concerned
about college
atmosphere?
When you think about college there are things to consider. You want a good education. And that means academic excellence. But that’s not a l l . . . a good education means interaction and involvement on your own level — doing what you enjoy more than anything else. For some that has to mean athletics. And if that includes you, consider Biola College. Are you a wrestler? Our team is ranked nationally. Top men from all over the U.S. come to Biola to wrestle. Do you play basketball? Our team is young, but with three all-state stars we stand to be tough. How about baseball, soccer, cross coun try, track, tennis? We could say much
more. But why don’t you write us? And remember Biola is a distinctly Christian institution, where high spirited standards and excellent Bible courses are part of every student’s life. Professionally accredited by th e Accrediting Association of B ible Colleges and regionally by th e W estern Association of Schools and Colleges.
Director of Admissions Biola College 13800 Biola Avenue La Mirada, California 90638
“ A Message from the E d ito r”
BY DR. SAMUEL H. SUTHERLAND / PRESIDENT, BIOLA SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES, INC.
What are we coming to ? T he January 1970 issue o f Fi-Po News (Fire and Police Research Association o f Los Angeles) reveals a most revo lting situa tion which exists in Southern C a lifornia . P resumably it is ta k in g place in o the r urban areas o f o u r coun try as well. An a rtic le in th is p u b li cation describes a gala event which too k place in the home o f moving p ic tu re and TV star, Dean M artin . Over 3 0 0 guests gathered fo r th is occasion; th e entrance fee was a donation o f $ 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 per couple. In th is way over $ 2 0 0 ,0 0 0 .0 0 was raised. For what purpose? Charity, medical research, deprived ch ild ren , s u ffe rin g humanity? C e rta in ly not! The purpose o f the ga the rin g was to assist in fu n d in g “ the costs o f the American C ivil L iberties Union Police Practice Complain t Cen te rs " ! These centers have been created w ith th e ir personnel acting in th e role o f “ w a tchdog” over ou r police! A selected lis t o f ACLU a tto rne ys are constan tly available to ca rry on legal ba ttles aga inst the o ffice rs o f the law in cases o f alleged “ police b ru ta lity " o r “ police harassm ent.” The a rtic le concludes w ith th is in cred ib le statement: “ The cop on the beat m ust be ever m ind fu l o f th e well-organized and highly-financed endeavors o f those like the ACLU who are standing by, ready to challenge his every action as he a ttem p ts to perform his du tie s o f en fo rc ing th e law. Yes, th a t cop on the beat is also fu lly aware th a t w h ile the re are centers set up to so lic it anti-police in fo rm a tion , he w ill not fin d any coun te rpa rt centers handing him commendations o r supp o rtin g him in his a c tio n s .” The tra ve s ty o f th e whole business is th a t these ACLU atto rneys are looked upon w ith fa vo r by many judges in ou r land. O f course, th e news media are on ly too happy to get te s tim on y from these a tto rneys so they can give them extended coverage in newspapers, radio, and television. The police ra re ly have o p p o rtu n ity to present th e ir side. W ith th is ho rrib le fa c t in m ind one wonders why any young man would be in terested in becom ing a lawman, a peace o ffice r, in th is coun try. O ur hats are o ff to those courageous ones who, know ing these hazards, jo in us to “ PROTECT AND SERVE” * us all!
To re tu rn to the gala at the M a rtin home: Ano the r amazing fa c t was th e lis t o f those in attendance. Heading the lis t a t th is ACLU fund -ra is ing pa rty was U.S. Senator Alan Cranston (D -Californ ia). An o the r prom inen t po litica l fig u re was Councilman Thomas Bradley, de feated cand ida te in the recent Los Angeles m ayoralty election. In view o f his supp o rt o f th is kind o f th ing , one shudders to th in k how close he came to being elected! Why th e J u n io r Senator from Ca li fo rn ia would pay $ 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 in to such a slush fund fo r the express purpose o f d is c re d itin g the police who are hired to p ro tect not only the state, city, and towns b u t also his home, his person, his loved ones is too d iffic u lt to understand. What would he have to say if some n ig h t his home was broken in to and his fam ily molested, while the police stood id ly by fo r fea r o f being accused o f “ police b ru ta lity " *T h e slogan which appears on all police cars.
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fo r in te rfe rin g w ith those who were de sp o iling th e Senator’s home? It is in cred ib le th a t th is is the type o f ind ividua l C a lifo rn ia voters sent to Washington to represent them on the national scene. His vo ting record there po in ts to th e fa c t th a t th is re la tionsh ip w ith ACLU was not a mere “ happenstance.” It is tra g ic th a t fo u r years m ust elapse before he m ust face th e voters again in an appeal fo r re-election. We tru s t th is episode w ill no t be fo rgo tten when the citizens enter the p o lling booth a t th a t election. Not only were p rom inen t p o litic ia n s present on th is p a rticu la r occasion b u t also actors and actresses, whose names are household words due to th e ir TV shows, were likew ise present in large numbers. Among them were Polly Bergen, M ilton Berle, Joey Bishop, Tony Cur tis , K irk Douglas, B u rt Lancaster, some o f the S inatra trib e , Andy W illiam s and others. A ll paid $ 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 each toward a fund estab lished fo r th e express purpose o f in tim id a tin g the police in th e ir e ffo rts to m a intain law and order; to hire cra fty, unscrupu lous lawyers to defend the lawless element whenever these characters fa ll in to the clu tches o f the law. To th in k th a t these show-business persona lities are the idols o f o u r American youth— and o f many o f th e ad u lts as well! As a m a tte r o f fact, the whole moving pictu re in d u s try is shot th rough and th ro ugh w ith those who want to see our American way o f life changed com plete ly to conform to th e ir comm u n is tic ideology and gu tte r-like type o f m o ra lity. These are the ones who go ju s t as fa r as the y dare in de p ic tin g sin, vice, co rru p tion , and im m o ra lity— not to condemn it— bu t fo r en te rta inm en t, and fo r appeal on ly and exclusively to the p ru rie n t interests and lusts o f a s p iritu a lly and m o ra lly decadent pub lic. Yet the most tra g ic aspect o f all o f th is is th a t so many otherw ise good, solid, law -abiding C h ristian American citizens aid and abe t th is kind o f life by sup p o rtin g th e movies and a llow ing tra sh y TV program s to have a place in th e ir homes. In these shows these anti-American characters are featured and no th ing is ever done o r said about the m atter. No voices are raised in protest; no demands are made o f pastors th a t sermons be preached against these social and moral evils. These people do not cast th e ir votes aga inst th e p o litic ia n s who are tea rin g down ou r mores and standards no r do the y vote to reject members o f the ju d ic ia ry who have an ou tspokenly perm issive a tti tude toward lawlessness, lawbreakers, and th e de file rs o f o u r land. Some w ill vote th e pa rty line whoever runs. A generation ago, one citizen said he was a Republican and if the devil ran on th a t tic ke t, he would vote fo r him ; th is was repeated by a Democrat, who n a tu ra l ly pu t his pa rty firs t. It figures! We believe the re is a great s ile n t m a jo rity o f good, solid Am e ri cans who believe a righ t, from a moral po in t o f view. If on ly we could un ite and make o u r concerted e ffo rts coun t fo r th e utmost, perhaps we m igh t s till tu rn back th e forces o f evil. The hou r is late; tim e is runn ing out in which such a reversal can be accomplished. But there comes to m ind the te rrify in g th o u g h t th a t unless th is right-about- face takes place very soon, laws may be enacted which w ill deprive us com plete ly o f o u r re lig ious freedoms. We shall wake up some m o rn ing and not be able to enjoy th e lib e rty which cost so much in blood and sweat and tears o f the p a trio ts who came before us. God g ran t it may never happen bu t le t us awake o u t o f ou r fa ta l sleep!
Dedicated to the spiritual development of the Christian home
THE KING’S BUSINESS
LA MIRADA, CALIFORNIA 9 0 6 3 8 TH E K ING ’S BUSINESS Magazine is a publication of BIOLA SCHOOLS and COLLEGES, INC. Louis T. Talbot, Chancellor, S. H. Sutherland, President. Articles: The Rejoicing Crisis / Dick Hillis 10 Youth Meet the President / Peggy Sanders 14 Bliss or Burning / Douglas C. Hartley 17 The Holiness of God / Vance Havner 19 Importance of Christian Radio / Charles Feinberg 24 The Spirit Saves / Lehman Strauss 26 Features: Message from the Editor / Samuel Sutherland 3 People in the News 5 Cults’ Critique / Betty Bruechert 6 Dr. Talbot's Question Box / Louis Talbot 8 Innovations in Learning / H. Norman Wright 22 Book Highlights and Reviews 28 Over a Cup of Coffee / Joyce Landorf 30 Christian Workers' Clinic / C. Chester Larson 32 Talking it Over / Clyde Narramore 33 Cover: Grand Tetons from Blacktail Pond, Wyoming. Photo by Gene Ahrens, New Milford, New Jersey. Editor: S. H. SUTHERLAND Managing Editor: B ILL EHMANN A rt Director: JOHN OZMON Copy Editor: BETTY BRUECHERT Christian Education Editor: H. NORMAN WR IGHT C irculation Manager: LOUISE POND Treasurer: PAUL SCHWEPKER Subscription Rates: TH E KING'S BUSINESS is pub lished m onthly with the exception of July/ August issue which is combined. U.S., its posses sions, and Canada, $3.00 one year; $1.50 six months, 30 cents, single copy. Clubs of three or more at special rates. A dd 90 cents extra for Canadian and Foreign subscriptions. Allow one month for a change of address to become effec tive. Please send both old and new address. Remittances should be made by bankdraft. ex press, or post office money order payable to TH E KING'S BUSINESS. Advertising: For informa tion address the Advertising Manager, TH E KING'S BUSINESS, 13800 Biola Ave., La Mirada, California 90638. Manuscripts: TH E KING'S BUSI NESS cannot accept responsibility for loss or damage to manuscripts mailed to us for consid eration. Second class postage paid in La Mirada, California. Printed in U.S.A. by Church Press, Glendale, California.
TH E K ING ’S BUSINESS
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D r. S a m u e l H . Sutherland, Presi d e n t o f B io la Schools and Col leges, La M irada, California, has an nounced r e t ir e
m ent effective Au gust, 1 9 7 0 . H av ing been associ ated w ith Biola s in c e 1 9 1 8 , he has been employed since 1 9 3 1 . He be cam e president in 1951. Dr. Sutherland Dallas Theological Sem inary, Dallas, Texas, was voted into m embership in th e Southern Association of Colleges and Schools a t its annual m eeting in De cem ber. M em bership in th is regional educational accrediting agency repre sents th e accreditation of th e education- al program of Dallas Sem inary which involves M asters’ and Doctors’ degree programs. Taping sessions fo r th e nationw ide telecast "D a y of D iscovery" are being film ed a t th e Bayfront Auditorium in St. Petersburg, Florida, again this sea son according to R ICHARD W. DeHAAN, president of th e Radio Bible Class and speaker on th e telecast. Consideration had been given to producing th e pro gram s in th e studio th is season. Ses sions a t th e Bayfront Auditorium to which th e public is invited are scheduled fo r June 2 , 16, and 2 3 . The telecast also plans several programs during 1 9 7 0 which will originate from Washington D.C. and California. M ou nt Herm on Christian Conference C enter has im m ediate openings fo r sum m er student s ta ff workers in 1 9 7 0 . Bro chures and applications are available from REV. R ICHARD J. DOSKER, Assis ta n t Director of th e M ou nt Hermon Asso ciation, M ou nt Hermon, Calif. 9 5 0 4 1 . N early fifty m issionaries attended the Ken Anderson Film Studios Annual M is sionary Photography Sem inary in Decem ber a t th e W inona Lake headquarters. Fifth in th e annual series, th e purpose o f th e sem inar is to assist m issionaries in using th e cam era and modern record ing facilities as instrum ents of vital com munication. Dates fo r th e 1 9 7 0 confer ence have been set fo r D ecember 8, 9 , and 10. DAN IEL BURKE, President Emeritus of th e American Bible Society since 19 6 2 , died a t his hom e in S umm it, New Jersey on January 2 6 , a fte r a long ill ness. H e was 9 6 years old.
A lonely child, loved by God, longs for your love
S he is h u n g ry, lonely, and frig h te n e d b u t she is c o n fid e n t th a t God loves her and th a t He w ill a n sw e r her prayers fo r som eone w ho w ill love h e r and care fo r her. W ill you be th e ch a n n el th ro u g h w h ich God answ ers her prayers? S he needs a g re a t deal o f love and a re la tive ly sm all am o u n t o f money. Tw elve d o l la rs a m onth (a b o u t 400 a day) w ill give her foo d , c lo th in g , health care, and a C h ristia n
home. Your love w ill g ive h e r th e fe e lin g th a t she belongs, th a t som ebody cares. W hen you sp o n so r y o u r ow n little g irl o r boy in K orea, Indonesia, In d ia , o r H a iti, yo u r c h ild know s you by name. You e xchange le tte rs and p ictu re s. You share y o u r love and are ric h e r fo r it. Some day th e w o rld m ay be a b e tte r p lace, because you fille d in th is cou p o n an d gave a little o f yo u rs e lf to one sm all c h ild to day.
C U T O U T A N D M A IL T O D A Y
C H IL D R E N L IK E T H E S E N E E D LO VE.
Y P C I ' want to sponsor a lonely child today. I understand I may ■ t w S discontinue at any time. COMPASSION, in c . REV. HENRY HARVEY. PRESIDENT, 7774 IRVING PARK ROAD, CHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60634 (Canadian residents w rite Box 880, Blenheim, Ontario) I prefer a □ boy or □ girl, approximately_____years old, from the land of__ K-40 Please rush FULL particulars. Enclosed is □ $12 for first month □ $144 for first year. □ Select a child for me from the most needy country. □ I am unable to sponsor, but wish to contribute $ ___________for general child care. □ Please rush further information today. □ Send my FREE tapestry at once.
Durga Joseph ■ - F R E E ! Mf iff You will receive a §§ lovely colorful hand- p | § | embroidered tapestry ■ m direct from the Orient if you w ill sponsor a vm&zm needy child.
Name«.
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11 7ip Make checks payable t APRIL, 1 9 7 0 g Loving Father by Mizpah Woffenden Loving Father, holy, gra cious! As I kneel to seek Thy face, May I bow in deep contri tion, L ean ing only on Thy grace. Loving counsel hast Thou given, In Thy Word, for me to see; May my footsteps follow only, In Thy way laid out for me. Loving Father, may I ever, Keep my heart for Thy de light; May I trust for my sustain ing, In Thy holy power and might. Abba, Father, gracious, ten der; Hear the child, Thy love hath bought; Cleanse me, mold me, guide me, keep me; Make me love Thee as I ought. THAT LITTLE CHAP WHO FOLLOWS ME A careful man, I want to be; A little fellow follows me. I do not dare to go astray, For fear he'll go the self-same way. I cannot once escape his eyes; Whatever he sees me do, he tries. Like me, he says he going to be, That little chap who follows me. He thinks that I am good and fine, Believes in every word of mine. The bad in me, he must not see; M y life must an example be. I must remember, as I go Through summer's sun and winter's snow, I am building for the years to be, That little chap who follows me. Psalms 37:23-24. Romans 8:14-17 A num ber o f years ago, when Los Angeles fir s t became the c u lt center o f th e U.S.A., some one wrote: “ A ll it takes to s ta rt a re ligion is to w rap a tu rb an about one’s head and s it in the sun under a palm tre e w ith a book.” Appa r e n tly it is not much ha rder today to found a c u lt o r to become a m in is te r o f one, according to an a rti cle in “ T im e " magazine, 2 /2 1 /6 9 , en titled “ Mail - O rder M in is te rs ” * from which we quo te by pe rm is sion: “ All a candidate needs is a postage stamp. Any man, woman or ch ild can become a m in is te r in the Universal Life Church. The only th in g th a t Hensley [w ho founded th is c u lt in 1962 a t Modesto, C a li fo rn ia ] demands is a name and ad dress so th a t he can fill ou t the ce r tific a te . A fte r tha t, the new m in is te r is on his own. In C a lifo rn ia , and according to Hensley, in many o th er states, he can pe rform marriages ( if he is over 21 ), o ffic ia te a t fu n e r als, dedicate churches, baptize, take up co llections and ordain o th er m in is te rs .” Founder K irby James Hensley cla im s a m embersh ip o f 18 ,000 and 1,000 m in iste rs. A lthough he cannot read o r w rite , he possesses a m a il-o rde r Ph.D. and an honorary degree in m e ta llu rg y and makes a liv in g as con tracto r. “ T im e " quotes him : “ My w ife and o the r people read the verses to me, and I would m em b rize them ; I have a good mem- bry . . . I membrized the B ible from Genesis all th e way th rough , and then I realized I was only he lping Peter, Paul and John to preach th e ir story. I had my ideas to preach too . . . I believe heaven is when you have what you want and hell is when you do n ’t have it . . . I be lieve in reinca rna tion, an eternal beam in you r body th a t moves from one to another. I believe th a t death is no th ing more than a lapse o f m emb ry from one life to the next. I believe th a t Jesus C h ris t was a human being ju s t like me and you w ith a little advanced knowledge. He was the Son o f Man, g it me?” He most ce rta in ly d id depa rt from the Gospel th a t Peter, Paul and John preached in the Word o f God! Meantime he continues m e rrily on his taxfree way, having complied w ith requirem ents o f incorpora tion and church charter, issu ing even D.D. degrees fo r $ 2 0 .0 0 each! *Courte$y TIME; copyright Time Inc. 1969. KB TH E K ING 'S BUSINESS 6 ____ I I r e l e v a n t . • • S tu d C e AS a n 9 f 'ss^ 0 m°ent'o n a ^ | s w h o “ ^ s s S ï s - f . " Lea h a dW ot'dNN'd T o n situations as e x c H » n 9 ‘ ‘ t o d a y i t h i s >s jv/Wssions n • nc no \onger.eX canoe 5 a p'odd'09 . . m a he back ot a P - ^ n / o 30 th ^ ° ° r ? a London also on^basemen\°l .aetandthe . \n th® , oeed of the ^ passes am . . . ° r of V °u r . c 0 re'ign Miss' a the mu buu°- « V R e vo lu tio n » * ■R ____ ~ \ intimacy ^ x h the y - ____ * «I/O ____ ____ » !*■ * * ° \ Yes. missions eXcVtìng'. \t' S re\e'/ant • • 0 ',recto' ' N 8 ” rrtca 9 0 ." W ° , s ” - t » “°“ 608,0 ' ■ 8 *n be a pan , me tbe '< \ Y t S U S S f ^ ^ ^ ; _ _ _ i \ y eat ¡0 s0''00' " NloodV APRIL, 1 9 7 0 7 th a t is really o u r o p p o rtun ity to w it ness to them o f ou r Saviour. FIRST PROMISE OF THE CROSS? Q. Does Genesis 3 :1 5 re fe r to C h ris t’s com ing as a Saviour? Does it describe th e c o n flic t between the devil and God? A. Yes, to both questions. God spoke to the serpent, pronouncing upon him the curse, o f which a pa rt was th is : “ I w ill put enm ity between thee and th e w om an ." Now, o f course, the serpent was bu t a tool o f Satan. It was the devil who was speaking. Satan is the enemy o f C h ris t and o f every C h ris tian ; he is called “ o u r adversary, th e d e v il” (I Peter 5 :8 ). He is ever seeking to tu rn man from th e w o r sh ip o f God to h im se lf. Even the beast, who was used by Satan, is hostile to man, h issing a t him and b itin g him and c ru sh ing him when possible. No one likes snakes. But the real hatred discussed in Gene sis is th a t between “ th a t old ser pent, the d e v il” (Rev. 2 0 :2 ), and C h rist and His servant, man. Note th e words: “ And between th y seed and her seed ." Here the seed o f the woman is none other than o u r Lord Jesus C h rist. This is the very fir s t prophecy o f His v ir gin b irth . In many passages He is called “ th e seed,” meaning the prom ised Son o f Man. Jesus C h rist was in very tru th “ the seed o f the w om an ," not o f man; fo r He had no human fa the r. Now Satan hates Christ, seeks in every way to thw a rt His great purpose fo r man, sought to tu rn the w o rship o f C h ris t to him se lf, b u t fa iled to obtain it. In every p a rtic u la r the re is enm ity be tween ou r sinless Saviour and the arch-enemy o f our souls. Ephesians 6 :1 2 describes th e kingdom o f Satan and his demons who w ith stand th e C h ristian and in th a t chap te r ou r a rm o r aga inst him is delineated. T h is we m ust put on daily. G e n e s is 3 :1 5 s t a t e s : “ He [C h ris t] shall bruise th y head [God here was speaking to the ser p en t] and thou sha lt bruise his [C h ris t's ] hee l.” The head is the seat o f government. Po ten tially TH E K ING ’S BUSINESS Ephesians 2 :8 -9 states: “ For by grace are ye saved th rough fa ith ; and th a t not o f yourselves; it is the g ift o f God; Not o f works, lest any man should boa st.” Read very care fu lly Romans, th e 10th chapter, and note p a rtic u la rly verse 4 : “ For C h rist is the end o f the law fo r righteousness to everyone th a t be- lie ve th .” When we are saved by fa ith in th e Son o f God, tu rn ou r lives over to Him, re lying upon Him com plete ly fo r salvation, we are born again; we become new crea tu re s in C h rist, and by the Holy S p irit are able to fu lfill the law, in fact, go fa r beyond it, fo r we then live by the S p irit o f life in Ch rist Jesus. COMPLETE SEPARATION POSSIBLE? Q. Please explain I C o rinth ians 5:9, 10, especially the last clause which is puzzling to me. It sounds as if com plete separation from the world was not possible fo r the Ch ristian. A. It does not teach any th ing o f the kind. The Word o f God is fu ll o f commands to separate ourselves from the sins o f th e world and its way o f life. Take I John 2 :15, fo r instance: “ Love not the wo rld, ne i th e r th e th in g s th a t are in the world. If any man love the world, th e love o f the Father is •not in h im .” In th is le tte r to the C o rin th i ans, Paul is exho rting C h ristians to live separated from the world but he is very practical. He makes it plain they are not to engage in the evils o f the wo rld; to be in tim a te w ith fo rn ica to rs , covetous, ex to r tione rs, idolaters, etc. Especially does he deal w ith professing C h ris tian s who live evil lives and states th a t the believer m ust not “ keep company” w ith them . But the clause you refe rred to makes it pos sible fo r C h ristians to ca rry on business dealings w ith unsaved people; otherw ise he says tru ly “ fo r then [ i f you do n o t] m ust ye needs go out o f the w o rld ." We do not re fuse to buy bread and meat, o r go to doctors o r den tists, who are not saved, although we would p re fe r to ; da ily we deal w ith th e unsaved and DR m m o l ’s Q U E S T IO N B O X BELIEVING AND DOING Q. How do you harmonize the fa c t th a t we can do no th ing to be saved w ith Romans 2 :13 : “ Not the hear ers o f the law are ju s t before God, but the doers o f the law shall be ju s tifie d ” ? A. When Paul w rote these words, under th e guidance o f the Holy S p irit, he was addressing people who appa ren tly believed as you do. They were tru s tin g in th e law fo r th e ir salvation. They gloried in the fa c t th a t it was given to them . Yet the very law condemned everyone o f them . They d id not— could not — keep it. Paul rem inded them th a t if they expected to be saved by the law, they had to keep it, not merely hear it, which the y were not doing. Paul makes clea r the m a tte r o f salvation in Romans 3 :19 , 20: "N ow we know th a t whatsoever the law saith, it saith to them who are under th e law: th a t every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become g u ilty before God. Therefore by th e deeds o f the law the re shall no flesh be ju s tifie d in his sight; fo r by the law is the know ledge o f s in .” All the law could do was to condemn the sinner, and d rive him to the Saviour. 8 C h rist bruised Satan's “ head” when He died and rose again, thu s a ccom p lish ing His redemptive work fo r m ankind, and lite ra lly He w ill seal Satan’s doom fo re ve r when He casts him in to th e lake o f fire “ to be to rm en ted day and n igh t fo r ever and ever” (Rev. 20 :1 0 ). Satan d id bruise C h ris t’s “ heel” on the cross, when Jesus suffe red and died. But death could not hold Him and some day H is to ta l v ic to ry over sin and Satan and death w ill be manifested. MoodyAnnuities provideINCOME forLIFE Pius support for these ministries MOODY LITERATURE M ISS ION Distributes millions of pieces of literature in schools, hospitals and jails; also assists mission agencies to produce Christian materials in more than one hundred languages. 1970 SUMMER TRAVEL PROGRAM MOODY IN S TITU TE OF SCIENCE Produces the “Sermon from Science” films used so effectively at three world’s fairs, by the armed forces and by missionaries around the world. RADIO • MOODY MONTHLY • BIBLE CONFERENCE M IN IS TRY • MOODY PRESS Write: Annuity Department Dept. 4K 0 M O O D Y B I B L E I N S T I T U T E 820 N. LaSalle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60610 Please send me, without obligation, information on: □ Gift Annuity Plans; □ Life Income Agreements; □ Deferred Annuity Plan; □ Wills. Date of Name Birth 6 3 years w ithou t loss to an annuitant! 1. Bible Lands Tour visiting Israel, Greece, Italy. July 7 - August 21. $ 1 3 9 5 . 2. Spain, North Address City W rite for Information Africa, Near East. July 12 - August 2. $995 . Zip State 3 . Central America. July 1 0 -August 21. $44 5 . 4 . European Countries July 12 - August 2. $79 5 . For complete information ISRAEL CARMONA, TOUR COORDINATOR Biola College La Mirada, California 9 0 6 3 8 D R . H A R U N J . RO PE R’S THROUGH THE BIBLE STUDY Chapter-by-Chapter Study of the WHOLE'.BfBLE For* Sunday Schools • Groups • Individuals — Write for FREE folder — THROUGH THE BIBLE PUBLISHERS 4032K Swiss Avenue • Dallas 4, Texas INTERNATIONAL DO YOU FIND IT HARD to speak to others about their S A LV A TIO N ? their FEARS? their TROUBLES? their SOR ROWS? Many Christians do. A n d yet they sincerely want their lives to be an influence for the Lord. There is a way of approach that is courteous and effective. Use our leaflets and booklets specially prepared for spiritual needs. Only Bible verses used with appropri ate headings. Sample titles: GOD'S MESSAGE T O Y O U . 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Write MOUNT HERMON CHRISTIAN CONFERENCE CENTER, Box 413 KB, Mount Hermon, Calif. 95041; or call (408) 335-4466. by Dich Hillis A tru e m issio n a ry s to ry from the C anadian N o rth b y BERNARD PALMER Reads like a novel, but this book captures the actual ex p e r i e n c e s o f o n e m a n ' s battles and achievements in bringing God's W ord to a tribe far rem oved from civil ization. a t y o u r b o o ksto re BETHANYFELLOWSHIP, INC. M in n e a p o lis , M in n . 5 5431 TH E K IN G ’S BUSINESS IO M ISS JOY RIDDERHOF . . . M issionary to Hon duras. Founder and D irector o f Gospel Record ings. And every tongue shall confess th a t Jesus Ch rist is Lord, to the g lo ry o f God the Father (Ph ilipp ia n s 2:11, Living Letters). “ You a m issionary?" M r. R idderhof laughed be n ign ly a t his youngest daughter. “ Joy, da rling , be rea sonable!” Mr. R idderhof tu rn ed to the v is itin g Quaker m is sionary and explained, “ Our Joy is much too fun -lo v ing and im p ractica l to be a m issionary. But you m ust meet o u r daugh te r Amy. What a fine m issionary she’ ll make!” Joy R idderhof got the same reaction from her school friend s . "Y ou in A frica?” they would chortle. "O h , Joy, y ou ’ re a fra id o f a frog . You’d never be able to live in A frica, w ith w itch doctors and lions and py th o n s .” They were righ t, Joy adm itted sadly. Her o lder s is te r Amy had all the qua lifica tion s fo r m issionary service. Joy could not do much o f anything. S till, she clung w is tfu lly to th e dream o f serving God in A frica. Joy’s dream was born as she listened to a m is sionary message when she was ju s t five years old. A woman spoke about the needs o f Honduras, and lit tle Joy w ished th a t some day she m igh t go and te ll fo re ign people abou t God. The stream o f m issionaries v is itin g in the R idder hof home in Los Angeles kept Joy’s dream alive and interested her p a rtic u la rly in Ethiopia and the Sudan. Joy attended Bible school, spent two years in practical church w o rk in M iam i, and completed a de gree in professional education a t U.C.L.A. In the s p ring o f 1930, M iss R idderhof was ready to go to the m ission fie ld . Tha t sp ring very few Americans were going any where, except bankrup t. But Joy's God was not bank rupt. He sent her fir s t to the very parish in Honduras whose needs had fir s t aroused her compassion. There the g irl who was “ too im p ra c tic a l” to be a m issionary survived two revolu tions and constan t per secution w ith the trium p h a n t testim on y th a t “ Fierce battles lead to g lo rious v ic to rie s .” Too sick to return to Honduras a fte r her fir s t te rm , Joy seized pick and shovel, hammer and nails, and tu rned a d irt-flo o re d Los Angeles stable in to a snug recording studio. The g irl who “ co u ld n ’t do an y th in g ” mastered the te chn ica litie s o f the fin e s t recording equ ipm ent. She traveled from Alaskan igloos to stone-age New Guinea, recording the Gospel message in the languages of illite ra te tribes. The c h ild who was a fra id o f frog s grew up to spend a year in the P h ilipp ine jungles. In th e shan tie s o f brown-skinned natives, she endured gekko liz ards and monsoon rains. The g irl who was “ too im p ra c tic a l” to be a m is sionary now d ire c ts a recording studio, pressing and processing plants, and a phonograph fa c to ry in Los Angeles. She supervises a hundred workers, oversees branch officves in six coun tries, and tra in s and directs fie ld workers. “ It is good,” Joy adm its, “ I did not know in the beg inning how vast th e ta sk was to be bu t I d id know th a t God had pledged His Word. Of Abraham he said, ‘ But Abraham never doubted. He believed God, fo r his fa ith and tru s t were strong, and he praised God fo r th is blessing before it even happened. He was com plete ly sure th a t God was well able to do any th in g He prom ised, (Rom. 4:20, 21, Living Letters). Could I not accept th is inheritance too?” Through five m illio n w h irlin g discs in over th re e thousand languages and dialects, Joy R idde rho f's fa ith speaks to th e wo rld. Testim onies to new life th ro ugh th e recorded message pour onto her Los An geles desk d a ily from th e fo u r corners o f the earth. What tu rn ed th e w is tfu l R idderhof g irl in to a wom an o f vic to riou s faith? In th ree stages Joy recounts the experiences th a t led to th e fo un d ing o f Gospel Recordings: The healing o f her d ispo s ition ; The fo l low -through o f obedience; The secret o f rejoicing. Her frien d s and fam ily good-naturedly disparaged her m issionary ideals. Bu t th a t d id not bother school g irl Joy too much. She was not pa rtic u la rly concerned abou t her lack o f a b ility o r a dap tab ility . One th in g tro u b le d her— her d isposition . Joy set high standards. M issionaries m ust be v ic to rio u s C h ristians in every-day life , especially in th e ir homes. Joy knew she d id not qua lify. “ I wanted to be good ,” she says, “ bu t I was w ill fu l. I was often cranky and cross. I was selfish, very c ritic a l, easily aggravated. I fussed a t my m other and blamed her fo r th ing s th a t we ren’t her fa u lt. The man ners o f my b rothers and siste rs annoyed and em ba r rassed me. I qua rreled w ith Amy, my closest s is te r.” To the Friends' m eeting th a t the R idderhofs a t tended in Los Angeles the re came old-fashioned fie ry evangelists who preached the ve ritie s o f sin, o f rig h t eousness, and o f judgm en t; “ . . . one who is not holy w ill not see th e Lo rd ” (Hebrews 12:14, Living Letters), the y thunde red . The te x t dug deeply in to Joy’s consciousness and convicted her o f need in the give and ta ke o f da ily living. Impatience, sho rt temper, irrita tio n — were these normal tra its fo r a c h ild o f God? “ You don ’t act like a C h ris tia n ,” said Joy in d ig nan tly one day, app ly ing her high standa rds to her APRIL, 1 9 7 0 11 o lde r sister. fa ll over a steep precipice and be lost if I did, bu t the word trust rescued me. I tru s ted th a t God’s arm s re ceived me, th a t H is S p irit had taken c o n tro l.” For Joy R idderhof, su rre nde r was an act o f the w ill, not an em otional experience. In th e fo llow ing months, as she watched God tu rn her in to the kind o f person she fe lt a m issionary should be, her heart fille d w ith gladness. M iss R idderhof likes to say th a t life began fo r her then. Imm ediately ahead o f her lay seven years o f tra in in g and patience and then a c ris is o f decision about her m issionary call. Several th in g s in those years could have held Joy back from m issionary service. A man she loved p ro posed to her. She tu rned him down because o f her m issionary comm itm en t. S till, the desire to have a home and fam ily pulled strongly. Later the frien d sh ip was renewed. Because Joy had no imm ediate plans fo r going to fie ld , she decided to say “ Y e s " to him but was prevented in the s im p lest possible way. He never “ popped” the question again! For two years Joy d id church w o rk in M iam i. In a fast-grow ing comm unity, she saw much fr u it among needy people. Lives were tran sfo rm ed . Prayers were answered. Young people were steered in to Christian service. Should Joy remain in Florida and continue to serve God there? Perhaps some o f the young peo ple she influenced would become m issionaries in her place. Bu t fam ily needs in Los Angeles recalled Joy to the West Coast. There she tu rn ed her face once more towards A frica as she set to work to com plete her studies a t U.C.L.A. fo r a teache r's credentia l. About to graduate, Joy looked around fo r m ission ary openings. There were none. The depression had closed the doors. M issions were conside ring re tren ch ment. What should she do? She had already bypassed m arriage and a successful m in is try in M iam i. Joy possessed a b rillia n t m ind. Her high grades and recommendations b rough t her an in v ita tion to teach in th e Los Angeles school system. She was de lighted. She could earn a com fo rtab le salary in spite o f the depression. She could save money fo r her m is sionary o u tfit and she could help pay her own way to A frica. When a college B ible class teacher asked Joy what she planned to do a fte r gradua tion, Joy to ld her, “ I’m going to teach fo r a year o r two and then app ly to the Sudan In te rio r M ission o r A frica Inland M ission .” The teache r looked a t Joy in su rp rise and said, “ But you know the tim e is s h o rt.” Joy went home and faced the m atter. She prayed, “ Lord, if You want me to go abroad now, show me an “ N e ithe r do y o u ," reto rted Amy. “ No, bu t I expect to when I’m you r age.” Yet Joy was no be tte r as she grew older. She d is appointed herself daily. Was she to rtu rin g her con science unnecessarily? Going outside the Quaker fe l lowship, Joy found preachers who to ld her she could never expect anyth ing more in th is life than daily defeats. Outside o f her home, Joy seemed a model C h ris tian . She invited her schoolmates to church youth classes and attended the meetings fa ith fu lly herself. She never le t down the s tric t standards o f her home and church. She was active in a ll sorts o f Christian Endeavor, stree t meetings and c ity m issions. As soon as she enrolled at U.C.L.A., she hunted up o the r C h ristians and found a prayer group th a t met every m orning. Joy made it her p rim a ry ob liga tion in life to attend those 7 :45 a.m. prayer meetings each day. The need to w itness fo r C h ris t rested heavily upon her, and she forced herself to speak to other students about her Saviour. C h ris tia n ity fo r Joy R idderhof, college freshman, age twenty, was a lis t o f a rb itra ry negatives and a parallel lis t o f arduous obliga tions. Ever w ith her was th e nagging consciousness o f her fa ilu re s at home. Surrender? Of course, the solution was to su rren de r her life com plete ly to God. Joy trie d it . . . no re su lt. She went on praying, fre ttin g , hungering. Du ring fin a ls week, Joy was drawn away from her anxieties about her grades by a conference a t the Friends church. Dr. R. C. McQuilken was scheduled to speak on “ The V icto rious L ife ,” basing his messages upon the book o f Romans. If the subject b rough t M iss R idderhof to the firs t meeting, the speaker kept her com ing. The assurance in his voice, the radiance on his face, the freedom and joy o f his s p irit gave a ring o f rea lity to his words. “ What a s u rp ris e !” says Joy, de sc rib ing the im pact o f those sermons. “ Instead o f ha rp ing on the sins o f anger o r bad tem per, he bore down hard on the w o rst o f my defeats— worry. ‘Worry is a s in ,' he would say. " I was undone. W ith all my s p iritu a l inadequacy I had thoug h t th a t a t least my concern fo r my own cond ition was commendable. But now I saw it fo r what it was— w o rry— a slap in the face o f a loving, a ll-powe rful God. No wonder my a ttem p ts a t su rre n der h a d n 't worked. I’d never surrendered my righ t to fuss over my own s p iritu a l life .” S ittin g in the church, hearing the words “ su rre n d e r” and “ tr u s t," Joy a t last let go o f her own e ffo rts to live like a C h ristian. “ It seemed as though I would 12 TH E K ING ’S BUS INESS open doo r before the date o f en te ring in to my con ta c t w ith th e c ity schools. If You w ill give me an open ing, I’ ll go to the m ission fie ld ." O f course, Joy meant she would go to A frica. Several days later, a member o f her church asked M iss R idderhof if she would be interested in w o rk ing in Honduras under the Quaker M ission Board. A needy post was em pty there. “ I was shocked,” recalls Joy. “ I a lm os t fe lt like Jephthah w ith my rash vow. I was caug h t.” Joy R idderhof fe lt no pull toward Latin America. As a little g irl, she had been a fra id o f Mexicans and would cross the stree t to avoid them in Los Angeles. She d id not know any o f the m issionaries in the Quaker wo rk in Honduras. Besides, she planned to apply to one o f the in terdenom inational fa ith m is sions. Though the y attended a Friends church, the R idderhofs had never iden tified w ith the denom ina tion. Joy’s hea rt was heavy. A strange coun try, s tra n gers to work w ith , a denom ination to serve, and o f all fie ld s , Latin America! But in the face o f her prom ise to God, how could she refuse? “ I waited before the W ord,” says M iss R idderhof. “ I hoped in the S crip tu re to fin d some ‘o u t’ o r else some very clear command to go. But no special mes sage was given me, ju s t the general im pact o f the Great Comm ission. I d id n ’t fin d any th ing to bolste r up my resistance or to urge me fo rw a rd .” Her prom ise to God, her realization th a t “ the tim e is sh o rt,” and the plain tea ch ing o f S crip ture caused Joy to accept th e appo in tm en t o f the Friends m ission to Honduras. There her tim e was indeed short, and opposition faced her a t every tu rn . In a remote h ill town, she worked w ith ju s t one Ch ristian companion, an illite r ate native g irl. The Roman Catholic village p riest spared no e ffo rt to destroy her work and get rid of the Protestants. Political upheaval, p rim itiv e liv in g cond ition s, and extreme personal danger to o k th e ir to ll. Joy caught a trop ica l fever. But how could she leave th is little town where she had seen such m iracle s o f grace? She had seen lives changed by th e Gospel; she had been rescued again and again from imm inen t danger. She stood by the death beds o f those who had ju s t tu rn ed to C h rist fo r salvation. She watched helplessly as young be lievers were swept away in to revo lu tiona ry activities. She heard the testim on ie s o f new C h ristians who blessed God w ith all the words at th e ir command. The tim e was sho rt; the w o rk ju s t beginning. In the excitemen t o f service, Joy ha rdly realized the cond ition o f her own health. Back in Los Angeles fo r a belated fu rlough , Joy yearned fo r the needy in the h ills o f Honduras. A year wasted away and s till she lay in her a ttic room . The tro p ica l disease was stubborn. Seeing no immediate prospect o f sending M iss R idderhof back to th e fie ld , the m ission board dropped her support. Lying the re weak, penniless, w ith the desire o f her heart closed to her, Joy faced what she ca lls her “ re jo icing c ris is .” God had been good to her, she rem inded herself. He had lifte d from her the burden o f a w illfu l tem p e ra ment. He had given her grace to fo llow th rough on her m issionary comm itm en t. He had allowed her six intense, fru itfu l years in Honduras. The way had not been easy, b u t happiness had always followed obe dience. “ I a t la s t woke up to th e fa c t th a t even on my sick bed I m ust rejoice. God could use me rig h t the re in my g a rre t as well as on the m ission fie ld . If I would wait, w ith rejoicing, fa ith , and expectation, God would w o rk in some g rea te r way to reach th e unreached in Honduras.” Thus Gospel Recordings was born. Convalescing Joy c u t a record in Spanish fo r use back in Honduras. The a ttic became an o ffic e where s c rip ts were pre pared. H ig h -fid e lity equ ipm ent, technical aid, finances, appeared as if on cue. By the tim e Joy’s health would pe rm it her to go abroad, m issionaries to o the r coun tries had begun asking fo r Gospel records. Joy hesitated. How she longed to retu rn to Honduras! Bu t God said to her, " I have o the r sheep, too, in ano the r fo ld . I m ust b rin g them also . .. .” (John 10:16, Living Gospels). M illio n s around the w o rld had no m issionary who knew th e ir language and no B ib le to read. Joy p rom ised God th a t she would make records in any lan guage o r d ia le c t fo r which He would help her fin d speakers and tran s la to rs . Rejoicing as each new doo r opened, Joy R idder hof and her team moved fo rw ard. To the Navaho firs t, then the Mexican Indians, and the Alaskan Eski mos; to ninety-two F ilip ino trib a l groups, naked Aus tra lia n aborigines, and on to Ethiopia, the Congo, and th e Sudan. S imple Gospel messages have been recorded in over th ree thousand languages and new d ialec ts are added each week. The m issionary fa ith o f a g irl who has never o u t grown being “ too im p ra c tic a l” reaches ahead to th e day when "e v e ry tongue shall confess th a t Jesus C h ris t is L o rd ” (P h ilip p ia n s 2 :1 1 ). KB Reprinted from Chapter Seven o f Bom to Climb by Dr. Dick Hillis. Word Books, Waco, Texas. Copyright 1967. APRIL, 1 9 7 0 1 3 by Peggy Sanders O n January 8, 1970, P resident R ichard Nixon de parted from his home in San Clemente, C a lifo r nia, and headed by he licop te r fo r El Toro Marine Base where A ir Force One awaited the P resident and his pa rty fo r the tr ip back to Washington, D.C. A lso aw a iting the P resident, however, was a small group o f representatives from the B a p tis t Youth As sociation o f Southern C a lifo rn ia . Finding a unique way to present the message o f Jesus Ch rist, these young people had received special perm ission to meet w ith the P resident before his depa rtu re and to present to him th ree plaques as an “ expression o f app reciation fo r his d ig n ifie d and God-honoring” leadership o f the country. When the P residential pa rty had landed and p re lim in a ry in trodu c tion s were over, the P resident lis tened in ten tly as Kathy Dussault o f Bethel Baptist Church in Torrance, began th e presentation by hand ing M r. Nixon a scro ll bearing the signature s o f six hundred B aptist youths who could not attend, but who w ished to express “ th e ir be lie f in God and loyal ty to Am e rica .” John Burgess, First B ap tist Church o f El Monte, then presented to th e P resident a plaque bea ring the photo “ Ea rth rise ” taken from Apollo 8. Below the photo was inscribed the quo ta tion “ In the beginning God . . .” from the Scrip tu re read from space by Astronauts Borman, Lovell and Anders on Christm as eve, 1968. John explained to M r. Nixon th a t th is plaque represented the app reciation o f his fe llow Bap tist youth fo r the reading o f th is S crip tu re and th a t it was a con firm a tion o f the g roup ’s be lie f th a t the B ib lica l account o f Creation deserved recognition. Tim Robertson, from Calvary B ap tist Tabernacle in Gardena, followed John by exp la in ing to the Presi den t th a t the young people he represented believe th a t “ accom plishm ents in space have been realized because o f th e in te lligence and resources which God the C reator has given to m an.” To emphasize th is fa c t and to place space exploration in its proper per spective, Tim gave the P resident a second plaque th a t ca rried a photo o f m an's fir s t “ m oonwalk,” ac companied by the inspired words o f Psalm 8 :3 : “ When I consider th y heavens, the wo rk o f th y finge rs, the moon and the stars which thou hast ordained: What is man th a t thou a rt m ind fu l o f him?” TH E K ING ’S BUSINESS APRIL, 1 9 7 0 1 5 The th ird plaque was presented to the P resident by C raig Heaps from the B ible B ap tist Church in H un ting ton Park. Below a photo o f the earth seen from space, were im p rin ted the words from Job 26:7: “ He stre tche th out the North over the em pty place, and hangeth the earth upon n o th in g .” C raig ex plained to the P resident th a t in view o f many old s c ie n tific teachings, th is ancient quo tation from the oldest book o f the B ible contains amazing in s igh t in to the workings o f the universe and “ is considered to be a unique te s tim on y to th e tru th fu ln e s s and accuracy o f the B ib le .” As M r. Nixon w a rm ly responded to each repre sentative, he read aloud over the m icrophones o f the news media, the words w ritten on each plaque. In a le tte r given to the President, the young people also stated th e ir supp o rt o f th e P resident in his “ con tin u in g e ffo rts to achieve an honorable and la s ting peace,” and th e ir recommendation o f Jesus Ch rist, the Prince o f Peace, as the answer to th e grave problem s faced by o u r coun try and th e world. For Kathy, Tim , Criag, and John the o p p o rtun ity to meet and speak w ith the P resident o f the U.S. was indeed a rare privilege, and the th r ill o f a life tim e . For Tim , January 8 th held special im portance as he received news, a fte r m eeting the President, o f his election as S tudent Body P resident o f his high school. M r. David N icholas, BYA D irector, who also ac companied the group, la te r received a personal le tte r from Lt. Commander Charles Larson, Naval Aide to the President, comm ending the g roup 's action and fa ith . Another le tte r was received from th e P resident o f the United States h im se lf which stated: “ I want to express my thanks to you and the members o f the B ap tist Youth Association o f South ern C a lifo rn ia once again fo r the lam inated plaques and scroll pe rta in ing to th e Apollo M ission th a t you presented to me. I was very pleased to be honored th is way and to learn th a t th is group o f young people, under you r direction , are su pp o rtin g my e ffo rts in such a loyal and dedicated manner. “ W ith my g ra titud e and best wishes to all o f you .” However, th e greatest result o f th a t day was the comm un ica ting o f th e Gospel message. For in search ing fo r a unique way to present the cla im s o f Christ, the Name o f Jesus C h rist and His g lo ry was p ro claimed nationw ide by a group o f dedicated, believ ing teenagers. KB More information concerning the plaque and the out reach of BYA is available by writing to Mr. Dave Nicholas, % Talbot Theological Seminary, 13800 Biola Avenue, La Mirada, California 90638. with a space-age wall witness These "Space-Age Wall W itnesses” have been beautifully preserved for life by means o f a high pres sure plastic lam ination process. Finished in elegant satin and sur rounded by IV a inches of luxuri ous w alnut, “ Spage-Age Wall W it nesses” m ake th e perfect gift for pastors, doctors, businessmen or anyone else who desires to com m unicate a contem porary witness fo r Jesus Christ in a tasteful and dignified m anner. T h e "Space - Age W a l l Witnesses" are really beauti ful. I am delight ed with them and h a v e r e c e i v e d many good com ments from visi tors to my office. — Dr. T im F. La bi a y e P a s t o r , S c o t t Memorial Baptist C h u r c h , San Diego, Calif. I have been thoroughly delighted with m y elegant "Space-Age W all W itness." Visitors to m y office are invariably at tracted to it and its testimony.— Dr. Charles Lee Feinberg, Dean, Talbot Theo logical Seminary, La Mirada, Calif. ORDER YOURS TODAY! ______ # 1 0 1 A "Earthrise" and Genesis 1:1 Size 10" x 12" $13.95 ea. ______ # 1 0 1 B "Earthrise and John 3:16 Size 10" x 12" $13.95 ea. ______ # 2 0 1 D "Earthview " and Job 26:7 Size 10" x 12" $13.95 ea. ______ # 2 0 1 E "Earthview " and Isa. 40:22 Size 10" x 12" $13.95 ea. ------------# 4 0 1G "M oonw alk" and Psa. 8:3, 4 Size 12" x 12" $14.95 ea. Special Rates ______ Set of two (any two listed) $25.90 ______ Set of three (any three listed) $36.90 (A ll orders, plus postage and handling) Send check or money order to: Space-Age Specialties 1 4 7 2 5 La Capelle Rd. La M irada, California 9 0 6 3 8 16 TH E K ING ’S BUSINESS
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