despite the withdrawal of Robert and Hannah Smith and other expected speakers,[1]
the first Keswick Convention took place, “acknowledging the debt [the speakers]
owed to Mr. Pearsall Smith,”[2]
and propagating the Higher Life theology of sanctification Mr. Smith had
learned from his wife. Despite “violent
criticism and opposition . . . [such that to] identify oneself with the . . .
Keswick Convention . . . [and] Higher Life teaching meant to be willing to be
separated from the leaders of the Evangelical Church,”[3]
including opposition by men such as Charles Spurgeon, Horatius Bonar,[4]
and J. C. Ryle.[5] For example, Dr. Bonar wrote:
authorized reports of the Brighton Conference—the number of perverted passages
of Scripture; and this is really the root of the whole evil. The speakers first disclaim, I might say,
derived theology, and then they proceed to distort the Word of God. . . . I was
grieved beyond measure . . . these perversions are part of the system. It cannot stand without them. . . . One of my
chief objections to the Perfectionst [Keswick] Doctrine is that it subverts the
whole argument and scope of the epistles to the Romans and the Hebrews. . . .
Have I written too strongly? I don’t
think so. Years are now upon me, and I
may claim to be entitled to speak; and . . . have this as my testimony before
God and the Churches, that I know few errors more subversive of what the Bible
really teaches, and of what our fathers of the Reformation died for, than this
modern Perfectionism. The thing now
called holiness is not that which we find in Scripture, and the method of
reaching holiness, by an instantaneous leap, called an act of faith, is nowhere
taught us by the Holy Ghost.[6]
Mr. Wilson decided to hold another convention.
“After that there was never any doubt that it should be held yearly.”[7] Wilson and Battersby would not heed the
warnings of the body of godly Bible-believing Christians in their day and
reject Keswick; “the greatest Leaders and Teachers of Evangelical Truth thought
it their duty to oppose to the utmost what they considered ‘very dangerous
Heresy’” taught at Keswick and its antecedent Holiness Conventions, “a false
doctrine of ‘Perfection in man,’”[8]
but the Conventions were to continue, nevertheless. Since that time “the Keswick message . . .
[has been] carried . . . to almost every corner of the world”[9]
and “its influence is seen to-day in every quarter of the globe.”[10] In modern times, Keswick Conventions are held
in many cities throughout countries such as England, the United States,
Australia, Canada, Romania, New Zealand, India, Jamaica, South Africa, Japan,
Kenya, and other parts of Africa, Asia, and South America—indeed, there are
“numerous conventions around the world on every continent which are modelled on
Keswick.”[11] Likewise, Keswick theology appears in
devotional compositions by men such as Andrew Murray,[12]
F. B. Meyer,[13]
J. Oswald Sanders,[14]
and Hudson Taylor.[15] Keswick’s teachings also impacted the Welsh
holiness revival of 1904-1905,[16]
“the German holiness movement, Foreign Missions, Conventions Abroad, the
American holiness movement, the American Pentecostal movement . . . the
Christian and Missionary Alliance . . . American fundamentalism . . . [and]
English fundamentalism or conservative evangelicalism,”[17]
as well as offshoots of Pentecostalism like the Health and Wealth or Word-Faith
movement which “arose out of the classic Higher Life, Keswick, and Pentecostal
movements.”[18] Keswick has indubitably become extremely
influential:
Moody Bible Institute[19] (D. L. Moody, R. A.
Torrey, James M. Gray), Pentecostalism, and Dallas Theological Seminary (Lewis
S. Chafer, John F. Walvoord, Charles C. Ryrie). Simpson founded the Christian
and Missionary Alliance, Moody founded Moody Bible Institute, and Chafer
cofounded Dallas Theological Seminary. Pentecostalism, which subsequently
dwarfed Keswick in size and evangelical influence, is the product of Wesleyan
perfectionism, the holiness movement, the early Keswick movement, Simpson,
Moody, and Torrey. Dallas Theological Seminary, the bastion of the Chaferian
view of sanctification, is probably the most influential factor for the [strong
influence] of a Keswick-like view of sanctification in modern fundamentalism
and conservative evangelicalism.[20]
Hannah W. and Robert P. Smith continues to this day. Not only are their teachings being spread
worldwide through the continuing widespread propagation of Keswick theology,
but their message is the root of other forms of error and apostasy in
Christendom, such as, most notably, the Pentecostal, charismatic, and Word of
Faith movements.
See here for this entire study.
Great Salvation, Barabas.
Great Salvation, Barabas.
Great Salvation, Barabas. “Indeed,
it was within the ranks of the Evangelicals that the hostility was most
pronounced” (pg. 81, Evan Harry
Hopkins: A Memoir, Alexander Smellie),
for “the whole holiness movement was subjected to violent criticism and
opposition amongst evangelical Christians” (pgs. 31-32, Transforming Keswick: The
Keswick Convention, Past, Present, and Future, Price & Randall).
1875.
Ryle had a blessed and credible testimony to a genuine new birth:
conversion. First, Algernon Coote, a friend from Eton, urged him to “think,
repent and pray”; then he heard the epistle one Sunday afternoon in church: “By
grace are ye saved (pause) through faith (pause) and that not of yourselves
(pause) it is the gift of God.” The succession of phrases brought full
conviction to Ryle. “Nothing,” he said, “to this day appeared to me so clear
and distinct as my own sinfulness, Christ’s presence, the value of the Bible,
the absolute necessity of coming out of the world, and the need of being born
again, and the enormous folly of the whole doctrine of Baptismal Regeneration”
(pg. 573, Biographical Dictionary of
Evangelicals, ed. Larsen).
affirm that Ryle changed his mind about his criticisms of Keswick; however, all
that actually happened is that Ryle, in 1892, led in prayer the Sunday after a
Convention ended on the platform where the Keswick Convention had been in
session the week before. Ryle prayed
during a meeting in which D. L. Moody, whose work Ryle commended, was
speaking. Ryle supported Moody, while he
did not support the Keswick Convention.
The fact that Bishop Ryle would lead in prayer in a service where Moody
was preaching by no means proves that he had become amenable to the Keswick
theology, any more than the fact that he had preached at St. John’s Anglican
congregation in 1879 before the Keswick Convention proves his endorsement of
Keswick, whose meetings in the Keswick Tent he never frequented. Consequently, affirmations such as that of
Polluck that Ryle was a “foremost past critic” and his actions indicated that
by “1892 . . . Keswick stood accepted by British evangelicals” is not supported
by the evidence, at least in the case of Bishop Ryle (cf. pgs. 77-78, The Keswick Story: The Authorized History of the Keswick
Convention, Polluck).
88, 90, 93, “The Brighton Convention and Its Opponents.” London Quarterly Review, October 1875.
Great Salvation, Barabas.
Keswick Convention, ed. Harford. Cf. pg. 40.
Great Salvation, Barabas.
30, Forward Movements, Pierson.
Keswick: The Keswick Convention, Past,
Present, and Future, Price & Randall.
He has done for me at Keswick . . . [and] was in close fellowship with . . .
the great Holiness movement . . . [and] what took place at Oxford and Brighton,
and it all helped me” (pg. 177, 180, So
Great Salvation, Barabas; pg. 448, The Life of Andrew Murray,
DuPlessis). Murray spoke “at Keswick . .
. [in] 1895 . . . [and] for many years he led a similar Convention in South
Africa,” where he was a minister in the Dutch Reformed Church (pgs. 177, 182, So Great Salvation, Barabas). Note the
discussion of Murray’s theology in the chapter on him below.
the chapter on Meyer below.
Upway ‘Keswick’ Convention, Australia”
(pg. 143, So Great Salvation,
Barabas), advocating the second-blessing doctrine of “Wesleyan Perfectionism”
(pg. 110, Keep In Step With The Spirit,
Packer). “Chambers used the language of
Wesleyan entire sanctification,” having adopted “Keswick teaching . . . through
F. B. Meyer” (pg. 49, Transforming
Keswick: The Keswick Convention, Past,
Present, and Future, Price & Randall).
Great Salvation, Barabas. Hudson
Taylor, who spoke at the Keswick Convention of 1883 (pg. 81, The Keswick Story: The Authorized History of the Keswick
Convention, Polluck) after discovering “the Exchanged Life,” held a
partial-Rapture view, following the lead of Edward Irving and Robert Govett, as
did D. M. Panton, Evan Roberts, Jessie Penn-Lewis, Otto Stockmayer, Watchman
Nee, and many other advocates of Keswick theology and the Pentecostalism that
developed from it.
the center and leader of the Welsh holiness revival, was strongly impacted by
the Keswick theology, as was Mrs. Penn-Lewis.
Note the discussion of Roberts and Penn-Lewis in the respective chapter
below.
D. D. Bundy. Wilmore, Kentucky: Asbury Theological Seminary, 1975, in the Journal of the Evangelical Theological
Society 19:4 (Fall 1976) 340-343.
Barabas even records that “Mrs. William Booth,” the cofounder of the
Salvation Army and leading woman preacher, second blessing perfectionist and
continuationist, “remarked that Keswick had been one of the principal means of
establishing the Salvation Army” (pg. 151, So
Great Salvation, Barabas; cf. pg. 151, The
Keswick Convention: Its Message, its
Method, and Its Men, ed. Charles Harford; pg. 20, Forward Movements, Pierson).
Believe: Examining the Origin and
Development of Classic and Contemporary Word of Faith Theologies, Paul L.
King. Note also the trajectory from the
Keswick movement to Pentecostalism and the Health and Wealth heresy in the
discussion of A. B. Simpson and John A. MacMillan in the respective chapters
below.
speakers, with Moody’s backing, were able to penetrate further into American
evangelicalism,” so that “in the 1890s Keswick was a significant force molding
sections of the evangelical constituency in North America” (pgs. 56-59, Transforming Keswick: The Keswick Convention, Past, Present, and
Future, Price & Randall).
Moody’s “old friend F. B. Meyer” was key in bringing Moody’s ministry to
the side of Keswick; “a Keswick speaker [was] . . . at every summer conference”
at Northfield (pgs. 116-117, The Keswick
Story: The Authorized History of the
Keswick Convention, Polluck). Moody,
with thousands before him, at the time Robert P. Smith was leading the Brighton
Convention, asked the crowds to pray for a special blessing “on the great
Convention that is now being held at Brighton, perhaps the most important
meeting ever gathered together,” a public endorsement of Brighton that Moody
pronounced on both the first and last day of the Convention (pgs. 47, 319, Record of the Convention for the Promotion
of Scriptural Holiness Held at Brighton, May 29th to June 7th,
1875. Brighton: W. J. Smith, 1875).
Theology: A Historical and Theological
Survey and Analysis of the Doctrine of Sanctification in the Early Keswick
Movement, 1875-1920, by Andrew Naselli.
Ph. D. Dissertation, Bob Jones University, 2006. Abbreviations employed in the source text for
institutions have been expanded to give their full names. In addition to Dallas seminary, the influence
of Moody and Scofield on the spread of Keswick theology in fundamentalism is
very significant: “The return of the
holiness teaching to America . . . i[n] [its] Keswick form, was . . . related
to the work of D. L. Moody. . . . Moody . . . taught very similar views . . .
[to] Keswick . . . and made them central in his work. . . . C. I. Scofield . .
. eventually more or less canonized Keswick teachings in his Reference Bible” (pgs. 78-79, Fundamentalism and American Culture,
Marsden). D. L. Moody not only prayed for blessing upon
the Higher Life meetings at Brighton during his evangelistic campaign in
Convent Garden in 1875 (pgs. 23-24, So
Great Salvation, Barabas) but also brought many Keswick speakers in who
propagated Keswick theology at Moody’s conferences at Northfield: “The visits of Rev. F. B. Meyer, and notably
of Prebendary H. W. Webb-Peploe, of London, and Andrew Murray, of Wellington,
S. Africa (who were at Northfield in 1895), and the late G. H. C. McGregor
introduced into Northfield conferences the grand teaching of Keswick” (pg. 164,
Forward Movements of the Last Half
Century, A. T. Pierson. New York,
NY: Funk & Wagnalls, 1900; cf. pg.
163, So Great Salvation, Barabas; pg.
6, Out of His Fulness: Addresses
Delivered in America, Andrew Murray.
London: J. Nisbet & Co,
1897). The Keswick theology
of Moody, Scofield, and their associates were in turn very influential in
Pentecostalism (cf. pgs. 111-113, Vision of the
Disinherited: The Making of American
Pentecostalism, Robert Anderson).
Recent Comments