Simpson and Tozer
#1
Posted 22 February 2008 - 09:12 PM
When I came into the Alliance (1998/1999 started my approval process), I heard Tozer talked about and quoted A LOT! It seemed, to me, like Simpson was an afterthought. Fast forward almost 10 years to present day. I hear Simpson talked about and quoted A LOT! And it seems, to me, like Tozer has become an afterthought. I base this only on my own interactions with Alliance pastors, newsletters and what stands out to me in ALife.
Does anyone else see a shift from Tozer back to more of Simpson? If so, why do you think it is happening? For now, I am not hinting if this shift is positive or negative - just reflecting on a shift I see.
Or, maybe I am on my own on this one!
#2
Posted 23 February 2008 - 05:55 AM
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#3
Posted 23 February 2008 - 07:06 AM
#4
Posted 23 February 2008 - 09:52 AM
Simpson was a visionary, and a gifted and charismatic leader. For those who are unfamiliar or interested in reading some of his works, his writings can be found on line at:
http://www.cmallianc.../ab_simpson.jsp
#5
Posted 27 February 2008 - 01:50 PM
When I think of Simpson, and I guess other do the same, I immediately think of a great visionary in the realm of missions and evangelism. When I think of Tozer, and I think others do the same, I think about a man deeply committed to boldly preach the truths of God's Word and calling the Church to holiness. The two men combined give a great scope of who we are as the Christian and Missionary Alliance.
We are VERY committed to reaching the world for Jesus - and that is good. But what I personally see happening is less attention given to the Christian side of our name. When people think of the C&MA, do they think of a group of people deeply committed to the Bible as much as they are missions? When I hear us talked about, it is in the realm of being on the cutting edge of missionary work. I no longer hear us talked about when people mention the greatest preachers of our day. Simpson was Moody's favorite preacher. Tozer is still impacting lives decades after his death.
There are people still alive who knew Tozer and heard him preach on a regular basis. Because of that, it is hard to re-invent him. Simpson, on the other hand, has no one alive who knew him personally. In a way, we can re-invent him to be who we want him to be. I have hear people make the argument that Simpson would support the Emergent Movement. Maybe he would, maybe he wouldn't. We do not know, so we assume. I think we would all have to agree that Tozer would have no patience for the Emergent Movement. We can find out for sure by asking those who knew him and what he stood for.
We can adapt a souls at all costs mentality - using any and every means we want - because we can say Simpson is on our side.
I am glad we are bringing Simpson back to the forefront - his heart should inspire us today. But I think we need to take care with making assumptions about what he would and would not endorse today. I am concerned, though, that Tozer seems to be getting pushed under the rug in the process. We cannot lose that convicing call to the authority of the Bible and the need for holiness in our day.
Let us truly be the Christiand AND Missionary Alliance, not just the Missionary Alliance. On an interesting note, I have heard many non-Alliance people just call us the Missionary Alliance. Interesting!
We must be careful lest we bring up the next generation to go into all the world to preach the Gospel, all the while being lean in the Spirit. It's almost like we think we can't be serious about the Bible and missions at the same time. SInce when are the two mutually exclusive???
#6
Posted 27 February 2008 - 05:49 PM
Tozer, on the other hand, is our soul. He's the man who taught us how to be still and know... to pursue God with everything we have and everything we are.
#7
Posted 27 February 2008 - 09:39 PM
Well put. And the two aspects, when kept together, is a powerful force for the Gospel. It is what has brought the Alliance this far.
#8
Posted 13 February 2009 - 03:49 PM
When I think of Simpson, and I guess other do the same, I immediately think of a great visionary in the realm of missions and evangelism. When I think of Tozer, and I think others do the same, I think about a man deeply committed to boldly preach the truths of God's Word and calling the Church to holiness. The two men combined give a great scope of who we are as the Christian and Missionary Alliance.
SInce when are the two mutually exclusive???
Paul, what many C&MA miss today is that BOTH Simpson and Tozer's spiritual formations were rooted in the Catholic Contemplitives (St. John of the Cross, Theresa de Avila, Molineux, Madame Guyon, etc).
The effectiveness of there various giftings was due to DEEPER LIFE they found through their teachings.
(for more, read "A.B. Simpson and the Pentecostal Movement" by Charles Nienkirchen (my prof at the C&MA Bible college in Canada) and read THE FOOTNOTES.
C&MA churches USED to have TWO conferences each year ... a DEEPER LIFE conference, and a MISSIONS conference.
We no longer have the DEEPER LIFE conference and our missions are suffering horribly. A connection? I think so.
Simpson and Tozer ... same stream ... deep calls to deep ... activating different gifting.
-abraham E. Sandler (NOT the Reverend)
SON OF long time C&MA missionary
#9
Posted 13 February 2009 - 07:31 PM
Paul, what many C&MA miss today is that BOTH Simpson and Tozer's spiritual formations were rooted in the Catholic Contemplitives (St. John of the Cross, Theresa de Avila, Molineux, Madame Guyon, etc).
The effectiveness of there various giftings was due to DEEPER LIFE they found through their teachings.
(for more, read "A.B. Simpson and the Pentecostal Movement" by Charles Nienkirchen (my prof at the C&MA Bible college in Canada) and read THE FOOTNOTES.
C&MA churches USED to have TWO conferences each year ... a DEEPER LIFE conference, and a MISSIONS conference.
We no longer have the DEEPER LIFE conference and our missions are suffering horribly. A connection? I think so.
Simpson and Tozer ... same stream ... deep calls to deep ... activating different gifting.
-abraham E. Sandler (NOT the Reverend)
SON OF long time C&MA missionary
This is helpful background for those of us who don't have a background in the Alliance. Thanks.
#10
Posted 23 February 2009 - 02:08 PM
#11
Posted 09 September 2010 - 08:15 AM
So, the question at hand is not whether Simpson is being referred to in earnest over Tozer, but rather will Simpson's teaching on Sanctification will overwhelm the current views on sanctification which exist in the denomination currently. As someone mentioned, we have moved away from the Deeper Life conferences, but I have heard national office employees bemoan this fact, and so I wouldn't be surprised if the Alliance pushed for some implementation of a Deeper Life component in our current system of conferences.
Will the crisis return to its prominence in Alliance teaching? Will the gifts take a more elevated role? All these will take time to answer.
#12 Guest_Marvin Harrell_*
Posted 09 September 2010 - 11:24 AM
I have noticed a return to AB Simpson, especially his teaching on the "deeper life."...
So, the question at hand is ... will Simpson's teaching on Sanctification will overwhelm the current views on sanctification which exist in the denomination currently. As someone mentioned, we have moved away from the Deeper Life conferences, but I have heard national office employees bemoan this fact, and so I wouldn't be surprised if the Alliance pushed for some implementation of a Deeper Life component in our current system of conferences.
Will the crisis return to its prominence in Alliance teaching? Will the gifts take a more elevated role? All these will take time to answer.
I appreciate the term "crisis" for I feel that we are certainly seeing a desperate need for a clear understanding and experience of sanctification from Simpson's perspective. I myself am finding a deepening dissatisfaction with the status quo of modern "churchianity" and believe strongly that the concept and practice of deeper life theology is at its heart the desire of Jesus for his bride.
I also feel that at the heart of sanctification is an extreme death to self. Not one of my strong suits (talk about bemoaning!)...yet to love Jesus and be overwhelmed by him requires everything of me...even my life.