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Angus Gunn: Theodore Austin-Sparks: Reflections on His Life and Work
by Angus Gunn
[Please note: The following is the introduction to the book "Theodore Austin-Sparks: Reflections on his life and work" by Angus Gunn, used with permission.]
Introduction
THEODORE
AUSTIN-SPARKS, best known as TAS to those of us who knew
and loved him, was a preacher and teacher who lived and
worked for most of his life in the Forest Hill District
of southeast London, England. With a high view of the
Bible as the word of God, coupled with an exceptional
ability to draw out its secrets, he profoundly
influenced many lives and left a legacy of proven
Spirit-anointed ministry that continues, in new ways, to
challenge and inspire Christians today.
TAS was born into a London family group of which only his
mother was a believer, and when he was sent away from her
influence to his father's relatives in Scotland, his
school years became very lonely. Christian life for Theo
began there, on a street in Glasgow, in 1906. He was 17
at the time and his attention was arrested by some young
people who were sharing their Christian experience in an
open air meeting. Before the day was over he had
committed his life to Christ. Within a short time he was
giving his personal testimony alongside the same group of
young people. He returned to London soon after his
conversion and became involved in the life of the
evangelical community there. When the Torrey-Alexander
Missionary team came to London to hold meetings in the
Albert Hall, Theo gave them enthusiastic support.
Unfortunately, his interests and activities were met with
disapproval and strong opposition from his father, to the
point where he had to leave home and find his way in life
without parental help.
The British evangelical community at this time was being
influenced by a remarkable revival that broke out in
Wales in the years 1904 and 1905. Whole communities, not
just individuals, anxiously sought salvation. About
100,000 professed conversion, and many felt that they
were experiencing the dynamic of the first century
church. Evan Roberts, of the Calvinistic Methodist
Church, underwent a vivid spiritual experience that made
him the central figure of the revival. Later, in 1912, he
described his experiences in a book written jointly with
Jessie Penn-Lewis, War on the Saints, in which the
necessity of a baptism in the Holy Spirit was stressed.
Only thus, it was claimed, could the Christian enjoy
triumphant living.
The Welsh Revival was followed by other widespread and
multifaceted movements that similarly focused on a deeper
experience of the Holy Spirit. Many were divisive. David
Bebbington, in his classic work Evangelicalism in
Modern Britain: A History from the 1730s to the 1980s, dates
these movements, with their emphases on a deeper life in
Christ, as extending from 1904 to the latter part of the
1920s.
Such were the times in which TAS matured and labored in
his early years of ministry. Many of those he admired or
with whom he associated, Oswald Chambers, F.B. Meyer,
Jessie Penn-Lewis, and A.J. Gordon and A.B. Simpson in
the United States, were very much involved in one or more
of these 'deeper life' movements. They or their writings
helped to shape TAS' thinking and to develop a vision
that, in its mature form, he would describe as "A
ministry to all saints so that they might enjoy a fuller
measure of Christ, a richer and higher level of spiritual
life, and thus help to bring the Church closer to God's
will for it."
From 1912 to 1926 he was pastor in turn of three
established churches in the Greater London area, one
Congregational and two Baptist Union. During that period
he was often invited to speak elsewhere in Britain. In
1926 he felt led to step aside from pastoral work in
order to establish, along with like-minded colleagues, a
Christian fellowship and conference centre in Forest
Hill, London, dedicated to the deepening of believers'
walk with God. The new centre had a guest house and
additional rooms where, under TAS' ministry, believers
met regularly and where he himself was almost continually
involved. A periodical, titled A Witness and a
Testimony, editor T. Austin-Sparks, had been launched
at his previous pastorate, Honor Oak Baptist Church. It
was published six times a year and now served to
distribute messages to a wider audience. In speaking of
contributors he would say "Witness" is the
person and "Testimony" what is proclaimed.
TAS' influence expanded greatly at the new centre. People
came from afar, attracted to his rich ministry and to
that of his several gifted associates. Many stayed for
extended periods of fellowship and instruction, some at
the centre, others later in Kilcreggan, Scotland, or West
Watch in southern England, two retreats that were
associated with the Forest Hill centre. Residential Bible
courses of the kind that are difficult in a church
setting became common features of these places. As the
centre became more widely known people tended to identify
it by the name of the road on which it was situated,
"Honor Oak." From time to time those whose
lives had been enriched by their contacts with the
fellowship centre moved on to mission fields in different
parts of the world. Invitations to speak came to TAS from
several countries, notably the United States. It was not
long before the centre bore the marks of a world-minded
community as God's work and servants worldwide were
brought before the Lord in prayer. Besides the
periodical, A Witness and a Testimony, other
publications were soon added and often a book would be
published as the record of a sequence of devotional
conference messages on a theme.
My first acquaintance with TAS was early in 1948. I had
committed my life to Christ at the centre a month earlier
while he was in the U.S., speaking at different places.
First impressions were of an attractive personality,
quite a commanding figure, tall, with a friendly smile.
He was somewhat reserved in manner. You soon discovered
that small talk was not for him. On occasion he would sit
in silence for extended periods, oblivious to those
carrying on a conversation nearby. The fellowship centre
was a happy spiritual home for me. I spent three years
there attending services and Bible studies, learning a
fuller meaning of the Bible, the content of which was
already quite familiar to me. TAS and his associates
provided a foundation for my Christian life that has
guided me ever since. Thinking of him, I can echo C.S.
Lewis' expression of his indebtedness to George
Macdonald: "He influenced me as much as any man can
influence another."
TAS always wanted to see the content of his teaching
shared widely and freshly relayed to succeeding
generations. He felt that what was given by God was
intended for the whole church and never only for one time
or place. That is why I have written this book. It is a
selection of annotated extracts from the many books
published at the centre, as a depository for future
generations. Its format has been defined by a particular
characteristic of TAS' own published works: almost every
book, periodical, or booklet reproduced messages exactly
as they were given in the spoken form. He insisted on
this. For those who knew the speaker, or who had heard
the messages at first hand, such an arrangement was fine.
They could benefit from further reflection. It is more
difficult for others who might read these publications in
later years. The content of the spoken word includes
voice modulation, emphasis, pauses, repetition, and body
language. Written text needs to be restructured to
compensate for the absence of all that. Such
considerations led me to write this book as extracts
highlighted by commentary rather than as an anthology of
chosen passages.
TAS brought certain emphases to the Christian community,
aspects of historic Christianity that had either been
neglected or had not received adequate coverage in the
preaching and literature of his time. However, it was not
just the rich content of his teaching that meant so much
to listeners; rather it was the ways in which he brought
Scripture to life and made it relevant and
life-transforming. It was this that made the lasting
impressions on the minds of those who heard him.
Many of the emphases he brought have since been recovered
by others; some remain as his unique contribution to
evangelical thinking. One example of the latter might be
the importance he gave to what I might call "God's
timeless purpose in Christ," based on the book of
Ephesians, defining salvation as an expression of the
glory of Christ rather than an emergency rescue mission
totally centred on humanity. With the possible exception
of prayer this focus is the one that is most vividly
remembered. Here is how one person described it many
years later: "What I personally received, and did
not get anywhere else, and in fact what was barely hinted
at anywhere else, was this theme of the 'Grand Design,'
the sense of things hanging together in the spiritual
life. I learned that everything was underlaid by one
single purpose and was moving toward the one single goal
which God had set for himself."
The deepest impressions of TAS' life and ministry came
from his prayer life and its challenge to those who
gathered with him at the Christian fellowship centre. Two
evenings a week were given exclusively to prayer, and few
areas of the world were untouched on these occasions. Of
the many comments I received from people who were
familiar with these meetings two will suffice to
illustrate their significance: "I shall never forget
the spiritual elevation and felt nearness to God on these
occasions. TAS' strong intimacy with God, and his evident
dependence on him, seemed to stun us. It was an
unforgettable experience." "Prayer at the
centre was a holy, corporate, unifying experience. Who
could fail to benefit from these prayer meetings, or who
could forget their power?" Additionally, the leaders
and church elders at the centre devoted all day every
Tuesday to prayer and fasting.
There were other areas of ministry that have often been
quoted as characteristic of TAS' teaching. One of these
was his insistent reminder that we always need divine
revelation to open up Scripture to us. That is not, of
course, in terms of God's initial disclosure of truth via
its authors. For us it is God's Holy Spirit here and now
illuminating our hearts by that word of God given through
them. Another focus was the subjective experience of the
cross of Christ, going beyond forgiveness to deliverance
from the power of sin and self as described in Romans
chapter six, and leading on to a walk with others in
newness of life in a corporate or church fellowship. TAS
had a simple but all-embracing definition of such church
life: "A local church is a company of born-again
Christians, brought together by the Lord in any given
place, and over whom the headship of Christ is an
established and operating reality." It was his
emphasis on the subjective work of the cross in human
lives that distinguished TAS' early messages from other
'deeper life' ministries of that period. It supplied
people with a positive meaning for and inward peace about
their sufferings and the sometimes painful divine
disciplines that they encountered in this life.
Strangely, however, this theme also alienated him from
some former pastoral colleagues and men in the ministry
to whom it was an unfamiliar and therefore questionable
teaching on the work of Christ.
This is how a pastor, one of his fellow workers at the
centre, described TAS' teaching about the cross: "He
preached a gospel of full salvation by simple faith in
Christ's sacrifice, but he further stressed that the one
who knows cleansing by the blood of Jesus should also
allow the same cross to work in the depth of the soul in
order to be released from self and thus find a less
carnal and more spiritual walk with God. TAS himself had
gone through a crisis of self-undoing by his acceptance
of the cross's verdict on his old nature, and had found
it to be the introduction into an altogether new
enjoyment of Christ's life, an 'open heaven' as he would
often say."
"The cross is not only painful; it is unifying. TAS
made it clear that it leads the individual believer not
only into an enlarged personal enjoyment of resurrection
life, but also integrates every such one into the
fellowship of the Church which is Christ's body. He could
never think of Christians as isolated, nor of churches as
isolated groups. He always kept before him the great
purpose of redemption, the incorporation of believers
into vital membership of the one body."
I can confirm most of these observations from my
experience and add some comments on memories that still
remain many decades later. I shall never forget TAS'
sensitivity to Scripture. Again and again he would go
over a particular exposition to ensure that the
interpretations were neither imbalanced nor shallow. This
high level of responsibility carried into other phases of
life. You rarely caught him off guard. There was a
consistently high level of commitment and sensitivity to
things of the Spirit. I recall prayer meetings where
perhaps only two or three were present. TAS shared a
message from Scripture with the same fulness and care
that he would have given to an audience of a thousand,
and his prayers were as strong as they would be in a
larger gathering.
A friend wrote me shortly after TAS' death and in the
course of his letter said this: "I feel within
myself a deep and lasting indebtedness to our mutual
friend, not so much for specific things he taught me as
for the way he led us to the Lord Jesus, taught us to
love and to follow him, and to expect a degree of
closeness and fellowship that no one, up to that time,
had even suggested might be possible. He made our
Christian faith a way of life more than anyone else had
ever done, and set us on a quest that still leads us
on." That spirit of quest was always a feature of
TAS' thinking. Once he likened the Christian life to that
of a pioneer making his way through unmapped wilderness
territory. One of his favorite hymns was George Rawson's,
"We limit not the truth of God to our poor reach of
mind, by notions of our day and sect, crude, partial and
confined. No, let a new and better hope within our hearts
be stirred," and then the refrain drawn from John
Robinson's 1620 sermon to the Pilgrim Fathers, "the
Lord has yet more light and truth to break forth from his
word."
I would be remiss if I failed to point out that TAS
shared the weaknesses and experienced the failures that
are common to a fallen humanity. He found it difficult to
share responsibility and this often deprived him of the
benefits and corrective help both of other evangelical
leaders and sometimes even of his own close colleagues.
He was very much aware of his own faults and many of us
knew of this personal sense of unworthiness. It
frequently found expression in his public prayers,
especially at the conclusion of a series of devotional
conference messages.
In those early days of my Christian life, in the 1940s,
the atmosphere in the British evangelical community was
quite defensive, almost a siege mentality. As I shared my
experience with other Christians, I found that new
thinking was a problem to them. They wanted to stick to
familiar language and well known doctrines. Today, in our
postmodern society, as we enter the twenty-first century,
there is an effervescence and confidence among
evangelical Christians that copes more easily with new
things. In his teaching, TAS was ahead of his time, so he
had to live with the difficulties that are always the lot
of visionaries.
From the hundred or so books or booklets of TAS, I have
grouped my paraphrased extracts under eight heads
representing the main themes that recur again and again
in his writings. To distinguish TAS' sources clearly, I
have indented them in smaller type. Biblical quotations
are from the New International Bible.
Angus M. Gunn
angus.gunn@telus.net
West
Vancouver
British Columbia, Canada
1999
Used with permission. © Copyright 2001
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