2 Thessalonians 2:1-4 Now we beseech
you, brethren, by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by our
gathering together unto him, That ye be not soon shaken in mind,
or be troubled, neither by spirit, nor by word, nor by letter as from
us, as that the day of Christ is at hand. Let no man deceive
you by any means: for that day shall not come, except
there come a falling away [G646:
Apostasy] first, and
that man of sin be revealed, the son of perdition;
Who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called
God, or that is worshipped; so that he as God sitteth in the
temple of God, shewing himself that he is God.
I begin with the scripture above because Paul tells us there are two
signs that precede the
day of the Lord and Christ's coming to gather us to Himself. This is
the blessed hope that we are to watch for. According to the Bible, God's
Word is Truth. The Greek word used for “falling away” is apostasia
and it means: defection from truth (properly, the state) (“apostasy”):
falling away, forsake. Therefore any teaching that strays from what
the Bible, God’s Word, says is a defection from the Truth and an apostasy.
This is not limited to the secular, but is a great part of many who consider
themselves Christians who have beliefs and practices in direct contradiction
to God’s Word. I believe in God’s literal Word being the foundation for
all belief and whatever deviates from that is no longer in line with Biblical
Christianity. I’m not trying to exclude anyone, just uphold the value of
taking God at His Word and living it as best as I can. I’m not perfect either,
but there is a time prophesied in which people will fall away from the Truth
to fables.
1 Timothy 4:1-9 Now the
Spirit speaketh expressly, that in the latter times some shall depart
from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils;
Speaking lies in hypocrisy; having their conscience seared with a hot
iron; Forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from meats, which
God hath created to be received with thanksgiving of them which believe
and know the truth. For every creature of God is good, and nothing
to be refused, if it be received with thanksgiving: For it is sanctified
by the word of God and prayer. If thou put the brethren in remembrance
of these things, thou shalt be a good minister of Jesus Christ, nourished
up in the words of faith and of good doctrine, whereunto thou hast attained.
But refuse profane and old wives' fables, and exercise thyself rather
unto godliness. For bodily exercise profiteth little: but godliness
is profitable unto all things, having promise of the life that now is,
and of that which is to come. This is a faithful saying and worthy
of all acceptation.
There are many beliefs out there that depart from the Truth. Some are
more subtle than others. This page will be a work-in-progress watching the
various forms of deception, blatant and subtle, so that you are not in darkness
regarding what God's Word says about much of the deception that is part
of the end-times. In fact, that is the first thing Christ warned about when
asked about the time of the end. The ultimate end of this apostasy will
lead people away from God and into a one world religion that will eventually
worship the
antichrist.
Matthew 24:3-5 And as he sat upon
the mount of Olives, the disciples came unto him privately, saying,
Tell us, when shall these things be? and what shall be the sign of
thy coming, and of the end of the world? And Jesus answered and
said unto them, Take heed that no man deceive you. For many shall come
in my name, saying, I am Christ; and shall deceive many.
Matthew 7:15-23 Beware of false
prophets, which come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are
ravening wolves. Ye shall know them by their fruits. Do men gather grapes
of thorns, or figs of thistles? Even so every good tree bringeth forth
good fruit; but a corrupt tree bringeth forth evil fruit. A good tree
cannot bring forth evil fruit, neither can a corrupt tree bring forth
good fruit. Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down,
and cast into the fire. Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them.
Not every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom
of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven.
Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied
in thy name? and in thy name have cast out devils? and in thy name done
many wonderful works? And then will I profess unto them, I never knew
you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity.
Until you learn what you don't know, you have no idea how blind you are.
Blindness comes from a lack of understanding of Truth, the inability to
see it. The Bible says that faith comes by hearing and hearing by the Word
of God. That is our Truth, not material things or man's rule, this Truth
is eternal. The Word of the Lord endures forever. 1 Peter 1:25
Revelation 3:14-22 And unto the
angel of the church of the Laodiceans write; These things saith the
Amen, the faithful and true witness, the beginning of the creation of
God; I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would
thou wert cold or hot. So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither
cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth. Because
thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing;
and knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and
blind, and naked: I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in
the fire, that thou mayest be rich; and white raiment, that thou mayest
be clothed, and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear; and anoint
thine eyes with eyesalve, that thou mayest see. As many as I
love, I rebuke and chasten: be zealous therefore, and repent.
Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and
open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he
with me. To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my throne,
even as I also overcame, and am set down with my Father in his throne.
He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches.
Is this speaking to the “prosperity gospel” being preached around the
world? It seems many Christians today are too wrapped up in the world and
conforming to it. The ways of the world hold more importance than the ways
of God and spending time with Him. The desire to “get ahead” in the world
takes our time away from God. Less time reading God’s Word means less foundation
upon which to build belief leading to a lukewarm attitude not based on Truth
of God’s Word, but feelings and impressions built from ideas here and there,
both Christian and secular. I've had to un-learn many things because I did
not keep God's Word central in my education of reality. Rather I conformed
somewhat to the world while holding onto the basics I had learned growing
up. Looking back now, I don't believe that was enough.
This mixing and mingling of belief is what Babylon was all about. It
is what God warned Israel not to do because they were set apart as God’s
people to follow His ways. How much more as followers of Christ are we to
walk in His ways written in the Bible? These are the ways of selfless love
toward God and others with the recognition of Yeshua as the Messiah that
died for the sins of the world, rose again and is going to come again. This
is obedience to God and a requirement to build a personal relationship with
Him. God and sin cannot coexist and we as Christians are temples that God
dwells in with us by His Holy Spirit. So let us return to the Book and His
ways and get out of the world and the indifference to righteousness in order
to fit into the world. Let’s fit into God’s kingdom now, even if it brings
hatred against us for speaking the Truth.
Trust the Word of God, for it is Truth.
The above
website and associated
newsletter covers in greater detail the pulling away from Biblical Christianity
that is happening more and more today as experience drives belief over the
Book for more and more believers. We must be cautious and guarded about
this because God is not the only being we can have supernatural encounters
with. I believe it is possible to be so caught up in searching for signs
and wonders that they cause us to miss the subtle and every-day miracles
that God works in the lives of them that love Him. I know in my study of
Bible prophecy, I have learned more detail about the future than any man
tried to guess at, only this is all God's Word, not man's word. If you don't
believe that, then this is all foolishness to you. But many ministries that
people see through and then associate with all Christianity are not following
God's Word, but men's fables and tickling words.
2 Timothy 3-4:18 This know also,
that in the last days perilous times shall come. For men shall be lovers
of their own selves, covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient
to parents, unthankful, unholy, Without natural affection, trucebreakers,
false accusers, incontinent, fierce, despisers of those that are good,
Traitors, heady, highminded, lovers of pleasures more than lovers
of God; Having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof:
from such turn away. For of this sort are they which creep into houses,
and lead captive silly women laden with sins, led away with divers lusts,
Ever learning, and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth.
Now as Jannes and Jambres withstood Moses, so do these also resist the
truth: men of corrupt minds, reprobate concerning the faith. But they
shall proceed no further: for their folly shall be manifest unto
all men, as their's also was.
But thou hast fully known my doctrine, manner of life, purpose, faith,
longsuffering, charity, patience, Persecutions, afflictions, which came
unto me at Antioch, at Iconium, at Lystra; what persecutions I endured:
but out of them all the Lord delivered me. Yea, and all that will
live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution. But
evil men and seducers shall wax worse and worse, deceiving, and being
deceived. But continue thou in the things which thou hast learned and
hast been assured of, knowing of whom thou hast learned them; And that
from a child thou hast known the holy scriptures, which are
able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ
Jesus. All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable
for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness:
That the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good
works.
I charge thee therefore before God, and the Lord Jesus
Christ, who shall judge the quick and the dead at his appearing and
his kingdom; Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove,
rebuke, exhort with all long suffering and doctrine. For the time
will come when they will not endure sound [Biblical]
doctrine; but after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers,
having itching ears; And they shall turn away their ears from the truth,
and shall be turned unto fables. But watch thou in all things, endure
afflictions, do the work of an evangelist, make full proof of thy ministry.
For I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at
hand. I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have
kept the faith: Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness,
which the Lord, the righteous judge, shall give me at that day: and
not to me only, but unto all them also that love his appearing. Do thy
diligence to come shortly unto me: For Demas hath forsaken me, having
loved this present world, and is departed unto Thessalonica; Crescens
to Galatia, Titus unto Dalmatia. Only Luke is with me. Take Mark, and
bring him with thee: for he is profitable to me for the ministry. And
Tychicus have I sent to Ephesus. The cloke that I left at Troas with
Carpus, when thou comest, bring with thee, and the books, but especially
the parchments. Alexander the coppersmith did me much evil: the Lord
reward him according to his works: Of whom be thou ware also; for he
hath greatly withstood our words. At my first answer no man stood with
me, but all men forsook me: I pray God that it may not be laid to their
charge. Notwithstanding the Lord stood with me, and strengthened me;
that by me the preaching might be fully known, and that all the Gentiles
might hear: and I was delivered out of the mouth of the lion. And the
Lord shall deliver me from every evil work, and will preserve me unto
his heavenly kingdom: to whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen.
Titus 2:7-15 In all things
shewing thyself a pattern of good works: in doctrine shewing uncorruptness,
gravity, sincerity, Sound speech, that cannot be condemned; that he
that is of the contrary part may be ashamed, having no evil thing to
say of you. Exhort servants to be obedient unto their own masters, and
to please them well in all things; not answering again; Not purloining,
but shewing all good fidelity; that they may adorn the doctrine of God
our Saviour in all things. For the grace of God that bringeth salvation
hath appeared to all men, Teaching us that, denying ungodliness
and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly, in
this present world; Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious
appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ; Who gave
himself for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify
unto himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works. These things
speak, and exhort, and rebuke with all authority. Let no man despise
thee.
This website is an examination of Biblical doctrine in light of end-time
events currently unfolding. One of those prophesied events is an apostasy
from Truth, the Bible. That alone is the foundation to determine sound doctrine.
However, it is just not the bits and pieces we choose to accept but the
whole collection of 66 books written by the Holy Spirit through 40 authors
over thousands of years. We are to teach the Gospel while looking for the
blessed hope,
the coming of Christ. In determining what the Bible has to say about
how that will come about, here are some things that I've learned about different
types of spirituality out there being used to chip away at the foundation
of Truth through the teachings of men and doctrines of demons showing signs
and lying wonders to deceive. I encourage you to learn
what the Bible has to say about what is going to unfold in the near
future.
“Christ is the same force as Lucifer but moving in seemingly the opposite
direction. Lucifer moves in to create the light within through the pressure
of experience. Christ moves to release that light, that wisdom, that
love into creation... Lucifer, like Christ, stands at the door of man’s
consciousness and knocks. If man says, ‘Go away because I do not like
what you represent. I am afraid of you,’ Lucifer will play tricks on
that fellow. If man says, ‘Come in, and I will give to you the treat
of my love and understanding and I will uplift you in the light and
presences of the Christ, my outflow,’ then Lucifer becomes something
else again. He becomes the being who carries that great treat, the ultimate
treat, the light of wisdom. [Lucifer] is the light giver. … He stands
no longer as the tester or the tempter but as the great initiator, the
one who hands the soul over to the Christ and from the Christ on into
even greater realms. … Lucifer works within each of us to bring us to
wholeness, and as we move into a New Age, which is the age of man’s
wholeness, each of us in some way is brought to that point which I term
the Luciferic initiation, the particular doorway through which the individual
must pass if he is to come fully into the presence of his light and
his wholeness. … At some point each of us faces the presence of Lucifer.
We either fear it when we come to grips with what we term ancient evil
or the spirit of darkness, or we move throughit and realize that we
are each of us light and dark. … When we do accept it, we can emerge
into the radiance of our inner light, the light that can never be extinguished.
… Lucifer comes to give to us the final gift of wholeness. If we accept
it then he is free and we are free. That is the Luciferic initiation.
It is one that many people now, and in the days ahead, will be facing,
for it is an initiation in the New Age. … In the New Age consciousness
there is not good and evil.” | David Spangler,
Lorian Association,
Reflections on the Christ, Findhorn Publications p. 40, 44-45,
Interconnections
Constance Cumbey: Discovering the New Age Movement
Constance Cumbey Author of
Hidden Dangers of the Rainbow: The New Age Movement and Our Coming Age of
Barbarism tells her story on how she discovered the New Age Movement.
Its an exciting story to hear as the truth of the new age movement is exposed
from the shadows it hides behind, revealing its dark purposes and satanic
plot in its hope for the Anti Christ. Constance also tells her thrilling
account of how she basically shattered a Benjamin Creme gathering by saying
the Lords Prayer, while they were waiting for Maitreya to show.. Get ready
for an exciting time as Constance Cumbey tells her story.
Filmed at the Radio Liberty 2006 conference,
hosted by Dr. Stanley Monteith.
The popularization of the very name New Age has been attributed to
her writings. Born Alice LaTrobe-Bateman in Manchester, England on June
16, 1880, she grew up as a society girl and enjoyed all the privileges
of the British upper-class. At the age of 35, her life changed forever
and later, in her unfinished biography she wrote:
“I discovered, first of all, that there is a great and divine
Plan... I discovered, for a second thing, that there are Those Who
are responsible for the working out of that Plan and Who, step by
step and stage by stage, have led mankind on down the centuries.”
Alice had her first contact with a voice that claimed to be a master
in November of 1919. Calling himself the “Tibetan,” he wanted Alice
to take dictation from him. Concerning this, Alice wrote:
“I heard a voice which said, “There are some books which it is
desired should be written for the public. You can write them. Will
you do so?”
Alice felt reluctant at first to take on such an unusual endeavor
but the voice continued urging her to writ the books. Alice experienced
a brief period of anxiety in which she feared for her health and sanity.
She was finally reassured by one of her other masters that she had nothing
to fear and that she would be doing a “really valuable piece of work.”
The “valuable work” Alice was to do lasted thirty years between 1919
and 1949, by means of telepathic communication, Alice Bailey wrote nineteen
books for her unseen mentor.
To occultists, the significance of the Alice Bailey writings was
that they foretold that in the coming Aquarian Age “the teachings of
the East and of the West must be fused and blended before the true and
universal religion - for which the world waits - could appear on earth.”
[This one sentence sums up the entire
theme of my book,
A Time of Departing]
There also would be a “Coming One,” whom she called “the Christ,”
who would not be the Lord Jesus Christ whom Christians await the return
of, but an entirely different individual. This man would embody all
the great principles of occultism, chiefly the divinity and perfectibility
of man, and consequently expect recognition and honor as to his
own lordship and divinity.
This sounds a lot like what Albert Pike wrote of in 1871 regarding “the
true light through the universal manifestation of the pure doctrine of Lucifer,
brought finally out in the public view.” This is the Biblical
man of sin from Revelation 13:1-10. Ray’s book is focused on the origins
of these occultic teachings and how they are creeping into the church and
focused on the inner self. With the New Age, the focus is on self and bettering
oneself and ones place in society. This all took off in the 60’s sex, drugs
and rock n’ roll movement. To understand the spiritual influence brought
about by music, watch
They Sold Their Souls for Rock N’ Roll and see how popular bands like
The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Marilyn Manson and others forward the wicked
agenda that has blinded generations.
Matthew 6:19-21 Lay not up for
yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and
where thieves break through and steal: But lay up for yourselves
treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt, and
where thieves do not break through nor steal: For where your treasure
is, there will your heart be also.
I believe that Raphael and Alice Bailey’s “Tibetan” are familar spirits.
I also believe they are revealing their plan of operation in
their writings. The intent of these beings can be seen by what the following
metaphysical practitioners convey:
It is all there -- just look for it. Seek the immortal, eternal
Spirit that dwells within you -- the “I am presence,” containting
all that was, is, or ever shall be.... The whole of life will become
more meaningful as you live from the center within. Remember that
you are Gods in the Making. | Donald Yott,
Man and Metaphysics (New
York, NY: Sam Weiser, Inc., 1980), p. 103.
It is not necessary to “have faith” in any power outside of yourself.
| Shakti Gawain,
Creative Visualization,
op. cit., p. 15.
The Angel of Light
Who do you think would want you to believe something like that? Who
would want you to believe that God does not exist outside of yourself
-- that you don't need o have faith in anything external. New
Age writer/philosopher David Spangler reveals who in his book
Reflections on the Christ when he writes:
Some being has to take these energies into his consciousness and
substance and channel them as it were to those other beings who
must receive them, in this case humanity. The being who chose to
embody these energies and to be in essence the angel of man's inner
evolution is the being we know as Lucifer.
| David Spangler,
Reflections of the Christ
(Findhorn Foundation, second edition, 1978(, p. 36.)
He lays out the entire program behind the New Age movement in the
following explanation:
He [Lucifer] comes to make us aware
of our power within, to draw to ourselves experience. He comes to
make us aware of the power of creative manifestation which we wield.
| David Spangler
When you are working with the laws of manifestation you are in
essence manifesting a Luciferic principle.
| David Spangler
“Christ
is the same force as Lucifer but moving in seemingly the opposite
direction. Lucifer moves in to create the light within through the
pressure of experience. Christ moves to release that light, that
wisdom, that love into creation... Lucifer, like Christ, stands
at the door of man’s consciousness and knocks. If man says, ‘Go
away because I do not like what you represent. I am afraid of you,’
Lucifer will play tricks on that fellow. If man says, ‘Come in,
and I will give to you the treat of my love and understanding and
I will uplift you in the light and presences of the Christ, my outflow,’
then Lucifer becomes something else again. He becomes the being
who carries that great treat, the ultimate treat, the light of wisdom.
[Lucifer] is the light giver. … He stands no longer as the tester
or the tempter but as the great initiator, the one who hands the
soul over to the Christ and from the Christ on into even greater
realms. … Lucifer works within each of us to bring us to wholeness,
and as we move into a New Age, which is the age of man’s wholeness,
each of us in some way is brought to that point which I term the
Luciferic initiation, the particular doorway through which the individual
must pass if he is to come fully into the presence of his light
and his wholeness. … At some point each of us faces the presence
of Lucifer. We either fear it when we come to grips with what we
term ancient evil or the spirit of darkness, or we move throughit
and realize that we are each of us light and dark. … When we do
accept it, we can emerge into the radiance of our inner light, the
light that can never be extinguished. … Lucifer comes to give to
us the final gift of wholeness. If we accept it then he is free
and we are free. That is the Luciferic initiation. It is one that
many people now, and in the days ahead, will be facing, for it is
an initiation in the New Age. … In the New Age consciousness there
is not good and evil.” | David Spangler,
Lorian Association,
Reflections on the Christ, Findhorn Publications p. 40, 44-45,
Interconnections
Even if Spangler had not written these words, the link between Lucifer
and the New Age movement would still be evident to Christians from reading
2 Corinthians 11:13-15:
For such are false apostles, deceitful workers, transforming themselves
into the apostles of Christ. And no marvel; for Satan himself
is transformed into an angel of light. Therefore it is no great
thing if his ministers also be transformed as the ministers of
rightrousness; whose end shall be according to their works.
(emphasis mine)
For this deception to be effective, he would have to come as an “angel
of light.” To judge a belief system as being satanic, one should compare
how close it comes to Satan's own statements about himself. God is asking
him, “How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning!
How art thou cut down to the ground, which didst weaken the nations!”
(Isaiah 14:12). Then He reminds Satan of his own words when he challenged
God:
For thou [Satan] hast said in thine heart, “I will ascend into heaven,
I will exalt my throne above the stars of God: I will sit also upon
the mount of the congregation, in the sides of the north; I will
be like the most High.” (Isaiah 14:13-14,
emphasis added)
Then later, when Satan deceived Eve in the Garden, he said:
For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes
shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good from
evil. (Genesis 3:5, emphasis mine)
Without a doubt, the New Age movement fits that bill.
Matthew 7:20 So
then, you will know them by their fruits.
The results are in! And sadly, they are not surprising. In a church
age where the average professing Christian is both “in” the world AND
“of” the world...In a church age where the average pulpit is filled
with compromise and half-truths...In a church age where uninspired commentaries
pass for the inspired word of God...Here's the latest statistics:*
70% of those claiming religious affiliations believe
multiple religions can lead a person to salvation.
57% of evangelical Christians say that multiple religions
can lead to salvation.
“57% of evangelical Christians say that multiple religions can
lead to salvation, though nary an evangelical theologian or minister
would be likely to say that.”*
Ya' know, it's one thing to be silent about something that
is false, but it's quite another thing to CLEARLY PRESENT THE TRUTH
IN LOVE! Where is the pastor who will boldly proclaim from
the pulpit that “THE BIBLE ALONE IS THE INSPIRED WORD OF GOD!” Where
is the preacher that will unapologetically declare that “JESUS ALONE
IS THE ONLY WAY TO HEAVEN!” The Bible says,
Acts 4:12 There is salvation
in no one else; for there is no other name (Jesus) under
heaven that has been given among men by which we must be saved.
And Jesus says,
John 14:6 I am the
way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father, but
through Me.
Self-help tips from the pulpit this Sunday won't be of much
value come Judgment Day.
Jeremiah 10:21 For the shepherds
have become stupid and have not sought the Lord.
-57% of evangelical Christians say that multiple religions can
lead to salvation.*
We live in a day much like the one that
Jeremiah lived in. He declared, “Those
who handle the law do not know Me(God)”
(Jeremiah 2:8). Can you imagine? A pastor of a church? A minister
who proclaims the Word of God each Sunday? Not even having a relationship
with the One he/she supposedly represents?
Jeremiah 5:30-31 An appalling
and horrible thing has happened in the land; the prophets prophesy
falsely, and the priests rule on their own authority; and My people
love it so! But what will you do at the end of it?
Can you imagine? A pastor running his church based on the
principles of a best selling book rather than the Word of God? A minister
or Bible school professor replacing the innerant/infallible Scripture
with his own ideas and calling them “The Bible?”
Well, it happened in Jeremiah’s day... And it’s happening RIGHT NOW!
* Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life Survey (36,000 people), San
Francisco Chronicle, “Americans Reshape Religion,” p.1.
In the following passages, take note that some of those shut out of the
marriage and even those that cast out demons and do miracles in Christ's
name and who call Him Lord are not of Him.
Matthew 25:1-13 Then shall the
kingdom of heaven be likened unto ten virgins, which took their lamps,
and went forth to meet the bridegroom. And five of them were wise,
and five were foolish. They that were foolish took their lamps,
and took no oil with them: But the wise took oil in their vessels with
their lamps. While the bridegroom tarried, they all slumbered and slept.
And at midnight there was a cry made, Behold, the bridegroom cometh;
go ye out to meet him. Then all those virgins arose, and trimmed their
lamps. And the foolish said unto the wise, Give us of your oil; for
our lamps are gone out. But the wise answered, saying, Not so; lest
there be not enough for us and you: but go ye rather to them that sell,
and buy for yourselves. And while they went to buy, the bridegroom came;
and they that were ready went in with him to the marriage: and the door
was shut. Afterward came also the other virgins, saying, Lord, Lord,
open to us.But he answered and said, Verily I say unto you,
I know you not.Watch therefore, for ye know neither the day
nor the hour wherein the Son of man cometh.
Matthew 7:15-23 Beware of
false prophets, which come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly
they are ravening wolves. Ye shall know them by their fruits. Do
men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? Even so every good
tree bringeth forth good fruit; but a corrupt tree bringeth forth evil
fruit. A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, neither can a corrupt
tree bring forth good fruit. Every tree that bringeth not forth good
fruit is hewn down, and cast into the fire. Wherefore by their fruits
ye shall know them. Not every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord,
shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of
my Father which is in heaven. Many will say to me in that day,
Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have
cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful works?And
then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye
that work iniquity.
This is not a judgment of the following as if I have some kind of authority
to do so. I am just a watchman and when I see warning signs, I must speak
up to bring awareness. My concern is that some of these ministries focus
less on Christ (while still using His name) and more on signs and wonders
and drawing those looking for personal experiences rather than the Truth
of God's Word. I don't claim infallibility in determining error, but I ask
you to just look honestly at these things and search the Bible for yourself
as well. Rely on God's Word over man's word, including my own things I share.
Acts 17:11
What is happening to mainstream Christianity is the same thing that
is happening to business, health, education, counseling, and other areas
of society. Christendom is being cultivated for a role in the New Age.
The entity, Raphael, explains this very clearly in the Starseed Transmissions:
We work with all who are vibrationally sympathetic; simple and sincere
people who feel our spirit moving, but for the most part, only
within the context of their current belief system. (emphasis
mine) | Ken Carey,
The Starseed Transmissions,
op. cit., p. 33.
He is saying that they “work,” or interact, with people who open
their minds to them in a way that fits in with the person's current
beliefs. In the context of Christianity this means that those meditating
will think that they have contacted God, when in reality they have connected
up with Raphael's kind (who are more than willing to impersonate whomever
the person wishes to reach so long as they can link up with them.)
This ultimately points to a global religion based on meditation and
mystical experience. New Age writer David Spangler explains it the following
way:
There will be several religious and spiritual disciplines as there
are today, each serving different sensibilities and affinities,
each enriched by and enriching the particular cultural soil in which
it is rooted. However, there will also be a planetary spirituality
that will celebrate the sacredness of the whole humanity in appropriate
festivals, rituals, and sacraments. There will be a more widespread
understanding and experience of the holistic nature of reality,
resulting in a shared outlook that today would be called mystical.
Mysticism has always overflowed the bounds of particular religious
traditions, and in the new world this would be even more true.
| David Spangler, Emergence:
The Rebirth of the Sacred, op. cit., p.112
The rise of centering prayer is causing many churches to become
agents of transformation. Those who practice it tend to embrace
this one-world-religion idea. One of the main proponents of centering
prayer had this revelation:
It is my sense, from having meditated with persons from many different
traditions, that in the silence we experience a deep unity.
When we go beyond the portals of the rational mind into the experience,
there is only one God to be experienced.... I think it has been
the common experience of all persons of good will that when we sit
together Centering we experience a solidarity that seems
to cut through all our philosophical and theological differences.
(emphasis mine)| M. Basil Pennington O.C.S.D.,Centered Living the Way of Centering Prayer (Liguori, MO:
Liguori Publications, Revised edition, 1999), pp. 198,200
In this context, we may compare all the world's religions to a dairy
herd. Each cow may look different on the outside, but the milk would
all be the same. The different religious groups would maintain their
own separate identities, but a universal spiritual practice would bind
them all together - not so much a one-world church as a one-world spirituality.
Episcopal priest and New Age leader Matthew Fox explains what he calls
“deep ecumenism”:
Without mysticism there will be no “deep ecumenism,” no unleashing
of the power of wisdom from all the world's religious traditions.
Without this I am convince there will never be global peace or justice
since the human race needs spiritual depths and disciplines, celebrations
and rituals, to awaken its better selves. The promise of ecumenism,
the coming together of religions, has been thwarted because world
religions have not been relating at the level of mysticism.
| Matthew Fox,
The Coming of the Cosmic Christ
(New York, NY: HarperCollins, 1988), p. 65.
Fox believes that all world religions will eventually be bound together
by the “Cosmic Christ” principle, which is another term for the higher
self.
As incredible as this may sound, it appears to be happening now.
The New Age is embedding in American religious culture far deeper and
broader than many people imagine. If your concept of the New Age is
simply astrology, tarot cards, or reincarnation, then you could easily
miss the real New Age as it pulses through the religious current. If
mystical prayer continues its advance, then we could one day see, perhaps
sooner than we expect, many Christian churches becoming conduits of
New Age thought to their membership.
Is God Graffiti?
Sue Monk Kidd is a best selling novel writer. Her book, The Secret
Life of Bees has sold over four million copies, mainly to women.
At one time a Southern Baptist Sunday school teacher, she became attracted
to centering prayer as a way to know God more deeply. Today, she is
the Writer in Residence of the Sophia Institute, which is devoted to
“foster[ing] the emergence of the sacred feminine” (i.e., the
Divine feminine). Monk Kidd now adheres to what New Agers teach,
that this mystical force (called God or Divinity) is in all things,
nothing excluded:
Deity means that divinity will no longer be only heavenly... It
will also be right here, right now, in me, in the earth, in this
river, in excrement and roses alike. (emphasis mind)
| Sue Monk Kidd,
The Dance of the Dissident Daughter
(New York, NY: HarperCollins, First HarperCollins Paperback edition,
2002), p. 160.
She reiterates this in her 2006 book, First Light, in which she writes:
If I am intent on centering my life in the presence of God, then
I must understand what I believe about where this presence can be
found... God became the steam of my soup, the uprooted tree, the
graffiti on the building, the rust on the fence.
| Sue Monk Kidd,
First Light (Carmel, NY:
Guideposts Books, 2006) pp. 96,98
But what if the graffiti is gang graffiti about killing members of
a rival gang or even worse, what if the graffiti is cursing God with
vile language? Well, Monk Kidd would still say that the graffiti
is God. Why?
It is because New Agers believe God is not a being but Being itself.
In other words, there is nothing that is not God. This is the decision
that the world is now facing -- is God a personal being or is God
the Universe and all that it entails? It is this vital question
that we will explore in the following chapters of this book.
The “Wiles” of Satan
Ephesians 6:11 warns: “Put on the whole armour of God, that ye may
be able to stand against the wiles of the devil” (emphasis mine).
The word wiles in this verse translates ingenious trap
or snare. In order for a trap to be effective, proper bait is
needed 00 something that is alluring, that looks and feels valid. For
example, let's take the case of the Reiki. The average Reiki practitioner
would think it outrageous and ridiculous that someone would even
suggest that Reiki is linked to Satan. One Reiki practitioner offered
this comment on the positive nature of Reiki:
During a Reiki treatment, you can expect to feel any number of sensations;
warmth, coolness, tingling, deep relaxation, or at times you may
not feel anything discernible. Sessions usually last one hour, and
afterward you will feel calm and relaxed. you will sleep better
and have a general sense of well-being.
| Jennifer Thebodeaus
link
Does this sound like something that is Satanic? Most people would
not only say no but would feel that something of this nature probably
would have to come from God. In The Reiki Factor, Reiki master
Barbara Ray says:
Reiki has reemerged as a trasformative tool for energy balancing,
for natural healing, for wholing and for creating peace, joy, love,
and, ultimately, for achieving higher consciousness and enlightenment.
| Barbara Ray,
Ph.D., The Reiki Factor (Smithtown,
NY: Exposition Press, Inc., 1983), p. 12.
Enlightenment is the same as self-realization, especially in the
context of a metaphysical practice. When a Christian hears someone claim
to be God, he immediately should recognize the pronouncements of Satan,
“Ye shall be as gods” (Genesis 3:5)
and “I will be like the most High”
(Isaiah 14:14). Hear this closely, He said, I will be like the
most High (God) ... I will be like God.
In view of this, the only logical conclusion is that the power behind
Reiki is satanic. The key is not to think in terms of how the
popular culture sees Satan, but rather how the inspired writers of the
Bible portrayed Satan -- a master deceiver and counterfeiter of the
Truth. He is one who comes as “an angel of light” (2 Corinthians 11:14)
to offer mankind godhood (you are divine and the master of your
own destiny).
The sad thing about all this is that these experiences are so real
and convincing. People experiencing the superconscious testify that
deep meditative states are incomparably beautiful and harpazoous. They
experience intense light flooding them, andhave a sens of omnipotent
power and infinite wisdom. In this timeless state, they experience an
ecstasy compared to nothing they have ever known before. They feel a
sense of unity with all of life and are convinced of their own immortality.
Such experiences keep them returning for more. One is not going to
believe he or she is God if one doesn't feel like God.
The late New Age leader Peter Caddy related an incident in which
a group of Christians confronted him and tried, as he put it, to
save my soul. He told them to come back and talk to him when they've
had the same wonderful mystical experiences he has had. the point he
was trying to make was that these naive Christians had no idea
what the metaphysical life is all about and if they did, they would
want what he had rather than trying to convert him to their
way of thinking.
Feelings such as this are common in New Age circles and have hooked
many over the past twenty years. They feel something this great has
to be of God. A similar account is related in Acts 8:9-11:
But there was a certain man, called Simon, which beforetime in the
same city used sorcery, and bewitched the people of Samaria, giving
out that himself was some great one: To whom they all gave heed,
from the least to the greatest, saying, This man is the great
power of God. And to him they had regard, because that of long
time he had bewitched them with sorceries.
(emphasis mine)
In the Greek, the word bewitched means to amaze or
astound. Sorcery means using the power of familiar spirits. What
this man was doing had to have appeared good, otherwise the people would
not have felt that “this man is the great power of God.” The truth of
the matter is, he wasn't of God, it just appeared that way.
In light of all this, it is easy to see why the coming of the Christian
Gospel to Ephesus, that bastion of the Ancient Wisdom, had such a dramatic
effect:
And many that believed came, and confessed, and shewed their deeds.9Many
of them also which used curious arts brought their books together,
and burned them before all men: and they counted the price of them,
and found it fifty thousand pieces of silver.
(Acts 19:18-19, emphasis mine)
The word curious is translated from a Greek word meaning
magical. The magical or metaphysical arts went out the door when
the Gospel of Christ came in. The two were not only incompatable,
but totally opposite as the following account reveals:
And when they were at Salamis, they preached the word of God in
the synagogues of the Jews: and they had also John to their minister.
And when they had gone through the isle unto Paphos, they found
a certain sorcerer, a false prophet, a Jew, whose name was
Barjesus: Which was with the deputy of the country, Sergius Paulus,
a prudent man; who called for Barnabas and Saul, and desired to
hear the word of God. But Elymas the sorcerer (for so is his name
by interpretation) withstood them, seeking to turn away the deputy
from the faith. Then Saul, (who also is called Paul,) filled
with the Holy Ghost, set his eyes on him. And said, O full of all
subtilty and all mischief, thou child of the devil,
thou enemy of all righteousness, wilt thou not cease to
pervert the right ways of the Lord?
(Acts 13:5-10, emphasis mine)
Romans 1:16 “For I am
not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God
unto salvation to every one that believeth.”
For various reasons, Christians of different sorts have tinkered
with “the gospel of Christ” as though it needed adjustments. Not major
alterations, most will tell you, but just some minor tweaking here and
there. The changes often begin by one's declaring that there is no real
change involved, simply a shift in emphasis. Yet, no matter what the
rationale may be, the end result is being “ashamed of the gospel of
Christ.”
To be “ashamed of the gospel” covers a number of attitudes from being
totally embarrassed by it to thinking one can improve upon it a bit
to make it more acceptable. One example of the former is the recent
claim by an Emerging Church author that the teaching regarding Christ's
paying the full penalty for the sins of mankind through His substitutionary
death on the Cross is irrelevant and viewed as “a form of cosmic child
abuse.” More subtle examples include trying to make the gospel seem
less exclusive, and the “softening” of the consequences from which the
gospel saves mankind, such as the wrath of God and the Lake of Fire.
Prevalent among many religious leaders who profess to be evangelical
Christians (i.e., Bible-believing Christians) is the promotion of a
gospel that is acceptable to, and even admired by, people throughout
the world. Today, the most popular form of this is the social gospel.
Although the social gospel is common to many new movements among
evangelicals, it is not new to Christendom. It had its modern beginning
in the late 1800s, when it developed as a way to address the various
conditions in society that caused suffering among the populace. The
belief was, and is, that Christianity will attract followers when it
demonstrates its love for mankind. This could be best accomplished by
helping to alleviate the suffering of humanity caused by poverty, disease,
oppressive work conditions, society's injustices, civil rights abuses,
etc. Those who fostered this movement also believed that relief from
their conditions of misery would improve the moral nature of those so
deprived.
Another driving force behind the introduction of the social gospel
was the eschatological, or end times, views of those involved. Nearly
all were amillennialists or post-millennialists. The former believed
that they were living in a (symbolic thousand-year) time period in which
Christ was ruling from heaven, Satan was bound, and they were God's
workers appointed to bring about a kingdom on earth worthy of Christ.
Post-millennialists also believed they were in the Millennium, and their
goal was to restore the earth to its Eden-like state in order for Christ
to return from Heaven to rule over His earthly kingdom.
The social gospel, in all of its assorted applications, helped to
produce some achievements (child labor laws and women's suffrage) that
have contributed to the welfare of society. It became the primary gospel
of liberal theologians and mainline denominations throughout the 20th
century. Although its popularity alternately rose and fell as it ran
its course, it was often energized by the combination of religion and
liberal politics, e.g., Martin Luther King Jr. and the civil rights
movement. Midway through the last century and later, the social gospel
influenced developments such as the liberation theology of Roman Catholicism
and the socialism of left-leaning evangelical Christians. It is in this
present century, however, that the social gospel has gotten its most
extensive promotion. Two men, both professing to be evangelicals, have
led the way.
George W. Bush began his presidency by instituting the White House
Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives. His objective was to
provide government funding for local churches, synagogues, mosques,
and other religious ministries that were providing a social service
to their community. Bush believed that programs run by “people of faith”
could be at least as effective as secular organizations in helping the
needy, and perhaps more so because of their moral commitment to “love
and serve their neighbor.” As he prepares to leave office, he has declared
that he considers his Faith-Based program to be one of the foremost
achievements in his tenure as president. Presidential candidate Barack
Obama stated that, should he win the election, he will continue the
Faith-Based and Community Initiatives.
Rick Warren, the mega-selling author of
The Purpose-Driven Church and
The Purpose-Driven Life, has
taken the social gospel to where it's never been before: not only worldwide
but into the thinking and planning of world leaders. Warren credits
business management genius Peter Drucker with the basic concept that
he is executing. Drucker believed that the social problems of poverty,
disease, hunger, and ignorance were beyond the capability of governments
or multinational corporations to solve. To Drucker, the most hopeful
solution would be found in the nonprofit sector of society, especially
churches, with their hosts of volunteers dedicated to alleviating the
social ills of those in their community.
Warren, acknowledging the late Drucker as his mentor for 20 years,
certainly learned his lessons. His two
Purpose-Driven books, translated into 57 languages and selling
a combined 30 million copies, reveal the game plan for what Drucker
had envisioned. Warren had local churches implement this vision from
his books through his enormously popular 40 Days of Purpose and 40 Days
of Community programs. To date, 500,000 churches in 162 nations have
become part of his network. They form the basis for his Global P.E.A.C.E.
Plan.
What is his P.E.A.C.E. plan? Warren's presentation of the plan to
the church is found at www.thepeaceplan.com. On video, he identifies
the “giants” of humanity's ills as spiritual emptiness, self-centered
leadership, poverty, disease, and illiteracy, which he hopes to eradicate
by (P)lanting churches, (E)quipping leaders, (A)ssisting the poor, (C)aring
for the sick, and (E)ducating the next generation.
Warren uses the analogy of a three-legged stool to illustrate the
best way to slay these giants. Two of the legs are governments and business,
which have thus far been ineffective, and, just like a two-legged stool,
cannot stand. The third very necessary leg is the church. “There are
thousands of villages in the world that have no school, no clinic, no
business, no government--but they have a church. What would happen if
we could mobilize churches to address those five global giants?” Warren
reasons that since there are 2.3 billion Christians worldwide, they
could potentially form what President Bush has termed a vast “army of
compassion” of “people of faith” such as the world has not yet experienced.
In addition to the Christian version,
Warren has an expanded inclusive version
of the P.E.A.C.E. plan that has drawn support and praise from political
and religious leaders and celebrities worldwide. At the 2008 World Economic
Forum, he declared, “The future of the world is not secularism, but
religious pluralism....” Referring to the ills besetting the world,
he declared, “We cannot solve these problems without involving people
of faith and their religious institutions. It isn’t going to happen
any other way. On this planet there are about 20 million Jews, there
are about 600 million Buddhists, there are about 800 million Hindus,
there are over 1 billion Muslims, and there are 2.3 billion Christians.
If you take people of faith out of the equation, you have ruled out
five-sixths of the world. And if we only leave it up to secular people
to solve these major problems, it isn't going to happen” (Davos
Annual Meeting 2008 - Faith and Modernization).
To accommodate working with people of all faiths Warren has revised
the “P” in his P.E.A.C.E. from “planting evangelical churches” to “(P)romoting
reconciliation” and the “E” from “equipping [church] leaders” to “(E)quipping
ethical leaders.” Warren has elsewhere acknowledged his practical shift
to pluralism: “Who’s the man of peace in any village--or it might be
a woman of peace--who has the most respect?...They don't have to be
Christian. In fact, they could be Muslim, but they're open and they're
influential, and you work with them to attack the five giants [to which
he has added global warming].” He quotes a secular leader who affirms
what he's doing: “I get it, Rick. Houses of worship are the distribution
centers for all we need to do.”
Warren has joined the advisory board of Faith Foundation, established
by former British prime minister and recent Roman Catholic convert Tony
Blair. The Foundation's goal is to further understanding and cooperation
among the six leading faiths: Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Sikh,
and Jewish. How does the Cross fit into this ecumenical gathering? It
doesn't. Critical to achieving that ecumenical goal is the elimination
of the problem of exclusive
religions, a concern articulated by one of the World Economic Forum
panelists: “There are some religious leaders in different religious
faiths who, in seeking to affirm their own faith and its authenticity
and legitimacy...deny other people their faith with its legitimacy and
authenticity. I don't think we can keep going like this without...spawning
the kind of hatred we are all here to try and solve. I think it's up
to us to hold the clergy's feet to the fire of whatever faith. That
we insist that we affirm what is beautiful in our own traditions while
at the same time refusing to denigrate other faith traditions by suggesting
that they are illegitimate, or consigned to some kind of evil end.”
The Bible declares all the religions of the world to be “illegitimate”
and “consigned” not to “some kind of evil end” but to their
just end. Only belief in the
biblical gospel saves humanity: “Neither is there salvation in any other:
for there is none other name [Jesus Christ] under heaven given among
men, whereby we must be saved;...He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting
life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the
wrath of God abideth on him” (Acts 4:12; John 3:36).
The history of the social gospel is, in nearly every case, a sincere
attempt by Christians to do those things that they believe will honor
God and benefit humanity. In every case, however, the practical working
out of “benefiting humanity” has compromised biblical faith and dishonored
God. Why is that? God's Word gives no commission to the church to fix
the problems of the world. Those who attempt to do so are starting out
under a false premise, “...a way which seemeth right unto
a man,” not
God's way. So where can it go
from there? “The end thereof are the ways of death,” i.e., destruction
(Proverbs 14:12). Furthermore, the problems of the world are all
symptoms. The root cause is
sin. much more...
Galatians 5:9 A little leaven
leaventh the whole lump.
The Shack is being described
as a “Christian” novel and is currently ranked number one on the
New York Times bestseller list
for paperback fiction. Many believers are buying multiple copies and
giving them to friends and family.
The Shack reads as a true story, but is obviously allegorical
fiction. The book conveys postmodern spiritual ideas and teachings that
challenge biblical Christianity – all in the name of “God” and “Jesus”
and the “Holy Spirit.” Author William P. Young’s alternative presentation
of traditional Christianity has both inspired and outraged his many
readers. All the while his book continues to fly off the shelves of
local bookstores.
Much like New Age author James Redfield’s book
The Celestine Prophecy,
The Shack is a fictional vehicle
for upending certain religious concepts and presenting contrary spiritual
scenarios. Allegorical novels can be a clever way to present truth.
They can also be used to present things that seem to be true but really
are not. Some books like The Shack
do both.
I was drawn into the New Age Movement years ago by books and lectures
containing parabolic stories that were not unlike
The Shack. They felt spiritually
uplifting as they tackled tough issues and talked about God’s love and
forgiveness. They seemed to provide me with what I spiritually needed
as they gave me much needed hope and promise. Building on the credibility
they achieved through their inspirational and emotive writings, my New
Age authors and teachers would then go on to tell me that
“God” was “in” everyone and everything.
I discovered that author William P. Young
does exactly the same thing in
The Shack. He moves through his very engaging and emotional
story to eventually present this same New Age teaching that God is “in”
everything.
But I am getting ahead of myself. Let me first provide some background
material concerning this
key New Age doctrine that “God is in
everything.” A good place to start is with Eugene Peterson, the
author of the controversial Bible paraphrase
The Message. After all,
Peterson’s enthusiastic endorsement of
The Shack is featured right
under the author’s name on the front cover.
Ironically, it was Peterson’s endorsement that caused me to be immediately
suspicious of this high-profile, bestselling “Christian” book. Through
his questionable paraphrasing of the Bible, Peterson had already aligned
himself in a number of areas with
New
Age/New Spirituality teachings. One obvious example was where he
translated a key verse in the Lord’s Prayer to read
“as above, so below” rather
than “in earth, as it is in heaven.”
“As above, so below” was a term that I was very familiar with from my
previous involvement in the New Age Movement. This esoteric saying has
been an occult centerpiece for nearly five thousand years. It is alleged
by New Age metaphysicians to be the
key to all magic and all mysteries. It means that God is not only
transcendent — “out there”— but
He is also immanent — “in” everyone
and everything.
But, as I found out just before abandoning the deceptive teachings
of the New Age for the Truth of biblical Christianity, God is not “in”
everyone and everything. The Bible makes it clear that man is
not divine and that man is
not God (Ezekiel 28:2, Hosea
11:9, John 2:24-25, etc.) In
Deceived on Purpose: The New Age Implications
of the Purpose-Driven Church, I quoted the editors of the
New Age Journal as they defined
“as above, so below” in their book,
As Above, So Below:
“'As above, so below, as below, so above.' This maxim implies
that the transcendent God beyond the physical universe and the immanent
God within ourselves are one.” (p.
32)
My concern about Peterson’s undiscerning use of “as above, so below”
in the Lord’s Prayer was underscored when the 2006 bestseller,
The Secret, showcased this
same occult/New Age phrase. In fact, it was the introductory quote at
the very beginning of the book. By immediately featuring “as above,
so below” the author
Rhonda Byrne was telling her readers in definite New Age language
that “God is in everyone and
everything.” Towards the end of the book,
The Secret puts into more
practical words what the author initially meant by introducing the immanent
concept of “as above, so below.” On page 164
The Secret tells its readers—“You
are God in a physical body.”
Most significantly, in his book
The Reappearance of the Christ and the Masters of Wisdom, New
Age leader
Benjamin Crème reveals that a
New World
Religion will be based on this foundational “as above, so below”
teaching of immanence — this idea that God is “in” everyone and everything:
“But eventually a new world religion will be inaugurated which
will be a fusion and synthesis of the approach of the East and the
approach of the West. The Christ will bring together, not simply
Christianity and Buddhism, but the concept of God transcendent —
outside of His creation — and also the concept of God immanent in
all creation — in man and all creation.” (p. 88)
“…a fresh orientation to divinity and to the acceptance of the
fact of God Transcendent and God Immanent within every form of life.
“These are foundational truths upon which the
world religion of the future will rest.” (p. 88) [link added]
In a November 9, 2003 Hour of Power
sermon – just two months before he was a featured speaker at the annual
meeting of the National Association of Evangelicals – Crystal Cathedral
minister
Robert Schuller unabashedly aligned himself with this same New Age/New
World Religion teaching. The man who claims to have mentored thousands
of pastors, including Bill Hybels and Rick Warren, stated:
“You know in theology — pardon me for using a couple of big words
— but in theology the God we believe in, this God of Abraham, is
a transcendent God. But He is also an immanent God. Transcendent
means up there, out there, above us all. But God is also an immanent
God — immanence of God and the transcendence of God — but then you
have a balanced perspective of God. The immanence of God means here,
in me, around me, in society, in the world, this God here, in the
humanities, in the science, in the arts, sociology, in politics
— the immanence of God…. Yes, God is alive and He is in every single
human being!”
But God is not in every single
human being. God is not in everything.
One of the many reasons I wrote
Deceived on Purpose was
because Rick Warren presented his readers with this same “God
in everything” teaching. Quoting an obviously flawed
New Century Bible translation
of Ephesians 4:6, Rick Warren — whether he meant to or not — was teaching
his millions of readers the foundational doctrine of the New World Religion.
Describing God in his book, The Purpose-Driven
Life, he wrote:
“He rules everything and is everywhere and is in everything.”
(p. 88)
Compounding the matter further, “immanence” has been taught as part
of the Foundations class at
Rick Warren’s Saddleback Church. An ill-defined reference to immanence
on page 46 of the Saddleback Foundations
Participants Guide plays right into the hands of the New Spirituality/New
World Religion by stating:
“The fact that God stands above and beyond his creation does
not mean he stands outside his creation. He is both transcendent
(above and beyond his creation) and immanent (within and throughout
his creation).”
All of this discussion about “God in everything” immanence is to
explain why The Shack is such
a deceptive book. It teaches this same heresy. This book ostensibly
attempts to deal with the deeply sensitive issues surrounding the murder
of a young child. Because of the author’s intensely personal story line,
most readers become engaged with the book on a deep emotional level.
However, the author’s use of poetic license to convey his highly subjective,
and often unbiblical, spiritual views becomes increasingly problematic
as the story line develops. This is most apparent when he uses the person
of “Jesus” to suddenly introduce the foundational teaching of the New
Spirituality/New World Religion — God is “in” everything. Using the
New Age term “ground of being” to describe “God,” the “Jesus” of
The Shack states:
“God, who is the ground of all being, dwells in, around, and
through all things….” (p. 112)
This false teaching about a “God” who “dwells in, around, and through
all things” is the kind of New Age leaven that left unchallenged could
leaven the church into the New Age/New Spirituality of the proposed
New World Religion. And while many people have expressed a great deal
of emotional attachment to The Shack
and its characters — this leaven alone contaminates the whole book.
Clearly, the “Jesus” of The Shack
is not Jesus Christ of the Bible. The apostle Paul chided the Corinthians
and warned them that they were vulnerable and extremely susceptible
to “another Jesus” and
“another gospel” and
“another spirit” that were not
from God (2 Corinthians 2:11). In the Bible, the real Jesus Christ warned
that spiritual deception would be a sign before His return. He further
warned that there would be those who would even come in His name, pretending
to be Him (Matthew 24:3-5;24). more...
“We have received grace and apostleship to bring about the
obedience of faith...the righteousness of faith...the righteousness
of faith...the righteousness which is by faith...the righteousness
based on faith...leading to obedience of faith.” Romans 1:5;
4:11,13; 9:30; 10:6; 16:26 (bold mine)
False teachings abound and delusion is EVERYWHERE! Everywhere I look
a new “ministry” is being built on “beachfront property” (please read
Matthew 7:24-27 if you don't understand what I mean). Jeremiah warned
against it,
“They have healed the brokenness of My people superficially,
saying, ‘Peace, peace,’ but there is no peace.” -see Jeremiah 6:14 &
8:11
But the people couldn't see. The apostle Paul warned us,
“While they are saying, ‘Peace and safety!’ then destruction
will come upon them suddenly like labor pains upon a woman with
child...” 1 Thessalonians 5:3
But we refuse to learn. The “repentance-free” gospel of today’s popular
evangelical Christianity is leading the multitudes astray. An entire
generation is being lost to a “false gospel of grace” that doesn’t require
the kind of faith that Paul describes as necessary for salvation.*
Lighthouse Trails Research Project Note: In 2007, Lighthouse
Trails published the apologetic biography,
The Other Side of the River by Kevin Reeves. For twelve years,
Reeves was part of a River church, one in which visions, signs and wonders,
and other mystical manifestations occurred. His story tells what happened
during those years in a church that was so influenced by the Toronto Blessing,
holy laughter, the Kansas City Prophets, the Word-Faith movement,
and the spiritual hysteria and manipulation that these hyper-charismatic
movements encourage. Because of the recent stories coming out of Florida
with Todd Bentley's revival, we hope you will read Reeves account.
Below is an excerpt from his chapter on visions.
“I Just Had a Vision!” by Kevin Reeves
There is
perhaps nothing so powerful as a vision. When the heavens open and our
eyes look upon fantastic things once hidden, it can alter the course
of our lives:
Isaiah 6:1-5 In the year that
king Uzziah died I saw also the LORD sitting upon a throne, high
and lifted up, and his train filled the temple. Above it stood the
seraphims: each one had six wings; with twain he covered his face,
and with twain he covered his feet, and with twain he did fly. And
one cried unto another, and said, Holy, holy, holy, is the LORD
of hosts: the whole earth is full of his glory. And the posts of
the door moved at the voice of him that cried, and the house was
filled with smoke. Then said I, Woe is me! for I am undone; because
I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people
of unclean lips: for mine eyes have seen the King, the LORD of hosts.
A glimpse into heaven itself to behold the God of all flesh made
Isaiah panic with self-loathing. His innermost heart was revealed in
the light of the Lord's glory, and there was no place to hide.
Who wouldn't want to have a vision of this magnitude? And why shouldn't
we? On the day of Pentecost, the Christians present experienced the
outpouring of the Holy Spirit: “[A]nd your young men shall see visions,
and your old men shall dream dreams” (Acts 2:17).
Never in the
history of our planet have so many who call themselves Christian claimed
visions from God. Encounters with Christ, angels, demons, even saints
long departed have begun to appear in book form, crowding the charismatic
section of our local Christian bookstores. The popularity of visions
never seems to wane, and the more a person has and the greater the scope,
the quicker he is skyrocketed to Christian stardom. People with virtually
no genuine theological training are suddenly propelled into the teaching
arena, regaling vast audiences with tremendous accounts of their own
spiritual derring-do. And while the stories continue to scale the heights
of plausibility, an amazed public looks on, vicariously a part of the
panoramic excitement and often with hands folded atop a closed Bible
in their laps.
Sadly and without exaggeration, the above account is an apt description
of the spiritual maelstrom that always characterized [my former church].
Sunday services were routinely stopped to give opportunity to report
a vision that occurred during worship. Many in the congregation would
listen with rapt attention as one person after another would share what
had transpired “in the spirit.” Sometimes demons would make an appearance;
sometimes it was the Lord Jesus Himself.
Angels were a particular favorite. I can't tell you how many times
angels made an impromptu appearance at our services.... No one halted
the festivities to suggest examining the claim in the light of God's
Word. It was merely taken at face value and used to bolster our self-image
as the church on the cutting-edge of God's worldwide movement....
The cries of “I saw!” reverberated throughout my church my whole
tenure there. Sometimes the visions were two-dimensional, sometimes
3-D, and sometimes the person was actually caught up into them, in the
same way the apostle John was translated into the heavenly realms in
the book of Revelation. They moved as participants in the vision itself,
walking, feeling, etc. As our pastor consistently reminded the congregation
of its prophetic calling, dreams and visions grew to paramount importance.
They were used to chart our congregation's very course, and any resistance
or verbal doubt was severely frowned upon or openly dismissed....
Many people cannot appreciate the gravity with which visions are
accepted in many charismatic circles, and consequently cannot understand
the bondage that results. If someone has a vision of “the Lord Jesus”
and is given a message to convey to you, for you to treat it lightly
is to despise the very words of God. You are bound to carry out the
instructions of this visionary or face the consequences. The ensuing
fear can be devastating, especially if the message contradicts your
own conscience or understanding of the Scriptures.
The new believer is especially vulnerable because he is led to believe
that all these visions are from God. Furthermore, any hindrance to,
or lack of visions on his own part is due, he is told, to lack of maturity
and failure to fully trust the leadership....
At my best count,
there are less than thirty visions or dreams recorded in the entire
New Testament, and of these only about fifteen took place in the book
of Acts. And this in a period, from the birth of Christ to the last
chapter of Acts, encompassing about sixty years.
I have come
to the conclusion that visions are not the norm for a believer, but
a rare occurrence. Of those saints in the Bible described as having
bona fide visions from God, a mere handful had more than one recorded
vision in their entire lifetime. Furthermore, none of these occurrences
were initiated by the individual, but were the result of a divine act
of God. In explaining mystical experiences, which is the category visions
fall into, I like this explanation by research analyst Ray Yungen:
While certain instances in the Bible describe mystical experiences,
I see no evidence anywhere of God sanctioning man-initiated mysticism.
Legitimate mystical experiences were always initiated by God to
certain individuals for certain revelations and were never based
on a method for the altering of consciousness. In Acts 11:5, Peter
fell into a trance while in prayer. But it was God, not Peter, who
initiated the trance and facilitated it. (ATOD,
p. 34)
Compared with the frequency of modern visions by many charismatic
churchgoers, these past biblical heroes seem almost deficient in their
relationship to the Lord....
I believe that most of what are reported as visions are not such
at all, but could be more appropriately termed mental pictures. The
two are certainly not synonymous. Mental pictures occur constantly during
our waking hours but don't necessarily have anything to do with the
spiritual, whereas visions always have their origin in the supernatural
realm. As we speak in conversation, we see mental images, memories,
etc., to correspond with the dialogue; reading gives us the same experience.
Even television viewing offers the same scenario, as the images dancing
across the screen click on our own past experiences or connections with
our present situations. This can transpose into our times of prayer,
giving us mental pictures that may or may not be of God....
The practice itself can be dangerous, actually maneuvering an innocent
Christian in the wrong direction. In many cults, and, unfortunately
in much of the Pentecostal arm of the church, it has already done just
that....
According to the Bible, there are three sources of visions--God,
the devil, and the flesh. Of these, only one can be trusted as to motive
and authenticity. As for the other spiritual experiences originating
with the kingdom of darkness or human sensuality, they must be discarded,
and immediately. They are not impotent fantasies, but are corrupt from
the word go and will quickly lead astray anyone whose attraction they
capture. (see Ezekiel 13:3-8)...
I cannot stress this enough--contrary to popular fallacy, there is
no such thing as a harmless false vision. Its fraudulent nature alone
is enough to condemn it in the eyes of God; those who give ear to it
will eventually have their faith in Christ contaminated, perhaps shipwrecked.
Attendees of the Peoples Temple were regaled with stories of angelic
visitations and “revelation knowledge.” The reverend Jim Jones capitalized
on his self-proclaimed intimacy with heaven to lead a group of followers
into mass suicide in the Guyana bush.1 Don't think that the
average believer in Christ is immune to this kind of deception. In the
wake of gold teeth and gold dust miracles showing up in various River
congregations worldwide, stories of angel feather sightings have set
a portion of the charismatic church wild with jubilee. One West Coast
church said that “tiny white feathers and gold flakes” appeared during
the service.2 Such occurrences were the next logical step
in an already deception-heavy system of super-spirituality, rationalization,
and the frenzied pursuit of illusion....
Any spirit, vision, dream, prophet, experience, whatever, that does
not agree with the revelation of Jesus Christ as set down in the Scriptures
is not of God. Water may look pure, but unless we know the source from
which it is drawn we may drink to our own ill health. A close examination
with a magnifying glass may betray bits and pieces of debris, or worse
yet, organisms roaming its depths that, taken internally, would cause
debilitating disease.
Am I suggesting we carry around a magnifier to inspect anything coming
our way? Perhaps that is just what is needed. For too long, we've covered
our eyes with blinders instead and accepted a testimony to our detriment,
simply because the person giving it named Christ and seemed sincere.
Paul said even deceivers within the church would attempt to pass themselves
off as the real article (II Corinthians 11:3-4, 13). We can judge without
being judgmental. Peripheral issues we can overlook, knowing full well
the sole reservoir of truth does not rest with us.
But in the presentation of Christ, there can be no leeway. A false
image of the Savior--His character, words, or deeds--will lead us away
from the truth, and consequently, away from God. And eventually, that
is what every fraudulent vision will do--take away from the person of
Christ and demand our attention and adherence to its personalized message.
I have seen it happen, as one vision after another proclaimed in my
former congregation boosted our elitism and remolded Jesus just a bit
more into the user-friendly image we preferred. With virtually no accountability,
fear of redefining Christ's biblically revealed character faded bit
by bit into obscurity....
This current state of things within the church is just the outgrowth
of an inner movement attempting to differentiate between truth and revelation.
It is being stated by popular authors that truth is where God has been,
but revelation is where He is at the moment. This dichotomy is a contrived
one. The Word of God is truth and revelation both, and the timeless
truth of God's Word applies to all saints throughout all ages. Again,
the implication of this kind of compartmentalized thinking is that the
Scriptures fall embarrassingly short when it comes to equipping the
saints for life in today's world.
In a mad dash to embrace the new thing, many Christians have run
right past the only place of refuge, God's Promise, that can keep us
from hurtling down the face of an impossibly steep cliff. I can testify
to the broken lives and empty spirituality that remains when the initial
high wears off. We had congregation members regularly spending their
cash to jet to this or that prophetic conference. They just had to keep
up with the latest move of God, and bring it back with them to our church.
Running after other gods, ancient Israel attained to this spiritual
bankruptcy on a regular basis. But we can take heart, for their failures
can be our lessons:
Romans 15:4 For whatsoever
things were written aforetime were written for our learning, that
we through patience and comfort of the scriptures might have hope.
For those former seers willing to swallow a large helping of humble
pie, there is most certainly hope. For those willing to repent, the
grace of our Lord will lead past every soulish and narcissistic revelation,
helping us to walk in humility and the simple freedom of Christ Jesus.
For the rest, the road can only lead further into deception and
confusion, compounding itself with every new revelation that adds to,
subtracts from, or contradicts Scripture.
Jeremiah 23:25-27 I have heard
what the prophets said, that prophesy lies in my name, saying, I
have dreamed, I have dreamed. How long shall this be in the heart
of the prophets that prophesy lies? yea, they are prophets of the
deceit of their own heart; Which think to cause my people to forget
my name.
Notes: 1. In 1978, cult leader Jim Jones lead over
900 followers in a mass suicide in northern Guyana. 2. Mary
Owen “Oregon Church Says Gold Dust, Feathers Fell During Meetings”
(Charisma magazine, September 2000,
Link).
Holy Laughter or Strong DelusionDiscernment-Ministries
Inc. - By Warren Smith - I watched the video again. It
was entitled Signs and Wonders Camp meeting 1994. Pastors of
huge charismatic churches were stumbling around the church stage “drunk”
with “holy” laughter. Wanting to testify to the fact that “holy” laughter
had transformed their ministries and their lives, many of them were
unable to speak when called on to do so. But their “drunken” condition
became their testimony. Their halting speech was seen as “proof”
of the “power of the spirit” that had come over them. The congregation
roared in approval as pastor after pastor laughed uncontrollably and
then fell to the floor. Standing alongside the “drunken” pastors was
evangelist Rodney Howard-Browne, the self described “Holy Ghost bartender”
who was serving up this “new wine” of “holy” laughter. Many Christians
today believe that Howard-Browne is God's appointed channel for imparting
joy and revival to the end-times church. Other Christians see Howard-Browne
as a false prophet who is inflicting great damage to the body of Christ.
Early last spring the Spiritual Counterfeits Project received
a fax from someone expressing concern about a new phenomenon called
“holy” laughter. He said that a San Francisco Bay Area Vineyard Church
was experiencing what was being described as “revival” and that the
manifestation of “holy” laughter was being cited as one of the signs
of this “revival.” Church members and visitors were reportedly breaking
into fits of spontaneous and uncontrollable laughter during their nightly
services.
Later when I talked with several members of the San Francisco Vineyard
congregation I was told how hundreds of people were getting “hit” with
“revival”--how some people were getting so “soaked in the spirit” they
would lose consciousness for up to several hours after falling to the
ground with “holy” laughter. The Vineyard members described “holy” laughter
unqualifiedly as “awesome” and definitely “the work of the Lord.”...
But what does the Bible say about laughter? Last summer, after watching
Rodney Howard-Browne on TBN, I consulted my concordance to see if there
was any biblical precedent for “holy” laughter. Surprisingly, I found
only 40 references to laughter in the Bible; 34 of them were in the
Old Testament, while only 6 were in the New Testament. Of those 40 references
22 of them referred to scornful laughter, as in Nehemiah 2:19 when Nehemiah
said, “they laughed us to scorn.”
Of the 18 remaining references to laughter, seven of them referred exclusively
to Abraham and Sarah's initial disbelief and ultimate astonishment that
God would give them a child in their old age. Barely into my study on
laughter I was already down to my last 11 references.
In Job 8:21 Bildad, one of Job's false comforters, wrongly
advised Job that if he were in right standing with God he would be prosperous
and full of laughter. The Psalmist in Psalm 126:2 recorded that when
the captivity of Zion was over, “then was
our mouth filled with laughter and our tongue with singing.”
Proverbs 29:9 says, “if a wise man contendeth
with a foolish man, whether he rage or laugh, there is no rest.”
With only 8 remaining references I had seen nothing in the Bible
up to this point that suggested anything even resembling “holy” laughter.
In Ecclesiastes 2:2 Solomon says, “I said
of laughter, it is mad.” Ecclesiastes 3:4 says, there is “a
time to weep and a time to laugh; a time to mourn and a time to dance.”
Ecclesiastes 7:3-4 says, “sorrow is better
than laughter: for by the sadness of the countenance the heart is made
better. The heart of the wise is in the house of mourning; but the heart
of fools is in the house of mirth.” Ecclesiastes 7:6 says, “for
as the crackling of thorns under a pot, so is the laughter of a fool:
this also is vanity.” Ecclesiastes 10:19 says that “a
feast is made for laughter, and wine maketh merry.”
Interestingly the Bible's last three references to laughter--the
only three references to authentic laughter in the New Testament--warn
against laughter. These three references actually seemed to underline
Solomon's contention in Ecclesiastes that “sorrow is better that laughter”
and that now is a time to weep and not to laugh. In Luke
6:21 Jesus says, “blessed are ye that weep now: for ye shall laugh.”
In Luke 6:25 Jesus says, “woe unto you that
laugh now! for ye shall mourn and weep.” James 4:9 tells us
not to laugh but to “be afflicted,
and mourn, and weep: let your laughter be turned to mourning, and your
joy to heaviness.”
I had searched the scriptures to find any biblical precedent for
“holy” laughter and there was none. To my amazement, I had discovered
that there were surprisingly few references in the Bible to any
kind of laughter. Did this mean that God doesn't have a sense of humor
or that people in the Bible never laughed? No. It just meant that laughter
apparently was not something that God chose to emphasize very much.
And certainly Jesus' last words on laughter--“woe
unto you who laugh now!”--were not ones that would seem to give
any encouragement to a “laughing revival.”
The Lord says, “Come now, and let us reason
together” (Isaiah 1:18. Here are some of my concerns about “holy”
laughter and “the laughing revival.”
(1) There is no biblical precedent for “holy” laughter.
Laughter is rarely mentioned in the Bible. Yet, when it is, the
Bible seems to make more of a case for holy sorrow than for
“holy” laughter. Scripture supports Solomon's contention that “sorrow
is better than laughter.” It does not support the present “laughing
revival.”
(2) Substituting the word joy for laughter is a non sequitur.
It is inaccurate and misleading.
There is no scriptural authority for equating biblical references
to joy with the involuntary manifestations of “holy” laughter. Just
because there are insufficient Bible texts to make the case for
“holy” laughter, it does not follow that you can simply redefine
the word laughter by substituting the word joy.
(3) “Holy” laughter advocates rarely, if ever, discuss the need
to “test the spirits.”
The Bible warns us that not every supernatural manifestation
is necessarily from God. 1 John 4:1 says, “Beloved,
believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of
God; because many false prophets are gone out into the world.”
Charles and Francis Hunter write in their book Holy Laughter,
“Once you begin to walk in the supernatural you really have to be
ready for anything and everything and never question the way God
does it!” (p.65)
(4) “Holy” laughter advocates rarely, if ever, talk about the
Spirit's express warning that in the latter times some people will be
supernaturally seduced by deceptive evil spirits into following them
and not the one true God.
1 Timothy 4: warns, “Now the Spirit
speaketh expressly, that in the latter times some shall depart from
the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils.”
(5) “Holy” laughter advocates rarely, if ever, talk about the
Bible's warnings of false prophets who come in the name of Jesus but
bring with them “another spirit.”
2 Corinthians 11:4 says, “For if he
that cometh preacheth another Jesus, whom we have not preached,
or if ye receive another spirit, which ye have not received, or
another gospel, which ye have not accepted, ye might well bear with
him.”
(6) Many laughter advocates condescendingly discourage and even
openly intimidate sincere Christians who question the “laughing revival.”
According to the August Charisma article, Rodney Howard-Browne
“disparages” people who “try to apply theological tests” to what
he does. The Hunters’ book Holy Laughter refers to skeptics
as God's “frozen chosen.” Mona Johnian writes, “skeptics, hesitaters
and procrastinators do not get anointed.” She warns “that any person
or church that wavered could be eliminated.”
(7) Rodney Howard-Browne's prayer to God just prior to his “anointing”
(“either you come down here and touch me or I'll come up there and touch
you”) was unscriptural.
Howard-Browne's prayer was the essence “my will be done.” It
was not “thy will be done,” as taught by Jesus in scripture.
Why should we automatically assume that it was God who answered
his prayer?
(8) “Holy” laughter advocates, in talking about “signs and wonders,”
rarely, if ever, mention the Bible's many warnings about deceptive
signs and wonders.
In Matthew 16:4 Jesus warns, “a wicked
and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign.” In Matthew
24:24 JESUS says, “For there shall arise
false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs and
wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive
the very elect.” In 2 Thess. 2:9 the apostle Paul warns of
the coming Antichrist, “even him, whose
coming is after the working of Satan with all power and signs and
lying wonders.”
(9) “Holy” laughter advocates seem to lay hands on almost everybody.
The Bible specifically warns against this.
The eighth chapter of Acts describes how the disciples would
not lay hands on Simon, a baptized believer, even though he desperately
wanted the gift of the Holy Ghost, because his heart was “not right
in the sight of God.” 1 Timothy 5:22 warns us to “lay
hands suddenly on no man.” Yet “holy” laughter is passed
on from person to person without so much as a second thought.
(10) “Holy laughter advocates blatantly disregard the biblical
admonition that things be done decently and in order.”
1 Corinthians 14:40 says, “Let all
things be done decently and in order.” Mona Johnian in her
book Fresh Anointing says, “decently and in order! We must
do things decently and in order. The Bible itself commands it, cry
those who are frightened by that which is beyond traditional order”
(p. 35). She advises her readers to “break with tradition” (p.45).
(11) The chaos and confusion that usually characterizes the “laughing
revival”: contradicts the Bible’s description of the Person of God.
1 Corinthians 14:33 states, “For God
is not the author of confusion, but of peace, as in all churches
of the saints.”
(12) Laughter advocates rarely if ever, discuss the well documented
demonic deceptions that have manifested in past revivals.
To combat the deception that arose during the Welsh revival at
the turn of this century authors Jessie Penn-Lewis and Evan Roberts
wrote “War on the Saints: a disclosure of the deceptive strategies
used by evil spirits against God's people.” Both were very involved
with the revival and were extremely concerned about the demonic
manifestations that began to dominate their meetings. The forward
to War on the Saints warns of “the grave dangers that beset
the path of uninformed enthusiasm.”
(13) A number of Christians have experienced the equivalent of
“holy” laughter when they were in the New Age.
Indian Guru Bhagvhan Shree Rajneesh was affectionately known
by his followers as the “divine drunkard” because he was reputed
to have drunk so deeply from the well of the “Divine.” As a former
follower of Rajneesh I met hundreds of Sannyasins who had flown
to India “to drink” from “Bhagwan’s wine.” When followers were physically
touched by Rajneesh, or even if they were merely in his presence,
they would often experience feelings of great exhilaration and joy.
Disciples of Swami Baba Muktananda would often manifest uncontrollable
laughter after receiving Shaktipat (physical contact) from the guru.
(14) The “laughing revival” could one day merge with what the
New Age calls the coming day of “planetary Pentecost.”
Barbara Marx Hubbard, (revered New Age leader and a 1984 Democratic
nominee for the Vice Presidency of the United States), writes in
her book, Teachings from the Inner Christ, how the human
race will soon experience a day of “Planetary Pentecost.” Hubbard,
claiming to be in contact with “Christ,” writes: “the Planetary
Smile is another name for the Planetary Pentecost. When enough of
us share a common thought of our oneness with God, Spirit will be
poured out on all flesh paying attention” (p.79). In her book
The Revelation, Hubbard says “Christ,” in describing the planetary
smile, said: “an uncontrollable joy will ripple through the thinking
layer of the earth. The co-creative systems, which are lying psychologically
dormant in humanity will be activated. From within, all sensitive
persons will feel the joy of the force, flooding their systems with
love and attraction...as this joy flashes through the nervous systems
of the most sensitive peoples on earth, it will create a psycho
magnetic field of empathy, which will align the next wave of people
in synchrony, everywhere on Earth. This massive, sudden empathic
alignment will cause a shift in the consciousness of Earth” (p.
234-235). Writing in Happy Birth Day Planet Earth, Hubbard
repeats what she heard from “Christ.” He said, “as the planetary
smile ripples through the nervous systems of earth, and the instant
of co-operation begins, and empathy floods the feelings of the whole
body of Earth, separation is overcome, and I appear to all of you
at once” (p. 10-11).
The controversy over “holy” laughter is already splitting congregations
and causing deep divisions in the body of Christ. And while many people
have already taken sides, there are many more who are still trying to
figure out just what is going on. Is this really a move of God, or is
this the kind of deception the Bible warns about in Matthew 24, 1 Timothy
4:1, and in the second chapter of Thessalonians?
Unity is indeed the heartfelt desire of every sincere Christian (Psalm
133:1). But the Bible warns of massive deception that will come at the
end and in Christ's name. Before the Church--in the name of unity--free
falls into a worldwide “laughing revival,” we had better be sure what
it is we are uniting with.
In reflecting on “holy” laughter during these very troubled times,
I recalled a music special I had seen on television a number of years
ago. In the midst of an otherwise polite Hollywood type crowd, a male
vocalist sang straight faced and sober into the teeth of their celebration.
His words were electric and piercing, and they seemed to hang in the
air. He sang, “you’re laughing now, but you should be praying. You're
in the midnight hour of your life.”
The Dangers of “Triumphalism” (2 Corinthians 2:14)Enjoying God Ministries - One of the
more not-so-subtle delusions that exists in many corners of the professing
Christian church is what I refer to as Triumphalism. I use that word
rather than a more technical theological phrase (“Over-realized Eschatology”)
lest I lose you up front. The bottom line in triumphalism is the belief
that the overt and consummate victories that we will experience only
in the age to come are available to us now.
I’m not saying that we as Christians shouldn’t rejoice in the daily
victories we experience by virtue of the enthronement of Christ Jesus
and the indwelling power of the Holy Spirit. Yes, we have authority
over demonic spirits (cf. Luke 10:17-20). Yes, we have been blessed
“with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places” (Ephesians 1:3)
and have been “raised” up with Christ and are “seated” together “with
him” (Ephesians 2:6). We who believe “that Jesus is the Son of God”
have “overcome” the world (1 John 5:5). And Jesus himself promises great
and glorious rewards “to the one who conquers” now (Revelation 2:7,
11, 12; etc.). So the last thing I want to endorse or encourage is a
defeatism that fails to embrace and act upon every good and glorious
blessing secured for us by the Lord Jesus Christ. But where many often
go astray is in their claim that such truths necessarily entail visible
and irreversible victories in the present that result in a life free
from persecution, suffering, or demonic assault.
It’s the notion that since I’m a “child of the King” I have a right
to live in financial prosperity and complete physical health, free from
that “groaning” under the lingering curse of the fall which Paul appears
to indicate will continue until the return of Christ (cf. Romans 8:18-25).
I’m talking about that often arrogant and presumptuous triumphalism
that belittles those whose “lack of faith” has resulted in a lingering,
daily struggle from which Jesus came to deliver them. What I want to
articulate is a perspective on the Christian life that celebrates both
our legitimate spiritual triumphs and our on-going daily trials. Nowhere
in Scripture is this dynamic tension any more evident than in 2 Corinthians,
where Paul can speak of being “afflicted in every way, but not crushed”
and of being “perplexed, but not driven to despair” and of being “persecuted,
but not forsaken” (2 Corinthians 4:8-9). The life he envisions is one
in which we “always” carry about in ourselves “the death of Jesus, so
that the life of Jesus may also be manifested in our bodies” (2 Corinthians
4:10).
There are no extraordinary Christians; but being an ordinary Christian
is an extraordinary thing. How I wish I would have understood that when
I was a new Christian. But I didn’t. Soon after my conversion I began
a quest to become the best possible Christian. In so doing I fell prey
to teachings that promised me a Christian life superior to that of ordinary
Christians. What I did not know was that I had embraced pietism. I didn’t
become an extraordinary Christian and I did walk straight into error.
My journey into the “deeper life” oftentimes involved embracing contradictory
teachings. For example, two of my favorite teachers in the early 1970’s
were Watchman Nee and Kenneth Hagin. One taught a deeper Christian life
through suffering) and the other taught a higher order Christianity
that could cause one to be free from bodily ailments and poverty. The
hook was that both claimed to have the secret to becoming an extraordinary
Christian. I found out that they didn’t. My dissatisfaction with the
Christianity taught in Bible College led me to join a Christian commune
some months after graduation. That group’s founder taught that all ordinary
churches and Bible Colleges were caught up in “religious Babylon.” He
taught that the kingdom of God was to be found by quitting one’s job,
selling one’s possessions, giving the money to the commune, and moving
in together to be devoted to the “kingdom” twenty four hours a day.
So in my search to become an extraordinary Christian I did what he said
and joined. By the time I had fully explored many versions of pietism
seeking to escape the tainted Christianity found in ordinary churches,
I had squandered the first ten years of my Christian life. I was converted
in 1971 and by 1981 I had given up on becoming a superior Christian.
I bought a house for my family and began a car repair business to pay
the bills while I tried to figure out what to do with my calling to
preach now that most everything I had been taught, practiced, and taught
others had failed. By God’s grace I went back to the Bible and determined
to merely teach verse by verse from that point on. It took another five
or six years to rid myself of the various errors I had embraced and
then I taught Romans in 1986. Through that study I came to appreciate
the doctrines of grace. That understanding opened my thinking and was
the turning point for my ministry. I also came to realize that the wrong-thinking
that attracted me to pietism was that I held to a theology based on
human ability rather than grace alone. Once I grasped that, I never
looked back. If the “secret” to a higher order Christianity is based
on something we discover and implement (the secret to the deeper life),
then it makes sense that some Christians could achieve a higher status
than others. But if salvation AND sanctification are God’s work through
His grace, then we are all in the same boat, and there’s no higher order.
Pietism is difficult to define because it can be taught and practiced
in an unlimited number of ways. Some versions appear to be innocuous
while others are so radical that most people would see that something
is wrong. I now know that no version of pietism is actually innocuous.
If a teaching is called pietism but teaches no more than what God has
always used to sanctify Christians, then it is not really pietism. Real
pietism always harms those who embrace it. The essence of pietism is
this: It is a practice designed to lead to an experience that purports
to give one an elite or special status compared to ordinary Christians.
The Bible addresses this error in the book of Colossians. The false
teachers in Colossae claimed to have the secret to a superior Christian
experience that would cause people to rise above the bad “fate” they
feared. Paul went on to explain that they already had everything they
needed through Christ and His work on the cross. Another way of stating
this is: If after having fully trusted Christ’s finished work on the
cross, you are told that you are still lacking something, you are being
taught pietism. Church history is littered with misguided pietistic
movements. Many of them are linked with mysticism. I will give examples
later in this article. Pietism can be practiced many ways including
enforced solitude, asceticism of various forms, man made religious practices,
legalism, submission to human authorities who claim special status,
and many other practices and teachings. The fact that pietism has many
forms can be seen by the litany Paul gives in Colossians:
Colossians 2:16-23 Therefore
no one is to act as your judge in regard to food or drink or in
respect to a festival or a new moon or a Sabbath day -- things which
are a mere shadow of what is to come; but the substance belongs
to Christ. Let no one keep defrauding you of your prize by delighting
in self-abasement and the worship of the angels, taking his stand
on visions he has seen, inflated without cause by his fleshly mind,
and not holding fast to the head, from whom the entire body, being
supplied and held together by the joints and ligaments, grows with
a growth which is from God. If you have died with Christ to the
elementary principles of the world, why, as if you were living in
the world, do you submit yourself to decrees, such as, “Do not handle,
do not taste, do not touch!” (which all refer to things destined
to perish with use) in accordance with the commandments and teachings
of men? These are matters which have, to be sure, the appearance
of wisdom in self-made religion and self-abasement and severe treatment
of the body, but are of no value against fleshly indulgence.
Paul calls this approach “self-made religion” which is exactly what
all forms of pietism are. They all suggest that having been converted
by the Lord through the cross and practicing His ordained means of grace
by faith are inadequate. They have discovered a better way that leads
to a higher order experience. Paul says they have “the appearance of
wisdom.” Pietism is an attack on the scriptural truth that Christ has
already done it all and that this is true for all Christians. I believe
in progressive sanctification, but God is sanctifying all Christians
by the same means. more...
“I went to a “Texas Ablaze” conference in Austin, TX. It was put
on by Stand Firm World Ministries, Fresh Fire Ministries, and Streams
Ministries. Some of the speakers were Keith Miller (SFWM), Todd Bentley
(FFM), and Barbie Breathitt (Streams Ministries). It was hosted at one
of the local Austin churches (I forget the name of the church). It was
three days long beginning on a Friday, in February. One of my friends
had recently become engaged, and his girlfriend was visiting San Antonio
to go to this Todd Bentley conference. They had been to one before somewhere
else in the USA. I had never heard of Todd Bentley or Fresh Fire Ministries
before. She compared going to a Todd Bentley conference to having
“An ice cream sundae treat in the Spirit.” Well, my friends and
I were up for that, so we registered and paid the fee and booked a hotel
for the weekend. I believe the registration fee was 35 dollars, but
more if you paid at the door. It felt weird to have to pay to go to
church like you would a concert or sports game. I attended the conference
with several people from the single’s group at the church I was going
to (Vineyard Church of San Antonio.). Many other families from the Vineyard
also attended, but us singles carpooled and shared hotel rooms because
we were cheap, and some of us did not have much money to pay for our
own hotel rooms, so it helped defer the cost. We were all excited about
this conference and prayed that God would do great things while we were
there. I went expecting a move of God. “I hope he does the ‘ring of
fire’!!” one of my friends commented. Ring of fire? Apparently a thing
where he makes a ring of fire in the air and you walk through it, and
supposedly this is some anointing or blessing or something. You walk
through the ‘ring of fire’, and he prays for you and you fall down.
It’s awesome, they said. That it was a rush to get the Spirit like that.
They way they talked about it made me feel a little apprehensive about
it. I hadn’t read anything about a ‘ring of fire’ in the bible. (He
didn’t do this signature ‘ring of fire’ at the conference I went to
after all.)
The first night it was jam-packed with everyone trying to get in.
Because we had paid our fee in advance, we went to the pre-registered
table. They required us to get these purple wrist-bands that we had
to wear for three days (we could not take them off, not even to shower,
or we could not get back in.). I am lucky my wrist is very small and
I could slip mine on and off because they did not put it tight enough.
It would have been obnoxious to have to sleep/shower with that thing
on. They did not want anyone who had not paid to get in. They had ushers
(guards?) at the doors to the sanctuary to make sure you had your wristband.
They would check your wrist after you went to use the bathroom too,
before they let you back in. I guess they were afraid of people getting
the Holy Spirit or getting healed without paying for it first? Around
the registration tables were tables piled full of things you can buy
from the ministries, or outrageous prices, too. 25 dollars for a CD,
or 30 bucks for a book. They had sets to teach you how to have experiences
like Todd Bentley has (going up to the third heaven, meeting angels,
etc, etc.) From Todd Bentley’s ministry you could also buy hankies and
get Todd to pray over them, and transfer the anointing to them, so your
sick relative or friend might be healed, or if they were healthy, just
get an “explosion” of an anointing of the Holy Spirit. (based on people
getting healed from Pauls’ hankies in Acts. I don’t think Paul made
people pay for hankies though). Streams Ministries had cards that excited
everyone, because our church was involved with Streams Ministries, and
was doing Dream Interpretation. They had laminated cards that you could
buy for $10-25 that were ‘cheat sheets’ on things like 1) What causes
what illnesses, or 2) What numbers, colors, letters, and various animals
mean in dreams. My friends bought the illnesses card and the dream card,
and I looked at them on the way home. The Illnesses card had things
like “Obesity is caused by low-self esteem.” “Low back pain is caused
by familiar spirits.” Etc. It was a chart with the illnesses on the
left and the demons/spiritual conditions on the top , with X’s to show
you what caused what. Some things were caused by multiple things. They
also had other material for sale that of course, showed you how to cast
out whatever demons you had so you could get well, or how to get better
self esteem so you wouldn’t be obese. The dreams card was your basic
run of the mill dream interpretation stuff, like the color red means
danger, purple means royalty, etc.
One thing I noticed is they interrupted the service a lot to advertise
products at the pulpit. They would talk for a minute about a book
or CD, and then remind us that we could buy it in the foyer for a “low,
low” price. I did not see how this is doing anything but turning a house
of prayer into a house of merchandise. They did this between speakers.
They encouraged people during the breaks to go out and shop at the tables.
In the sanctuary, they had special areas roped off for ‘VIP’ people.
Churches that were partners with the ministries, or groups that had
paid extra money, got to sit in these special areas up front. Everyone
else that had just paid the regular price had to sit in the back. Sometimes
we could not all sit together because there wasn’t enough room in one
area, and we had not reserved an area for our group. Apparently paying
extra money for your group got your group mentioned up front, because
the first day they were like “And we’ve got guests from such-and-such
church over here” and then that church would clap to show everyone where
they were. They did not mention any groups that were not seated in the
VIP sections.
At the beginning of the conference Keith Miller
talked about how he felt there were going to be “open heavens” during
this conference and people were going to get new anointings and stuff
like that. I don’t remember much about Keith Miller, except that when
he was ‘invoking’ the Holy Spirit, he kept saying “psssshhh, pssssh”
into the microphone. Like, “Come down Holy Spirit, psssh ,psssh, psssh.
The Holy Spirit’s coming tonight, psssh, pssh. Psssh. Psssh.” It was
very weird, and I did not know that making hissing noises into the microphone
like that got the Holy Spirit to come down. It actually made me a little
uncomfortable, the way he was doing it. But I had not experienced something
like that before, so I did not pay much attention to it, but it did
not seem much like praying to me. He talked a lot about angels appearing
to him and such, and how there were angels in the room. He talked a
lot about ‘mantles’. How God was going to rip off a tiny piece of His
robe and float it on down to you to cover you, and you would get a new
mantle that would give you some kind of power. That prophetic mantles,
and healing mantles, etc, would be given out today, straight from God.
(They tie this in with Elisha taking Elijah’s mantle).
So Barbie from Streams Ministries also spoke. She spoke about “heavenly
orbs” that people would be seeing at conferences, and how they would
capture them on camera. How these ‘heavenly orbs’ were God’s glory and
angels and things like that. How they had pictures of one that when
you looked close, you would see a figure with her hands held out. That
these orbs (Angels) were here to minister to us. They showed pictures
on the projector of orbs at other conferences, some of the pictures
had more orbs than others. How many orbs were there was supposed to
be in proportion to how much glory of God had come down. I was extremely
skeptical about the whole orbs thing, because it just did not sound
right to me. One of my friends caught ‘orbs’ on her digital camera ,but
when we showed them to our photographer friend back in San Antonio who
could not come to the conference, she told us that those orbs were nothing
but ‘lens flare’. Also while Barbie was talking, she interpreted some
dreams from pastors. She would only do it for pastors and not anyone
else. The reason she gave for this was that they work hard and we need
to give something back, etc. Strangely, all the pastor’s dreams, while
each one very different, all seemed to mean that God would be blessing
expanding their ministry and bringing them rich people to their church
to help. (One guy had some dream about diving into a well with a big
fish ,and she took this to mean a ‘big fish’ businessman who would be
able to finance ministries.)
When Todd Bentley finally spoke (I believe it was the 2nd day), the
atmosphere in the room was like “Finally! The guy we have been waiting
for!” And you could feel the room get excited in anticipation. He started
out really energetic. There wasn’t any prayer beforehand. He was sweating
within like 3 minutes. Not that there is anything wrong with sweat,
but you could see the perspiration on his brow from the back of the
room. What was weird, was that he said he was going to preach on a psalm.
So we all got out our bibles. But every time he went to try to read
the verse, he would begin to laugh, and stagger, and make weird noises.
This made me EXTREMELY uncomfortable. It seemed as though he was mocking
the scripture, by laughing at it when he began to read it. Everyone
admired him for this, though, saying he was so “drunk in the Spirit”
that he could not read his bible! He would calm down, but as soon
as he went over to the pulpit where his bible was, he would immediately
become so “drunk” that he could not read nor preach, but just would
stagger around laughing and snorting for a few minutes. Still
acting rather drunk, he began to preach about all the great things he’s
done (with God’s help, of course.) About how he went from having
no money to having a multi-million dollar ministry, and healings, etc,
and how great it all was. Everyone thought this was a fantastic testimony
on his part, but I wondered why God would have him set aside whatever
he was going to preach on to brag about his accomplishments. He
laughed, snorted, and chortled through his entire speech. Whenever
he would begin to mention something a scripture said, he would become
incoherent. Why could he not read nor recite the scriptures without
breaking into a fit? But was able to maintain enough composure to brag
about all the great stuff God’s done with him. And people ate it up!
It was seriously disturbing to me. He talked a lot about how he would
go to the third heaven, and how many times he’s met angels, etc. And
how you, too, can get into a Holy-Spirit induced trance whenever you
want and go to heaven, and how he’s got teachings on how to do it. (apparently
we can force the Holy Spirit to take us to heaven and have out-of-body
experiences whenever we want.) He related one tale, of a witch doctor.
Who had come to a conference of his. That night God took him out-of-body,
supposedly, and into the witch doctor’s dreams, and witnessed to him
while he was dreaming. The witch doctor came back the next day saved
because of being witnessed to while he was dreaming. He also talked
about one time, he got taken up into the third heaven, and angels were
running around saying “The books of destiny, the books of destiny!”
and stuffed a page from one of those books which had a map of this one
African country into his mouth, and then 3 days later the ruler of that
country called his ministry...
So at the end of the conference, we were supposed to move our chairs
out of the way and stand in line to get the anointing from Todd Bentley
and Keith Miller. The “prophets” went in the back room to pray while
everyone stacked their chairs along the walls. Then we all lined up
in semi-circles with space in-between, and waited for them to come back
out. They came back out and you were supposed to hold out your hands,
and wait for them to touch you. They had men to walk behind the lines
to ‘catch’ you so you would not hurt yourself as you fell. So they were
touching people’s hands, and people would fall over. So lots of people
were falling. They got to one guy, and he would go into a seizure-like
state, as he was falling, sortof crazy dancing and squealing. They thought
this was great, and it made them laugh, so they had the catchers lift
him back up so they could touch him again and laugh as he did this weird
dancing/seizure thing as he fell backwards. They did that a few times.
They did not spend a lot of time with most of the people, just touched
them and moved on. I was praying during all of this, that God would
show me if it was of Him or not. I was a little frightened at the prospect
of it NOT being of Him, and possibly opening myself up to the influence
of evil spirits. So I was a little scared too, I did not want a bad
spirit to make me fall over. I had considered opting out of being touched,
but then I thought what if it IS of God and I miss my chance to get
a word from God? So when they finally got to me, Todd Bentley said “FIRE
OF GOD!” as he touched my hands. But I felt nothing. Certainly not any
fire. The other guy touched my hands as they passed by. I just had a
very heavy feeling, and I began to cry. One of the prayer ladies that
were following them to pray stopped by me because she had seen that
I had not fallen, and she put her hand on my forehead to pray for me.
She did not seem to understand that I wasn’t falling, because she kept
praying for the Spirit to come over me, and pushed her hand harder on
my forehead. Her pushing made me plant my feet even more firmly on the
ground. She was not going to knock me over. She gave up when she realized
I was not going to going to fall over, and was just going to keep crying,
so she moved on. I was not the only one who did not fall over. I noticed
that a few others did not either. I went and sat by the wall to pray,
and was crying a lot because I just felt horrible at this whole experience,
and was wondering where God was in all of this. The prayer pastor from
my vineyard came over to talk to me, but I did not have much to say.
I could not express what I was feeling about this whole event, and everyone
just assumed that the holy spirit had touched me through the prophets
and that was why I was crying, they did not know I was crying because
God did NOT touch me through those prophets, and I did not know how
to tell them that I didn’t think that God was here. I felt uncomfortable
about the whole conference, and it just reached a climax at that point,
as I saw people shaking with seizure-like things, and laughing uncontrollably,
and rolling around on the floor. I cried a lot, also, because nobody
seemed to really be praying to God. In fact not a whole lot of prayer
seemed to go on during this conference, for as long as it lasted, there
were only a few times that any of the speakers prayed. The only ‘prayer’
was to call down the Holy Spirit, or ask for angels to heal or give
anointings. They talked about the Holy Spirit a lot, and not so much
about Jesus or the Gospel. There wasn’t hardly any talk about sin, or
repentance either. Just anointings and mantles and prophecy. more...
I do find it disturbing that scripture was not a central part
of this conference, but rather sales and talk of angels and mystic
practices. There are many more things that bring up big red flags
with Todd Bentley:
You’ve heard the saying, “If you play with fire you’re going to get
burnt.” Today’s “Christian” Gnostics seem to have an obsession with
the elements of earth, wind, water, and fire. When we watch “Christian”
television, be it Sky Angel, TBN, or the God Channel, we hear the televangelists
and “prophetic” folks scream “Fire”! over people who react with wild
jerkings and flailing of limbs as they go down in a heap on the floor.
What is this “fire” being thrown around on these platforms in such a
showy fashion? First of all from Scripture we can see where fire has
symbolized God’s presence such as in the burning bush and in the pillar
of fire by night that led the Israelites across the desert plain. Old
Testament offerings were burned and the aroma of the smoke ascended
to God in an acceptable sacrifice. Also, in the book of Hebrews it says
“our God is a consuming fire.” In its context, it is speaking of His
attribute of wrath towards evil works.
Hebrews 12:27-29 And this
word, Yet once more, signifieth the removing of those things that
are shaken, as of things that are made, that those things which
cannot be shaken may remain. Wherefore we receiving a kingdom which
cannot be moved, let us have grace, whereby we may serve God acceptably
with reverence and godly fear: For our God is a consuming fire.
This “fire” is that of God’s judgment – a judgment that is not sleeping
but is ready to be poured out upon a world that rejects God’s provision
of a Messiah. This is the fire that is being kindled – the sort of fire
that believers hope to escape by virtue of abiding in the Lamb – the
Messiah. And then the Bible speaks of hell’s fire – eternal fire that
is also called “the lake burning with fire.”
Revelation. 21:8 But the fearful,
and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers,
and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part
in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the
second death.
The modern day “prophets” who throw fire around like it is theirs
to command attribute this fire to the Holy Spirit. Yet, if they are
correct, what is their biblical justification for doing so? Do we really
want to “catch the fire” that these men and women are trafficking in?
Would you want anything to do with the sort of “fire” that Elijah’s
List’s founder, Stephen Schulz is describing in this excerpt from his
website?
From the desk of Steve Shultz:
“I would like to recommend a couple of our newer instrumental
music CDs, Abide by Paul Ahn and El Olam: Ancient Echoes by John
Belt and Barbara Grimshaw. These CDs are designed for times of reflection,
meditation, and worship. Open the door and ENTER into an experience
in the eternal King's Realm where the fire NEVER dies. Come to the
streams of promise and wait until you encounter Him. Fire by Night
delivers a powerful and intimate live, prophetic, worship experience
that will thrill your spirit and invigorate your senses. This CD
is one of our best-selling AND one of my personal favorites!”
Blessings, Steve Shultz
Where have we read that before? -- “where the fire NEVER dies” –
What is that describing? When we look that up in our concordance, what
materializes?
Mark 9:47-48 And if thine
eye offend thee, pluck it out: it is better for thee to enter into
the kingdom of God with one eye, than having two eyes to be cast
into hell fire: Where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not
quenched.
Or from the Living Bible, the paraphrase many of these televangelists
so love to quote: Mark 9:48 – “where the worm never dies and the fire
never goes out.” I don’t think I want to serve a “king” whose abode
is there! Other charismatic ministries use -- even over-use the “fire”
symbol to describe their emphasis. We hear terms and slogans such as
“Touch of Fire Ministries,” John Arnott hosts the TV program Catch the
Fire, “Fire Evangelism” a book by prophetic leader Che' Ahn , Sacred
Fire, a music CD by John Belt, “Wild Fire Ministries”, “Blaze of Glory
ministry,” etc. And then there are conferences called “Let the Fire
Fall” But what fire are these people toying with? It is not a coincidence
that the occult throws around the same “fire” term in much the same
manner as the charismatics. In the classic occult book, “The Secret
Destiny of America,” written by occult historian
Manly P. Hall, he writes of the special initiates of the flame who
pass on secret knowledge from Babylon all the way to modern day, on
page 195:
“We are exploring into the mysteries of the atoms and the electrons,
and have brought the heavenly fire, electricity, to be the
servant of our purposes.”
This fire of the occultists can also be shared with others. Cindy
Jacobs, at the 1999 Charisma Women’s conference in Daytona Beach spent
quite a while throwing around the fire to the participants, sometimes
speaking in a deep voice with a look of evil on her countenance. Over
and over again, she waved her hand over the crowd of women shouting,
Fire! “Yes for the Lord says there’s a new wave of the spirit coming
and the Lord is showing me that Daytona Beach is the gateway for the
fire of God… Church of Daytona, put your hands up. Yes, burn up those
religious spirits. Here comes more fire!! Take it! More! Fire! Fire!
Take it!!”
She seemed to be emulating Benny Hinn, who has been using the “Fire!”
shout for over a decade. When this “fire-anointing” comes over him,
he says even his children are afraid of him. On October 19, 1999 during
a guest visit on the Praise the Lord program on TBN, he told a frightening
story to host Paul Crouch. Speaking of a perceived attack on his ministry
by the secular media, Hinn says:
“Right before that happened, my dear sweet Suzanne (his wife) gets
attacked… 2 o-clock in the morning, I wake up and my wife is choking
in bed. The devil trying to kill her. My wife wasn’t acting like
my wife. I saw my own wife attacked. It was like the last thing
I could handle, I think.”
False prophet Kim Clement on the Praise the Lord program on July
5, 2007 described the spirit that he mistakes for the Holy Spirit in
terms that can only describe an unholy spirit such as the ones taking
control of these men and women. He said to hosts Matt and Laurie Crouch,
“The prophetic word opens up a whole new world out there for you to
be enticed. God entices you with a future. That’s the glory of the future,
he entices you. Remember something, he wants you there, he says he’s
gonna get you there and he’s going to lure you there.” Who is this “he”
that is going to “entice” and “lure” people to enter this “new world”?
I believe this is the same “he” that entices the fire throwers to spread
his false anointings. It is said in Scripture that in the last days
(and I believe we are in those days) God will remove this evil spirit
that masquerades as the Holy Spirit. Zechariah wrote:
Zechariah 13:2 “It shall be
in that day,” says the Lord of hosts, “that I will cut off the names
of the idols from the land, and they shall no longer be remembered.
I will also cause the prophets and the unclean spirit to depart
from the land.”
That same unclean spirit gets mentioned in the New Testament as well:
Matthew 12:43 When an unclean
spirit goes out of a man, he goes through dry places, seeking rest,
and finds none.
Benny Hinn used the same terms to describe the spirit that directs
him – the one he passes around with the exclamation
“Fire on you” to those who attend his crusades. more...
I personally try not to follow the lead of men over what the
Bible says. I think this has given me a spirit of distrust and in
my searching making me more cautious because I believe there are
lying signs and wonders that will deceive many people. The distrust
of men has led to sole trust in the Bible, which I believe has opened
my eyes and made me to see, but I am not infallible and am still
learning from God's Word.
Matthew 24:3-5 And as
he sat upon the mount of Olives, the disciples came unto him
privately, saying, Tell us, when shall these things be? and
what shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the
world? And Jesus answered and said unto them, Take
heed that no man deceive you. For many shall come in
my name, saying, I am Christ; and shall deceive many.
2 Thessalonians 2:6-12
And now ye know what withholdeth that he might be revealed in
his time. For the mystery of iniquity doth already work: only
he who now letteth will let, until he be taken out of the way.
And then shall that Wicked be revealed, whom the Lord shall
consume with the spirit of his mouth, and shall destroy with
the brightness of his coming: Even him, whose coming is after
the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders,
And with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that
perish; because they received not the love of the truth, that
they might be saved. And for this cause God shall send them
strong delusion, that they should believe a lie: That they all
might be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure
in unrighteousness.
This paints a much different picture of the time leading to Christ's
coming. Verse 3 speaks of an apostasy, a falling away from Truth
that comes before the end. If the Bible (Word) is Truth, then it
is a falling away from the Bible. The Bible is not read much I think
now-a-days. If it were, and followed, there wouldn't be such a coldness
in the world as the Bible said the end would be. Love is selfless
and we live in a self-centered world.
I see extreme detail and Biblical origins for timing being what
it is for the end. That is what the
HIStory, Our Future Bible studies are about. What I see
is increased persecution of Christians and increased deception leading
many to a one-world religion that will eventually point to the antichrist.
He is the one that will bring about the great tribulation. He will
also come with lying signs and wonders. 2 Thessalonians 2:9 Some
feel this irrelevant because the harpazo will come first. 2 Thessalonians
2:1-4 speaks of a
pre-wrath harpazo however as described by Paul. When I see the
Bible lay out history more clearly than modern prophets speak and
with Biblical reasoning behind it in great precision to boot, I'm
very wary of this. Not because I don't believe it, but because I
do and I don't know the spirit realm or what side the inhabitants
are on, just the overview given in the Bible. Not knowing a lot
about these movements I could be wrong not trusting some individuals,
but I'll never go wrong trusting only the Bible. I don't need signs
and wonders, those will come soon enough when we're in heaven and
the Bible lays out our coming persecution because we preach obedience
to God's Word and salvation through Yeshua alone. I ask only that
you search your heart for the motivations, listen to the Spirit
and step forward in faith when guided by the Spirit - just check
first (pray). Signs should not be the source of our faith because
faith comes by hearing and hearing the Word of God. I believe that
whether logos (written word) or rhema (spoken word), it is
God's Word (Bible) that brings faith when heard. From personal
experience, that's when my faith began to increase, when I read
His Word. Until then faith was a struggle, now it is not.
Hebrews 11:1 Now faith
is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of
things not seen.
“Be not overcome
of evil, but overcome evil with good.” Romans 12:21
Watchman Bible Study | 2005 - 2024
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work herein is archived under fair use without profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior interest in reviewing the included information for personal use, non-profit research and educational purposes only. Ref.