Dec
28th
A
WEEK IN
MILAN
A
year or two ago Andrea Ferrari of
Milan
got in touch inviting me to
Italy
to take part in the Jonathan Edwards' centenary celebrations. The Alfa &
Omega publisher had just translated and printed
Iain Murray
’s life of Edwards, and Edwards’ “Religious Affections” had also been
translated into Italian. I could not go that year and neither could
Iain Murray
but we went the following year. Andrea did his Master of
Philosophy degree on the Italian reformer, John Diodati at the Bryntirion
Seminary Wales under Dr Gwyn Davies of the
Aberystwyth
Welsh
Evangelical
Church
. John Diodati was the pastor of the Italian church in
Geneva
and a professor at Calvin's Academy. He was also responsible for the
translation of the Bible into Italian. He had begun to translate this when he
was 16 years of age. What promise there was in the early history of the
Reformation in
Italy
until the Inquisition and Counter Reformation set up its machinery of
repression.
Andrea
often attends the autumn Montville Conference in the
New Jersey
church where Al Martin is the pastor, and he has also been to the Carey
Ministers' Conference, Westminster Conference and to the Leicester Banner of
Truth Conference. He is in his mid thirties and has been married to Cristina
(the daughter of an Italian Assemblies of God minister) for thirteen years. They
both have excellent English, and so what I thought would be an overload of
English imposed on an Italian home for a week turned out to be giving our
friends an enjoyable opportunity of exercising their fluent English.
The
Ferraris spoke of their years in
Sicily
where Andrea was an AOG pastor for six years. What vegetable are grown there,
they said, their eyes sparkling! Many people would cook their own bread in an
oven in the kitchen taking it out hot, sprinkling it with salt and covering it
with olive oil and eating it immediately: "Delicious," Andrea sighed,
"but now they eat . . . McDonalds." They have two delightful boys,
Simone and Daniele, aged 12 and 11, sweet natured, a pleasure to share a house
with. We could hear their family devotions wafting upstairs - the singing -
before they went to school. When Simone was five years of age Cristina was
reading the story of Samson and Delilah to him. "You see, it all went wrong
when he married the wrong woman. He didn't marry the woman God chose," she
said. Simoni was quite concerned; "How will I know that I won't marry the
wrong woman?" he asked. "Well, you will see how she lives and that she
loves God, and so on," his mother told him. "But when Delilah first
went out with Samson she seemed to love God and be a believer," he said.
"Then you must pray that God will help you marry a real Christian,"
his mother said. "O, let's pray now," the 5 year old said to his
mother earnestly and immediately.
Andrea
Ferrari had not had a promising start to life. From a nominal Roman Catholic
home he mixed with other teenagers so that smoking cigarettes developed to
smoking marijuana. He also knew the heroin injecting crowd in this part of
Milan
but stopped short of that. A good thing because most of those were dead of AIDS
within ten years, but a friendly priest spoke to Andrea of his growing drug
addiction and told him of Teen Challenge and its work. He went along and lived
there in that Christian rehab programme and soon he was converted. Reading the
book of Ecclesiastes became the definitive instrument. Was it a struggle to come
off drugs? "No," he said, "I was a new person." He began to
attend the Assemblies of God, and his parents could hardly believe what he was
telling them, in fact on one Sunday his father followed him from the home to
confirm that Andrea was indeed going to church. The parents have since both been
converted and are members of this congregation in
Milan
. We enjoyed being with them at the meetings. How difficult his father first
found it when he became a Christian, to change the old patterns of life. He had
always worked very hard, but then as a Christian, to have to stop the work he
enjoyed at the end of the afternoon on Tuesdays and Fridays to give his evenings
to the weeknight meetings, and also not to work on Sundays at all, how tough
that was at first. Now it is all the sweet new routine in Christ which he gladly
does, seeing all the benefits. It is part of presenting his body to Christ. At
the other end of the family Andrea's sons are raised in that happy pattern.
Interestingly enough they now go to the same school which he had once attended.
It is a state school, open plan, with yoga lessons! The larger family unit of
the Ferraris is a blessed one.
Andrea
trained in
Rome
in the theological college of the Assemblies of God, and Christiane also did
the one year woman's course there and that is where they met. It was while he
was studying there that he and another student, Nazzareno (
Reno
) Ulfo came across the Puritans and their fertile minds were captivated by them.
He sought counsel from men in
Scotland
, and his appreciation of the Reformers, Spurgeon and the writings of Dr
Lloyd-Jones and his subsequent thinking about the ministry of the Spirit meant
that his days in that denomination were numbered. He pastored for a time an
Assemblies of God church in
Sicily
, and then a few years ago returned to this his home town. It is called Novate,
and is one of the satellite towns around
Milan
, where he became the founding pastor of a newly constituted Reformed Baptist
Church based on the 1689 Confession of Faith. They have called it the
Filadelfia
Church
.
I
met with around 15 of them on Friday night at their weeknight Prayer Meeting and
spoke briefly. It was just like our own church mid-week meeting in its structure
as were the Sunday services where many more attended including for the first
time three families from an AOG who are deciding to join them. The hymns were
all known to us, and sung heartily in unison; the prayers were reverent and
long. Preaching through an interpreter is like running a 100 metres race single
step by single step, though Andrea's skill on all four occasions was terrific.
One of the hymns we sang was, "Great is Thy Faithfulness," with its
chorus
"Tu
sei fedel Signor, tu sei fedel Signor
Giorno
per giorno tu spandi merce,
E
mi provvedi quanto m'occorre,
Tu
sei fedel Signor, fedel con me."
The
church fellowship is growing and the young families are attentive and expect the
Word of God to be opened up and applied to them week by week.
Andrea
was amongst the first group of younger men to translate and print Puritan works
in Italian while still a student in
Rome
.
PASSAGGIO
'Passaggio'
is the name of another publishing house bringing out many of the works of Dr
Lloyd-Jones, including the 'Sermon on the Mount', five volumes of Romans so far,
and 'Preaching and Preachers.'
Other books by Sinclair Ferguson and Walt Chantry have also been translated and
published and more are planned. Passagio have a splendid annual conferences in
May. This year the conference theme was The Work of the Holy Spirit (4
addresses) and the speaker was past. Jim Elliff (
USA
). His ministry was a great blessing for them and very refreshing. Andrea
Artioli is oneof the men who heads up Passagio and he writes, “It is a great
privilege to rest in God's sovereign work and to be re-minded that the Spirit is
always active even though we sometimes do not see much of him. The Lord Jesus
said, ‘The
kingdom
of
God
is as if a man should scatter seed upon the ground,and should sleep and rise
night and day, and the seed should sprout and grow, he knows not how. The earth
produces of itself, first the blade, then the ear, then the full grain in the
ear. But when the grain is ripe, at once he puts in the sickle, because the
harvest has come.’ What an encouraging passage! By the way, the first
conference in Rimini was attended by almost 200 people coming from all over
Italy and the second one in the church in Asti was attended on Sunday by 150
people.All of them have been greatly blessed and Passaggio sold so many books as
it never did in the past 10 years. Please, we ask you to pray for us and for the
ministry. Just before the Passaggio Conferences began some people started to
attack the work of Passaggio by telling to a quite large gathering of Italian
elders that our doctrinal position is Hyper-Calvinist. This false statement is
causing a great sorrow among us and pressure.We do know that there is a
spiritual battle in all what we do. But... as we have been just reminded: we are
in His almighty and sovereign hands.”
ALFA & OMEGA
The
publishing house connected with Andrea Ferrari is called 'Alfa & Omega.'
They have translated into Italian Bunyan's 'Holy War,' Pink's 'Profiting from
the Word,' Richard Sibbes' 'Bruised Reed,' Thomas Watson's 'All for Good,'
Warfield's 'Person and Work of Christ,' Jonathan Edwards' 'Religious
Affections,"
Iain Murray
's 'Life of Jonathan Edwards,' Whitefield's 'Sermons,' Edwards' 'Charity and its
Fruit,' Tedd Tripp's 'Shepherding a Child's Heart,' Lloyd-Jones on 'The Primacy
of Preaching.' Essential serious materials. They are now in the process of
completing the translation of Spurgeon's 'Lectures to my Students,'
Ryle on Matthew, and the works of John Owen in volume 6, dealing with
overcoming temptation and mortification. I told him Andrea Ferrari on my last
Sunday morning in Aberystwyth I had preached on that theme and had mentioned the
excellent new paperback edition of Owen on Mortification modernised and
published by the Banner. They also plan to publish O'Brian's commentary on
Ephesians, and David Daniell's life of Tyndale - impressive stuff. Without
responsible commentaries serious Protestant pastors in
Italy
simply have the books of RC scholars and translated German works to consult in
preparing sermons.
How
do these books get to the Christians in
Italy
? There are a mere 9 Christian Literature Crusade Bookshops in the whole
country, and one other Christian bookshop and distributor from a Swiss
organisation. That's your lot. Most of these shops, like the one in
Milan
, are small and tucked away in a suburb. So, this is the dilemma, that a handful
of little shops will stock the books which you want to see sold throughout the
entire nation. Many Protestant churches are not book-conscious congregations and
certainly not sympathetic with what Alfa & Omega are saying. So how can
these books reach the Christians of Italy? Today it is largely by a mailing list
containing 3,000 names and this is growing. Alfa & Omega also have a good
web site which advertise and promote their literature, and numbers are sold by
that means. The larger theological volumes are printed in runs of a thousand
copies, while when they printed a more popular work like
Iain Murray
on Jonathan Edwards it is in a run of 1,500 to 2000 copies. There has been no
history of Protestant Christian literature in
Italy
. This is all new. When they got the annual sales figures from the CLC Book
shops one shop manager was excited to tell them that she had sold more books
than ever in the past year.
The
Assemblies of God is the largest Protestant denomination by far in
Italy
with about a thousand churches. It has as many congregations as all the other
Protestant churches put together. Its older pastors, who still have influence in
the denomination, were men who preached the gospel and expected a holy life of
separation from worldly activities in any who professed faith in Christ. God
honoured for many years their preaching of repentance and faith in the finished
work of Christ, but today the music scene has spread and continues to do so
amongst the AOG. Their groups and bands, with that emphasis on self-_expression
and inevitably on entertainment, have taken a grip of Sunday services. So while
much singing, with all its vibes, is defined as 'worship' Bible preaching has
been marginalised, and so has the demand to mortify worldliness as being not
'seeker-sensitive.' The Baptists, on the other hand, while adopting some of
these ingredients, have largely swallowed the social gospel and so too has the
ancient Waldensian church. Such denominations sharing a similar outlook have
been drawn together. In the annual tax returns Italians are allowed to designate
a certain amount of their taxes to churches or charities. Earlier this year the
leading homosexual organisation in
Italy
announced that gays intended to designate the Waldensians as the group who were
going to receive their tax money as the religious group who were most
understanding and protective of homosexuals. There are between 100 and 200 of
the Waldensian congregations meeting in fine large buildings in key places in
all the big cities of
Italy
, and yet with tiny elderly congregations, and the buildings are hired for
cultural and political meetings. The largest religious group in
Italy
after the Roman Catholics are in fact the Jehovah's Witnesses with half a
million members. They have achieved this total not by crusade evangelism with
advertising enticing great crowds to football stadiums, nor by choirs and
choreography and drama in Sunday services, but by steady personal work and
literature.
THE CITY OF
MILAN
Greater
Milan
is the largest conurbation in
Italy
(though
Rome
as a city is larger). Eight million people live here, three times the
population of
Wales
. The 45 minute journey south-west from the airport was drab, into industrial
haze and past hundreds of factories lining both sides of a busy motorway for
kilometre after kilometre. The land here is flat; not a hill offers any
distraction from all these dirty concrete flat-roofed buildings with their
hoardings. It is far better to take off in the other direction from
Milan
gong north towards the nearby Swiss border.
We
went into the heart of
Milan
on a train and the underground on Friday morning ascending steps from the tube
and emerging next to the famous Cathedral, Opera House and Galleria complex at
the heart of downtown
Milan
. The Opera House was having a facelift and was hidden behind grey sheeting. The
Galleria is a high magnificent arcade of expensive shops built like a church and
in the shape of a cross. The Cathedral is a vast edifice which utterly dominates
the city. The front is the last part being renovated, and like the Opera House
is covered in scaffolding which faces the pigeon-infested square. The sides of
the Cathedral are now pristine. Five hundred years old it is a magnificent
example of renaissance architecture with its ceiling, statues, and vast panelled
doors. It is a statement of the Counter Reformation that Protestant word-centred
worship and access to God through Christ alone by the Spirit was not going to
disturb the papal-priestly religious structures of
Italy
. The best part of the cathedral is its roof. We paid fifteen euros (ten pounds)
for the three of us to take the elevator rather than ascend the 250 steps. There
were many more steps to climb when we arrived up on the roof walking under the
flying buttresses and between the forest of columns from the top of which
statues gaze out across the city. The cathedral is crowned by a large golden
statue of Mary looking up, with her arms plaintively moving out from her body.
On the roof we sat and had the ham and olives rolls that Cristina had prepared.
Around
the corner from this Cathedral is a two storey Catholic Book Shop packed with
thousands of books. If one could be complacent at the absence of any services or
clergymen in the Cathedral so that one began to think of Rome as a museum then
this shop, bulging with modern books, reminded you of the vast network of
churches covering continental Europe explaining Rome's position on the nature of
reconciliation between mankind and God as one mediated to men and women by the
actions of 'mother church' alone. She has an image of authority, scholarship,
reverence and trinitarian orthodoxy which would make some inquirers, judging
between
Rome
's claims and
Italy
's few Protestant churches, pause and wait a long time. How modest are the
wonderful efforts of both Alfa & Omega and Passaggio in comparison. How few
and far between are the free grace churches in this vast nation. I felt I was
witnessing the planting of a mustard seed, but what promises are linked to that
enterprise. There are round a thousand such Roman Catholic Book Shops throughout
Italy
, well stocked and managed, all in the most prominent places in most cities and
found at every shrine and place of pilgrimage. Why shouldn't these shops in this
age of aggioronamento also stock and sell the publications of Passaggio and Alfa
& Omega? They are already displaying and selling the books the Waldensians
publish. There is a ready made network of book shops in
Italy
. May that day come.
“THE
INSTITUTE FOR EVANGELICAL FORMATION AND DOCUMENTATION”
On
Saturday we drove 150 miles to
Padua
and the residential study centre of the Institute for Evangelical Formation and
Documentation (IFED). This architecturally impressive three storey building
standing in its own grounds was opened ten months ago with lecture rooms,
dormitories, library, computer room and the church's meeting room where its
residential Sunday congregation meets. Its director who chaired the meeting is
Dr Pietro Bolognesi who studied at the Aix Seminary. Its Vice-Principal is Dr
Leonardo de Chirico who studied in the Evangelical Theological of Wales in
Bridgend and got his Ph.D. from King's College,
London
. His first book has appeared, "Evangelical Theological Perspectives on
Post-Vatican II Roman Catholicism," (
Bern
; Peter Lang, 337 pages) in which he examines the way leading men have grappled
with this issue. Those theologians are Berkouwer, Van Til, David Wells, Bloesch,
Herbert Carson and Stott. It is a splendid book.
90%
of the money for the ambitious project of building this Institute was raised
within
Italy
itself. At the present it is offering lodging places for Christians where they
may sleep while on holiday.
Padua
is just 45 minutes away from
Venice
and is central for north
Italy
. Dr Pietro Bolognesi has had influence among the Plymouth Brethren Assemblies
of Italy which have been the most biblically thoughtful groups in that nation's
Protestant congregations. The Institute has promoted the Reformed world and life
view by its conferences and also by an impressive six-monthly journal of
theology full of meaty articles and reviews. Its journals tend to be single
issue editions on such subjects as ethics, biblical theology and leading
theologians. It has been running for over 15 years.
One
remembers an Institute with a similar vision started in
Toronto
about forty years ago which disappointed the Dutch immigrant Christians who had
hoped it would become a stronghold for the historical evangelical faith. It
became the doorway by which more Dutch liberal thinking entered the Christian
Reformed Church in
North America
. The Italian Institute is rooted in more fundamentalist soil. Those whose
Christian background of 'Assembly Principles' has been pre-millennial
dispensational ("Why paint the deck-chairs on the ship when the Titanic is
going down?") have been presented in the Institute and its publications
with a new attitude of cultural understanding and engagement, showing them,
incidentally, the evangelistic opportunities that such thinking offers. The
organisers do not want to alienate the fellowship of those who have been dubbed
the 'stepchildren of the Reformation'. Italian Protestantism has enough
divisions without this new venture further polarising believers. On this
occasion about 70 men and women came to hear a paper on, "When Orthodoxy is
Not Enough." Some had travelled 300 miles from north of
Rome
to be present. With the exciting development of this new facility the
supporters of the Institute wait on God for his blessing and guidance as to
future progress.
VENICE
After
the peace and happiness of the Sunday services at which we were joined by three
women from
America
, Monday was spent travelling the 160 miles to
Venice
and our first experience of that extraordinary city. How vast it is, and four
huge cruise ships, high in the water, had deposited their passengers there to
explore the city before going off again with them around the other ports of the
Mediterranean
. No cars are on the islands on which
Venice
has been built. The city is not wheelchair friendly as every hundred yards
there is a steep humpbacked bridge of ten or so steps up and down to allow the
beautifully lacquered gondolas to pass beneath. What a colourful sight the
gondoliers make in their straw boaters and striped sweaters, but we heard none
of them singing. Many of the buildings in
Venice
are over 500 years old and the sights in every direction are magnificent. The
city goes on and on and we walked ourselves into the ground. There are the water
buses and we bought a day ticket which allowed us to travel all round the city,
up the
Grand Canal
in the morning, alighting at St Mark's famous square with the Doge's Palace and
Cathedral. We took the water bus back at the end of the afternoon to a spot near
the ocean liners where our car was packed. One felt one needed to go back for a
week to take in everything. We had seen 1% of what
Venice
has for the curious.
GEOFF THOMAS