their owner’s benighted
pleasure – all the
profits…
thousands of humble Christian homes have never
yet
been
broken into
by a criminal of any
sort: God His
own
according
to their faith: for their trust in him protecting they put
rather than the
police. Thirdly,
if it should come to actual
violence- Matthew 5 and Romans 12 would still remain true,
and God’s Word would still have to be
obeyed.
Two
pages
later the
newspaper
Objector,”
carried a testimonial from
as it was entitled. The
14
17
account of a Pentecostal
corps.
testimony
C.O.’s
experiences subsequent
service postscript
was a simple,
straightforward
before the
military
Tribunal Court and his
in the non-combatant
indicated that the testimonial was
published belief that it would
“help many
of our
young
men in the stand
they
will take at this time.”
An editorial
in the
editorial caution.
Romans 13:1-7
sounded a
warning against
The
May 19, 1917
issue of The
Weekly Evangel
was a study in
The cover
page
was devoted to a quotation
under the
heading,
temper
the second Booth-Clibborn
.
page
four. There the
question previous
article was
completed
war:
though
pride.
of
“To All Their Due.” This insubordination and served to
article,
which was carried on and answer format
begun
in the with a statement
strongly
critical
of the
European Could
anything
be more
pitiable
than the
slaughter
of
thousands of gallant
young
Frenchmen in the vain attempt to
save the old Roman Catholic cathedral of Rheims; – as
God dwelt there! No!
Beloved, “The
Lord of heaven
and earth dwelleth not in temples made with hands.” Nor is
the
young
Christian called to spill blood in defense of God-
forsaken churches and nations, with all their
pomp
and
To them Christ is saying, as to the Pharisees of old,
“Behold
your
house is left unto
you desolate!” …
But there
is another
way
in which the
temple
can be destroyed,
viz.,
into it the
present
horrible hatred,
pride,
and
“Know
ye
not that
ye are
the
Temple
of
God, and that
the
Spirit of God dwelleth
in you? If any man
(R.V.) the temple of God, Him shall God destroy!”
by dragging bloody butchery!
destroy
It was
page eight, however, news. There “An
Explanation” been
unfolding
question
within the Executive
passed by
which carried the
truly significant was
given
of events which had
Presbytery regarding
the
of
military
service:
There has been
recently
issued from the office of the General Council, a letter
accompanied by
a Resolution
the Executive
Presbytery.
The letter has been sent to all our Ministers. It deals with the matter of our attitude toward
military
service or the
taking up
of arms.
The editorial
explanation
was
carefully
reaffirmed the General the Government:
alluded to the
pacifist position
of the resolution.
Council’s
willingness
worded,
and
only
In addition, it to
cooperate
with
The
purpose
of the Resolution is to
interpret
as
clearly
as
what the
Scriptures
teach
upon
the
subject…
The
matter does not include
any
new
thing.
It
in
simply
words what we have before found it unnecessary to
possible subject puts
15
18
say… unwilling
Prior to this
statement,
of the resolution:
We are not
opposed
to the Government and not
to serve in any capacity that will not
require
the destruction of life.
the editors commented on the limits
may exemption taking
was
composed
conscientious
objection within the Assemblies
of
securing conscientious
and it the
right
to objectors”
and
purpose It is not
intended to hinder
anyone
from taking up arms who
feel free to do so, but we
hope
to secure the
from such
privilege of
military
service as will necessitate the
of life for all who are real conscientious
objectors
and
who are associated with the General Council.
In other
words,
the resolution was not to be
enforced,
for the sole
purpose
for “real
of God ranks. 8
It was two and a half months after that
before the resolution referred to there
appeared
4,
1917 issue
foreword,
the General Council
.
May
19
“Explanation”
in The
Weekly
published
at
length
the and
significant correspond- and the State
Department
Evangel.
The
August resolution,
an editorial ence between
regarding
the resolution.
The editorial foreword stated
categorically
which introduced the that Pentecostals
everywhere
resolution had
always
been
pacifists: From the
very beginning,
the movement has been character-
ized
by Quaker principles.
The laws of the
Kingdom,
laid
down
by our elder brother, Jesus Christ,
in His Sermon on
the Mount, have been
unqualifiedly adopted,
the movement has found itself
consequently
opposed
to the
spilling
of
blood of any man, or of offering resistance to any
branch of the
aggression.
movement, whether
in the United
Great Britain or
Germany,
has held to this
Every States, Canada, principle.
of,
that the General
The foreword went on to
explain
that:
It had not been
seriously
considered
Council of the Assemblies of God… would find it necessary
to
interpret
its attitude toward war, until the war clouds
gathered
and actual war was declared. Neither the General
Council, nor any other wing of the movement that we know
have ever written a creed, therefore it was found
necessary
for a number of the official members of the
Executive
Presbytery
to assemble
together
and draw
up
a
resolution
interpreting
the established
principles
or creed
of all sections of the Pentecostal Movement..
important
items to be
gleaned
from this
There are several foreword.
Pentecostal movement
For one
thing,
the writers were
quick
to associate the
with an historical Peace Church
position.
16
19
and certain to
qualify
for
served as a kind of
Pentecostals
The
Quakers
exemption
if
anyone reference
their
position intelligible became
Quakers
influence
of the Confidence
pacifist
insisted that all Pentecostaldom in its absolute non-resistance.
were well established
did. The
Quakers
by
which the authors of the resolution could make
to the State
Department.
by
association. And to be
sure,
the
Quaker among
Pentecostals was not small.
Secondly,
reprint
revealed
Pentecostal sentiment in
Europe
service.
In addition,
in
spite
a substantial strand of non-
at
least,
the writer had been one monolithic
body
quoted
here shows that the
of Furthermore,
the “General
without
precedent
statement on
military to
speak
for “all sections of
The second
part
of the foreword
“General Council” was
pressed
into action
by the expediency the
day.
The war forced their hand.
Council” was
working, by
its own
admission,
in their efforts to draw
up
a Pentecostal
they presumed
the Pentecostal Movement” with their resolution. What makes this
particularly striking
is that the resolution
up by
“a number of the official
because the Executive
of five
men, and the
part
of the foreword above
clearly suggests
that not all of the five were
present
Presbytery.” only
consisted
This is
striking
the resolution was drawn
up.
was not on the Executive
There is yet more interest
was
actually
drawn
members of the Executive
Presbytery
quoted
when It is also
noteworthy
that the
correspondence surrounding War
Department
“Claims for
read:
resolution was drawn
up during
the brief
period
when E.N. Bell
Presbytery
regarding
resolution’s formulation. Also
published
the resolution was a section of the
board.
the circumstances of the
among
the
significant
Discharge”
conditions.
The
deserve our attention.
working
certain criteria, dictated meet. The second
. primary
condition
That you are a member of any well-organized religious sect
or organization and existent
May, 1917,
whose then
creed or
existing
principle
forbade its members to participate in war
in any form…
There are two
things
in particular which
One is the
simple
fact that those who framed the resolution were
in the face of such a condition. The resolution had
by the
War
Department,
point
of interest
of the date
given
in the “Claims for
Discharge”
that
posted
with the resolution
April 28, 1917,
had been “then
existing”
which it had to emerges
from a comparison
condition with itself. The
resolution,
dated
for
twenty days
when
17
20
the deadline came due.
The limits and
purpose stated in the
reaffirmed
the resolution.
of the
resolution,
May
19 issue of The
Weekly in a letter sent to the
President,
The letter assured
which had been
Evangel,
were
which
accompanied the President that:
The resolution,
quoted lution. Furthermore,
regardless the resolution’s
formulation, the
predominant
sentiment certainly
the Executive
It is not the
purpose
of this Resolution to weaken the hands of the Executive, nor to
discourage
enlistment of any, even of our own
people,
whose conscientious
principles
are not involved. We
only pray that we,
whose
religious
tenets will not allow us so to engage, be allowed to obey God according to our constitutional
rights.
below,
is
certainly
a
pacifist
reso- of the conditions
surrounding
if not
you
know are not
pacifists. conditions which attended show that its real
objective doctrinal
discipline.
Conscience resolution reads as follows:
it must be taken to
represent,
of Assemblies of God
constituents,
Presbytery’s
iment. You
simply
do not write
pacifist
Nevertheless,
the formulation of the resolution
assessment of that sent-
resolutions for
people
the
qualifications
and
was not to
impose any
kind of
was to be the final
guide.
The
Resolution
Concerning
the Attitude of the General Council of the Assemblies of God Toward
any Military
Service which Involves the Actual
Participation
in the destruction of Human Life.
‘
While
recognizing
Human Government as of Divine ordi- nation and
affirming
our
unswerving loyalty
to the Govern- ment of the United States, nevertheless we are constrained to define our
position
with reference to the
taking
of human life.
Resoluti.on adopted
at the
WHEREAS, in the Constitutional
Hot
Springs
General Council,
April 1-10, 1914,
we
plainly declare the
Holy Inspired Scriptures
to be the all-sufficient rule of faith and
practice,
and
WHEREAS, the Scriptures
deal
plainly
with the
and relations of
obligation
humanity, setting
forth the
principles
of “Peace on
Earth, good
will toward men.” (Luke
2:14);
and
20:13);
WHEREAS, we,
as followers of the Lord Jesus Christ, the Prince of Peace, believe in implicit obedience to the Divine commands and
precepts
which instruct us to “Follow
peace with all men,” (Heb. 12:14); “Thou shalt not kill,” (Exod.
“Resist no evil,” (Matt. 5:39); “Love
your enemies,” (Matt. 5:44); etc. and
WHEREAS these and other
Scriptures
have
always
been
18
21
by
our churches as
prohibiting
.
accepted
and
interpreted
Christians from
shedding
blood or taking human life;
THEREFORE we, as a body of Christians, while
purposing
to fulfill all the
obligations
of loyal citizenship, are neverthe- less constrained to declare we cannot
in
conscientiously participate
war and armed resistance which involves the actual destruction of human
life, since this is contrary
to our view of the clear
teachings
of the
inspired
Word of
God, which is the sole basis of our faith.
coming person belongs
and
Three weeks
later,
E.N. Bell was asked in
Answers” column if it was to in the war. He his “Questions
It is evidently the
right help replied:
duty
of all to uphold the law and
of our
authority
government
and for all to
respond,
if drafted to war,
in an orderly way to the
authority designated.
If any
to
any well recognized religious body
that
cannot
conscientiously engage
in actual
warfare,
he should
come to his
exemption
board and
put
in a
respectful
and
on this
ground
to be
legally excused,
as the law
three weeks after the
publication
was couched in conditional
of
orderly plea
permits.
Bell’s
reply, coming just the non-combatant phrases
objection.
resolution,
and was somewhat short of a call to conscientious
The
story
of the 1917 resolution
what we have seen.
.
According
Presbytery”
,
is not
completed simply by to the
foreword,
the resolution
to President
Wilson. The
Council boards had
evidently
had been
formally approved “by
the Executive and General
before
being
forwarded
urgency
of the moment had demanded that the resolution be drawn
up mid-year, considerably prior
to the General
Hasty approval
of the
Presbytery
yet
it would
only
seem reasonable to
expect
the
to have been reaffirmed or ratified
representative body
at the General
meeting. been
secured, resoluton
by
the
larger
Council
assembly
later that of the General Council of the
no mention of the resolution
two resolutions
passed
year. However,
the Minutes Assemblies
whatsoever.
by
the General Council enthusiastically
endorsed
of God,
1917,
contains
There
were, nevertheless,
relative to the war. The first resolution
Raymond
Richey’s
work
among
the
soldiers and vowed “to become all
things
to all men that
by
all
means we
may
save some.” General Council’s
The second
resolution affirmed
the
A.P. Collins loyalty
to the
followed and said we were on government: 10 Bible grounds in
the
government,
and said that the
flag stood not
for civil freedom but also for religious
liberty;
and that at the Texas District Council
they
had
purposed
to cancel
honoring only
19
22
the credentials
government.
represent In
large part, then,
in the 1917 General
of
any preacher
who
spoke against
the
This
body agreed
that such radicals do not
this General Council.
developments
Council sessions served furtherto moderatethe 1917 resolution
That the resolution itself was never
by
the General Council seems
inexplicable.
Presbytery
to the General
there were less uniform on the
subject.
For the Executive
on conscientious
objection. discussed
only
wonder if the Executive ing
the resolution
record in
Washington. evidently enough.
No
attempt popular support
Assemblies
of God members
We can
refrained from
present- Council because
opinions
The resolution was on
Presbytery
that was
it was
clearly
seems to have ever been made to secure broad
for the measure. In
addition,
stated that no effort would be made to
impose
the resolution on 1
it seems reasonable to assume that the resolution
within an
organization
insure
harmony
and freedom less than uniform on the
topic. protect
the flock.
our
picture of God
during the
in tract form.
“Destroy
This
Tract,” Bell
explained
who were less
pacifistic.1
was intended to
which was It was a measure
designed
to
Day Conditons,”
the
admonition.
on hand.
beloved President
The second
Answers” column in the October Evangel,
a
questioner
There are three items from 1918 that will serve to round out
of the
type
and status of
pacifism
in the Assemblies
first World War. “Present
first of the Bartleman articles
quoted above,
had been
circulating
In the
August 24,
1916 issue of The Christian Evangel
E.N. Bell (once
again
editor) called
upon
his readers to
as he entitled his editorial
that the tract was unsuitable for wartimes and that he had
already
burned all of the
copies
which he himself had
He then exhorted readers to “stand
in this hour of crisis to our civilized world.”12
item also involved
behind the
Bell. In his
“Questions
and 19,1918
issue of The Christian
asked,
“Would it be murder for a child of God to
go
to war and shoot men as do other soldiers?” The
as we have
seen,
had been
put
to Bell twice
previously
This time the
question
the moral ramifications of killing in warfare had to be confronted.
question,
in different forms.
Bell answered:
was so
phrased
that
Our faith leaves this with the conscience of each man. We have never
opposed
the
going to war of our members whose conscience allowed them to
go.
But everyone must
keep
hatred out of his heart. The sheriff who
hangs
the
personal
20
heart,
Bell’s
response participation
in warfare
23
For
Bell,
active
Council
meeting.
combatant resolution
appeared, cation of an
open
discussion resolution
criminal as commanded
by law need have no hatred
in his
and he is not a murderer when he obeys his country in
executing just punishment
on the criminal Hun.
was
blatantly non-pacifistic.
did not need to be considered sinful. The final item is found in the Minutes of the 1918 General
Once
again,
no reference
to the 1917 non- nor was there
any
other indi-
There
was, however,
a
of
pacifism.
passed
which reaffirmed the
loyalty
stance taken the year
before:
Resolved, that
the General Council
hereby
declares its
unswerving loyalty
to our Government and to its Chief
Executive, President Wilson, and that we hereby restate
our
fixed
purpose
to assist in
every way morally possible,
consistent with our faith, in
bringing
the
present
“World
War” to a successful conclusion.
It is evident from all of the above that the 1917 resolution
did not
uniformly represent practice
the
majority
on
conscientious
objection
and
opinion
within the Assemblies the resolution
represented irregular
circumstances involved and ratification,
the ambivalent
early years testify
resolution
stituency.
The
early Assemblies
in spirit.
of conscientious
objection, service. In such columns,
the conditional statements
nature of the
war-peace
to a somewhat tenuous among
the Assemblies of God
leadership
check the other questions
person’s
of God
membership. Surely
sentiment,
but the in the resolution’s formulation
appended
to
it, and
dialogue throughout
the
standing
for the
and con-
leaned toward
pacifism
ask
questions
about
Assemblies Confidence pacifistic spondingly, God
organs
of God
certainly
If not, readers would have asked Bell about the
morailty
not about the
morality
of
military
people generally
what
they
think
might
be
taboo,
or about what
they’ve
been told is taboo and want to
prove
otherwise.
orthodoxy. Generally speaking,
asked of Bell arise out of a
religious
context
warfare and violence were censured.
istic stand was ever taken
by
a
representative
of God
during
this time.
reprint
stand as the
only originators
statements of
any
kind in our literature.13 Corre-
the bulk of literature
Or,
often
they
ask to
the
in which Furthermore,
no militar-
body
within the In
fact,
E.N. Bell and the
of
clearly
non-
on the
topic
in Assemblies of
was
decidedly pacifistic. Finally,
the 1917 reso- lution,
even if it was not so representative
of Pentecostal
opinion
21
24
an
expression
foreword to the
resolution,
nantly, though
As Pentecostals
The claims of the
are not without The overall
picture
of
from
which was
predomi- in its convictions.
to
as its ambitious foreword would
suggest,
still must be viewed as
of
majority opinion
both in the Assemblies of God and in the Pentecostal movement at
large.
while
overstated,
some basis in the
reality
of the
day.
Assemblies of God attitudes toward warfare which
emerges these documents shows an
organization
not
uniformly, pacifistic
we are now no less than then called discern what it means to be faithful to God’s Word on this issue. As we
carry on
the
dialogue,
with ourselves
we would do well to notice a remarkable
Where there is
argumentation
and it
frequently appeals
as well as with
others,
pattern
evident in these
in favor of is
biblically rooted,
eschato-
to the work of the
and in the creation of a new
is
to our self-under-
early
documents.
pacifism,
that
argumentation logically informed,
Spirit
in
sanctification, conversion, people
or of a new
age. characterized
by qualities standing
as Pentecostals. against pacifism
is characterized
That is to
say
that the
argument which are central
On the other
hand, argumentation
is characterized
by
elements which we have
generally determining
by political
considerations,
as
adequate
traditions sources for
rationalism and humanism. That is to
say
that the
argumentation
drawn from intellectual
not
regarded
doctrinal or ethical truth. At the
very
least this should make us
carefully
consider the
way
we
argue
as much as what we
argue
for. We have to
ask,
for
instance,
Just War tradition are
really
to a stance of Pentecostal
presuppositions
of the appropriate
corresponding presuppositions
case,
we do well to look
again
to our Pentecostal
examine how those Pentecostal
Spirit
which we claim as an
inheritance,
of war – a question contemporary
if the
logical
more
discipleship
than the of Christian
pacifism.
In either
roots,
and to pioneers,
moved
by
the same
dealt with the
question
to both their world and ours.
22
25
Roger
Robins received the M.Div. degree from Harvard Divinity School in June, 1984.
1. The editors were E.N. Bell and J.R. Flower.
2. See
especially Albert Weaver, “The Crucial Hour,”
The Christian November
Evangel,
28, 1914.
3. In this particular editorial, the author also gives his view of
It would seem that
military history:
every few centuries God has a national stock- with a view to
taking breaking up some proud power or bringing to some
judgement corrupt principle.
4. The editors also gave their editorial
We wish to
philosophy:
say here that many things are permitted
to enter our
column with which we do not wholly agree, because this paper is a
religious newspaper and not an individual organ to advance some pet
A newspaper must be broad and be willing to look on all
sides of a question, hence we have
theory…
above which takes an
published the article under the
heading opposite
view to the editorial in
allow. As soon as a question becomes controversial, we reserve the
question. However, there are some limitations to this liberty we
to throw the article of this nature in the wastebasket, or return it
to the writer. We right
propose
to maintain the sweet
spirit of love,
fellowship, tolerance, and respect…
5. The editorship remained in the hands of Flower and Bell.
6. See Jay Beaman, “Pentecostal Pacifism; The Origin, Development, and Rejection of Pacific 8elief Among Pentecostals,” unpublished Masters Thesis, North American Baptist Seminary, 1982, pp. 34-40.
7. Minutes of the General Council of the Assemblies of God, 1916.
8. It is important to recognize, then, that the doctrinal resolution was not framed in the interest of making an formulation of the denomination’s belief. Whether or not a resolution objective drawn up under such “objective” conditions would have differed from the one at hand is another question. The fact remains that the expressed
intention of those who framed the resolution was “to secure the privilege
of exemption from…
military service.”
9. E. N. Bell. “Questions and Answers,” The Weekly Evangel, August 25, 1917, p. 9. 10. It is noteworthy that this loyalty resolution constituents from Texas. In
1915, it had been Burt evidently originated among of Fort Worth who had written the January,
McCafferty
from Confidence. McCafferty’s
article must have set off a furor in
pacifist rebuttal to the
Texas. This General Council
reprint
resolution may well represent the vindication of McCafferty’s foes.
11. In fact, the only war-related threat of sanction which I have found was that suggested by
the Texas District Council, and there the sanction was to be invoked for opposing the government’s military policies too vigorously not for failing to
. oppose them vigorously enough.
12. Quoted from Beaman, p. 51.
13. The loyalty resolutions passed in 1917 and 1918 are expressions of
not
patriotism
militarism, and although they certainly act to moderate the tone of A.G. pacifism, they
do not nullify it. These resolutions could have been affirmed
and
by patriotic pacifists patriotic non-pacifists
alike. Indeed, the resolutions probably
meant very different things to those two groups.
23