The “War Room” Is Open For Business at Berean
A SHORT PREFACESatan, like Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, knows that he is not going to win the war, but he exerts himself to the utmost in order to win the battle. Yamamoto, before WWII, attended Harvard, and had seen firsthand the size and strength of America. But, as a samurai by adoption, he was committed to a war he knew his side would lose. Allied codebreakers identified the course of a plane he was travelling in, and shot it down. The key to breaking Satan’s code is the “sword” of scripture, and the atomic bomb that can force unconditional surrender is prayer. We are not detached observers of the “great controversy,” but participants, soldiers at the frontlines of the conflict. The war analogies (shield, helmet, breastplate, etc.) that Paul cites, starting In Ephesians 6:11, culminate with 6:18: “Praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit…” The act of prayer stands in a class apart. Paul does not feel the need to embellish it with metaphors.
The battle between good and evil is such a dominant condition that a description of it as “metaphorical war” is inadequate. When Pastor Fredrick Russell chose “The War Room” as a theme for prayer meetings, he was referring to a real war. People get killed in this war. The inaugural remarks by pastor Russell focused on another room, the “throne room” of God. This is where prayers are processed.
![Alfrid.](http://homemadegospel.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/alfrid-krupp.jpg)
Berean’s “War Room” is located, for the moment, in the chapel area of the old church facility. This medium sized space is the aesthetic twin to the larger, adjacent main sanctuary. It features “prairie style” light fixtures (in the manner of Frank Lloyd Wright), in addition to cove lighting. The structure, like the sanctuary structure, is tongue-in-groove planks on glue-laminated frames. The focus of the space has been relocated from an end wall to a side wall, a provision that puts most of the congregation much closer to the podium than does a more traditional layout, The first time I ever noticed this counter-intuitive seating arrangement was in the floorplan of Robert H. Schuller‘s Crystal Cathedral, now renamed (in a rather clever manner) Christ Cathedral, and operated by the highly solvent Catholic church. If you click on the link, the central building is the cathedral itself, the interior of which is well known to anyone who has ever watched former broadcasts of the “Hour of Power.”
The design is by Philip Johnson, not a personal favorite of mine, but this church is not representative of his decadent period. The late Robert Schuller took a lot of the credit for this design, but it may be a case of self-delusion. The reverend was a great patron of architecture. On the link, the building seen at far right is by Richard Neutra , the 1968 “Tower of Hope,” part of a group of structures by the California based émigré architect. It was a late addition to Schuller’s Shepherd’s Grove. This last link briefly summarizes the rise and fall of the Schuller empire. The neo-gothic tower at the far left of the “Christ Cathedral” link is something I neither know about, nor care about, but given the track record of Schuller, it was (no doubt) designed by another “name” architect. I would describe it as “high mediocre.”
THE OPENING SALVO. ALL FOUR PASTORS IN ATTENDANCE.
The first of the four current Berean Seventh-day Adventist pastors to speak was Pastor Austin Humphreys. He was featured last Wednesday, but just spoke a minute this evening. Last week he introduced his sermon with a reference to the movie “Mission Impossible.” Tonight he began with a reference to the TV show “West Wing.” I expected a full sermon to follow, but this did not happen. Instead, the pastor just briefly alluded to the “situation room” in the White House, a private place where the characters would take themselves away into in order to talk to the Commander in Chief. It was a most succinct talk, but it went straight to the point.
![Huh?](http://homemadegospel.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/berean-seventh-day-adventist-war-room-1.jpg)
![What a big noggin!](http://homemadegospel.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/michelangelos-moses.jpg)
Pastor Russell told the crowd that two Wednesday mornings ago he was up early, talking to God. The pastor was attempting to resolve an issue that was personally painful, one that had bothered him since he was a child. For twenty minutes he argued with God. “You know how much pain it has caused me,” the pastor lamented. Two hours after this heated exchange, the remarkable nature of the incident struck him. The pastor had actually experienced a real-time, contemporaneous conversation with God. The pastor had been praying for an encounter like this for years. God had slipped it in, so deftly that it did not even initially strike the pastor as something unusual. In his rear-view mirror, the pastor was able to grasp the enormity of this incident. THAT is prayer!
![Incense. pepermint, la la la la](http://homemadegospel.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/the-vision-of-heaven.jpg)
Apropos of the theme of “prayer,” the pastor now focused on the golden “bowls,” the NIV improvement on golden “vails.” The pastor made a humorous allusion to the misuses of incense in his youth, as a mask for less socially accepted aromas. Real-world incense is strongly identified with Roman Catholicism. I have encountered it in “high church” Episcopalian worship. I have almost finished an essay entitled “The Church of Christ Ban On Musical Instruments.” It is an unintended defense of instruments, one that surprised me, as I don’t really care that much one way or the other about the issue. But the Church of Christ argument is so flawed, that just pointing out the flaws sounds like a refutation of their views. Here is an insane extract from the forthcoming piece: “The description of instruments in heaven is acknowledged. M.C. Kurfees’s [primary apologist for the church’s doctrine] scholarly rejoinder? So what! They got incense too! You want incense? These Church of Christ folk really seem to have a thing against incense.” This facetious extract faithfully mirrors the tone the apologist adopts. I love Church of Christ people, and regret that my reaction to their polemic makes it sound as if I don’t.
![Smellums](http://homemadegospel.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/golden-altar-of-incense.jpg)
Overwhelmed by the idea of talking to God in “real-time,” the pastor asked himself how he could have that experience all of the time. He said that sometimes God speaks to us in a clear voice, and sometimes God speaks to us in His Word. He concluded by reiterating that our prayers ascend like sweet-smelling incense to the throne room of God, and quoted from Jeremiah 29:13: “And ye shall seek me, and find me, when ye shall search for me with all your heart.”
Some fervent and voluble prayers, and a few heartfelt testimonies, followed the pastor’s remarks. The pastor requested that we “call out” our prayers, as they did in the Book of Acts (some old criticism of Pastor Russell by an internet crank likened spoken prayer to “talking in tongues,” and seemed to have the same kind of grudge against the latter as Church of Christ apologist M.C. Kurfees has against incense. Both spoken prayer and talking in tongues are 100% scriptural).
![fifty days](http://homemadegospel.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/pentecost.jpg)
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