| THEOLOGYFire From HeavenBy Dr. J. Rodman WilliamsTheologian
 
A Personal Reflection and Review
 The publication in 1995 of Fire from Heaven: the Rise of Pentecostal 
          Spirituality and the Reshaping of Religion in the Twenty-first Century 
          is an extraordinary event. In this book, Harvard professor Harvey Cox 
          speaks quite affirmatively of "pentecostal spirituality" as 
          the best hope for the reshaping of religion in our time and the future. 
          Cox's book will come as a surprise to many both inside and outside Pentecostal 
          circles. I personally find the book to be both exciting and challenging. 
         Thirty years prior to Fire from Heaven Cox wrote The Secular City (1965). 
          It was anything but a tribute to Pentecostal spirituality. A couple 
          of quotations may suffice: "As Bonhoeffer says, in Jesus God is 
          teaching man to get along without Him, to become mature, free from infantile 
          dependencies, fully human"; "It may well be that the English 
          word God will have to die, corroborating in some measure Nietzsche's 
          apocalyptic judgment that 'God is dead.'" In such a situation Cox 
          summoned his readers to celebrate the liberties and disciplines of the 
          secular city. Perhaps God will be found there.  In the same year, 1965, I became a Pentecostal. This does not mean 
          that I joined the Assemblies of God or some other Pentecostal denomination. 
          No, at the time I taught theology in a Presbyterian seminary, and to 
          this day carry Presbyterian credentials. But I had what Pentecostals 
          would surely call a Pentecostal experience including, yes, speaking 
          in tongues. It happened as I began existentially to yearn for a living 
          counter to "the death of God." Harvey Cox's Secular City frankly 
          dismayed me, although not as much as the surrounding coterie of outspoken 
          "death of God" theologians flourishing in the 1960's. Of the 
          three leaders, I knew two personally. There must, I reflected often 
          in agony, be some way to a recovery of the living God. It is a long 
          and involved story which I will not recount here. Suffice it to say 
          that a spiritual breakthrough occurred the day before Thanksgiving in 
          the fall of 1965. The secular God, the dead God, suddenly became almost 
          overwhelmingly alive. The secular only seemed to have replaced the city 
          of God.  Back to Harvey Cox again. Thirty years ago The Secular City; now in 
          1995 comes "fire from heaven"! Here to the amazement--and 
          doubtless consternation--of many, Harvey Cox declares enthusiastic affirmation 
          of "the rise of pentecostal spirituality." Today, the inauguration 
          of the Azusa Street lectureship, I will quote a few words of Cox in 
          regard to Azusa Street: "a spiritual fire roared forth that was 
          to race around the world and touch hundreds of millions of people with 
          its warmth and power" (46). Again, "it is a spiritual hurricane 
          that has already touched nearly half a billion people, and an alternative 
          vision of the human future whose impact may only be in its earliest 
          stages today" (65). Wow! Pentecostals/charismatics can only cry. 
          Fire roaring forth--a spiritual hurricane-- and Regent University, if 
          not fully at the center, represents something of the wind and fire. 
          On the much debated phenomenon of speaking in tongues Cox refers to 
          the background reason, namely, that it "is to be found in the searing 
          realization that the reality of God utterly transcends our puny capacity 
          to describe it." "Our corrupt and inadequate language is transformed 
          by God's love into the tongues of angels" (96). Right on again! 
          Pentecostalism represents "a religious groundswell that transcends 
          the boundaries of any single denomination" (116). Again, this speaks 
          to us at Regent that in so far as we embrace, and even promulgate, "pentecostal 
          spirituality," we are riding the groundswell to a fuller unity 
          among the worldwide people of God.  I find it fascinating to observe how Cox speaks of "pentecostal 
          spirituality" as "primal spirituality." Pentecostalism 
          "has succeeded because it has spoken to the spiritual emptiness 
          of our time by reaching beyond the levels of creed and ceremony into 
          the core of human religiousness, into what might be called 'primal spirituality,' 
          that largely unprocessed nucleus of the psyche in which the unending 
          struggle for a sense of purpose and significance goes on" (81). 
          Cox refers next to "primal speech," his term for speaking 
          in tongues which he describes as "an ecstatic experience, one in 
          which the cognitive grids...that normally prevent people from opening 
          themselves to deeper insights and exultant feelings, are temporarily 
          suspended" (86). Moreover, "tongue speaking has persisted...because 
          it represents the core of all pentecostal conviction: that the Spirit 
          of God needs no mediators but is available to anyone in an intense, 
          immediate, indeed interior way" (87). Thus Pentecostalism signifies 
          "the recovery of primal speech" (see title of chap. 4). Two 
          other aspects of "primal spirituality" are "the recovery 
          of primal piety" and "the recovery of primal hope" (see 
          titles of chaps. 4 and 5).  Now despite my appreciation of all that Cox says about "pentecostal 
          spirituality" being "primal spirituality," I have certain 
          concerns. I will mention three of them.  First, I find in Cox's approach a tendency to view Pentecostalism as 
          basically a religious expression that belongs to human existence at 
          large. It is an expression in depth of "human religiosity." 
          Cox refers to "pentecostalism's power to tap into a deep substratum 
          of human religiosity" (page 91). Thus Pentecostalism, despite its 
          depth probe, may be viewed, for example, as a form of shamanism. "My 
          own observations," says Cox," lead me to believe that the 
          answer to the question of whether there can be a Christian shamanism 
          is yes" (228).* Pentecostal spirituality lies latent within this 
          and many other forms of religious expression. But is there not something 
          distinctive about Pentecostal spirituality? Is it only a powerful breaking 
          forth of what is latent anywhere and everywhere?  This leads to a second concern: I find little reference in Fire from 
          Heaven to the Holy Spirit. One of the few references was earlier quoted 
          about "the pentecostal conviction that the Spirit of God needs 
          no mediators but is available to anyone in an intense, immediate, indeed 
          interior way." Is this the Holy Spirit that needs "no mediators," 
          etc.? Pentecostals view the Holy Spirit as being mediated through Jesus 
          Christ, and hold that the pentecostal experience rather than being an 
          internal upsurge of latency comes from the exalted Christ. In regard 
          to the Holy Spirit and Christ, the only reference to my knowledge (I 
          may have missed something here) is in Cox's statement "a special 
          encounter with the 'Holy Spirit'...was at the heart of the early Pentecostal 
          movement. But they were not just talking about any spirit. They said 
          it was the same Spirit who hovered over the primeval chaos when God 
          created the world, who spoke through the prophets, who dwelt in Jesus 
          Christ" (716). What seems to be lacking in Cox's treatise is any 
          focus on the idea of "a special encounter." For not only , 
          I would say, did the Holy Spirit dwell in Jesus; He was also sent forth 
          by Christ (see Acts 2:33). The result for Pentecostals is a special 
          encounter. This seems lacking in Cox's book wherein the Spirit represents 
          an immanent reality that may break forth at any time.  Third, and this follows, little if anything is said by Cox of the basic 
          Pentecostal conviction that the Pentecostal experience flows not only 
          out of a special encounter with the Holy Spirit, who comes from the 
          exalted Christ, but also happens to those who have found salvation. 
          Candidates for the Pentecostal experience are only those who have found 
          new life in Christ. The human situation in depth is more than the "largely 
          repressed nucleus of the psyche"; it is a nucleus of human sin 
          and evil that must be dealt with before the Holy Spirit will become 
          operational. Pentecostal spirituality is a primal spirituality-- yes--but 
          is rooted deep in a saving experience with Jesus Christ. Nothing in 
          Cox's book elucidates this matter.  Now let me speak a final personal word of challenge to Harvey Cox. 
          Despite his extraordinary knowledge of Pentecostal history and its recent 
          day spread around the world, his visitations to innumerable Pentecostal 
          gatherings and fellowship with many Pentecostal people, Cox declares 
          himself not really to be a part of it all. In the Preface Cox states 
          forthrightly, "I am not myself a pentecostal" (xvii). What 
          if Cox were to become one? Of course, I do not mean denominationally 
          so but spiritually. Would such an experience not make possible a still 
          profounder understanding of Pentecostal spirituality and the reshaping 
          of religion in the century to come?  In any event, I want to close by expressing my sincere appreciation 
          for Harvey Cox's Fire from Heaven. The book has stimulated me greatly, 
          and I view it as a landmark contribution to the far-reaching Pentecostal/charismatic 
          movement. In Cox's own words, "a spiritual fire roared forth" 
          at Azusa Street that is now being felt around the world. We can only 
          be grateful for Harvey Cox's affirmation of it.  Footnote:  *According to Webster, a shaman is "a priest or priestess who 
          uses magic for the purpose of curing the sick, divining the hidden, 
          and controlling events."      
 Content Copyright 2003 by J. Rodman Williams, 
  Ph.D. 
 
 
 
 
 
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