American Lutheran Classics

C. S. Lewis explains why we’re publishing the American Lutheran Classics, et al…

for “The Kids”…

Lewisthanasius

by C. S. Lewis  //  Introduction to De Incarnatione by St. Athanasius of Alexandria

There is a strange idea abroad that in every subject the ancient books should be read only by the professionals, and that the amateur should content himself with the modern books. Thus I have found as a tutor in English Literature that if the average student wants to find out something about Platonism, the very last thing he thinks of doing is to take a translation of Plato off the library shelf and read the Symposium. He would rather read some dreary modern book ten times as long, all about “isms” and influences and only once in twelve pages telling him what Plato actually said. The error is rather an amiable one, for it springs from humility. The student is half afraid to meet one of the great philosophers face to face. He feels himself inadequate and thinks he will not understand him. But if he only knew, the great man, just because of his greatness, is much more intelligible than his modern commentator. The simplest student will be able to understand, if not all, yet a very great deal of what Plato said; but hardly anyone can understand some modern books on Platonism. It has always therefore been one of my main endeavours as a teacher to persuade the young that firsthand knowledge is not only more worth acquiring than secondhand knowledge, but is usually much easier and more delightful to acquire.

This mistaken preference for the modern books and this shyness of the old ones is nowhere more rampant than in theology. Wherever you find a little study circle of Christian laity you can be almost certain that they are studying not St. Luke or St. Paul or St. Augustine or Thomas Aquinas or Hooker or Butler, but M. Berdyaev or M. Maritain or M. Niebuhr or Miss Sayers or even myself.

Now this seems to me topsy-turvy. Naturally, since I myself am a writer, I do not wish the ordinary reader to read no modern books. But if he must read only the new or only the old, I would advise him to read the old. And I would give him this advice precisely because he is an amateur and therefore much less protected than the expert against the dangers of an exclusive contemporary diet. A new book is still on its trial and the amateur is not in a position to judge it. It has to be tested against the great body of Christian thought down the ages, and all its hidden implications (often unsuspected by the author himself) have to be brought to light. Often it cannot be fully understood without the knowledge of a good many other modern books. If you join at eleven o’clock a conversation which began at eight you will often not see the real bearing of what is said. Remarks which seem to you very ordinary will produce laughter or irritation and you will not see why — the reason, of course, being that the earlier stages of the conversation have given them a special point. In the same way sentences in a modern book which look quite ordinary may be directed at some other book; in this way you may be led to accept what you would have indignantly rejected if you knew its real significance. The only safety is to have a standard of plain, central Christianity (“mere Christianity” as Baxter called it) which puts the controversies of the moment in their proper perspective. Such a standard can be acquired only from the old books. It is a good rule, after reading a new book, never to allow yourself another new one till you have read an old one in between. If that is too much for you, you should at least read one old one to every three new ones.

Every age has its own outlook. It is specially good at seeing certain truths and specially liable to make certain mistakes. We all, therefore, need the books that will correct the characteristic mistakes of our own period. And that means the old books. All contemporary writers share to some extent the contemporary outlook — even those, like myself, who seem most opposed to it. Nothing strikes me more when I read the controversies of past ages than the fact that both sides were usually assuming without question a good deal which we should now absolutely deny. They thought that they were as completely opposed as two sides could be, but in fact they were all the time secretly united—united with each other and against earlier and later ages—by a great mass of common assumptions. We may be sure that the characteristic blindness of the twentieth century — the blindness about which posterity will ask, “But how could they have thought that?” — lies where we have never suspected it, and concerns something about which there is untroubled agreement between Hitler and President Roosevelt or between Mr. H. G. Wells and Karl Barth. None of us can fully escape this blindness, but we shall certainly increase it, and weaken our guard against it, if we read only modern books. Where they are true they will give us truths which we half knew already. Where they are false they will aggravate the error with which we are already dangerously ill. The only palliative is to keep the clean sea breeze of the centuries blowing through our minds, and this can be done only by reading old books. Not, of course, that there is any magic about the past. People were no cleverer then than they are now; they made as many mistakes as we. But not the same mistakes. They will not flatter us in the errors we are already committing; and their own errors, being now open and palpable, will not endanger us. Two heads are better than one, not because either is infallible, but because they are unlikely to go wrong in the same direction. To be sure, the books of the future would be just as good a corrective as the books of the past, but unfortunately we cannot get at them.

I myself was first led into reading the Christian classics, almost accidentally, as a result of my English studies. Some, such as Hooker, Herbert, Traherne, Taylor and Bunyan, I read because they are themselves great English writers; others, such as Boethius, St. Augustine, Thomas Aquinas and Dante, because they were “influences.” George Macdonald I had found for myself at the age of sixteen and never wavered in my allegiance, though I tried for a long time to ignore his Christianity. They are, you will note, a mixed bag, representative of many Churches, climates and ages. And that brings me to yet another reason for reading them. The divisions of Christendom are undeniable and are by some of these writers most fiercely expressed. But if any man is tempted to think — as one might be tempted who read only contemporaries — that “Christianity” is a word of so many meanings that it means nothing at all, he can learn beyond all doubt, by stepping out of his own century, that this is not so. Measured against the ages “mere Christianity” turns out to be no insipid interdenominational transparency, but something positive, self-consistent, and inexhaustible. I know it, indeed, to my cost. In the days when I still hated Christianity, I learned to recognise, like some all too familiar smell, that almost unvarying something which met me, now in Puritan Bunyan, now in Anglican Hooker, now in Thomist Dante. It was there (honeyed and floral) in Francois de Sales; it was there (grave and homely) in Spenser and Walton; it was there (grim but manful) in Pascal and Johnson; there again, with a mild, frightening, Paradisial flavour, in Vaughan and Boehme and Traherne. In the urban sobriety of the eighteenth century one was not safe—Law and Butler were two lions in the path. The supposed “Paganism” of the Elizabethans could not keep it out; it lay in wait where a man might have supposed himself safest, in the very centre of The Faerie Queene and the Arcadia. It was, of course, varied; and yet — after all — so unmistakably the same; recognisable, not to be evaded, the odour which is death to us until we allow it to become life:

an air that kills
From yon far country blows.

We are all rightly distressed, and ashamed also, at the divisions of Christendom. But those who have always lived within the Christian fold may be too easily dispirited by them. They are bad, but such people do not know what it looks like from without. Seen from there, what is left intact despite all the divisions, still appears (as it truly is) an immensely formidable unity. I know, for I saw it; and well our enemies know it. That unity any of us can find by going out of his own age. It is not enough, but it is more than you had thought till then. Once you are well soaked in it, if you then venture to speak, you will have an amusing experience. You will be thought a Papist when you are actually reproducing Bunyan, a Pantheist when you are quoting Aquinas, and so forth. For you have now got on to the great level viaduct which crosses the ages and which looks so high from the valleys, so low from the mountains, so narrow compared with the swamps, and so broad compared with the sheep-tracks.

The present book is something of an experiment. The translation is intended for the world at large, not only for theological students. If it succeeds, other translations of other great Christian books will presumably follow. In one sense, of course, it is not the first in the field. Translations of the Theologia Germanica, the Imitation, the Scale of Perfection, and the Revelations of Lady Julian of Norwich, are already on the market, and are very valuable, though some of them are not very scholarly. But it will be noticed that these are all books of devotion rather than of doctrine. Now the layman or amateur needs to be instructed as well as to be exhorted. In this age his need for knowledge is particularly pressing. Nor would I admit any sharp division between the two kinds of book. For my own part I tend to find the doctrinal books often more helpful in devotion than the devotional books, and I rather suspect that the same experience may await many others. I believe that many who find that “nothing happens” when they sit down, or kneel down, to a book of devotion, would find that the heart sings unbidden while they are working their way through a tough bit of theology with a pipe in their teeth and a pencil in their hand.

This is a good translation of a very great book. St. Athanasius has suffered in popular estimation from a certain sentence in the “Athanasian Creed.” I will not labour the point that that work is not exactly a creed and was not by St. Athanasius, for I think it is a very fine piece of writing. The words “Which Faith except every one do keep whole and undefiled, without doubt he shall perish everlastingly” are the offence. They are commonly misunderstood. The operative word is keep; not acquire, or even believe, but keep. The author, in fact, is not talking about unbelievers, but about deserters, not about those who have never heard of Christ, nor even those who have misunderstood and refused to accept Him, but of those who having really understood and really believed, then allow themselves, under the sway of sloth or of fashion or any other invited confusion to be drawn away into sub-Christian modes of thought. They are a warning against the curious modern assumption that all changes of belief, however brought about, are necessarily exempt from blame. But this is not my immediate concern. I mention “the creed (commonly called) of St. Athanasius” only to get out of the reader’s way what may have been a bogey and to put the true Athanasius in its place. His epitaph is Athanasius contra mundum, “Athanasius against the world.” We are proud that our own country has more than once stood against the world. Athanasius did the same. He stood for the Trinitarian doctrine, “whole and undefiled,” when it looked as if all the civilised world was slipping back from Christianity into the religion of Arius — into one of those “sensible” synthetic religions which are so strongly recommended today and which, then as now, included among their devotees many highly cultivated clergymen. It is his glory that he did not move with the times; it is his reward that he now remains when those times, as all times do, have moved away.

When I first opened his De Incarnatione I soon discovered by a very simple test that I was reading a masterpiece. I knew very little Christian Greek except that of the New Testament and I had expected difficulties. To my astonishment I found it almost as easy as Xenophon; and only a master mind could, in the fourth century, have written so deeply on such a subject with such classical simplicity. Every page I read confirmed this impression. His approach to the Miracles is badly needed today, for it is the final answer to those who object to them as “arbitrary and meaningless violations of the laws of Nature.” They are here shown to be rather the re-telling in capital letters of the same message which Nature writes in her crabbed cursive hand; the very operations one would expect of Him who was so full of life that when He wished to die He had to “borrow death from others.” The whole book, indeed, is a picture of the Tree of Life — a sappy and golden book, full of buoyancy and confidence. We cannot, I admit, appropriate all its confidence today. We cannot point to the high virtue of Christian living and the gay, almost mocking courage of Christian martyrdom, as a proof of our doctrines with quite that assurance which Athanasius takes as a matter of course. But whoever may be to blame for that it is not Athanasius.

The translator knows so much more Christian Greek than I that it would be out of place for me to praise her version. But it seems to me to be in the right tradition of English translation. I do not think the reader will find here any of that sawdusty quality which is so common in modern renderings from the ancient languages. That is as much as the English reader will notice; those who compare the version with the original will be able to estimate how much wit and talent is presupposed in such a choice, for example, as “these wiseacres” on the very first page.

+SDG+

Just & Sinner Relaunch 2014 || Kickstarter

Help fund Just & Sinner’s summer publishing push, and help new Just & Sinner editor Trent Demarest get relocated to Iowa!

 

Just & Sinner Relaunch, Summer 2014

…first there was a blog;
…then, a podcast;
…now, a publishing house!

The Coopers

Pastor Jordan Cooper began his formal study of theology as an undergraduate at Geneva College. Coming as he did from a Reformed church background, Jordan was acutely aware of the many issues confronting Protestants — indeed all Christians — in this “post-modern” era of American Christianity. After a process of intense study and inquiry, he found sufficient and compelling answers for the greatest of these quandaries in the historic Lutheran Church.

In confessional Lutheran theology Jordan discovered the true evangelical and catholic heart of “the faith once passed down to the saints.” And he never looked back! Instead, he began busily applying himself to making the treasures of Lutheran theology available to those who, like him, had at one time or another been dissatisfied and frustrated by their experiences in other churches. But he wasn’t going it alone.

In 2008 Jordan met Lisa, whose charm so arrested his attention that he was willing — nay, forced! — to overlook her ignorance of certain of his favorite post-punk emo bands. Pious, witty, and pretty, she captured his heart. The two dated for two years and were married in December of 2010.

Shortly before he and Lisa were wed, Jordan had begun work on a Master’s degree at the Wittenberg Institute. While a student there, he began to post more theological reflections on his blog, Just & Sinner, including a number of scholarly journal articles. In September of 2012, Jordan added a theology podcast to his site and quickly acquired an eager following. In February of 2013 Jordan and Lisa moved to Brighton, IA, where Jordan was installed as the pastor of Hope Lutheran Church. In October of that year, Just & Sinner Publications was launched, publishing The Way of Salvation in the Lutheran Church by George Henry Gerberding, the first volume of the American Lutheran Classics Series.

Pr. Cooper and Lisa with their son, Jacen, at Hope Lutheran Church in Brighton, IA.

 

Trent

Trent Demarest rediscovered the confessional tradition of Lutheranism while an undergraduate at Hillsdale College. He took an early interest in Jordan Cooper’s work when the latter was studying at the Wittenberg Institute. While Jordan was in school at the Institute, Trent was in school, too…in a manner of speaking: he was teaching history, theology, and Latin at a Lutheran classical academy. Although he had been a lifelong Lutheran, Trent was frustrated by certain presentations of contemporary Lutheran theology, and he appreciated Jordan’s more historic and catholic perspective. On occasion he would email Jordan questions or comments, sometimes roping the latter into ridiculously picayune theological debates with complete strangers. Because of this, or in spite of this, the two struck up a cordial relationship.

That’s all you need to know about Trent. That, and he has a green website – no, not like “emission-free” green. Just green. For some strange reason, Jordan befriended him. Over the course of a few years, the two went from emailing to talking on the phone — usually about theology, but sometimes about the merits of single-origin coffee and lustrous red facial hair.

In the spring of 2014, Jordan decided that the best way to get Trent to stop emailing him would be to keep him within shouting distance, at least for awhile. So he and Lisa invited Trent to come and work for Just & Sinner publications that summer. Then, they started a Kickstarter. That’s the story.

This summer

This summer Just & Sinner is taking things to the next level as a number of new and exciting developments get underway. The American Lutheran Theological Journal, published by Just & Sinner, will release its premier issue at the annual convention of the AALC (American Association of Lutheran Churches) this June; several new installments of the American Lutheran Classics series are waiting in the wings, as well as the Works of Revere Franklin Weidner (Pastor Cooper’s favorite American Lutheran theologian); last, but certainly not least, Pastor Cooper is writing a complete systematic theology text!

When asked, “Where do you see yourself fitting into all of this?” Trent scratched the underside of his chin, and said, “Me? I coulda been a contenda.” This wasn’t particularly helpful.

When asked, “Where do you see Trent fitting into all of this?” Pastor Cooper shrugged and said, “Well, he’s the only person besides Lisa I’d allow to make me coffee.”

Trent is relocating to Iowa this summer to work as full-time as possible for Just & Sinner Publications, doing anything and everything that needs to be done: editing, researching, writing, design, and, yes, making coffee. Your funding will help him with relocation costs and provide a small stipend so that he can devote as much time as possible to the publishing house without going broke and having to take up busking in Fairfield. He might like to go busking in Fairfield, but for fun, not for…you know…food.

“Would prefer to play for fun, not food…”


You

The mission of Just & Sinner in general — and of Just & Sinner Publications in particular — is to promote the Gospel by making the treasures of classical Lutheran theology available at an affordable price. The podcasts are free; the books are inexpensive; both, however, require funding to produce. That’s where you come in.

This is an unabashed request for your generous support! $3000 would meet Just & Sinner’s needs for this summer publishing push; thus, it is the minimum that would need to be raised by this effort. But Just & Sinner would be grateful to receive any funding that exceeds this target amount! Any surplus that is raised will be used to fund the following items:

  • Book sales - What if your church or Bible-class wanted to do a study of C.F.W Walther’s The Proper Distinction Between Law and Gospel or Henry I. Schmidt’s The Lutheran Doctrine of the Lord’s Supper? Book subsidies would allow Just & Sinner to offer sale and bulk pricing on these and other classic Lutheran works.
  • More and better media content - Trent is going to be relaunching Pseudepodcast under the Just & Sinner banner, in which he will be joined by Matt Fenn and Levi Nunnink to talk amateur theology (and perhaps occasionally spoof/roast Pastor Cooper). Just & Sinner also has plans to do a professional-quality video series of Pr. Cooper’s sermons.
  • Travel budget - Just & Sinner would love to be more mobile; a modest travel budget would allow us to market books at conferences in the greater Midwest, do on-site interviews, etc.; speaking of conferences…
  • Conferences - We would like to do more in the future! And we would like to charge people as little as possible to attend. (We look forward to seeing many of you at the Pirate Christian Radio Conference this August!)
  • Equipment - microphones, a printer (and ink cartridges), computer monitors, mixing and editing software. Any questions? Look in the FAQ section to see if your question is addressed; if it’s not, please let us know!

Risks and challenges

Kickstarter wisely suggests that we address the following question:

“When it comes to fulfillment, every project has potential obstacles, from production delays to permits to collaborator mishaps. What unique challenges might you face after your project is successfully funded? And if setbacks do arise (we hope they don’t, but it happens!), how will you tackle them?”

Honestly, the biggest hurdle is simply acquiring the needed funding, but we’re imaginative enough to be able to think of others that might pop up and smack us in the shins…

…we just can’t think of any right now. Is that bad?

But we can answer the last part: “If setbacks do arise, how will you tackle them?”

Well, we’ll make do, “with the sense God gave a goose, but never apart from His grace” (to borrow a phrase from Pr. Heath Curtis, a friend of Just & Sinner). We all believe in this work, and we will engage in it with as little or as much as God provides. Soli Deo Gloria!

Click Here to go to the Official Just & Sinner Kickstarter Page!