A New
Kind of Saint – Martyrs &
Confessors of Faith
.
“Standing firm for the
faith even at the risk of losing life,
possessions, and respectability”
by Donald
Bloesch
The church in every age needs models, people in
whom the passion and victory of Jesus Christ are
palpably manifest. As Christians, we are all
called to be saints, but there are some who have
been specially chosen by God to make a public
witness that patently reveals the judgment of
God upon human sin. We are all called to radiate
the light of Christ, but only some are given the
privilege of bearing this light in the face of
open and flagrant opposition. We are all
expected to take up the cross and follow Christ,
but only some carry a cross that poses a direct
challenge to the principalities and powers of
the world. Only some therefore can be considered
saints in the special sense of being public
signs of the passion and victory of Jesus
Christ.
This is not to denigrate the unsung and unknown
saints who have had to break with friends or
family or who have lost jobs or the hope of
promotion for taking a stand for what they know
to be right. Or the mother who has been left on
her own to care for five children and who
survives on next-to-nothing and a living faith
in God. But it is to insist that those singled
out for public rebuke and opprobrium, especially
those who die for the faith, should be given
signal recognition and honor by the church,
since the sufferings of these people become
dramatically visible to the world at
large.
…I suggest that the models of the future will
again be the martyrs and confessors of the
faith,* those who are persecuted primarily
because of their Christian identity.
These are people who will suffer for the sake
of the gospel itself and not simply for the
cause of social righteousness. These are the
people who will boldly confess that Jesus Christ
alone is Savior and Lord....The demonstration of
a Christian life will still be important, but it
is the proclamation of the gospel that will
arouse the special ire of a secularized world.
Life and words, of course, go together, but the
stumbling block that will elicit the rage of the
world is Jesus Christ himself and those who bear
witness to him (cf. John 15:18-20; Acts
4:24-26).
What I am suggesting is that the Christian
message itself will become the object of
ridicule. The life of discipleship will be
derided precisely because it calls attention to
the gospel, to its claims and imperatives. We
are entering an age in which the simple
confession of faith becomes the dividing line
between the reprobate and the elect, the
oppressors and the oppressed, the children of
darkness and the children of light.
What the church needs today is... people who
will stand firm for the faith even at the risk
of losing life, possessions, and respectability.
* Confessors are those who
confess the faith under persecution but do not
actually suffer death for their convictions.
Church historians have traditionally referred
to these people as “white martyrs.”
This
article is excerpted from the book, Crumbling
Foundations, by Donald Bloesch, (c)1984
by The Zondervan Corporation, Grand Rapids,
Michigan
Donald Bloesch (1928 – 2010)
was a noted American evangelical theologian.
He was raised in the Evangelical and
Reformed Church, in which his father and
both his grandfathers were also ordained
ministers. From 1957 until his retirement in
1992, he was a professor of theology at the
University of Dubuque Theological Seminary
in Dubuque, Iowa, USA, where he continued as
a professor emeritus. He wrote numerous
books, including Wellsprings of Renewal:
Promise in Christian Communal Life,
Crumbling Foundations: Death and Rebirth
in an Age of Upheaval, A Theology Of Word
& Spirit: Authority & Method In
Theology.
|