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Except Ye Repent
By Dr. Harry Ironside

Chapter 3 – JOHN’S BAPTISM OF REPENTANCE
The New Testament opens with a call to repentance. The ministry of John the Baptist was pre-eminently devoted to emphasizing its importance. Sent of God in the spirit and power of Elijah to prepare the way of the Lord, he found a self-satisfied, self-righteous nation prating of being the chosen people professedly waiting for the promised Messiah, and yet utterly unready to welcome Him because of their low moral condition.
Like the Tishbite, he appeared suddenly and unannounced, a wilderness preacher, declaring to the abjects of Israel first, and then as others sought him out, to the self-righteous scribes, Pharisees, and Sadducees the need of heart preparation for the reception of the Kingdom. His message was summed up in the pregnant words: “Repent ye: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” It was a challenge to face their sins and the true state of their hearts in the light of the holiness and righteousness of God. And we are glad to learn that the publicans and sinners hearing him justified God and were baptized in recognition of the judgment of self and the need of remission of sins.
For with the preaching was linked the rite of baptism. It was definitely declared to be a baptism of repentance for (or unto) the remission of sins. That is, those who submitted to his baptism were practically saying: ‘In this act I declare my change of mind, my new attitude toward myself, my sins, and my God. I own my unworthiness, and I cast myself upon the infinite mercy of God, looking to Him for deliverance, counting on Him to forgive my sins and graciously fit me for the reception of the King and a place in the Kingdom of the heavens.’
I do not say that all who were baptized entered into its full meaning, but I do insist that this was its true import. Baptism, of course, did not procure remission of sins. It was simply the acknowledgment of the need of such forgiveness. Those so baptized might be likened to debtors giving their notes in recognition of their indebtedness. When our Lord condescended to be identified with this remnant by Himself undergoing baptism He was, as it were, endorsing their notes, declaring that He was ready to meet all their responsibilities by fulfilling every righteous demand of the throne of God on their behalf. It was more than three years later that He said, “I have a baptism to be baptized with; and how am I straitened [or pained] till it be accomplished.” Ah, the notes were fast falling due, and on the cross He must settle in bloody agony for them all.
How much of this John, the forerunner, saw it is not easy to say. But that he did have some insight into the great truth, that Jesus was not only Messiah but Saviour, was evidenced by his words, “Behold the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sin of the world!” His baptism of repentance was with a view to the remission of sins through the offering up of the foreordained Lamb as a propitiatory sacrifice.
To the haughty, self-righteous leaders John said: “O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come? Bring forth therefore fruits meet for repentance.” And then he warned them that natural relationship to Abraham would not save anybody, but spiritual kinship only; for faith alone makes one a child of the faithful patriarch. “Fruits meet for repentance.” That is, the changed life must evidence the changed attitude; otherwise there is no true repentance at all.
And then he declared: “Now also the ax is laid unto the root of the trees: Every tree therefore which bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down, and cast into the fire.” How different this to the ameliorative measures advocated by many who should know better! Some modern preaching might be summed up in ‘the axe is laid to the fruit of the tree.’ Cut off the bad fruit. Prune the tree. Spray it with a religio-philosophical mixture. Change its environment if possible. Attempt by ethical culture, by religious education, to make the tree produce good fruit — then all will be well. No need of repentance. No place for a second birth. But in spite of human reasoning, the divine principle remains unchanged. The tree is bad; that is why its fruit is corrupt. No use experimenting and trying to produce good fruit from so unwholesome a plant. Lay the axe to the root. Hew down the bad tree to make way for a new one of the heavenly Father’s planting.
Repentance is the recognition, the avowed recognition, of God’s estimate of the hopeless character of our hearts till renewed by the Word and Spirit of God. Grapes cannot be gathered from a thorn bush, nor figs from thistles. It is not the fruit that must be dealt with. The tree must be removed. To attempt to improve it is useless. God Himself has given it up. “The heart is deceitful above all things and desperately [literally, incurably] wicked.” Therefore the need of a new heart and a new spirit.
It was thus that John prepared the way of the Lord. No matter with whom he dealt, he sought to expose the hidden evil of the heart and the need of self-judgment, which is just the recognition that, “in me, that is, in my flesh, dwelleth no good thing.” In order to make this manifest, covetous soldiers were commanded to be content with their wages, tax-gatherers to exact no more than their due. Herod, the King himself — who sought to patronize John, while living in vilest incest and licentiousness — writhed as he heard the stern preacher declare, while he pointed to Herodias, “It is not lawful for thee to have her.” A prison cell and later the executioner’s sword might silence the tongue of the preacher of repentance, but his words live on forever, rebuking still the self-indulgent, the self-righteous, the covetous, the lustful, to the end of time, who fancy they can in some way bribe an offended God to overlook and condone their iniquity.
John the Baptist has been described as “the last of the prophets,” and his ministry was certainly most intimately linked with that of the great prophetic brotherhood of the Old Testament. We have already seen how our Lord identifies him in spirit with Elijah; and to His questioning disciples, who were perplexed regarding the prediction in Malachi of Elijah’s return prior to the ushering in of the great and dreadful day of the Lord, the Saviour replies, referring to John, “If ye will receive it, this is Elijah which was for to come.” He came to break up the fallow ground that the word of the Kingdom might not be sown among thorns. Thus he was chosen of God as a voice crying in the wilderness to prepare the way of the Lord and make straight in the desert a highway for our God. His was a leveling message. There were hills of pride to come down and valleys of degradation to be filled in by grace in order that the divine program might be expeditiously carried out.
In one sense his was a unique ministry which can never again be repeated, inasmuch as the same circumstances will never be duplicated. But there is a wider sense in which a similar message is always in order, for man’s heart remains unchanged and the King is still seeking those who will acknowledge and bow to His authority. Hence the importance of ever insisting upon the need of repentance, a state of soul which must always precede blessing.
The words of the holy Virgin, in the Magnificat, have an ever present application: “He hath put down the mighty from their seats, and exalted them of low degree. He hath filled the hungry with good things; and the rich he hath sent empty away” (Luke 1:52-53). This is the same leveling doctrine as that proclaimed by John. It is the “no difference” doctrine of the Apostle Paul. Yet how the human heart rebels against it. How men pride themselves on fancied distinctions which God’s eye does not discern.
“Must I be saved in the same way as my coachman?” indignantly asked a distinguished lady.
“Madam,” was the faithful reply, “you do not need to be saved at all. But if you ever are saved it will be on exactly the same ground as any other poor sinner.”
Years ago I was amazed to hear an eloquent French evangelist, Paul J. Loizeaux, exclaim, “Oh, how hard it is to find sinners! If only I could find one, I have a marvelous message for him.” A moment’s thought made his meaning clear. To be a sinner is one thing; to know it is another.
Faithful preaching of man’s responsibility will drive this truth home to the conscience. Repentance is the recognition of my sinnership — the owning before God that I am as vile as He has declared me to be in His holy Word. Until one comes to this place there is no further word from heaven for any man, except the sentence of doom. This truth does not in the least degree compromise the Gospel of grace. It rather prepares the sinner to know “the grace of God in truth” and to rejoice in it, reveling in the marvellous provision God has made to “satisfy the longing soul.”
Just as one may be hungry and not realize it because of a cloyed taste, and so fail to heed the dinner call, so one may be dying for lack of God’s gracious provision and have no sense of his lost estate, and therefore no appreciation of the message of grace. The call to repentance is designed of God to produce that soul hunger that will make the distressed one come with full appetite to the Gospel feast. Until one is thus aroused and made conscious of his need he will turn from the Gospel story with indifference and contempt. “The full soul loatheth an honeycomb; but to the hungry soul every bitter thing is sweet.”
Too often the earnest Gospel preacher dwells on the hopelessness of obtaining salvation by good works, when addressing men whose works are altogether evil and who have no thought of meriting life eternal but care only for the things of this godless world. We are warned against casting pearls before swine. Is it not possible even in Gospel preaching to do this very thing? We may make it all too simple, so easy that we quite misrepresent the God of all grace, who has in all ages first sought to show men their sinfulness and guilt, and then has offered the remedy to those who confessed to their dread disease.
I am persuaded revival would come to believers and awakening to the lost if there were more faithful preachers of the John the Baptist type, who would cry aloud and spare not, but would solemnly show the people their sins and call upon them in the Name of the Lord to repent, remembering that he who justifies himself must be condemned by God, but he who condemns himself will find complete justification in Christ, who died for his sins and who now is exalted to God’s right hand as a Prince and a Saviour, granting repentance and remission of sins to all who receive His testimony.
“I am not told to labor
To put away my sin,
So foolish, weak and helpless,
I never could begin.
But, blessed truth, I know it,
Though ruined by the fall,
Christ for my sin has suffered,
Yes, Christ has done it all.”
It will be seen that repentance is the very opposite of meritorious experience. It is the confession that one is utterly without merit, and if he is ever saved at all it can only be through the merits of our Lord Jesus Christ, “who gave himself a ransom for all.” Here is firm footing for the soul who realizes that all self-effort is but sinking sand. Christ alone is the Rock of our salvation.
[Dr. Harry Ironside (1876-1951), a godly Fundamentalist author and teacher for many years, served as pastor of Chicago’s Moody Memorial Church from 1930-1948]
Rescued Out of Darkness and Confusion: Robin’sTestimony
By Robin Campbell
I was raised in anon-Christian home, and exposed to pagan practices from a very young age. I believed these to be the truth. These practices made me feel special. My friends at the time also influenced me into thinking some of these things were cool to follow.
From about the age of 13, I started practicing astrology, psychic readings, higher consciousness meditation, spirit guides, palm readings, and angel cards, and more. These practices enslaved me. I thought I was in control and that everything happened by random chance. I believed in so many lies like superstitious, and also believed in karma. I thought that bad things would happen to me if I was too negative.
I attempted for many years developing psychic powers and tapping into things that I could not explain. I would tell people whom I didn’t even know about things in their life that I could not have known through normal channels. I would later find out that this information was from demonic powers of darkness. In spite of all this involvement, I was empty and still seeking happiness. I was angry and bitter,and my life was filled with lies and guilt and shame for things I had done. There was even a period of time in my life that getting high and drinking became the norm. I also tried to find fulfillment in things or people, but that never satisfied me.
I felt alone and trapped, and around my late teens and early 20’s, I began meditation and learning about freeing my spirit. I did this by trying to practice a “higher consciousness” and even just thinking more positive thoughts. I read New Ager Eckhart Tolle, medium Sylvia Brown, watched “The Secret” DVD numerous times,tried to live out the so-called Law of Attraction, and sought spirit guides. However,all of these things gave me only a temporary escape. I lived my life trusting in my feelings and my own understanding, taking bits and pieces from different books and religions, like Buddhism. I went as far as trusting in psychics.Again, this brought temporary relief, but soon enough I was back in a vortex of darkness with no light.
Living for myself was depressing. I even tried to be a better person morally, or think more positive and not allow circumstances to control me. I wondered why these things that I had cherished and believed in for years had given me no peace, comfort,or security. There were absolutely no answers to the deep questions I had about life, like why I am here and what happens after I die. I was filled with anxiety, fear, and hopelessness. I was even eager that doctors would diagnose me with some disorder in the hopes that they could fix me. These things were myi dols; they were my God. I was searching for something to free me.
I had no idea that I was enslaved to the lies of the enemy and to my own depravity. I also strongly believed at one point that I was a product of reincarnation. I thought that I was an old soul who had lived over 200 times (I gullibly accepted what a psychic said). I also had an experience in which I felt like a different person in a different era. This was a lie, because Hebrews 9:27 says that it is appointed for man to die once and then to face judgment.
In 2008, my friend Sharon Ortiz shared her faith with me. That was the first time I had heard the real Gospel message. She pressed the issue of repentance and faith in Christ’s finished work alone. I still thought that I was a pretty good person until God showed me my wickedness and His holiness. As it is written,
“There is none righteous, no, not one,” (Romans3:10).
Sharon and her parents spent much time with me. They shared God’s word with me and answered many questions. It was through the book of Romans that God convicted my heart and I realized I was lost and apart from Him. I started to get an understanding of who the true God is.
I originally came to Christ for relief from my anxiety but learned that the real problem was my need for forgiveness of sins and that I needed a Savior. I repented of my former ways of doing things, and believed in Christ alone to save me.
“Let no one be found among you who sacrifices his son or daughter in the fire, who practices divination or sorcery, interprets omens, engages in witchcraft, or casts spells, or who is a medium or spiritist or who consults the dead. Anyone who does these things is detestable to the Lord.” Deut. 18:10-12
I understood that God is holy and that I deserved judgment, and that I was dead in my sins. But praise be to God, He made a way for me through Jesus Christ! I now have peace,security, and hope. I learned that Jesus bore the wrath of God for me, and I now have his righteousness. I am justified by faith alone in Christ alone.
“Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus,because through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit of life set me free from the law of sin and death.”Romans 8:1, 2
How marvelous!Jesus lived the perfect life that no one can live. Since God is holy, He demands perfection, and He himself is that perfection!
“Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.” Hebrews 12:2
“For it is by grace you have been saved,through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— not by works,so that no one can boast.” Ephesians 2:8-9
The Pentecostals and Charismatics –
End-time Revival
or End-time Deception?
Rudolf Ebertshauser February 2011
Lecture 1
This paper is written by a Bible-believing German preacher and Bible teacher who joined the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement as a young believer about 1986. He was an ardent Charismatic for about four years, but then he was convinced by the Lord that in this movement not the Holy Spirit is at work, but a deceptive spirit. He separated from the movement, and through years of Bible study and critical examination came to a biblically founded repudiation of Charismatic teachings and practices. He wrote a book about this topic and holds seminars about the Charismatic movement in Bible-believing churches in order to warn the children of God and equip them with sound doctrine to discern the end-time deceptions.
These are the notes of a teaching lecture the author held in 2011 in Kenya, Africa. Due to the fact that the author is not a native speaker of English the text may contain some unusual and un-idiomatic phrasing or even occasionally a false choice in wording. The author strongly recommends that all readers look up all the given Bible references and use a traditional, conservative Bible translation which is close to the original wording of the Holy Scriptures.
1. Introduction:
The Charismatic visions of an end-time revival
The Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements see themselves as a first wave of a big outpouring of the Holy Spirit in the last times before the second coming of the Lord Jesus. They believe that God has promised through the prophet Joel to pour out His Spirit on the Church and the whole heathen world in the last days – “on all flesh”, as Joel 2:28 says. They expect that God’s Spirit will be poured out mightily on whole peoples, on millions and billions of men, and many of their prophets have foretold such an outpouring which would imply a mighty awakening and revival which is without parallel in history.
In the course of this “second Pentecost”, they say God brings back all the supernatural gifts of the Spirit which were found in the days of the Apostles, like prophecy, healings, speaking in unknown tongues, etc. According to their teachings, God will appoint new apostles and new prophets who will lead the end-time people of God to big successes. The present Pentecostal and Charismatic churches understand themselves to be a vanguard, the forerunners of that huge outpouring which is believed to come soon – in fact, it is announced almost daily by some Charismatic prophet in the world.
The Pentecostal and Charismatic followers believe their task is to make that big outpouring come – by prayers and “spiritual warfare” against evil spirits, by huge “evangelistic” campaigns which show many signs and wonders, and by the ministry of their “apostles” and “prophets” who are supposed to prepare the way for the coming revival.
This vision of a dynamic, powerful and influential Christianity which will see even more glory and success than the apostolic church and the ultimate triumph of the Gospel in the world is very attractive for many Christians today. These groups have a dynamic and optimistic outlook, they mobilize masses of people, and success seems to confirm their teachings: It is estimated that about 400 – 600 million people belong to the Pentecostal and Charismatic movements – including a large section of Charismatic members of the Roman Catholic Church.
But the big question is not: Are these teachings attractive? But: Are these teachings true? Are they in accordance with the Word of God, with the Teaching of the Apostles which we find in the Holy Scriptures?
As children of God who live in the end-time we are frequently warned by the Word of God to be on our watch and take heed so that we may not be deceived by false prophets and false teachers:
Now as He sat on the Mount of Olives, the disciples came to Him privately, saying: Tell us, when will these things be? And what will be the sign of Your coming, and of the end of the age? And Jesus answered and said to them: Take heed that no one deceives you. For many will come in my name, saying, ‘I am the Christ’ and will deceive many. (…) For false christs and false prophets will rise and show great signs and wonders to deceive, if possible, even the elect. See, I have told you beforehand. (Mt 24:3-5 + 24-25)
Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits, whether they are of God, because many false prophets have gone out into the world. (1Jh 4:1)
Test all things; hold fast what is good. (1Thess 5:21)
Therefore we want to test the teachings and prophecies, the powers and gifts of the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement by the unfailing standard of the Holy Scriptures.
2. What the Bible teaches about the end times
One thing we must stress at the beginning of our lecture is the vital importance of sound biblical teaching for us who are living in the last days of our present dispensation. Truly many “teachers” and many “prophets” are among us who tell us fascinating and fanciful stories instead of preaching and teaching the Word of God.
In quite a few cases you can see their true character as deceivers in the service of Satan from their life and the fruits of their “ministry”: They make big money from their preaching and healing and live in luxury; they seduce women and commit adultery; they teach outright heresies and pervert biblical truth. But sometimes things are not so obvious; many Christians are led astray because they trust false teachers and hold them to be powerful ministers of the Lord. They lack biblical discernment and do not know the Scriptures as well as they should.
1. What we need is first of all a solid knowledge of all the Scriptures. The false teachers always use some Scripture quotations to justify their deceptive teachings. But they isolate these Scripture passages from their context and true meaning, and they make them to say something quite different. Also, they use some Bible texts and ignore others which would show that their interpretation is wrong. In order to detect such falsifications, we must know our Bible from Genesis to Revelation! So it is very helpful to read through the whole Bible once a year, or at least once every two years.
2. What we also need is an understanding of Biblical doctrine. Biblical doctrine is formed by studying and comparing all relevant scripture texts on a certain topic and extracting their true meaning. Biblical doctrine is based on all Scripture and does not contradict any Scripture. False teaching usually is founded on only some arbitrarily interpreted Biblical passages and ignores other passages which would correct it.
3. The third important clue to biblical doctrine and discernment is the fact that the decisive doctrinal standard of the believers in Christ is the teaching of the Apostles (Acts 2:42) which we find in the letters of the New Testament. Many false teachers come and try to teach us heresies by using the Old Testament (e.g. believers are obliged to keep the Sabbath) or by misinterpreting passages out of the Gospels or the Book of Acts while ignoring the letters of the Apostles which give us the authorized clue to the understanding and application of the whole Bible, directly inspired by our risen head, the Christ.
If we want to achieve a good knowledge of sound doctrine, we need to study our Bibles thoroughly. We need to try and grasp the meaning of each verse and word in the Bible in order to get the true doctrine out of it. This means we must take heed to three more important points:
1. We must make sure we read a good Bible translation which is close to the original wording and free from liberal and modernist theological influences. Modern Bible versions like Good News, Living Bible, or the modernist New International Version are not faithful to the original Text and lead to misunderstandings and false teachings. The version that is most estimated in English-speaking countries is, of course, the King James Bible (Authorized Version). For believers who do not speak English as their first language, the choice is difficult; the New King James Version is, although it has some problems, the best choice in these cases. (Comp. David Cloud, Myths about the Modern Bible Versions.)
2. We ought to use a concordance in order to find all the Scriptures where the topics we study do occur, e.g. healing of the sick, signs and wonders, tongues. It is important for Bible study to get an overall picture of what the Bible says on a given topic. We need to regard every Scripture Text and interpret them all together; then we get a well-founded view.
3. We ought to use good Bible commentaries which are free from liberal theology or false teachings. We would recommend, among others, the Scofield Bible and the commentaries of William MacDonald, Arno Gaebelein, and Harry Ironside (all with the qualification of 1Thess 5:21!).
a) The heathen world in the last limes: Revival or lawlessness?
The Pentecostal and Charismatic prophets and preachers are convinced that millions of people, in fact whole cities and countries and peoples will turn to Christ as a result of the mighty outpouring of the Spirit they announce. But is that optimistic prophecy backed by the inspired prophecy of the Bible? What does the Bible say about the development of the world short before Christ’s return?
We cannot look at all Scriptures which testify to this topic, but just a few will give a clear picture. The first comes from the one and unique great Prophet that God sent to Israel and the world, our Lord Jesus Christ. He taught His disciples about the times when He as the Son of Man will come back:
And as it was in the days of Noah, so it will be also in the days of the Son of Man: They ate, they drunk, they married wives, they were given in marriage, until the day that Noah entered the ark, and the flood came and destroyed them all. Likewise as it was also in the days of Lot: They ate, they drank, they bought, they sold, they planted, they built; but on the day that Lot went out of Sodom it rained fire and brimstone from heaven and destroyed them all. Even so will it be in the day when the Son of Man is revealed. (Lk 17:26-30)
The Lord here says that the world in the last time will resemble the world short before the flood. Now was that a time of revival, of the conversion of many millions? What does the Bible say?
Then the LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was evil continually. (…) So God looked upon the earth, and indeed it was corrupt; for all flesh had corrupted their way on the earth. (Gen 6:5+12)
Just that will be the moral and spiritual condition of the mass of humankind when the Lord will return – according to His own unfailing words! This does not sound like “mass revival” and “outpouring of the Holy Spirit” – it means mass apostasy, occultism and outright rebellion against God. Even as in the days of Noah, the overwhelming majority of men will scoff at the preachers of righteousness, and they will drive their sinful frenzy to a point where the wrath of God cannot be withheld further, but must be poured out on the evildoers.
Our Lord also says the last times will be like the days of Lot, who had to see all the evil things and moral perversions the Sodomites committed. Now, among them you couldn’t even find ten just people, otherwise the city might have been saved. Is it not so that our times see the “revival” of the sins of Sodom on a very large scale? Is it not true that not only the world, but also the outer façade of heathen “Christendom” is rapidly turning to the rotten paths of Sodom? The end of this will be God’s wrath and not “the healing of the nations”!
So the Bible teaches very clearly, that the world will be full of lawlessness and perverse sins in the last days, and most of the people will not repent (cp. Rev 9:21; 16:9-11). 2Thess 2:7-9 shows that lawlessness is growing in the end, and it will have its peak when the Antichrist comes. In 2Thess 1:7-9 we find that the Lord Jesus, when He comes back to the earth, will send judgement on all those who do not obey Him:
… when the Lord Jesus is revealed from heaven with His mighty angels, in flaming fire taking vengeance on those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. These are punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of His power, when He comes in that day …
Also, in Rev 18:23 the Word of God says the Whore Babylon has deceived all the nations by its sorcery. How is that possible when all the nations have been converted? We know, of course, that there will be a time where all nations shall be converted, but this will only be a purified remnant of the nations in the Messianic kingdom, after the great judgements of God, and not in the Church dispensation, where it is only a small minority that is saved from among the nations.
b) The Church in the last times: triumph or decay?
The Pentecostal and Charismatic teachers and prophets frequently claim that the end time is the time of triumph and huge growth for the Church. Equipped with apostles, prophets, with supernatural gifts and the fullness of the Spirit, the Church is supposed to see millions of new Christians flooding in. It is said to be the head, and not the tail. It allegedly will overcome the powers of darkness and throw them into the abyss, thereby freeing the masses from their oppression. It will establish the kingdom of God on earth.
But when we consult the Bible and study the teachings of the inspired Apostles of Jesus Christ on this topic, we encounter a picture which is totally different from the above. Again we cannot cover all the relevant Scriptures, but we will focus on two inspired prophecies about the situation of the Church in the last days:
But know this, that in the last days perilous (or hard, severe) times will come: For men will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy, unloving, unforgiving, slanderers, without self-control, brutal, despisers of good, traitors, headstrong, haughty, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, having a form of godliness but denying its power. And from such people turn away! (2Tim 3:1-5)
Here we see that the last times are not the times of triumph and display of power for the true Church. Instead, the Word of God tells us that these times will be perilous, hard and evil times. The main reason which is given in our text is the dominance of people in Christendom who live like the sinners of Romans 1 – but they claim to be children of God, true believers!
They have a form, an outer appearance of godliness or fear of God, but they deny its power and very essence! They are false Christians, who have not the Holy Spirit, who have no longing to obey God, no spiritual mind, but they are open for every heresy and false teaching, and tend to draw the Church into the realm of this world.
The second inspired prophecy is also found in the second letter to Timothy – a very important letter to study for true believers in the last days!
For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine, but according to their own desires, because they have itching ears, they will heap up for themselves teachers, and they will turn their ears away from the truth, and be turned aside to fables. (2Tim 4:3-4)
Here we have foretold a second typical feature of end-time Christianity: those who call themselves Christians will not endure the sound doctrine of the Bible. They will not love the teaching of the apostles about repentance, faith in Christ, self-denial and being crucified with Christ, renouncing the world and its lusts etc. In fact, they will deny these truths because they hinder them in living their own self-willed lives.
They will consciously turn their ears away from the truth – a very serious act of departure from God and the faith! This rotten attitude towards truth is the basis for the powers of end-time deception to blind those false Christians; they will fall prey of strong delusions, because did not receive the love of truth:
The coming of the lawless one is according to the working of Satan, with all power, signs, and lying wonders, and with all unrighteous deception among those who perish, because they did not receive the love of the truth, that they might be saved. And for this reason God will send them strong delusion, that they should believe the lie, that they all may be condemned who did not believe the truth but has pleasure in unrighteousness. (2Thess 2:9-12)
This Scripture passage is of central importance for the biblical understanding of the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement. The same principles that operate in the very last time when the Antichrist will be revealed operate today as well. Many false Christians who rejected the true gospel of Christ and prefer fables to the sound doctrine of God (2Tim 4:3-4), will turn to the false prophets and teachers of the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement, which is, in fact, a movement that is about to prepare the coming of the Antichrist, as we will see later.
As these people reject the divine truth, which admonishes to them to repent and give their lives to Christ, they will eagerly embrace false prophets and teachers who tell them fables – invented stories and fanciful teachings that allow them to live in sin and error. These false teachers are paid well for preaching a message that satisfies the itching ears of the listeners: “God blesses your ways; God is your friend, God gives you health, wealth and power”. This is a divine judgement (1Pt 4:17); these people are enslaved by the strong delusions because they rejected the truth which would have made them free.
A third prophecy is to be seen in context with these two, and it shows the spiritual forces that push the mighty trends of deception in the end-time Church:
Now the Spirit expressly says that in latter times some will depart from the faith, giving heed to deceiving spirits and doctrines of demons, speaking lies in hypocrisy, having their own conscience seared with a hot iron … (1Tim 4:1-2)
Here we also have the latter times in view, and we see that the hidden cause for all the heresies and false teachings in the Church is the activity of demons, of deceptive spirits who lead the people astray by powers, false visions, dreams, signs and wonders, but also by cunningly invented doctrines which pervert the teachings of the Bible and lead the people on the broad way.
Again this confirms the teaching of 2Thess 2:9-11, because the powers of Antichrist and the strong delusions clearly are demonic in nature. This prophecy obviously alludes to the beginnings of the heretical Catholic Church in verse 3, but is applicable to every other heretical current in the Church of God; it has special relevance for the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement, where these deceiving spirits operate more openly and massively than in many other heresies.
The Bible teaches that heresy and error will experience a rapid growth in the end time; in fact this unnatural, destructive growth is likened to that of cancer cells in God’s Word:
But shun profane and idle babblings, for they will increase to more ungodliness. And their message will spread like cancer. (2Tim 2:16-17)
But evil men and impostors (or swindlers, deceivers) will grow worse and worse, deceiving and being deceived. (2Tim 3:13)
When we take these prophecies together, and compare them with quite a few other hints in the New Testament (e.g. 2Pet 2:1-2; 3:3; Jude 1:17-19; 1Pet 4:17; Acts 20:29-30), we can safely conclude that the Apostles teach us the very opposite of the false Charismatic prophets of today. The situation of the Church in the last times will be rather precarious; there will be many deceptions and false teachings, false Christians and false teachers, and the sound believers will have to struggle in order to keep the true path of Christ. They will have only a little strength (Rev 3:8).
The NT nowhere teaches that there will be new apostles or prophets or signs and wonders at the end of the Church dispensation; instead it warns decidedly against false apostles (2Cor 11:13; Rev 2:2), false prophets (Mt 24:11+24; Mt 7:15-23; 1Jn 4:1; Rev 19,20), false teachers (1Tim 4:1-2; 2Tim 4:3-4; 2Pt 2:1; 1Jn 2:18-26; 2Jn 1:7-11), and false signs and wonders (Mt 24:24; 2Thess 2:9; Rev 13:13-14; 16:14) in the last time.
c) The prophecy of Joel: On whom will the Spirit be poured out?
One of the main biblical proofs for the teachings of the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement seems to be the great OT prophecy of Joel, where an outpouring of the Holy Spirit “on all flesh” is prophesied for the latter times. This prophecy is very often cited by the Pentecostals in order to show that their expectation of the big revival is biblically justified. But is that really the case? What does the prophet truly say? Who will receive that outpouring of God’s Spirit after all?
Let us read this important text:
And it shall come to pass afterward that I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh; your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions. And also on the menservants and on the maidservants I will pour out my Spirit in those days.
And I will show wonders in the heavens and in the earth: Blood and fire and pillars of smoke. The sun shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the coming of the great and awesome day of the LORD. And it shall come to pass that whoever calls on the name of the LORD shall be saved. For in Mount Zion and in Jerusalem there shall be deliverance, as the LORD has said, among them remnant whom the LORD calls (Joel 2:28-32; Joel 3:1-5 in other versions)
Now on the first reading, one might say: The Pentecostals have a point here! The Word says the Spirit will be poured out on all flesh! That obviously means that eventually all men on earth will receive the Spirit in the end time! That is how almost all Pentecostals and Charismatics understand this text; they claim that all men will one day be filled with God’s Spirit, and this is underlined by scores of “visions” and “revelations” which show millions and millions of people in ecstatic praise, filling stadiums and large public places, whole cities that are “converted” and whole nations that are “healed by the spirit”.
But we must read the Word of God thoroughly and precisely in order to get its true meaning. One central point is to read and interpret the Scriptures in their context and not out of context. So we will read this text once more, but we will include the preceding and the following verses this time:
You shall eat in plenty and be satisfied, and praise the name of the LORD your God, who has dealt wondrously with you; and my people shall never be put to shame. Then you shall know that I am in the midst of Israel: I am the LORD your God and there is no other. My people shall never be put to shame. And it shall come to pass afterward that I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh; your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions. (Joel 2:26-28)
Now when we include the verses which precede our passage, we get a clear idea who will really receive the Holy Spirit in the last days: it is the people of Israel! It is absolutely clear who your sons and your daughters are – the sons and daughters of the god-fearing remnant of the once chosen people Israel who will be accepted as God’s people again in the last time, when the Church has been enraptured and taken into heaven.
But why does God say: “on all flesh”? Now, if we study the Old Testament, the dispensation of the Law, then we will realize that under the Law, not every believer or God-fearing Israelite had received the Spirit of God. This privilege then was only for a few chosen instruments: The leaders and kings like Mose or David; the God-fearing high priests, and the prophets. The ordinary people of God did not receive the Spirit in those days (cf. Num 11:29).
But it will be different when Israel is accepted as God’s people again, when the New Covenant will be realized for Israel. Then God will put His Spirit into each believer’s heart (Ezek 11:19; 36:26), so when the Spirit is poured out on end-time renewed Israel, it will be poured out not only on priests and prophets, but on all flesh, that is: all converted Israelites – sons and daughters, old men and young men, menservants and maidservants. This is the only possible meaning of “all flesh” in this passage; it is impossible to include the masses of the heathen nations in this expression, as we will see below.
This interpretation is confirmed by quite a few other prophecies in the OT; we will only cite two of them (comp. also Isa 32:15; Ezek 39:29):
For I will pour water on him who is thirsty, and floods on the dry ground; I will pour my Spirit on your descendants and my blessing on your offspring … (Isa 44:3)
And I will pour on the house of David and on the inhabitants of Jerusalem the Spirit of grace and supplication; then they will look on me whom they pierced. (Zech 12:10)
So it is clearly established that the outpouring announced by the prophet Joel will be on the converted people of Israel and not on all nations. On the contrary, the verses following that prophecy show that at the same time the heathen nations will face severe judgement from the LORD:
For behold in those days and at that time, when I bring back the captives of Judah and Jerusalem, I will also gather all nations, and bring them down to the valley of Jehoshaphat, and I will enter into judgement with them there on account of my people, my heritage Israel … (Joel 3:1-2)
The way the apostle Peter quotes Joel in Acts 2:16-21 basically confirms this view as well. Peter does not say: Here you find the prophecy fulfilled, but he simply says that the pouring out of the Spirit at Pentecost is of the same quality as the one predicted by Joel. In fact, the signs in heaven mentioned in Joel 2:30-31 did not happen at Pentecost, and the outpouring then can only be interpreted as a first or partial fulfilment, whereas the final or complete fulfilment will be come to pass in the last days.
At Pentecost, the Spirit was poured out in a similar way as it will then, in the last days, when the complete fulfilment of Joel’s prophecy will come. The Spirit was poured out on Jews alone, who called upon the name of the Lord; the Spirit was poured out in Jerusalem, and the Spirit brought true prophetic gifts to the people of God. But the aim of that outpouring was altogether different from that which will come. At Pentecost, the Spirit came to form the Church of Jesus Christ, the Assembly of God, a new people of God formed by former Jews and Gentiles who now were to become one new man in Christ.
The Spirit of God was only once poured out on the Church; according to the promise of our Lord, this Spirit of truth will abide with the church forever; He will dwell with all believers of the Church dispensation and be in all of them (Jn 14:16-18). We never hear of any promise that there will be several outpourings of that Spirit for the Church, because He has been poured out once and for all at Pentecost, and will stay with the Church forever: “whom he poured out [Greek in the sense: once and for all] on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Savior” (Tit 3:6).
d) The Pentecostal prophets tell lies and pervert the words of the living God
When we compare the “inspired prophecies” of the Pentecostal and Charismatic camp and their teachings with the truly inspired prophetic Word of Scripture (2Pet 1:19-21), then it becomes very clear that there is a fundamental contradiction. Only one statement can be true. If we follow the Charismatics, there must be a great end-time pouring out of the Spirit on all peoples, and billions shall be converted before the Lord Jesus comes back. If we follow the Bible, there will be lawlessness, overabounding sodomitic sin and anti-Christian movement in the world, and the Church will be ridden with heresies, false prophets and pseudo-believers – it will be a great falling away instead of a great awakening!
Now who is right? We can only believe one of the two doctrines. And, of course, every true believer should accept the Bible’s teaching and reject the wishful theories of the Pentecostal false prophets. We have seen with the prophecy of Joel that the false teachings of the Charismatics can only be maintained if one perverts the true meaning of the Words of God. The false prophets of the end-time thus commit the same sin as the false prophets in old Israel, about whom the LORD had to say:
How long will this be in the hearts of the prophets who prophesy lies? Indeed they are prophets of the deceit of their own heart, who try to make my people forget my name by their dreams which everyone tells his neighbour, as their fathers forgot My name for Baal. The prophet who has a dream, let him tell a dream, and he who has My word, let him speak My word faithfully. What is the chaff to the wheat? says the LORD. Is not my word like a fire? says the LORD, and like a hammer that breaks the rock in pieces?
Therefore, behold, I am against the prophets, says the LORD, who steal my words every one from his neighbor. Behold, I am against the prophets, says the LORD, who use their tongues and say ‘He says.’ Behold, I am against those who prophesy false dreams, says the LORD, and tell them and cause my people to err by their lies and by their recklessness. Yet I did not send them or command them; therefore they shall not profit this people at all, says the LORD (…) For every man’s word will be his oracle (or burden), for you have perverted the words of the living God, the LORD of hosts, our God. (Jer 23:28-36)
3. Beware of the false prophets in the last times!
We have seen until now that the teachings of the Pentecostal and Charismatic camp are contrary to the Bible and that they picture an illusionary mass awakening in the last times. The Bible unmasks these people as false prophets and false teachers. But the Bible has more to say about this movement – and these are Scriptures which hardly ever are taken seriously or expounded by Charismatics. The Bible gives us frequent and serious warnings about a strong influence of false, deceitful prophets in the end time, and we ought to have a closer look on these warnings.
a) The warning against false prophets in Matthew 24
First of all we should look at the important speech of our Lord at the Mount of Olives, where He teaches His disciples about the end of time, the glorious moment when He, the Son of Man, shall come in might and glory to set up His Kingdom. The time before that great event will be characterized by certain traits, and one of them, in fact, the most prominent, will be the activity of false prophets:
Now as He sat on the Mount of Olives, the disciples came to Him privately, saying: Tell us, when will these things be? And what will be the sign of Your coming, and of the end of the age? And Jesus answered and said to them: Take heed that no one deceives you. For many will come in my name, saying, ‘I am the Christ’ and will deceive many.
And you will hear of wars and rumours of wars. See that you are not troubled; for all these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet. For nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom. And there will be famines, pestilences, and earthquakes in various places. Al these are the beginning of sorrows (literally: of labours = labours of birth with a woman).
Then they will deliver you up to tribulation and kill you, and you will be hated by all nations for My name’s sake. And then many will be offended, will betray one another, and will hate one another. Then many false prophets will rise up and deceive many. And because lawlessness will abound, the love of many will grow cold. But he who endures to the end shall be saved.
For false christs and false prophets will rise and show great signs and wonders to deceive, if possible, even the elect. See, I have told you beforehand. (Mt 24:3-13 + 24-25)
In that very important passage, the Lord shows certain characteristic traits of the end time. We should note that this includes the time when the Church is on earth, but also the time afterwards when Antichrist comes, when the Great Tribulation happens and the remnant of Israel turns to Christ. These end-time characteristics develop in the form of labour pains as in the birth of a child (that is the meaning of “sorrows” in Mt 24:8). That means: the symptoms like false prophets, wars, famines etc., will occur with increasing intensity and frequency as the end comes closer.
In fact, the first and most prominent feature our Lord mentions as characteristic of the last times is deception: “Take heed that no one deceives you” (v. 4). This end-time deception will have a Christian mask. The false prophets will come in Christ’s name, and they will talk in the first person as if Christ spoke through them: “I am the Christ”. The warning against them is twice repeated in our text – a very rare phenomenon which shows how serious the danger is. “Then many false prophets will rise up and deceive many” (v. 11). ”For false christs and false prophets will rise and show great signs and wonders” (v. 24).
So we have the warning of our loving Lord that as the end times unfold, false prophets and false signs and wonders will spread in the church, as the evil one tries to deceive the children of God and lead them a wrong way.
b) How to detect the false prophets: Matthew 7
But the warnings against these false prophets go even more into detail. In Matthew 7, our Lord Jesus Christ gives a lesson about the false prophets which we should heed well.
Beware of the false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravenous wolves. You will know them by their fruits. Do men gather grapes from thornbushes or figs from thistles? Even so, every good tree bears good fruit, but a bad tree bears bad fruit. A good tree cannot bear bad fruit, nor can a bad tree bear good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. Therefore, by their fruits you will know them.
Not everyone who says to me ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter into the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven. Many will say to Me in that day: ‘Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Your name, cast out demons in Your name, and done many wonders in Your name?’ And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness!’ (Mt 7:15-23)
Here we have several important hints which we will follow.
1. First of all, let us notice what a false prophet is in the Scriptures. In the Greek of the NT their name means “false, lying, deceiving prophet”. So he claims to be a prophet, but he is a fake and tells lies to the people of God. Now what is a true prophet in the Bible? It is a chosen, sanctified speaker of God himself, who does not speak his own words, but passes on the very Words of the Lord who has sent him. A true prophet is an inspired messenger of God. A false prophet is a person who poses as messenger of God and claims to have a new word of God, but in reality he tells lies and false visions; he is a speaker of Satan who leads the people of God astray.
2. Second, our Lord warns us about the perfect camouflage of these prophets. They come to God’s people in sheep’s clothing, that is, they make the impression of being true, reborn believers, children of God, sheep of the Good Shepherd. In fact, many of them seem to be fascinating men of God, full of power, accompanied with signs and wonders, people who seem to be spiritually far above the ordinary child of God. But our Lord also reveals to us that all this is just a show, a beautiful façade with a totally different reality behind it. In their inner heart, they are darkness, unrighteousness, thirst for power. They are ravenous wolves who want to prey on the true sheep (comp. Acts 20:29).
3. Third, our Lord shows us how to detect these wolves in spite of their clever camouflage. It is not mainly by their speeches and stories. A good deceiver will tell in his sermons about 80% of biblical truth, and mix it with 20% deadly error. In some cases, when the deception is very cunning, it might be 90% truth and 10% error. But still, the overall result is error and destruction, not edification. If you want to detect these deceivers, you first of all have to test the fruit of their messages and ministry. If the fruit is bad, e.g. it leads to doctrinal errors, personal sins and schisms, then the tree itself is bad. And as some of its fruit may look good, but in reality is poisoned, you have to determine whether the tree is bad, and then reject even those fruits that seem to be harmless and delicious (comp. Gen 3:6). We must remember that never there will come good fruit from a bad tree!
4. Fourth, our Lord gives us a decisive clue to detect the false prophets by the severe passage which shows us the end of their glamorous and boastful ministry. In vv. 22-23 we see how these ministers of the devil will come to the Lord and say: “Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Your name, cast out demons in Your name, and done many wonders in Your name?” The Lord, the one who knows the hearts, will then answer them: “I never knew you; depart from me, you who practice lawlessness!” But we not only know the dreadful end of these self-ordained prophets by these verses. We also see that there are three central characteristics of the false “ministry” of the end-time deceptive prophets: They prophesy in Christ’s name; they cast out demons in Christ’s name, and they do great signs and wonders in Christ’s name.
c) The pseudo-prophetic movement of the last days unmasked
If we take the teachings of our Lord together, and take them serious as inspired prophecy which will come to pass, then we have to expect in the end times an influential movement of false prophets, who bring unbiblical messages in Christ’s name, and whose ministry is characterized by prophecy, casting out demons and performing great wonders. Now if we look at the history of the Church in the last two centuries, we will only find one great movement which shows all these three characteristics of false prophets, and that is the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement!
It is the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement which boasts of its prophets as having the new revelation of God for the end time, and boasts that the “gift of prophecy” with dreams, visions and inner voices is given to each one who has received its “baptism of the spirit”. It is this movement which boasts of their ability to cast out demons out of every Christian, out of all unbelievers and even out of the heavenlies, out of whole cities and countries. And it is this movement which boasts of the big wonders and signs that happen daily in its midst, whose preachers and prophets claim that the great power of God is working through them (comp. Acts 8:9-10).
In the centuries before, there had been similar movements on a smaller scale, like the Montanists of the third and fourth century, or the Camisards in the 17th, or the Irvingites in the 19th century. In all these movements, the prophecies proved to be lies, and their fruit was deception and destruction. But none of these earlier movements gained an impact on the Church comparable to that great movement which began at the start of the 20th century in the USA. If there is any fulfilment of our Lord’s prophetic announcement in Matthew 24, it can only be this movement which has spread over the whole world and penetrated almost every branch of the Church on earth.
“See, I have told you beforehand” (Mt 24:25) says our Lord and Master. If we are prepared to listen to His words and take His warnings, His teachings serious, we can detect the end-time false prophets without much difficulty. But many Christians have already been poisoned by the deceptive spirits of the movement, and they are unable to see the obvious; they prefer to be deceived instead of facing the truth which hurts. What about you and me?
4. The origins and essence
of the Pentecostal and Charismatic movements
There is one last point left which is made clear by the precise Word of Truth, the inspired word of the Bible, if only we see the connection between different messages and teachings of the Lord in the Scriptures. And this is something the devil wants to keep in the mist, in half-darkness, so that the clear truth is not made known to God’s people.
We have seen that the whole movement began with an “outpouring of spirit” and saw uncountable such “outpourings” since. But as the true Holy Spirit was poured out only once on the Church, at Pentecost – how are we to account for the Pentecostal “outpourings” in the last days? Or, to put the question more clearly: What sort of spirit was poured out? According to the Biblical teaching, it cannot be the Holy Spirit. But what spirit was it then?
A deceptive spirit is poured out on deceived people
The first occurrences of the Pentecostalist “outpouring of spirit” happened in the United States in 1901 and 1906. The recipients were adherents to extreme groups of the “holiness movement” who taught a “complete sanctification” which allegedly eradicated all sin, lust or sinful desire out of the heart to produce a “clean heart” and sinless perfection already here on earth. This error was quite popular in those days; it had its roots in the teachings of John Wesley and Charles Finney, among others.
Some of these groups taught a “three step sanctification” with the new birth as first stage, the “entire sanctification” as second, and then the “baptism of the Holy Spirit” as third and highest stage. They expected an outpouring of the spirit according to Joel and a renewal of the apostolic gifts of prophecy and wonders. People fasted and prayed for days to receive that “baptism” and “outpouring”, and after some time, a spirit was poured out indeed; it manifested itself in prophecies, tongues, trembling, trance and unconsciousness, in strange and uncontrollable movements, jerks and cries, in miraculous healings.
The fruit of this spirit was an endless wave of splitting up of churches and groups, a dirty wave of heretical teachings, of moral sins, adultery and fornication, and an uncountable mass of false prophecies which were proven lies by the outcome, of deceptive wonders and healings, of greed and filthy gain, of domination and manipulation of people by self-styled “prophets”, “apostles” and “shepherds” … The sad inside story of this movement would fill volumes. It proves by the criterion of our Lord that it was a false spirit which was poured out then.
And when we consider the Lord’s judgement on the teachings these deluded people held, then we can understand the judgement of God which underlies this sad counterfeit “revival”. The heresy of “complete sanctification” is addressed and characterised in the first letter of the Apostle John:
If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar, and His word is not in us. (1Jn 1:8-10)
The false teachers of “complete sanctification” claimed just what John characterizes here; they claimed that after their mystical “sanctification experience”, they had no longer any sin and sinned no more. Now the Word of God condemns these heretical teachings with very serious words. Those who say such things deceive themselves, and, more serious even, they make God a liar, because God clearly teaches that the flesh and sinful lusts and sin remains in the child of God until the glorious day when we are transformed and will be as He is (1Jn 3:2; Phil 3:20-21).
Now we can understand better why the God whom these heretical fanatics made a liar permitted a spirit of lie and demonic deception to be poured out on them. They turned away from the sober teaching of Scripture, from Biblical truth, and so they received a lying spirit, a spirit which deceived them even further and plunged them in a system of false teachings which is quite difficult to escape from once one has put oneself under its influence.
This is in full accordance with the teaching of 2Thess 2:9-12 where we read that, because the deceived people did not receive the love of truth, God sends them strong delusions, that they should believe the lie. They come under the working of Satan with all its deceptive power, signs and wonders, just because they turned away from God’s truth. We are reminded of the equally serious word of the Apostle Peter: “For the time has come for judgement to begin at the house of God; and if it begins with us first, what will be the end of those who do not obey the gospel of God?” (1Pet 4:17).
In the OT, we have a telling and important precedent for such an outpouring of a deceptive spirit on false people. In Isa 19:14 we read that the Lord poured (or mingled) into the Egyptians a perverse spirit (or a spirit of dizzyness). In 2Chr 18:22 we read that the Lord judged his unfaithful king Ahab by allowing al lying spirit to deceive him: “The LORD has put a lying spirit in the mouth of these prophets of yours, and the LORD has declared disaster against you.” A very striking parallel with the workings of the false spirit of the Pentecostal movement is found in Isa 29:9-11:
Pause and wonder! Blind yourselves and be blind! They are drunk, but not with wine; they stagger, but not with intoxicating drink. For the LORD has poured out on you the spirit of deep sleep [or unconsciousness], and has closed your eyes, namely the prophets, and He has covered your heads, namely the seers. The whole vision [or revelation] has become to you like the words of a book that is sealed, which men deliver unto one who is literate, saying: ‘Read this, please’. And he says: ‘I cannot, for it is sealed.’
In a like manner, the lying spirit that forms and leads the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement makes its followers spiritually drunk and blind for the true teachings of God’s revelation, the written Word. They hunt after all sorts of dubious “prophets” who sell them their fancy pseudo-revelations, but they become blind for the sound teaching of the Apostles. They fall to the ground and lie in ecstasy and think, they receive a “blessing” by it. But their true situation is prefigured by the words of Isaiah the prophet:
But these also have erred through wine, and through strong drink are they gone astray. The priest and the prophet have erred through strong drink, they are overpowered by wine, they are gone astray through strong drink; they have erred in vision, they have stumbled in judgement. (…) For with stammering lips and a strange tongue will He speak to this people, to whom He said, This is the rest, cause the weary to rest, and: This is the refreshing. But they would not hear. And the word of the LORD was unto them Precept upon precept, precept upon precept, line upon line, line upon line, here a little, there a little: that they might go, and fall backward, and be broken, and snared, and taken. (Isa 28:7-13; Darby translation)
The bad fruits of the false spirit
This leads us to the second point we want to consider. In 1Jn 4:1 we are expressly commanded: “Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits, whether they are of God; because many false prophets have gone out into the world.” How are we to test the spirits of the prophets? Now some have thought this means to call upon these spirits and command them to identify themselves or to formulate a doctrinally sound confession. But this is not the right way and may bring harm.
The right way to test the spirits is shown us in the teaching of the apostolic letters. We think this is hinted at in 1Jn 4:6, when the apostle John underlines that the true servants of God accept the sound teaching of the apostles: “We (the Apostles) are of God; he who knows God hears us; he who is not of God does not hear us. By this we know the Spirit of truth and the spirit of error.” So we have to look whether the Charismatic prophets truly listen to the doctrine of the Apostles and abide by it.
It is by testing their teachings by the teachings of the Word of God, and also by testing their workings by the inspired teaching on how the Holy Spirit works in the believer. We have already seen that the teachings and prophecies of the false Pentecostalist spirits are contrary to the sound teaching of the Lord and His apostles. But how about the working and the effects of that spirit? Can we test them and see which sort of spirit we have before us?
I believe we can, and if we compare the teachings of the NT about the fruit and the effects of the Holy Spirit on the believer, we can safely conclude that the fruits of the false spirit in the Pentecostal and Charismatic movements testify to its demonic nature. We will only mention three points here, as we want to treat this topic more extensively in our next lecture:
1. The true Spirit of God works self-control and not compulsive reactions: God’s Spirit leaves the believer always his own conscious decision; He leads and sometimes urges believers to do God’s will, but He never overrules his personality of robs him of his self-control. In fact, self-control is one of the fruits of the Spirit, the last one mentioned in Gal 5:22-23. Many symptoms of the false Pentecostalist spirit show that this deceiving spirit works by compulsion; it steers the people without and often against their will. So we meet, especially in the so-called “Toronto blessing”, but also apart from that, with symptoms like compulsive laughter, compulsive hopping or convulsions, compulsive shouting or speaking in tongues, and so on. This is never the Spirit of God, of whom we read: “where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty”, and: “the spirits of the prophets are subject to the prophets” (1Cor 14:32).
2. The true Spirit of God works sobriety and vigilance, not drunkenness or unconsciousness. The false Pentecostalist spirit frequently throws its followers into unconsciousness; this was not a new phenomenon of the “Toronto blessing”, but has occurred from the beginnings of that movement. Many deep ecstatic experiences of that spirit are associated with states of trance, hypnotic states, “spirit drunkenness” or unconsciousness, e.g. the ill-famed “slain in the spirit” symptoms. But the Spirit of God works not trance and unconsciousness, but “a sound mind” (2Tim 1:7). The spiritual person is exhorted to watch (i.e. to stay awake), to be vigilant and sober (comp. Rom 13:11-14; 1Cor 15:34; 1Cor 16:13; Eph 5:14; 1Tim 3:2; 1Pet 4:7; 1Pet 5:8; Rev 3:2-3):
“You are all sons of light and sons of the day. We are not of the night nor of darkness. Therefore let us not sleep, as others do, but let us watch and be sober. For those who sleep, sleep at night, and those who get drunk get drunk at night. But let us who are of the day be sober …” (1Thess 5:5-8)
The express states of “spiritual drunkenness” which have caused prominent Charismatics to declare themselves as “barkeepers” of their false spirit, are clearly not in accordance with the character of God’s Holy Spirit; they are caused by the end-time spirits of deception (1Tim 4:1). Therefore we read in 2Tim 2:26: “…and that they may come to their senses and escape the snare of the devil, having been taken captive by him to do his will.”
3. The true Spirit of God glorifies God through decency, not erratic or undecent behaviour. The false Pentecostalist spirit leads its followers frequently to a behaviour which dishonors God. Examples from a much longer list would include speaking in assemblies against God’s order (1Cor 14:26-40); behaving compulsively like animals or laughing and shouting without self-control; violation of God’s orders for women to behave still and not dominating men, and so on. (Comp. also lecture 2 on this topic.)
c) The cancer-like growth of the error
The first wave of this end-time deception was the Pentecostal Movement. It originated in extreme Holiness circles, as we saw, and it was soon detected as an aberration by the sound Bible-believing churches. It separated its followers from sound churches and built a movement of its own, quickly divided into dozens of sub-groups mostly orientated to respective “anointed apostles” and “anointed prophets” who often condemned each other and claimed divine inspiration for themselves only. There were some quite large organisations, though, like the Assemblies of God, or the International Church of the Foursquare Gospel, which was founded by the woman “apostle” Aimee Semple McPherson.
The Pentecostal churches were a growing, but isolated section of Christianity for about sixty years. An important change took place in the 1960ies, when an increasing number of members and pastors of mainline protestant churches (which were all liberal in their orientation) received the Pentecostal “spirit baptism”, and the liberal leaders of these churches subsequently came to tolerate or even encourage such “renewal movements”. This development had been prepared in the fourties and fifties by interdenominationally working Pentecostal “healers” like oral Roberts or William Branham, by the efforts of Demos Shakarian and his “Full Gospel Businessmen”, and largely through the efforts of David du Plessis, a Pentecostal preacher from South Africa who influenced liberal church leaders of the ecumenical “World Council of Churches” to open their churches for the “spirit baptism”. In the sixties, this pervert seed grew up, and through the influence of people like Episcopalian Dennis Bennett, Lutheran Larry Christenson, and faith healer Agnes Sanford.
Soon the charismatic “renewal” spread within every mainline denomination in America, including, from 1967, the Roman Catholic Church. The teachings and practices of these groups were essentially the same like with the older Pentecostals, although liberal theology and denominational traditions were integrated. The movement also reached Europe and spread throughout the whole world. The special characteristic of the “classical” Charismatics is that they choose to stay in their denomination instead of forming separate churches. They penetrate these denominations like leaven and thus spread the experience of their “spirit baptism” very efficiently.
The Catholic Charismatic renewal has become one of the largest and most important groups within the classical Charismatics. They claim about 120 million followers in 230 countries all over the world. They are acknowledged by the last three Popes and furthered by prominent members of the Roman Catholic hierarchy, e.g. Cardinal Suenens or the Pope’s preacher, R. Cantamalessa.
Besides these denominational renewal movements, there is a growing number of independent Charismatic churches and new denominations like the Calvary Churches or the Vineyard Fellowship. Many of these are open for massive heretical teachings, e.g. the Word of Faith movement (Kenneth Hagin), many are preachers of the false prosperity gospel or of the “positive confession” heresy. These independent Charismatics are usually grouped around some “especially anointed” leader and experience rapid growth. There are also very many Charismatic missions and parachurch organizations like “Youth with a Mission”, charismatic television channels (PTL) etc. An “evangelistic” outreach of sad fame in Africa is Reinhard Bonnke’s organisation with its sensationalist healing crusades.
In the eighties of the 20th century a “third wave of the Holy Spirit” was announced by some Charismatics, especially John Wimber. This new deceptive “wave” was directed to the traditional evangelical churches which had before been less influenced by Charismatic teachings and practices. Special efforts have been made to export the Charismatic false spirit to non-Charismatic evangelicals, and the attractive Charismatic music, especially “praise & worship” songs, function as an effective “door opener” mainly with younger believers.
The characteristic which distinguishes the Charismatics from their elder brethren, the Pentecostals, seems to be that the earlier movement was still influenced by its Holiness roots and had in some way a more conservative character, whereas with the Charismatics, reckless wordliness, moral laxness and even New Age and esoteric influences can spread unchecked. With the growing success of the Charismatics, however, the younger generation of Pentecostal pastors seem to have adapted very much to their more efficient colleagues, and an increasing mingling of the two currents can be observed.
d) The crucial role of the Pentecostal and Charismatic movements
in the end-time deception of the Church
We have seen that the Pentecostal and Charismatic wave is rapidly swelling in these last days. If numerical growth and outward success were a sure sign of God’s blessing, as many believe, then surely the Charismatics could claim to be God’s vanguard. But we have already seen that in the last time, it is heresy and departure from the faith that is growing, spreading like cancer (2Tim 2:17). The remnant of faithful believers, on the other side, is said to have “a little strength” (Rev 3:8). So the growth of these movements is according to Scripture, but it fulfils warnings like those in 2Tim 3:13: “But evil men and impostors will grow worse and worse, deceiving and being deceived”. In the end time, the false teachers will draw by far the larger crowds as compared to the true teachers:
But there were also false prophets among the people, even as there will be false teachers among you, who will secretly bring in destructive heresies, even denying the Lord who bought them, and bring on themselves swift destruction. And many will follow their destructive ways, because of whom the way of truth will be blasphemed. By covetousness they will exploit you with deceptive words … (2Pet 2:1-3)
This is not to say that there are no true believers among the Pentecostals and Charismatics. I am persuaded there are quite a few souls who have believed in the Lord Jesus as their Saviour and are true children of God, although deceived by the false teachings and spirits of these movements. On the other hand, the sad fact is that usually a majority, in Charismatic churches often a very large majority of adherents show no biblical evidence of a new birth and of biblical salvation. This is due to the false gospel which is preached in these circles, to the false Jesus that is revered, and to the false spirit that works (2Cor 11:4; see second lecture).
Why is it that this openly unbiblical movement has such a success? Well, the answer is that it is furthered by Satan who uses it to open up the nominal Christians for the coming anti-Christian deception. There are three destructive effects of the movement which the devil uses massively in end time Christianity:
1. The Pentecostal and Charismatic movements persuade people to consider false revelations, subjective experiences and feelings more important than the written Word of God. The inspired Word of Scripture is the only sure guide for our faith and life – that is the sound principle to which most evangelical believers still adhere – or: used to adhere, before the deceiving influences of the Charismatics perverted that principle. Wherever the false spirit of that movement gains influence, people are subtly turned away from simple faith in Scripture. They become accustomed to regard the messages of some “anointed” prophets, the dreams or voices of their deluded hearts an even more authentic and topical “word of God” than the Bible. And this mystical leaven is used by the devil to draw many evangelical Christians away from the faith once and for all delivered to the saints (Jude 1:3).
2. The Pentecostal and Charismatic movements prepare the people to accept signs and wonders as a divine confirmation and authentification. This prepares the way for the even stronger delusions which are to come when Antichrist appears on the scene. The false prophets of that movement teach their followers to accept those as divinely authorized, who perform signs and wonders. Now we know that at the peak of the Anti-Christian deception, Satan will use a super-prophet as his tool who will perform the most amazing wonders and signs – in order to seduce people to worship the Antichrist and his image (comp. Rev 13:12-15; 2Thess 2:8-12). Whenever we see Charismatic “faith healers” proclaim their mighty signs and wonders, we ought to remember that one day a fascinating miraculous healing will bring deluded men to worship the dragon and the beast (Rev 13:3-4)!
3. The Pentecostal and Charismatic movements enable the absorption of many bible-believing Christians into the ecumenic movement and the future world religion of the Whore Babylon. It is telling that the liberal, ecumenical, Christ-renouncing World Council of Churches has gladly welcomed the Charismatic movement. They estimate it highly because they rightly see that in face of the unbridgeable divisions between denominations in the realm of doctrine, this “renewal” based on false spirituality, false revelation and false experience can be an effective bridge to unite very different groups. And this is truly the case. The charismatic leaven has brought about a totally unbiblical ecumenic unity where deluded Baptists and Pietists dance together with liberal theologians, catholic priests, evangelical church growth adherents and Pentecostals in a wild “worship dance” around an invisible calf, all drunk with the false spirit and its tongues, visions and emotions.
Conclusion
We need not be bewildered, burdened or discouraged by all the things we have heard and read. Our Lord, when He taught His disciples about the end time and its dangers, still told them: “Now when these things begin to happen, look up and lift up your heads, because your redemption draws near” (Lk 21:28). The Lord Jesus Christ has won the victory over Satan and his deceptive spirits. The Lord has promised: “I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.” (Mt 16:18). So we need not be anxious about that.
But still it is our responsibility to keep to the sound doctrine which our Lord has given us through His Apostles. The Lord will preserve us and guide us safely through these last times with all their dangers. But it is our part to keep in close fellowship with Him and to keep His word. He will preserve those who are faithful. Do you want to be among His faithful remnant that overcomes and will receive the crown? It will cost a price in these days, to keep His word, to keep faith and holiness and to live as crucified and risen with Christ – but the reward will be wonderful.
So let us look up unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith (Hebr 12:2)! Let us stay away from the end-time false prophets and instead heed the sure prophetic word of the Bible, “as a light that shines in a dark place, until the day dawns and the morning star rises in your hearts” (2Pet 1:19)! Let us stay with the little flock of true believers, with “those who call on the Lord with a pure heart” (2Tim 2:22), with the small faithful remnant within the end-time Church of whom is written: “See, I have set before you an open door, and no one can shut it; for you have a little strength, and you have kept my word, and have not denied My name” (Rev 3:8). The Lord will keep us and give us strength to persevere until the end!
and to present you faultless before the presence of His glory
with exceeding joy,
to God our Saviour, who alone is wise,
be glory and majesty, dominion and power,
both now and forever.
Amen.Jude 1:24-25
The Pentecostals and Charismatics –
End-time Revival
or End-time Deception?
Rudolf Ebertshauser February 2011
Lecture 1
This paper is written by a Bible-believing German preacher and Bible teacher who joined the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement as a young believer about 1986. He was an ardent Charismatic for about four years, but then he was convinced by the Lord that in this movement not the Holy Spirit is at work, but a deceptive spirit. He separated from the movement, and through years of Bible study and critical examination came to a biblically founded repudiation of Charismatic teachings and practices. He wrote a book about this topic and holds seminars about the Charismatic movement in Bible-believing churches in order to warn the children of God and equip them with sound doctrine to discern the end-time deceptions.
These are the notes of a teaching lecture the author held in 2011 in Kenya, Africa. Due to the fact that the author is not a native speaker of English the text may contain some unusual and un-idiomatic phrasing or even occasionally a false choice in wording. The author strongly recommends that all readers look up all the given Bible references and use a traditional, conservative Bible translation which is close to the original wording of the Holy Scriptures.
1. Introduction:
The Charismatic visions of an end-time revival
The Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements see themselves as a first wave of a big outpouring of the Holy Spirit in the last times before the second coming of the Lord Jesus. They believe that God has promised through the prophet Joel to pour out His Spirit on the Church and the whole heathen world in the last days – “on all flesh”, as Joel 2:28 says. They expect that God’s Spirit will be poured out mightily on whole peoples, on millions and billions of men, and many of their prophets have foretold such an outpouring which would imply a mighty awakening and revival which is without parallel in history.
In the course of this “second Pentecost”, they say God brings back all the supernatural gifts of the Spirit which were found in the days of the Apostles, like prophecy, healings, speaking in unknown tongues, etc. According to their teachings, God will appoint new apostles and new prophets who will lead the end-time people of God to big successes. The present Pentecostal and Charismatic churches understand themselves to be a vanguard, the forerunners of that huge outpouring which is believed to come soon – in fact, it is announced almost daily by some Charismatic prophet in the world.
The Pentecostal and Charismatic followers believe their task is to make that big outpouring come – by prayers and “spiritual warfare” against evil spirits, by huge “evangelistic” campaigns which show many signs and wonders, and by the ministry of their “apostles” and “prophets” who are supposed to prepare the way for the coming revival.
This vision of a dynamic, powerful and influential Christianity which will see even more glory and success than the apostolic church and the ultimate triumph of the Gospel in the world is very attractive for many Christians today. These groups have a dynamic and optimistic outlook, they mobilize masses of people, and success seems to confirm their teachings: It is estimated that about 400 – 600 million people belong to the Pentecostal and Charismatic movements – including a large section of Charismatic members of the Roman Catholic Church.
But the big question is not: Are these teachings attractive? But: Are these teachings true? Are they in accordance with the Word of God, with the Teaching of the Apostles which we find in the Holy Scriptures?
As children of God who live in the end-time we are frequently warned by the Word of God to be on our watch and take heed so that we may not be deceived by false prophets and false teachers:
Now as He sat on the Mount of Olives, the disciples came to Him privately, saying: Tell us, when will these things be? And what will be the sign of Your coming, and of the end of the age? And Jesus answered and said to them: Take heed that no one deceives you. For many will come in my name, saying, ‘I am the Christ’ and will deceive many. (…) For false christs and false prophets will rise and show great signs and wonders to deceive, if possible, even the elect. See, I have told you beforehand. (Mt 24:3-5 + 24-25)
Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits, whether they are of God, because many false prophets have gone out into the world. (1Jh 4:1)
Test all things; hold fast what is good. (1Thess 5:21)
Therefore we want to test the teachings and prophecies, the powers and gifts of the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement by the unfailing standard of the Holy Scriptures.
2. What the Bible teaches about the end times
One thing we must stress at the beginning of our lecture is the vital importance of sound biblical teaching for us who are living in the last days of our present dispensation. Truly many “teachers” and many “prophets” are among us who tell us fascinating and fanciful stories instead of preaching and teaching the Word of God.
In quite a few cases you can see their true character as deceivers in the service of Satan from their life and the fruits of their “ministry”: They make big money from their preaching and healing and live in luxury; they seduce women and commit adultery; they teach outright heresies and pervert biblical truth. But sometimes things are not so obvious; many Christians are led astray because they trust false teachers and hold them to be powerful ministers of the Lord. They lack biblical discernment and do not know the Scriptures as well as they should.
1. What we need is first of all a solid knowledge of all the Scriptures. The false teachers always use some Scripture quotations to justify their deceptive teachings. But they isolate these Scripture passages from their context and true meaning, and they make them to say something quite different. Also, they use some Bible texts and ignore others which would show that their interpretation is wrong. In order to detect such falsifications, we must know our Bible from Genesis to Revelation! So it is very helpful to read through the whole Bible once a year, or at least once every two years.
2. What we also need is an understanding of Biblical doctrine. Biblical doctrine is formed by studying and comparing all relevant scripture texts on a certain topic and extracting their true meaning. Biblical doctrine is based on all Scripture and does not contradict any Scripture. False teaching usually is founded on only some arbitrarily interpreted Biblical passages and ignores other passages which would correct it.
3. The third important clue to biblical doctrine and discernment is the fact that the decisive doctrinal standard of the believers in Christ is the teaching of the Apostles (Acts 2:42) which we find in the letters of the New Testament. Many false teachers come and try to teach us heresies by using the Old Testament (e.g. believers are obliged to keep the Sabbath) or by misinterpreting passages out of the Gospels or the Book of Acts while ignoring the letters of the Apostles which give us the authorized clue to the understanding and application of the whole Bible, directly inspired by our risen head, the Christ.
If we want to achieve a good knowledge of sound doctrine, we need to study our Bibles thoroughly. We need to try and grasp the meaning of each verse and word in the Bible in order to get the true doctrine out of it. This means we must take heed to three more important points:
1. We must make sure we read a good Bible translation which is close to the original wording and free from liberal and modernist theological influences. Modern Bible versions like Good News, Living Bible, or the modernist New International Version are not faithful to the original Text and lead to misunderstandings and false teachings. The version that is most estimated in English-speaking countries is, of course, the King James Bible (Authorized Version). For believers who do not speak English as their first language, the choice is difficult; the New King James Version is, although it has some problems, the best choice in these cases. (Comp. David Cloud, Myths about the Modern Bible Versions.)
2. We ought to use a concordance in order to find all the Scriptures where the topics we study do occur, e.g. healing of the sick, signs and wonders, tongues. It is important for Bible study to get an overall picture of what the Bible says on a given topic. We need to regard every Scripture Text and interpret them all together; then we get a well-founded view.
3. We ought to use good Bible commentaries which are free from liberal theology or false teachings. We would recommend, among others, the Scofield Bible and the commentaries of William MacDonald, Arno Gaebelein, and Harry Ironside (all with the qualification of 1Thess 5:21!).
a) The heathen world in the last limes: Revival or lawlessness?
The Pentecostal and Charismatic prophets and preachers are convinced that millions of people, in fact whole cities and countries and peoples will turn to Christ as a result of the mighty outpouring of the Spirit they announce. But is that optimistic prophecy backed by the inspired prophecy of the Bible? What does the Bible say about the development of the world short before Christ’s return?
We cannot look at all Scriptures which testify to this topic, but just a few will give a clear picture. The first comes from the one and unique great Prophet that God sent to Israel and the world, our Lord Jesus Christ. He taught His disciples about the times when He as the Son of Man will come back:
And as it was in the days of Noah, so it will be also in the days of the Son of Man: They ate, they drunk, they married wives, they were given in marriage, until the day that Noah entered the ark, and the flood came and destroyed them all. Likewise as it was also in the days of Lot: They ate, they drank, they bought, they sold, they planted, they built; but on the day that Lot went out of Sodom it rained fire and brimstone from heaven and destroyed them all. Even so will it be in the day when the Son of Man is revealed. (Lk 17:26-30)
The Lord here says that the world in the last time will resemble the world short before the flood. Now was that a time of revival, of the conversion of many millions? What does the Bible say?
Then the LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was evil continually. (…) So God looked upon the earth, and indeed it was corrupt; for all flesh had corrupted their way on the earth. (Gen 6:5+12)
Just that will be the moral and spiritual condition of the mass of humankind when the Lord will return – according to His own unfailing words! This does not sound like “mass revival” and “outpouring of the Holy Spirit” – it means mass apostasy, occultism and outright rebellion against God. Even as in the days of Noah, the overwhelming majority of men will scoff at the preachers of righteousness, and they will drive their sinful frenzy to a point where the wrath of God cannot be withheld further, but must be poured out on the evildoers.
Our Lord also says the last times will be like the days of Lot, who had to see all the evil things and moral perversions the Sodomites committed. Now, among them you couldn’t even find ten just people, otherwise the city might have been saved. Is it not so that our times see the “revival” of the sins of Sodom on a very large scale? Is it not true that not only the world, but also the outer façade of heathen “Christendom” is rapidly turning to the rotten paths of Sodom? The end of this will be God’s wrath and not “the healing of the nations”!
So the Bible teaches very clearly, that the world will be full of lawlessness and perverse sins in the last days, and most of the people will not repent (cp. Rev 9:21; 16:9-11). 2Thess 2:7-9 shows that lawlessness is growing in the end, and it will have its peak when the Antichrist comes. In 2Thess 1:7-9 we find that the Lord Jesus, when He comes back to the earth, will send judgement on all those who do not obey Him:
… when the Lord Jesus is revealed from heaven with His mighty angels, in flaming fire taking vengeance on those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. These are punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of His power, when He comes in that day …
Also, in Rev 18:23 the Word of God says the Whore Babylon has deceived all the nations by its sorcery. How is that possible when all the nations have been converted? We know, of course, that there will be a time where all nations shall be converted, but this will only be a purified remnant of the nations in the Messianic kingdom, after the great judgements of God, and not in the Church dispensation, where it is only a small minority that is saved from among the nations.
b) The Church in the last times: triumph or decay?
The Pentecostal and Charismatic teachers and prophets frequently claim that the end time is the time of triumph and huge growth for the Church. Equipped with apostles, prophets, with supernatural gifts and the fullness of the Spirit, the Church is supposed to see millions of new Christians flooding in. It is said to be the head, and not the tail. It allegedly will overcome the powers of darkness and throw them into the abyss, thereby freeing the masses from their oppression. It will establish the kingdom of God on earth.
But when we consult the Bible and study the teachings of the inspired Apostles of Jesus Christ on this topic, we encounter a picture which is totally different from the above. Again we cannot cover all the relevant Scriptures, but we will focus on two inspired prophecies about the situation of the Church in the last days:
But know this, that in the last days perilous (or hard, severe) times will come: For men will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy, unloving, unforgiving, slanderers, without self-control, brutal, despisers of good, traitors, headstrong, haughty, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, having a form of godliness but denying its power. And from such people turn away! (2Tim 3:1-5)
Here we see that the last times are not the times of triumph and display of power for the true Church. Instead, the Word of God tells us that these times will be perilous, hard and evil times. The main reason which is given in our text is the dominance of people in Christendom who live like the sinners of Romans 1 – but they claim to be children of God, true believers!
They have a form, an outer appearance of godliness or fear of God, but they deny its power and very essence! They are false Christians, who have not the Holy Spirit, who have no longing to obey God, no spiritual mind, but they are open for every heresy and false teaching, and tend to draw the Church into the realm of this world.
The second inspired prophecy is also found in the second letter to Timothy – a very important letter to study for true believers in the last days!
For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine, but according to their own desires, because they have itching ears, they will heap up for themselves teachers, and they will turn their ears away from the truth, and be turned aside to fables. (2Tim 4:3-4)
Here we have foretold a second typical feature of end-time Christianity: those who call themselves Christians will not endure the sound doctrine of the Bible. They will not love the teaching of the apostles about repentance, faith in Christ, self-denial and being crucified with Christ, renouncing the world and its lusts etc. In fact, they will deny these truths because they hinder them in living their own self-willed lives.
They will consciously turn their ears away from the truth – a very serious act of departure from God and the faith! This rotten attitude towards truth is the basis for the powers of end-time deception to blind those false Christians; they will fall prey of strong delusions, because did not receive the love of truth:
The coming of the lawless one is according to the working of Satan, with all power, signs, and lying wonders, and with all unrighteous deception among those who perish, because they did not receive the love of the truth, that they might be saved. And for this reason God will send them strong delusion, that they should believe the lie, that they all may be condemned who did not believe the truth but has pleasure in unrighteousness. (2Thess 2:9-12)
This Scripture passage is of central importance for the biblical understanding of the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement. The same principles that operate in the very last time when the Antichrist will be revealed operate today as well. Many false Christians who rejected the true gospel of Christ and prefer fables to the sound doctrine of God (2Tim 4:3-4), will turn to the false prophets and teachers of the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement, which is, in fact, a movement that is about to prepare the coming of the Antichrist, as we will see later.
As these people reject the divine truth, which admonishes to them to repent and give their lives to Christ, they will eagerly embrace false prophets and teachers who tell them fables – invented stories and fanciful teachings that allow them to live in sin and error. These false teachers are paid well for preaching a message that satisfies the itching ears of the listeners: “God blesses your ways; God is your friend, God gives you health, wealth and power”. This is a divine judgement (1Pt 4:17); these people are enslaved by the strong delusions because they rejected the truth which would have made them free.
A third prophecy is to be seen in context with these two, and it shows the spiritual forces that push the mighty trends of deception in the end-time Church:
Now the Spirit expressly says that in latter times some will depart from the faith, giving heed to deceiving spirits and doctrines of demons, speaking lies in hypocrisy, having their own conscience seared with a hot iron … (1Tim 4:1-2)
Here we also have the latter times in view, and we see that the hidden cause for all the heresies and false teachings in the Church is the activity of demons, of deceptive spirits who lead the people astray by powers, false visions, dreams, signs and wonders, but also by cunningly invented doctrines which pervert the teachings of the Bible and lead the people on the broad way.
Again this confirms the teaching of 2Thess 2:9-11, because the powers of Antichrist and the strong delusions clearly are demonic in nature. This prophecy obviously alludes to the beginnings of the heretical Catholic Church in verse 3, but is applicable to every other heretical current in the Church of God; it has special relevance for the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement, where these deceiving spirits operate more openly and massively than in many other heresies.
The Bible teaches that heresy and error will experience a rapid growth in the end time; in fact this unnatural, destructive growth is likened to that of cancer cells in God’s Word:
But shun profane and idle babblings, for they will increase to more ungodliness. And their message will spread like cancer. (2Tim 2:16-17)
But evil men and impostors (or swindlers, deceivers) will grow worse and worse, deceiving and being deceived. (2Tim 3:13)
When we take these prophecies together, and compare them with quite a few other hints in the New Testament (e.g. 2Pet 2:1-2; 3:3; Jude 1:17-19; 1Pet 4:17; Acts 20:29-30), we can safely conclude that the Apostles teach us the very opposite of the false Charismatic prophets of today. The situation of the Church in the last times will be rather precarious; there will be many deceptions and false teachings, false Christians and false teachers, and the sound believers will have to struggle in order to keep the true path of Christ. They will have only a little strength (Rev 3:8).
The NT nowhere teaches that there will be new apostles or prophets or signs and wonders at the end of the Church dispensation; instead it warns decidedly against false apostles (2Cor 11:13; Rev 2:2), false prophets (Mt 24:11+24; Mt 7:15-23; 1Jn 4:1; Rev 19,20), false teachers (1Tim 4:1-2; 2Tim 4:3-4; 2Pt 2:1; 1Jn 2:18-26; 2Jn 1:7-11), and false signs and wonders (Mt 24:24; 2Thess 2:9; Rev 13:13-14; 16:14) in the last time.
c) The prophecy of Joel: On whom will the Spirit be poured out?
One of the main biblical proofs for the teachings of the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement seems to be the great OT prophecy of Joel, where an outpouring of the Holy Spirit “on all flesh” is prophesied for the latter times. This prophecy is very often cited by the Pentecostals in order to show that their expectation of the big revival is biblically justified. But is that really the case? What does the prophet truly say? Who will receive that outpouring of God’s Spirit after all?
Let us read this important text:
And it shall come to pass afterward that I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh; your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions. And also on the menservants and on the maidservants I will pour out my Spirit in those days.
And I will show wonders in the heavens and in the earth: Blood and fire and pillars of smoke. The sun shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the coming of the great and awesome day of the LORD. And it shall come to pass that whoever calls on the name of the LORD shall be saved. For in Mount Zion and in Jerusalem there shall be deliverance, as the LORD has said, among them remnant whom the LORD calls (Joel 2:28-32; Joel 3:1-5 in other versions)
Now on the first reading, one might say: The Pentecostals have a point here! The Word says the Spirit will be poured out on all flesh! That obviously means that eventually all men on earth will receive the Spirit in the end time! That is how almost all Pentecostals and Charismatics understand this text; they claim that all men will one day be filled with God’s Spirit, and this is underlined by scores of “visions” and “revelations” which show millions and millions of people in ecstatic praise, filling stadiums and large public places, whole cities that are “converted” and whole nations that are “healed by the spirit”.
But we must read the Word of God thoroughly and precisely in order to get its true meaning. One central point is to read and interpret the Scriptures in their context and not out of context. So we will read this text once more, but we will include the preceding and the following verses this time:
You shall eat in plenty and be satisfied, and praise the name of the LORD your God, who has dealt wondrously with you; and my people shall never be put to shame. Then you shall know that I am in the midst of Israel: I am the LORD your God and there is no other. My people shall never be put to shame. And it shall come to pass afterward that I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh; your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions. (Joel 2:26-28)
Now when we include the verses which precede our passage, we get a clear idea who will really receive the Holy Spirit in the last days: it is the people of Israel! It is absolutely clear who your sons and your daughters are – the sons and daughters of the god-fearing remnant of the once chosen people Israel who will be accepted as God’s people again in the last time, when the Church has been enraptured and taken into heaven.
But why does God say: “on all flesh”? Now, if we study the Old Testament, the dispensation of the Law, then we will realize that under the Law, not every believer or God-fearing Israelite had received the Spirit of God. This privilege then was only for a few chosen instruments: The leaders and kings like Mose or David; the God-fearing high priests, and the prophets. The ordinary people of God did not receive the Spirit in those days (cf. Num 11:29).
But it will be different when Israel is accepted as God’s people again, when the New Covenant will be realized for Israel. Then God will put His Spirit into each believer’s heart (Ezek 11:19; 36:26), so when the Spirit is poured out on end-time renewed Israel, it will be poured out not only on priests and prophets, but on all flesh, that is: all converted Israelites – sons and daughters, old men and young men, menservants and maidservants. This is the only possible meaning of “all flesh” in this passage; it is impossible to include the masses of the heathen nations in this expression, as we will see below.
This interpretation is confirmed by quite a few other prophecies in the OT; we will only cite two of them (comp. also Isa 32:15; Ezek 39:29):
For I will pour water on him who is thirsty, and floods on the dry ground; I will pour my Spirit on your descendants and my blessing on your offspring … (Isa 44:3)
And I will pour on the house of David and on the inhabitants of Jerusalem the Spirit of grace and supplication; then they will look on me whom they pierced. (Zech 12:10)
So it is clearly established that the outpouring announced by the prophet Joel will be on the converted people of Israel and not on all nations. On the contrary, the verses following that prophecy show that at the same time the heathen nations will face severe judgement from the LORD:
For behold in those days and at that time, when I bring back the captives of Judah and Jerusalem, I will also gather all nations, and bring them down to the valley of Jehoshaphat, and I will enter into judgement with them there on account of my people, my heritage Israel … (Joel 3:1-2)
The way the apostle Peter quotes Joel in Acts 2:16-21 basically confirms this view as well. Peter does not say: Here you find the prophecy fulfilled, but he simply says that the pouring out of the Spirit at Pentecost is of the same quality as the one predicted by Joel. In fact, the signs in heaven mentioned in Joel 2:30-31 did not happen at Pentecost, and the outpouring then can only be interpreted as a first or partial fulfilment, whereas the final or complete fulfilment will be come to pass in the last days.
At Pentecost, the Spirit was poured out in a similar way as it will then, in the last days, when the complete fulfilment of Joel’s prophecy will come. The Spirit was poured out on Jews alone, who called upon the name of the Lord; the Spirit was poured out in Jerusalem, and the Spirit brought true prophetic gifts to the people of God. But the aim of that outpouring was altogether different from that which will come. At Pentecost, the Spirit came to form the Church of Jesus Christ, the Assembly of God, a new people of God formed by former Jews and Gentiles who now were to become one new man in Christ.
The Spirit of God was only once poured out on the Church; according to the promise of our Lord, this Spirit of truth will abide with the church forever; He will dwell with all believers of the Church dispensation and be in all of them (Jn 14:16-18). We never hear of any promise that there will be several outpourings of that Spirit for the Church, because He has been poured out once and for all at Pentecost, and will stay with the Church forever: “whom he poured out [Greek in the sense: once and for all] on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Savior” (Tit 3:6).
d) The Pentecostal prophets tell lies and pervert the words of the living God
When we compare the “inspired prophecies” of the Pentecostal and Charismatic camp and their teachings with the truly inspired prophetic Word of Scripture (2Pet 1:19-21), then it becomes very clear that there is a fundamental contradiction. Only one statement can be true. If we follow the Charismatics, there must be a great end-time pouring out of the Spirit on all peoples, and billions shall be converted before the Lord Jesus comes back. If we follow the Bible, there will be lawlessness, overabounding sodomitic sin and anti-Christian movement in the world, and the Church will be ridden with heresies, false prophets and pseudo-believers – it will be a great falling away instead of a great awakening!
Now who is right? We can only believe one of the two doctrines. And, of course, every true believer should accept the Bible’s teaching and reject the wishful theories of the Pentecostal false prophets. We have seen with the prophecy of Joel that the false teachings of the Charismatics can only be maintained if one perverts the true meaning of the Words of God. The false prophets of the end-time thus commit the same sin as the false prophets in old Israel, about whom the LORD had to say:
How long will this be in the hearts of the prophets who prophesy lies? Indeed they are prophets of the deceit of their own heart, who try to make my people forget my name by their dreams which everyone tells his neighbour, as their fathers forgot My name for Baal. The prophet who has a dream, let him tell a dream, and he who has My word, let him speak My word faithfully. What is the chaff to the wheat? says the LORD. Is not my word like a fire? says the LORD, and like a hammer that breaks the rock in pieces?
Therefore, behold, I am against the prophets, says the LORD, who steal my words every one from his neighbor. Behold, I am against the prophets, says the LORD, who use their tongues and say ‘He says.’ Behold, I am against those who prophesy false dreams, says the LORD, and tell them and cause my people to err by their lies and by their recklessness. Yet I did not send them or command them; therefore they shall not profit this people at all, says the LORD (…) For every man’s word will be his oracle (or burden), for you have perverted the words of the living God, the LORD of hosts, our God. (Jer 23:28-36)
3. Beware of the false prophets in the last times!
We have seen until now that the teachings of the Pentecostal and Charismatic camp are contrary to the Bible and that they picture an illusionary mass awakening in the last times. The Bible unmasks these people as false prophets and false teachers. But the Bible has more to say about this movement – and these are Scriptures which hardly ever are taken seriously or expounded by Charismatics. The Bible gives us frequent and serious warnings about a strong influence of false, deceitful prophets in the end time, and we ought to have a closer look on these warnings.
a) The warning against false prophets in Matthew 24
First of all we should look at the important speech of our Lord at the Mount of Olives, where He teaches His disciples about the end of time, the glorious moment when He, the Son of Man, shall come in might and glory to set up His Kingdom. The time before that great event will be characterized by certain traits, and one of them, in fact, the most prominent, will be the activity of false prophets:
Now as He sat on the Mount of Olives, the disciples came to Him privately, saying: Tell us, when will these things be? And what will be the sign of Your coming, and of the end of the age? And Jesus answered and said to them: Take heed that no one deceives you. For many will come in my name, saying, ‘I am the Christ’ and will deceive many.
And you will hear of wars and rumours of wars. See that you are not troubled; for all these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet. For nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom. And there will be famines, pestilences, and earthquakes in various places. Al these are the beginning of sorrows (literally: of labours = labours of birth with a woman).
Then they will deliver you up to tribulation and kill you, and you will be hated by all nations for My name’s sake. And then many will be offended, will betray one another, and will hate one another. Then many false prophets will rise up and deceive many. And because lawlessness will abound, the love of many will grow cold. But he who endures to the end shall be saved.
For false christs and false prophets will rise and show great signs and wonders to deceive, if possible, even the elect. See, I have told you beforehand. (Mt 24:3-13 + 24-25)
In that very important passage, the Lord shows certain characteristic traits of the end time. We should note that this includes the time when the Church is on earth, but also the time afterwards when Antichrist comes, when the Great Tribulation happens and the remnant of Israel turns to Christ. These end-time characteristics develop in the form of labour pains as in the birth of a child (that is the meaning of “sorrows” in Mt 24:8). That means: the symptoms like false prophets, wars, famines etc., will occur with increasing intensity and frequency as the end comes closer.
In fact, the first and most prominent feature our Lord mentions as characteristic of the last times is deception: “Take heed that no one deceives you” (v. 4). This end-time deception will have a Christian mask. The false prophets will come in Christ’s name, and they will talk in the first person as if Christ spoke through them: “I am the Christ”. The warning against them is twice repeated in our text – a very rare phenomenon which shows how serious the danger is. “Then many false prophets will rise up and deceive many” (v. 11). ”For false christs and false prophets will rise and show great signs and wonders” (v. 24).
So we have the warning of our loving Lord that as the end times unfold, false prophets and false signs and wonders will spread in the church, as the evil one tries to deceive the children of God and lead them a wrong way.
b) How to detect the false prophets: Matthew 7
But the warnings against these false prophets go even more into detail. In Matthew 7, our Lord Jesus Christ gives a lesson about the false prophets which we should heed well.
Beware of the false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravenous wolves. You will know them by their fruits. Do men gather grapes from thornbushes or figs from thistles? Even so, every good tree bears good fruit, but a bad tree bears bad fruit. A good tree cannot bear bad fruit, nor can a bad tree bear good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. Therefore, by their fruits you will know them.
Not everyone who says to me ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter into the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven. Many will say to Me in that day: ‘Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Your name, cast out demons in Your name, and done many wonders in Your name?’ And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness!’ (Mt 7:15-23)
Here we have several important hints which we will follow.
1. First of all, let us notice what a false prophet is in the Scriptures. In the Greek of the NT their name means “false, lying, deceiving prophet”. So he claims to be a prophet, but he is a fake and tells lies to the people of God. Now what is a true prophet in the Bible? It is a chosen, sanctified speaker of God himself, who does not speak his own words, but passes on the very Words of the Lord who has sent him. A true prophet is an inspired messenger of God. A false prophet is a person who poses as messenger of God and claims to have a new word of God, but in reality he tells lies and false visions; he is a speaker of Satan who leads the people of God astray.
2. Second, our Lord warns us about the perfect camouflage of these prophets. They come to God’s people in sheep’s clothing, that is, they make the impression of being true, reborn believers, children of God, sheep of the Good Shepherd. In fact, many of them seem to be fascinating men of God, full of power, accompanied with signs and wonders, people who seem to be spiritually far above the ordinary child of God. But our Lord also reveals to us that all this is just a show, a beautiful façade with a totally different reality behind it. In their inner heart, they are darkness, unrighteousness, thirst for power. They are ravenous wolves who want to prey on the true sheep (comp. Acts 20:29).
3. Third, our Lord shows us how to detect these wolves in spite of their clever camouflage. It is not mainly by their speeches and stories. A good deceiver will tell in his sermons about 80% of biblical truth, and mix it with 20% deadly error. In some cases, when the deception is very cunning, it might be 90% truth and 10% error. But still, the overall result is error and destruction, not edification. If you want to detect these deceivers, you first of all have to test the fruit of their messages and ministry. If the fruit is bad, e.g. it leads to doctrinal errors, personal sins and schisms, then the tree itself is bad. And as some of its fruit may look good, but in reality is poisoned, you have to determine whether the tree is bad, and then reject even those fruits that seem to be harmless and delicious (comp. Gen 3:6). We must remember that never there will come good fruit from a bad tree!
4. Fourth, our Lord gives us a decisive clue to detect the false prophets by the severe passage which shows us the end of their glamorous and boastful ministry. In vv. 22-23 we see how these ministers of the devil will come to the Lord and say: “Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Your name, cast out demons in Your name, and done many wonders in Your name?” The Lord, the one who knows the hearts, will then answer them: “I never knew you; depart from me, you who practice lawlessness!” But we not only know the dreadful end of these self-ordained prophets by these verses. We also see that there are three central characteristics of the false “ministry” of the end-time deceptive prophets: They prophesy in Christ’s name; they cast out demons in Christ’s name, and they do great signs and wonders in Christ’s name.
c) The pseudo-prophetic movement of the last days unmasked
If we take the teachings of our Lord together, and take them serious as inspired prophecy which will come to pass, then we have to expect in the end times an influential movement of false prophets, who bring unbiblical messages in Christ’s name, and whose ministry is characterized by prophecy, casting out demons and performing great wonders. Now if we look at the history of the Church in the last two centuries, we will only find one great movement which shows all these three characteristics of false prophets, and that is the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement!
It is the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement which boasts of its prophets as having the new revelation of God for the end time, and boasts that the “gift of prophecy” with dreams, visions and inner voices is given to each one who has received its “baptism of the spirit”. It is this movement which boasts of their ability to cast out demons out of every Christian, out of all unbelievers and even out of the heavenlies, out of whole cities and countries. And it is this movement which boasts of the big wonders and signs that happen daily in its midst, whose preachers and prophets claim that the great power of God is working through them (comp. Acts 8:9-10).
In the centuries before, there had been similar movements on a smaller scale, like the Montanists of the third and fourth century, or the Camisards in the 17th, or the Irvingites in the 19th century. In all these movements, the prophecies proved to be lies, and their fruit was deception and destruction. But none of these earlier movements gained an impact on the Church comparable to that great movement which began at the start of the 20th century in the USA. If there is any fulfilment of our Lord’s prophetic announcement in Matthew 24, it can only be this movement which has spread over the whole world and penetrated almost every branch of the Church on earth.
“See, I have told you beforehand” (Mt 24:25) says our Lord and Master. If we are prepared to listen to His words and take His warnings, His teachings serious, we can detect the end-time false prophets without much difficulty. But many Christians have already been poisoned by the deceptive spirits of the movement, and they are unable to see the obvious; they prefer to be deceived instead of facing the truth which hurts. What about you and me?
4. The origins and essence
of the Pentecostal and Charismatic movements
There is one last point left which is made clear by the precise Word of Truth, the inspired word of the Bible, if only we see the connection between different messages and teachings of the Lord in the Scriptures. And this is something the devil wants to keep in the mist, in half-darkness, so that the clear truth is not made known to God’s people.
We have seen that the whole movement began with an “outpouring of spirit” and saw uncountable such “outpourings” since. But as the true Holy Spirit was poured out only once on the Church, at Pentecost – how are we to account for the Pentecostal “outpourings” in the last days? Or, to put the question more clearly: What sort of spirit was poured out? According to the Biblical teaching, it cannot be the Holy Spirit. But what spirit was it then?
A deceptive spirit is poured out on deceived people
The first occurrences of the Pentecostalist “outpouring of spirit” happened in the United States in 1901 and 1906. The recipients were adherents to extreme groups of the “holiness movement” who taught a “complete sanctification” which allegedly eradicated all sin, lust or sinful desire out of the heart to produce a “clean heart” and sinless perfection already here on earth. This error was quite popular in those days; it had its roots in the teachings of John Wesley and Charles Finney, among others.
Some of these groups taught a “three step sanctification” with the new birth as first stage, the “entire sanctification” as second, and then the “baptism of the Holy Spirit” as third and highest stage. They expected an outpouring of the spirit according to Joel and a renewal of the apostolic gifts of prophecy and wonders. People fasted and prayed for days to receive that “baptism” and “outpouring”, and after some time, a spirit was poured out indeed; it manifested itself in prophecies, tongues, trembling, trance and unconsciousness, in strange and uncontrollable movements, jerks and cries, in miraculous healings.
The fruit of this spirit was an endless wave of splitting up of churches and groups, a dirty wave of heretical teachings, of moral sins, adultery and fornication, and an uncountable mass of false prophecies which were proven lies by the outcome, of deceptive wonders and healings, of greed and filthy gain, of domination and manipulation of people by self-styled “prophets”, “apostles” and “shepherds” … The sad inside story of this movement would fill volumes. It proves by the criterion of our Lord that it was a false spirit which was poured out then.
And when we consider the Lord’s judgement on the teachings these deluded people held, then we can understand the judgement of God which underlies this sad counterfeit “revival”. The heresy of “complete sanctification” is addressed and characterised in the first letter of the Apostle John:
If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar, and His word is not in us. (1Jn 1:8-10)
The false teachers of “complete sanctification” claimed just what John characterizes here; they claimed that after their mystical “sanctification experience”, they had no longer any sin and sinned no more. Now the Word of God condemns these heretical teachings with very serious words. Those who say such things deceive themselves, and, more serious even, they make God a liar, because God clearly teaches that the flesh and sinful lusts and sin remains in the child of God until the glorious day when we are transformed and will be as He is (1Jn 3:2; Phil 3:20-21).
Now we can understand better why the God whom these heretical fanatics made a liar permitted a spirit of lie and demonic deception to be poured out on them. They turned away from the sober teaching of Scripture, from Biblical truth, and so they received a lying spirit, a spirit which deceived them even further and plunged them in a system of false teachings which is quite difficult to escape from once one has put oneself under its influence.
This is in full accordance with the teaching of 2Thess 2:9-12 where we read that, because the deceived people did not receive the love of truth, God sends them strong delusions, that they should believe the lie. They come under the working of Satan with all its deceptive power, signs and wonders, just because they turned away from God’s truth. We are reminded of the equally serious word of the Apostle Peter: “For the time has come for judgement to begin at the house of God; and if it begins with us first, what will be the end of those who do not obey the gospel of God?” (1Pet 4:17).
In the OT, we have a telling and important precedent for such an outpouring of a deceptive spirit on false people. In Isa 19:14 we read that the Lord poured (or mingled) into the Egyptians a perverse spirit (or a spirit of dizzyness). In 2Chr 18:22 we read that the Lord judged his unfaithful king Ahab by allowing al lying spirit to deceive him: “The LORD has put a lying spirit in the mouth of these prophets of yours, and the LORD has declared disaster against you.” A very striking parallel with the workings of the false spirit of the Pentecostal movement is found in Isa 29:9-11:
Pause and wonder! Blind yourselves and be blind! They are drunk, but not with wine; they stagger, but not with intoxicating drink. For the LORD has poured out on you the spirit of deep sleep [or unconsciousness], and has closed your eyes, namely the prophets, and He has covered your heads, namely the seers. The whole vision [or revelation] has become to you like the words of a book that is sealed, which men deliver unto one who is literate, saying: ‘Read this, please’. And he says: ‘I cannot, for it is sealed.’
In a like manner, the lying spirit that forms and leads the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement makes its followers spiritually drunk and blind for the true teachings of God’s revelation, the written Word. They hunt after all sorts of dubious “prophets” who sell them their fancy pseudo-revelations, but they become blind for the sound teaching of the Apostles. They fall to the ground and lie in ecstasy and think, they receive a “blessing” by it. But their true situation is prefigured by the words of Isaiah the prophet:
But these also have erred through wine, and through strong drink are they gone astray. The priest and the prophet have erred through strong drink, they are overpowered by wine, they are gone astray through strong drink; they have erred in vision, they have stumbled in judgement. (…) For with stammering lips and a strange tongue will He speak to this people, to whom He said, This is the rest, cause the weary to rest, and: This is the refreshing. But they would not hear. And the word of the LORD was unto them Precept upon precept, precept upon precept, line upon line, line upon line, here a little, there a little: that they might go, and fall backward, and be broken, and snared, and taken. (Isa 28:7-13; Darby translation)
The bad fruits of the false spirit
This leads us to the second point we want to consider. In 1Jn 4:1 we are expressly commanded: “Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits, whether they are of God; because many false prophets have gone out into the world.” How are we to test the spirits of the prophets? Now some have thought this means to call upon these spirits and command them to identify themselves or to formulate a doctrinally sound confession. But this is not the right way and may bring harm.
The right way to test the spirits is shown us in the teaching of the apostolic letters. We think this is hinted at in 1Jn 4:6, when the apostle John underlines that the true servants of God accept the sound teaching of the apostles: “We (the Apostles) are of God; he who knows God hears us; he who is not of God does not hear us. By this we know the Spirit of truth and the spirit of error.” So we have to look whether the Charismatic prophets truly listen to the doctrine of the Apostles and abide by it.
It is by testing their teachings by the teachings of the Word of God, and also by testing their workings by the inspired teaching on how the Holy Spirit works in the believer. We have already seen that the teachings and prophecies of the false Pentecostalist spirits are contrary to the sound teaching of the Lord and His apostles. But how about the working and the effects of that spirit? Can we test them and see which sort of spirit we have before us?
I believe we can, and if we compare the teachings of the NT about the fruit and the effects of the Holy Spirit on the believer, we can safely conclude that the fruits of the false spirit in the Pentecostal and Charismatic movements testify to its demonic nature. We will only mention three points here, as we want to treat this topic more extensively in our next lecture:
1. The true Spirit of God works self-control and not compulsive reactions: God’s Spirit leaves the believer always his own conscious decision; He leads and sometimes urges believers to do God’s will, but He never overrules his personality of robs him of his self-control. In fact, self-control is one of the fruits of the Spirit, the last one mentioned in Gal 5:22-23. Many symptoms of the false Pentecostalist spirit show that this deceiving spirit works by compulsion; it steers the people without and often against their will. So we meet, especially in the so-called “Toronto blessing”, but also apart from that, with symptoms like compulsive laughter, compulsive hopping or convulsions, compulsive shouting or speaking in tongues, and so on. This is never the Spirit of God, of whom we read: “where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty”, and: “the spirits of the prophets are subject to the prophets” (1Cor 14:32).
2. The true Spirit of God works sobriety and vigilance, not drunkenness or unconsciousness. The false Pentecostalist spirit frequently throws its followers into unconsciousness; this was not a new phenomenon of the “Toronto blessing”, but has occurred from the beginnings of that movement. Many deep ecstatic experiences of that spirit are associated with states of trance, hypnotic states, “spirit drunkenness” or unconsciousness, e.g. the ill-famed “slain in the spirit” symptoms. But the Spirit of God works not trance and unconsciousness, but “a sound mind” (2Tim 1:7). The spiritual person is exhorted to watch (i.e. to stay awake), to be vigilant and sober (comp. Rom 13:11-14; 1Cor 15:34; 1Cor 16:13; Eph 5:14; 1Tim 3:2; 1Pet 4:7; 1Pet 5:8; Rev 3:2-3):
“You are all sons of light and sons of the day. We are not of the night nor of darkness. Therefore let us not sleep, as others do, but let us watch and be sober. For those who sleep, sleep at night, and those who get drunk get drunk at night. But let us who are of the day be sober …” (1Thess 5:5-8)
The express states of “spiritual drunkenness” which have caused prominent Charismatics to declare themselves as “barkeepers” of their false spirit, are clearly not in accordance with the character of God’s Holy Spirit; they are caused by the end-time spirits of deception (1Tim 4:1). Therefore we read in 2Tim 2:26: “…and that they may come to their senses and escape the snare of the devil, having been taken captive by him to do his will.”
3. The true Spirit of God glorifies God through decency, not erratic or undecent behaviour. The false Pentecostalist spirit leads its followers frequently to a behaviour which dishonors God. Examples from a much longer list would include speaking in assemblies against God’s order (1Cor 14:26-40); behaving compulsively like animals or laughing and shouting without self-control; violation of God’s orders for women to behave still and not dominating men, and so on. (Comp. also lecture 2 on this topic.)
c) The cancer-like growth of the error
The first wave of this end-time deception was the Pentecostal Movement. It originated in extreme Holiness circles, as we saw, and it was soon detected as an aberration by the sound Bible-believing churches. It separated its followers from sound churches and built a movement of its own, quickly divided into dozens of sub-groups mostly orientated to respective “anointed apostles” and “anointed prophets” who often condemned each other and claimed divine inspiration for themselves only. There were some quite large organisations, though, like the Assemblies of God, or the International Church of the Foursquare Gospel, which was founded by the woman “apostle” Aimee Semple McPherson.
The Pentecostal churches were a growing, but isolated section of Christianity for about sixty years. An important change took place in the 1960ies, when an increasing number of members and pastors of mainline protestant churches (which were all liberal in their orientation) received the Pentecostal “spirit baptism”, and the liberal leaders of these churches subsequently came to tolerate or even encourage such “renewal movements”. This development had been prepared in the fourties and fifties by interdenominationally working Pentecostal “healers” like oral Roberts or William Branham, by the efforts of Demos Shakarian and his “Full Gospel Businessmen”, and largely through the efforts of David du Plessis, a Pentecostal preacher from South Africa who influenced liberal church leaders of the ecumenical “World Council of Churches” to open their churches for the “spirit baptism”. In the sixties, this pervert seed grew up, and through the influence of people like Episcopalian Dennis Bennett, Lutheran Larry Christenson, and faith healer Agnes Sanford.
Soon the charismatic “renewal” spread within every mainline denomination in America, including, from 1967, the Roman Catholic Church. The teachings and practices of these groups were essentially the same like with the older Pentecostals, although liberal theology and denominational traditions were integrated. The movement also reached Europe and spread throughout the whole world. The special characteristic of the “classical” Charismatics is that they choose to stay in their denomination instead of forming separate churches. They penetrate these denominations like leaven and thus spread the experience of their “spirit baptism” very efficiently.
The Catholic Charismatic renewal has become one of the largest and most important groups within the classical Charismatics. They claim about 120 million followers in 230 countries all over the world. They are acknowledged by the last three Popes and furthered by prominent members of the Roman Catholic hierarchy, e.g. Cardinal Suenens or the Pope’s preacher, R. Cantamalessa.
Besides these denominational renewal movements, there is a growing number of independent Charismatic churches and new denominations like the Calvary Churches or the Vineyard Fellowship. Many of these are open for massive heretical teachings, e.g. the Word of Faith movement (Kenneth Hagin), many are preachers of the false prosperity gospel or of the “positive confession” heresy. These independent Charismatics are usually grouped around some “especially anointed” leader and experience rapid growth. There are also very many Charismatic missions and parachurch organizations like “Youth with a Mission”, charismatic television channels (PTL) etc. An “evangelistic” outreach of sad fame in Africa is Reinhard Bonnke’s organisation with its sensationalist healing crusades.
In the eighties of the 20th century a “third wave of the Holy Spirit” was announced by some Charismatics, especially John Wimber. This new deceptive “wave” was directed to the traditional evangelical churches which had before been less influenced by Charismatic teachings and practices. Special efforts have been made to export the Charismatic false spirit to non-Charismatic evangelicals, and the attractive Charismatic music, especially “praise & worship” songs, function as an effective “door opener” mainly with younger believers.
The characteristic which distinguishes the Charismatics from their elder brethren, the Pentecostals, seems to be that the earlier movement was still influenced by its Holiness roots and had in some way a more conservative character, whereas with the Charismatics, reckless wordliness, moral laxness and even New Age and esoteric influences can spread unchecked. With the growing success of the Charismatics, however, the younger generation of Pentecostal pastors seem to have adapted very much to their more efficient colleagues, and an increasing mingling of the two currents can be observed.
d) The crucial role of the Pentecostal and Charismatic movements
in the end-time deception of the Church
We have seen that the Pentecostal and Charismatic wave is rapidly swelling in these last days. If numerical growth and outward success were a sure sign of God’s blessing, as many believe, then surely the Charismatics could claim to be God’s vanguard. But we have already seen that in the last time, it is heresy and departure from the faith that is growing, spreading like cancer (2Tim 2:17). The remnant of faithful believers, on the other side, is said to have “a little strength” (Rev 3:8). So the growth of these movements is according to Scripture, but it fulfils warnings like those in 2Tim 3:13: “But evil men and impostors will grow worse and worse, deceiving and being deceived”. In the end time, the false teachers will draw by far the larger crowds as compared to the true teachers:
But there were also false prophets among the people, even as there will be false teachers among you, who will secretly bring in destructive heresies, even denying the Lord who bought them, and bring on themselves swift destruction. And many will follow their destructive ways, because of whom the way of truth will be blasphemed. By covetousness they will exploit you with deceptive words … (2Pet 2:1-3)
This is not to say that there are no true believers among the Pentecostals and Charismatics. I am persuaded there are quite a few souls who have believed in the Lord Jesus as their Saviour and are true children of God, although deceived by the false teachings and spirits of these movements. On the other hand, the sad fact is that usually a majority, in Charismatic churches often a very large majority of adherents show no biblical evidence of a new birth and of biblical salvation. This is due to the false gospel which is preached in these circles, to the false Jesus that is revered, and to the false spirit that works (2Cor 11:4; see second lecture).
Why is it that this openly unbiblical movement has such a success? Well, the answer is that it is furthered by Satan who uses it to open up the nominal Christians for the coming anti-Christian deception. There are three destructive effects of the movement which the devil uses massively in end time Christianity:
1. The Pentecostal and Charismatic movements persuade people to consider false revelations, subjective experiences and feelings more important than the written Word of God. The inspired Word of Scripture is the only sure guide for our faith and life – that is the sound principle to which most evangelical believers still adhere – or: used to adhere, before the deceiving influences of the Charismatics perverted that principle. Wherever the false spirit of that movement gains influence, people are subtly turned away from simple faith in Scripture. They become accustomed to regard the messages of some “anointed” prophets, the dreams or voices of their deluded hearts an even more authentic and topical “word of God” than the Bible. And this mystical leaven is used by the devil to draw many evangelical Christians away from the faith once and for all delivered to the saints (Jude 1:3).
2. The Pentecostal and Charismatic movements prepare the people to accept signs and wonders as a divine confirmation and authentification. This prepares the way for the even stronger delusions which are to come when Antichrist appears on the scene. The false prophets of that movement teach their followers to accept those as divinely authorized, who perform signs and wonders. Now we know that at the peak of the Anti-Christian deception, Satan will use a super-prophet as his tool who will perform the most amazing wonders and signs – in order to seduce people to worship the Antichrist and his image (comp. Rev 13:12-15; 2Thess 2:8-12). Whenever we see Charismatic “faith healers” proclaim their mighty signs and wonders, we ought to remember that one day a fascinating miraculous healing will bring deluded men to worship the dragon and the beast (Rev 13:3-4)!
3. The Pentecostal and Charismatic movements enable the absorption of many bible-believing Christians into the ecumenic movement and the future world religion of the Whore Babylon. It is telling that the liberal, ecumenical, Christ-renouncing World Council of Churches has gladly welcomed the Charismatic movement. They estimate it highly because they rightly see that in face of the unbridgeable divisions between denominations in the realm of doctrine, this “renewal” based on false spirituality, false revelation and false experience can be an effective bridge to unite very different groups. And this is truly the case. The charismatic leaven has brought about a totally unbiblical ecumenic unity where deluded Baptists and Pietists dance together with liberal theologians, catholic priests, evangelical church growth adherents and Pentecostals in a wild “worship dance” around an invisible calf, all drunk with the false spirit and its tongues, visions and emotions.
Conclusion
We need not be bewildered, burdened or discouraged by all the things we have heard and read. Our Lord, when He taught His disciples about the end time and its dangers, still told them: “Now when these things begin to happen, look up and lift up your heads, because your redemption draws near” (Lk 21:28). The Lord Jesus Christ has won the victory over Satan and his deceptive spirits. The Lord has promised: “I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.” (Mt 16:18). So we need not be anxious about that.
But still it is our responsibility to keep to the sound doctrine which our Lord has given us through His Apostles. The Lord will preserve us and guide us safely through these last times with all their dangers. But it is our part to keep in close fellowship with Him and to keep His word. He will preserve those who are faithful. Do you want to be among His faithful remnant that overcomes and will receive the crown? It will cost a price in these days, to keep His word, to keep faith and holiness and to live as crucified and risen with Christ – but the reward will be wonderful.
So let us look up unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith (Hebr 12:2)! Let us stay away from the end-time false prophets and instead heed the sure prophetic word of the Bible, “as a light that shines in a dark place, until the day dawns and the morning star rises in your hearts” (2Pet 1:19)! Let us stay with the little flock of true believers, with “those who call on the Lord with a pure heart” (2Tim 2:22), with the small faithful remnant within the end-time Church of whom is written: “See, I have set before you an open door, and no one can shut it; for you have a little strength, and you have kept my word, and have not denied My name” (Rev 3:8). The Lord will keep us and give us strength to persevere until the end!
and to present you faultless before the presence of His glory
with exceeding joy,
to God our Saviour, who alone is wise,
be glory and majesty, dominion and power,
both now and forever.
Amen.Jude 1:24-25
Are We Seeing Signs of the Close of the Age?
Posted on June 4, 2013 by Mike Ratliff
by Mike Ratliff
15 Προσέχετε ἀπὸ τῶν ψευδοπροφητῶν, οἵτινες ἔρχονται πρὸς ὑμᾶς ἐν ἐνδύμασιν προβάτων, ἔσωθεν δέ εἰσιν λύκοι ἅρπαγες. (Matthew 7:15 NA28)
15 “Beware of false prophets who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but within are ravenous wolves.” (Matthew 7:15 translated from the NA28 Greek text)
The Church in our time appears huge, but this is only in appearance. It is thousands of miles wide, but only a fraction of an inch deep. Much of what claims to be Christian is not and proves it by what is actually its focus and what (or who) it actually worships. The focus has its foundation in pragmatism and its worship is nothing more than self-aggrandizement. They give lip service to their own version of “Jesus” who bears little if any resemblance to the Jesus we read of in God’s Word. This counterfeit Christianity is the majority while the true Church, which is made up of those saved by grace through faith because of God’s election and effectual calling is the minority. This should not surprise us because the Word of God tells us that this will be case as this age comes to a close to make way for the age to come.
1 Καὶ ἐξελθὼν ὁ Ἰησοῦς ἀπὸ τοῦ ἱεροῦ ἐπορεύετο, καὶ προσῆλθον οἱ μαθηταὶ αὐτοῦ ἐπιδεῖξαι αὐτῷ τὰς οἰκοδομὰς τοῦ ἱεροῦ. 2 ὁ δὲ ἀποκριθεὶς εἶπεν αὐτοῖς· οὐ βλέπετε ταῦτα πάντα; ἀμὴν λέγω ὑμῖν, οὐ μὴ ἀφεθῇ ὧδε λίθος ἐπὶ λίθον ὃς οὐ καταλυθήσεται. 3 Καθημένου δὲ αὐτοῦ ἐπὶ τοῦ ὄρους τῶν ἐλαιῶν προσῆλθον αὐτῷ οἱ μαθηταὶ κατ’ ἰδίαν λέγοντες· εἰπὲ ἡμῖν, πότε ταῦτα ἔσται καὶ τί τὸ σημεῖον τῆς σῆς παρουσίας καὶ συντελείας τοῦ αἰῶνος; (Matthew 24:1-3 NA28
1 And having gone out, Jesus went from the Temple and his disciples approached him to show him the buildings of the Temple. 2 But he answered saying to them, “Do you not see all these things? Amen I say to you, by no means here will there be a stone left upon a stone which will not be demolished.” 3 And while he was sitting on the Mount of Olives the disciples approached him privately saying, “Tell us, when these things will be be and what will be the sign of your coming and of the closing of the age?” (Matthew 24:1-3 translated from the NA28 Greek text)
Carefully read this passage my brethren. There are three questions asked of our Lord by the disciples in response to his warning of the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in v2. However, our Lord’s answer to these questions apparently intertwines prophecy concerning the destruction of Jerusalem and His second coming, which will end this age and usher in the age to come. Let us look at our Lord’s answer to these questions which is found in vv4-31 of Matthew 24, however, we will concentrate on vv4-14 in this study.
Finish HERE
QUACKING away…
The following story came in as a comment a short while ago. I loved this little story so much I wanted to give it a special place here. Enjoy!
Quacking away…
This is off topic just a bit, and I know M’Kayla has answered it before on this sight. For those who want to label us as judgmental, it is something to consider. For those who post on this sight, I hope it makes you smile.
We have a small flock of ducks on our property. Last winter, a weasel dug into the duck pen and killed all but two of our ducks. Ducks are very gentle and have no real defense other than flight. They are a lot like sheep that way. My ducks couldn’t get away. They were trapped in that pen. All of our drakes (males) were killed. Those drakes got in the way to protect the ducks and were the first to be killed. Had they not done this, we would probably have lost all of the birds.
Anyway, this female was gravely injured. We brought her into the house and cared for her for a few weeks; and, to our amazement, she rallied. Though she limped around the yard for months, she has now fully healed. She has become our warning signal in the yard. If anything is wrong, she starts just a quacking away. She is always on the watch. If another duck wanders off, you’ll find her in the yard just quacking and quacking. She is awesome!
I think that’s what a lot of the posters on this blog are like. We were trapped in a “pen” of false teaching. When the weasel got in, we couldn’t simply fly away. So we were gravely injured. We know the pain of it, and we hope and pray to help others avoid it. Praise God, that He got us all through it!
So now we quack away. It is a warning. I, for one, plan to keep quacking and quacking…not like those in the “Toronto barnyard”, but like one equipped with the Word of God…rebuking, correcting, encouraging. To those who find it offensive, I pray for you and accept that criticism like “water off a duck’s back.” I believe that’s what “turning the other cheek” is all about. Thank you, M’Kayla, for a platform to “quack”.
Introduction by Lou Whitworth
The Early Years
In this essay we will examine the life and work of Edgar Cayce, often called “the sleeping prophet.” Many considered him to be a prophet and healer very popular in the sixties and seventies. Today his influence is stronger than ever as he helped pave the way for the popularity of “channeling.”
Edgar Cayce was born in Hopkinsville, Kentucky, in 1877. His family was ordinary in most ways, except for a current of demonic dabbling and occultism among the males. His grandfather was a water witch and unerringly accurate in dousing for water with the forked limbs of a witch hazel tree. Many of his acquaintances held that he was also able to make tables and brooms “dance.” Edgar’s father was an unwitting Pied Piper of snakes. Apparently snakes loved him and followed him around and even wrapped their bodies around his hat brim if he put his hat down while working in the fields. It unnerved him so much that he moved from the farm into the city and eventually became a justice of the peace.
Edgar Cayce’s childhood was very unique. As a boy he exhibited an occultic tendency to see and hear things that others didn’t see. For example, he had “little playmates” who disappeared when others came around. They always grew with him and stayed his size, but after the death of a neighbor girl who could also see them, they seemed smaller. He realized that he was growing up and would soon lose their companionship.
As a young boy Edgar attended the Christian church and wanted to be a minister. He resolved to read the Bible through once for each year of his life. By age 13 he was working on his thirteenth reading in his favorite place, a playhouse by a creek in the woods, when he heard a humming sound. He looked up to see a woman in brilliant white clothing with wings on her back standing in front of him. She said,…….
Continue HERE
HEAVEN IS FOR REAL: A DANGEROUS BOOK FOR AN APOSTATE AGE
October 25, 2011
From Way of Life – David Cloud
Heaven Is For Real, a book about a four-year-old boy’s supposed visit to heaven, has sold over 1.5 million copies and is currently the # 6 best seller on Amazon. It has broken Thomas Nelson’s sales records and is popular with Independent Baptists. One pastor told me that it is “circulating around many of our IBaptist camps; many are recommending it.” The book is the true story of Colton Burpo, a Methodist pastor’s son who allegedly visits heaven during emergency surgery. There he meets a dead sister and great grandfather, sees Jesus and God the Father and the Holy Spirit and Satan, and learns things not revealed in Scripture. We don’t doubt that the little boy is convinced that he visited heaven, but we don’t believe for a minute that it actually happened.
First, the book is contrary to the testimony of Scripture that the apostles were the last to see the resurrected Christ. This was one of the evidences of apostleship (Acts 1:22; 1 Corinthians 9:1; 15:7). Paul said that he was the last of the apostles to see Christ, meaning that he saw Christ some time after the other apostles had seen him (1 Cor. 15:8). This occurred on more than one occasion in his life as described in the book of Acts. Paul gave this testimony in the context of giving the eyewitness evidence for Christ’s resurrection. We also know that the apostle John saw Christ on the island of Patmos as described in Revelation 1. All of the evidence we need for our faith is found in the testimony of Scripture and in these particular eyewitnesses.
Second, the book is contrary to Paul’s statement that when he had visited heaven he heard things that he was not allowed to repeat (2 Cor. 12:4). Obviously, then, a person cannot visit heaven and describe whatever he sees and hears there.
Third, the book Heaven Is for Real is contrary God’s emphasis on the priority and sufficiency of faith and Scripture. The book contains testimonies of how people have believed in God and heaven because of Colton’s alleged visitation, but the Bible says that without faith it is impossible to please God (Heb. 11:6), and faith comes by hearing God’s Word, not by signs and wonders (Romans 10:17). In his account of the rich man and Lazarus, Jesus taught that if someone does not hear the Scriptures, he will not “be persuaded, though one rose from the dead” (Luke 16:31). All of the signs and revelation we need are found in the completed canon of Scripture (John 20:30-31). The Bible is able to make the man of God “perfect, throughly furnished unto all good works “(2 Timothy 3:16-17). God has told us everything He wants us to know about heaven at this time.
Fourth, the book Heaven Is for Real is contrary to the Bible’s plain teachings. For example, Colton says Jesus’ horse is rainbow-colored (p. 63), whereas the Bible says it is white (Rev. 19:11). Colton says the Holy Spirit shoots down power from heaven (p. 125), whereas the Bible says the Holy Spirit came from heaven at Pentecost and He is the power (Acts 1:8). Colton says everyone has wings in heaven except Jesus (p. 72), that the angel Gabriel sits on the left hand of God’s throne (p. 101), that the Holy Spirit is blue and sits in a chair near the throne of God (p. 102), and “for our Catholic friends” the book is happy to report that Mary stands in heaven beside Jesus (p. 152). Some might ask, how Colton could learn secrets about his dead sister who died in the womb and facts about his great grandfather that he had not been told. The answer is demons. Paul warned that Satan transforms himself into an angel of light and his ministers as ministers of righteousness (2 Cor. 11:14-15). The book Heaven Is for Real also promotes the visions of child progeny Akiane Kramarik, who began “seeing heaven” at age four (pp. 141-144). Colton claims that the “Jesus” that he saw in heaven is the same “Jesus” that Akiane drew from her visions at age nine. But Akiane’s religious faith is a New Age type faith in a vaguely defined “God.” It is religious mysticism rather than faith in an infallible Revelation from God and the blood atonement of Christ. Even if we knew what Jesus looked like, we are forbidden by God’s law to make His likeness (Exodus 20:4).
STANDING OVATION FOR HOMOSEXUAL PASTOR
by David Cloud
(Friday Church News Notes, October 14, 2011, http://www.wayoflife.org, fbns@wayoflife.org, 866-295-4143)
The first homosexual was ordained last week in the Presbyterian Church USA under a new rule allowing such ordinations. When Scott Anderson was ordained at the Covenant Presbyterian Church in Madison, Wisconsin, the crowd “gave him a thunderous standing ovation and began roaring with cheers” (“U.S. Presbyterian Church Ordains First Gay Minister,” FoxNews, Oct. 8, 2011).
What an amazing fulfillment of Bible prophecy to see a “church” roaring its approval for moral perversion. The hour is obviously very late.
“But there were false prophets also among the people, even as there shall be false teachers among you, who privily shall bring in damnable heresies, even denying the Lord that bought them, and bring upon themselves swift destruction. And many shall follow their pernicious ways; by reason of whom the way of truth shall be evil spoken of” (2 Peter 2:1-2).
by David Cloud
Way of Life Literature
“The Shack” was in the Top Ten on the New York Times bestseller list for Paperback Trade Fiction for two years. As of January 2010, it had sold seven million copies. It is being translated into 30 languages and a motion picture is said to be in the works.
Though its author, William Paul Young, is not a member of a church and is even reticent to call himself a Christian, and though its doctrine of God is grossly heretical, the novel is being touted as a helpful Christian book.
“The Shack” has been endorsed by Pat Robertson’s 700 Club, CCM artist Michael W. Smith, Mark Batterson (senior pastor of National Community Church in Washington, D.C.), Wayne Jacobson, author of “So You Don’t Want to Go to Church Anymore,” Gayle Erwin of Calvary Chapel, James Ryle of the Vineyard churches, and Greg Albrecht, editor of “Plain Truth” magazine. The premier issue of Rick Warren’s magazine, The Purpose Driven Connection, refers to The Shack as a “notable best-selling Christian” book (p. 24). The Shack is recommended by Frank Viola and Leonard Sweet, authors of The Jesus Manifesto. Viola said, “I will shamelessly throw my hat in the ring with those who are giving unqualified praise for The Shack” (http://frankviola.wordpress.com).
Eugene Peterson, Regent College professor and author of The Message, is profuse in his praise of the book: “When the imagination of a writer and the passion of a theologian cross-fertilize the result is a novel on the order of ‘The Shack.’ This book has the potential to do for our generation what John Bunyan’s “Pilgrim’s Progress” did for his. It’s that good!”
William Young was one of the speakers at the February 2009 National Pastor’s Convention in San Diego, sponsored by Zondervan and InterVarsity Fellowship. The 1,500 attendees were pastors and Christian workers. Other speakers included Bill Hybels, Leighton Ford, Brian McLaren, and Rob Bell. Young had his own break-out session and was interviewed in one of the general sessions by Andy Crouch, a senior editor of Christianity Today. It was said that 57% of the attendees had read “The Shack,” and Young was enthusiastically received. Crouch treated Young as a fellow believer and did not even hint that there might be a damnable theological problem with the way that God is depicted in the book. When Young said, “I don’t feel responsible for the fact that it [“The Shack”] is tampering with people’s paradigms” or how people think about God, the crowd responded with clapping, cheers, and laughter. The emerging church loves to tamper with traditional Bible doctrine and there is no fear of God for doing so!
Young was born in Alberta in 1955 but spent most of the first ten years of his life in Papua New Guinea with his missionary parents, who were ministering to a backwards tribal group called the Dani. He graduated from Warner Pacific College, which is affiliated with the Church of God (Anderson, Indiana), with a degree in religion.
In “The Shack,” Young presents traditional Bible-believing Christianity as hypocritical and hurtful. The book’s main character grew up under “rigorous rules,” and his father, who was an elder in the church, was “a closet drinker” and treated his family with cruelty when drunk (p. 7).
Hypocrisy is very injurious to the cause of Christ, but hypocrisy on the part of Christians does not disprove the Bible. Let God be true and every man a liar (Romans 3:4)! All too often this type of thing is used as an excuse by rebels. I know this by personal experience. In my youth I used the inconsistencies that I saw in Baptist churches to excuse my rejection of the church. The chief problem, though, was not the hypocrisy of others but my own rebellion and love for the world. When I repented of my wickedness at age 23 and turned to Christ and received the Bible as God’s holy Word, I stopped blaming others and took responsibility for myself before Almighty God.
Rules and obligations under God’s grace are not wrong. They are an integral part of Bible Christianity. We are saved by grace without works, but we are saved “unto good works” (Ephesians 2:8-10). The New Testament epistles are filled with rules and obligations that believers are expected to keep and filled with warnings about disobedience. The true grace of God does not let us live as we please. It teaches us, rather, “that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly, in this present world” (Titus 2:11-12). That is a very strict standard of Christian living.
There is hypocrisy in churches and there are false gospels that are law-based rather than grace-based and most churches today are corrupt, but the solution is not to reject the literal interpretation of Scripture and create a new God! God is amazingly compassionate and loving and He has proven that on the cross, but God is also holy and just and requires obedience and hates and punishes sin, and that side of God cannot be ignored without creating a false God.
The flesh wearies greatly of the holiness of God! I can testify to that. From time to time in my Christian life I have gotten discouraged at God. It is not a simple thing to reconcile God’s love and grace with His awful holiness and justice. On one hand, the New Testament tells us that the believer is forgiven, redeemed, justified, accepted in the beloved, blessed with all spiritual blessings in Christ, holy and without blame before God, and seated in the heavenlies (Ephesians 1-3). On the other hand, the same New Testament tells us that the believer must be exceedingly careful about how he lives before God. We are to “cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God” (2 Corinthians 7:1), which is the highest conceivable standard. The believer who does not pursue this is in danger of being judged (e.g., 1 Cor. 3:13-17; 9:26-27; 11:27-32; Hebrews 13:4; 2 John 8-11; Revelation 2:4-5, 16, 22-23; 3:15-16). There is even a sin unto death (1 John 5:16-17; Acts 5:1-11; 1 Corinthians 11:30). Thus there must be many warnings in the Christian life (Acts 20:31; Colossians 1:28; 2 Timothy 4:2; Titus 1:13; 2:15).
These things seem to be contradictory to the fallen flesh and to the natural man, but they are two sides of the same compassionate, thrice holy God, and to reject either one is reject the true God for an idol.
In an interview with the 700 Club in February 2009 Young described a “huge personal failure” that occurred in his life at age 38. He says, “My life crashed and burned, and I had to go back and deal with some stuff from being a child on the mission field along with other stuff in my life.” He speaks of “secrets” that he kept from his childhood and guilt that he carried. He doesn’t describe any of this in detail, but it appears that he felt guilty for not obeying God’s Word and perhaps went through psychological therapy. He talks continually of “pain,” “damage,” healing childhood memories, and such.
REDEFINING GOD
“The Shack” is about redefining God. Young has said that the book is for those with “a longing that God is as kind and loving as we wish he was” (interview with Sherman Hu, Dec. 4, 2007). What he is referring to is the desire on the part of the natural man for a God who loves “unconditionally” and does not require obedience, does not require repentance, does not judge sin, and does not make men feel guilty for what they do.
In that same interview, Young said that a woman wrote to him and said that her 22-year-old daughter came to her after reading the book and asked, “IS IT ALRIGHT IF I DIVORCE THE OLD GOD AND MARRY THE NEW ONE?”
Young therefore admits that the God of “The Shack” is different from the traditional God of Bible-believing Christianity. He says that the God who “watches from a distance and judges sin” is “a Christianized version of Zeus.” This reminds me of the modernist G. Bromley Oxnam, who called the God of the Old Testament “a dirty bully” in his 1944 book “Preaching in a Revolutionary Age.”
“The Shack” explores the issue of why God allows pain and evil. It is a fictional account of a man who is bitter against God for allowing his youngest daughter to be murdered and who returns to the scene of the murder, an old shack in the woods, to have a life-changing encounter with God. The “God” that he encounters, though, is not the God of the Bible.
Young depicts the triune God as a young Asian woman named “Sarayu” * (supposedly the Holy Spirit), an oriental carpenter who loves to have a good time (supposedly Jesus), and an older black woman named “Elousia” (supposedly God the Father). God the Father is also depicted as a guy with a ponytail and a goatee. (* The name “Sarayu” is from the Hindu scriptures and represents a mythical river in India on the shores of which the Hindu god Rama was born.)
Young’s god is the god of the emerging church. He is cool, loves rock & roll, is non-judgmental, does not exercise wrath toward sin, does not send unbelievers to an eternal fiery hell, does not require repentance and the new birth, puts no obligations on people, doesn’t like traditional Bible churches, does not accept the Bible as the infallible Word of God, and does not mind if the early chapters of the Bible are interpreted as “myth.”
Note the following quotes from the god of “The Shack”:
“Don’t go because you feel obligated. That won’t get you any points around here. Go because it’s what you want to do” (p. 89).
Contrast 1 Corinthians 4:2.
“I don’t need to punish people for sin. Sin is its own punishment, devouring you from the inside. It’s not my purpose to punish it…” (p. 120).
Contrast Isaiah 13:11; Ephesians 5:5-6.
“There are lots of people who think it [Eden] was only a myth. Well, their mistake isn’t fatal. Rumors of glory are often hidden inside of what many consider myths and tales” (p. 134).
Contrast 2 Peter 1:16.
“[Your heart] is wild and beautiful and perfectly in process” (p. 138).
Contrast Jeremiah 17:9; Mark 7:21-23.
“To force my will on you is exactly what love does not do. … True love never forces” (pp. 145, 190).
Contrast John 8:31-32; 14:15; Titus 2:11-12; Hebrews 12:5-11; Revelation 2:14-16, 20-23; 3:3, 16-19.
“Our final destiny is not the picture of Heaven that you have stuck in your head–you know, the image of pearly gates and streets of gold” (p. 177).
Contrast Revelation 21-22.
“My church is all about people and life is all about relationships. … You can’t build it. … I don’t create institutions–never have, never will” (pp. 178, 179).
Contrast Acts 2:41-42, 13-14.
“Those who love me come from every system that exists. They were Buddhists or Mormons, Baptists or Muslims, Democrats, Republicans and many who don’t vote or are not part of any Sunday morning or religious institutions. … I have no desire to make them Christian” (p. 182).
Contrast Acts 4:12; 26:28.
“Through his death and resurrection, I am now fully reconciled to the world … The whole world. … In Jesus, I have forgiven all humans for their sins against me … When Jesus forgave those who nailed him to the cross they were no longer in his debt, nor mine” (pp. 192, 225).
Contrast John 3:36; Acts 17:30-31; 1 John 5:12, 19; Revelation 20:11-15.
“The Bible doesn’t teach you to follow rules. … Enforcing rules, especially in its more subtle expressions like responsibility and expectation, is a vain attempt to create certainty out of uncertainty. … That is why you won’t find the word responsibility in the Scriptures. … because I have no expectations, you never disappoint me” (pp. 197, 203, 206).
Contrast 1 Corinthians 4:2; 2 Corinthians 5:18. In Ephesians 4-6 alone there are at more than 80 specific obligations that believers are exhorted to keep.
“I don’t do humiliation, or guilt, or condemnation” (p. 223).
Contrast Isaiah 2:11; 5:15; John 3:19; Romans 3:19; 1 Corinthians 11:27; James 3:1; 5:9; Jude 4; Revelation 11:18; 20:11-15.
THE SHACK’S GOD IS EMERGENT AND NEW AGE
Not only is “The Shack’s” god suspiciously similar to the one described in the books of the more liberal branch of the emerging church (e.g., Rob Bell, Donald Miller, Brian McLaren), it also has a strong kinship to the New Age god promoted by John Lennon and Oprah Winfrey.
Lennon’s extremely popular song “IMAGINE” (1971) proclaims:
“Imagine there’s no heaven … No hell below us, above us only sky … no religion too/ You may say I’m a dreamer, but I’m not the only one/ I hope some day you’ll join us, and the world will live as one.”
William Young imagines the same thing in “The Shack.” If there is a God, he is non-judgmental. There is no hell. God just wants people to do their own thing and be happy.
Oprah preaches the same gospel to millions. Man is not a sinner; God is not a judge; all is well with the universe; and I just need to surrender to the flow. Her message is the celebration of self. She grew up in a traditional Baptist church, but she has reinterpreted the Bible and moved beyond its restrictions. She says, “As I study the New Age movement, it all seems to say exactly what the Bible has said for years, but many of us were brought up with a restricted, limited understanding of what the Bible said” (“The Gospel according to Oprah,” Vantage Point, July 1998).
Many of the statements in The Shack are out and out New Age philosophy. As Gary Gilley observes:
“The very essence of God is challenged when Young, quoting from Unitarian-Universalist, Buckminster Fuller, declares God to be a verb not a noun (pp. 194, 204). In a related statement, Young has Jesus say of the Holy Spirit, ‘She is Creativity; she is Action; she is Breathing of Life’ (p. 110). Yet the Bible presents God as a person (noun) not an action (verb). When this truth is denied we are moving from the biblical understanding of a personal God to an Eastern understanding of God in everything. Thus, we are not surprised when Mack asks the Holy Spirit if he will see her again he is told, ‘Of course, you might see me in a piece of art, or music, or silence, or through people, or in creation, or in your joy and sorrow’ (p. 198). This is not biblical teaching. This idea seems repeated in a line from a song Missy creates, ‘Come kiss me wind and take my breath till you and I are one’ (p. 233). At what point do we become one with creation? Again, this is an Eastern concept, not a biblical one.
“Young reinforces his Eastern leanings with a statement right out of New Age (New Spirituality) teachings: Papa tells Mack, ‘Just say it out loud. There is power in what my children declare”’(p. 227). Rhonda Byrne would echo this idea in her book, The Secret, but you will not find it in the Bible.
“Further, we are told Jesus ‘as a human being, had no power within himself to heal anyone’ (p. 100). So how did he do so? By trusting in the Holy Spirit. Jesus, the Spirit says, ‘is just the first to do it to the uttermost–the first to absolutely trust my life within him…’ (p. 100). There is enough truth here to be confusing but not accurate. Jesus, never ceasing to be fully God, had all Divine power dwelling within Him. That He chose to limit His use of that power and rely on the Holy Spirit while on earth in no way diminishes His essence. While Jesus is our example He is not a guru blazing a trail in which in this life we too can be like God. This idea smacks of New Age teaching, not Scripture. Jesus even tells Mack that ‘God, who is the ground of all being, dwells in, around, and through all things–ultimately emerging as the real’ (p. 112). This is pure New Age spirituality” (Gilley, “The Shack – A Book Review”).
DENYING THE INFALLIBILITY OF THE BIBLE
Another foundational problem with “The Shack” is its denial of the Bible as the absolute and sole authority. Note the following quote:
“In seminary he [the book’s main figure, Mack] had been taught that God had completely stopped any overt communication with moderns, preferring to have them only listen to and follow sacred Scripture, properly interpreted, of course. God’s voice had been reduced to paper, and even that paper had to be moderated and deciphered by the proper authorities and intellects. … Nobody wanted God in a box, just in a book. Especially an expensive one bound in leather with gilt edges, or was that guilt edges?” (pp. 65, 66).
To believe that the Bible is the infallible Word of God and the sole authority for faith and practice is not to “put God in a box.” It is to honor God by receiving the Scripture for what it claims to be and what it has proven itself to be. If a father goes on a journey and leaves behind a written statement of his will for the family during his absence, the family that truly honors the father submits to that written record. To reject the Bible as the infallible Word of God is to launch out upon the stormy waters of subjective mysticism. It allows man to be his own authority and to live as he pleases, which is an objective of both the New Age movement and the emerging church.
CHANGED LIVES
The author of “The Shack” points to changed lives as evidence of the truth of the book and the grace of God in using it. At the National Pastor’s Conference, William Young told Andy Crouch that the book was setting people free from “addictive bondages and doctrinal bondages.” He said, “Even people who have been vocally against the book, people in their own family have been healed.”
Healed of what and healed in what way?
What is happening is that people who don’t like Bible Christianity, don’t want to obey the Bible, don’t want to feel guilty for their sin, and have rejected the “angry” God of Scripture, are responding enthusiastically to the man-made idol presented in “The Shack.” The following is typical of the postings at Young’s MySpace site by readers of the book:
“Your book, The Shack, is amazing! It has changed so many people’s idea of what God is really like! It has set some of my friends free!”
Miracles do not prove that something is of God. There is one that the Bible calls “the god of this world” (2 Corinthians 4:4), and he can do miracles and answer prayers. I saw miracles and experienced answers to prayers when I was the member of a Hindu meditation society before I came to Christ. Miracles are not the proof of the truth; the Bible alone is the proof. The prophet Isaiah said, “To the law and to the testimony: if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them” (Isaiah 8:20).
CONCLUSION
“The Shack” is another building stone of the end-times Tower of Babel.
God’s people must be exceedingly careful in these days of awful apostasy. The Bible warns:
“Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is; but exhorting one another: and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching. For if we sin wilfully after that we have received the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins” (Hebrews 10:25-26).
The willful sin described in this verse points back to the sin referred to in verse 29. It is the sin of counting the blood of salvation an unholy thing. It is the rejection of personal salvation through the blood of Christ, which many in the emerging church are doing. You can’t be saved if you reject the substitutionary atonement.
In these days we need to stay in the Bible every day and be in sweet communion with Christ, confessing our sins and walking in the light.
And we need to capture the heart of the next generation and educate them so they will not be taken captive by the wiles of the devil and the guile of false teachers.
There is a local health institute that has done excellent work for the community here in the state of Washington. For that I commend them.
This is from from an article dated August 20, 2009.
http://www.pnwlocalnews.com/kitsap/pat/news/53850762.html
CAPRI’s 12-week cardiac rehabilitation program helps people recover from heart attacks, angina, heart surgery including bypasses and valves, angioplasty and stent insertions, and heart/lung transplants. CAPRI also offers an eight- to 10-week pulmonary rehabilitation program that helps people manage pulmonary conditions such as COPD, emphysema, asthma and pulmonary fibrosis.
Once rehabilitation is done, many clients move on to the cardiac and pulmonary maintenance program to continue improving their health.
Their website says that this is their mission or vision.
CAPRI’s Pulmonary Programs
Our Vision
“STRIVING TO ACHIEVE OPTIMAL HEART AND LUNG HEALTH IN OUR COMMUNITY”
But it seems that some serious issues have arisen.
The director has taken it upon himself to further enlighten the participants of this program. I was given one of the handouts circulated at a June 23, 2011 meeting. It is titled, “Healthy Thinking & Positive Self-Talk.”
There are many great suggestions on the front and back of page one regarding healthy thinking in relation to stress, healthy diet, exercise, etc. The areas I disagree with here are the recommendations of meditation 15 minutes a day and hypnosis to “reprogram your attitudes, beliefs and thoughts”, as “methods of reprogramming the subconscious.”
Page two further develops how such things may be accomplished. It is titled “Notes on Thoughts, Belief and Destiny.” My first reaction was to ask, ” Why is an exercise program delving into spiritual issues? As a Christian I can tell you that my discernment alarms clanged loudly at the following list of quotes.
“There is one secret, and that is the power we have in forming our own destinies.” Dolley Madison 1833
This goes against biblical thinking. There is no secret. God’s plan is laid out openly in the Holy Bible. Consider these verses in Isaiah 45:19, “I have not spoken in secret, in a dark place of the earth…I, the Lord speak righteousness, I declare things that are right”, and 48:16. “Come near to me, hear this: I have not spoken in secret from the beginning.” In Luke 8:17 we read, “For nothing is hidden that shall not become evident, nor anything secret that shall not be known and come to light.”
The buzz from the book The Secret teaches otherwise. In his review of The Secret, Donald Whitney says, “It is not exaggeration to say that this book implicitly ( and sometimes explicitly) denies virtually every major doctrine in the Bible.” [1]
“Whatever the mind of man can conceive and believe, it can achieve.” Napoleon Hill, 1937, Think and Grow Rich
Here again we have positive thinking on steroids. False teacher Robert Schuller based his ministry on these concepts and now faces bankruptcy for his ice palace of a church. All the visualizations of money rolling in from the visualized fat wallets of the congregation seems to have fizzled out.
What is behind the man, Napoleon Hill and how was his philosophy created. The answer may surprise you. This is from Mike Oppenheimer of Let us Reason Ministries.
Napoleon Hill wrote about imagery and visualization in his book, Think and Grow Rich. He writes, “The THIRTEENTH principle is known as the sixth sense, through which Infinite Intelligence may and will communicate voluntarily, without any effort from, or demands by, the individual…. Step by step, through the preceding chapters, you have been led to this, the last principle. If you have mastered each of the preceding principles, you are now prepared to accept, without being skeptical, the stupendous claims made here….”Just before going to sleep at night. I would shut my eyes, and see, in my imagination, this group of men seated with me around my council table…. After some months of this nightly procedure, I was astounded by the discovery that these imaginary figures became apparently real.” “Each of these nine men developed individual characteristics, which surprised me…. “These meetings became so realistic that I became fearful of their consequences, and discontinued them for several months. The experiences were so uncanny, I was afraid if I continued them I would lose sight of the fact that the meetings were purely experiences ofmy imagination. …. Whatever you believe that the adviser is a spirit, a guardian angel, a messenger from God, a hallucination, a communication from your right brain to your left, or a symbolic representation of inner wisdom is all right. The fact is, no one knows what it is with any certainty. We can each decide for ourselves….
Sometimes people will encounter religious figures like Jesus, Moses, or Buddha, while others will find an angel, fairy, or leprechaun. People sometimes encounter the adviser as a light or a translucent spirit…. The best way to work with this and any other imagery experience is just to let the figures be whatever they are. Welcome the adviser that comes and get to know it as it is.
Also from Dave Hunt
Though he clung to the idea that it was all imagination, from what Hill wrote it is clear that visualization had opened the door to the world of the occult:
Ah…so Napoleon Hill had spirit guides. The bible is clear on divination, we are not to contact spirits from the other side, because we will indeed be deceived by them.
There are other quotes from James Allen, As A Man Thinketh, and Florence Scovel Shinn. Mixed in we have some scripture about prayer. The Bible verses just don’t fit in the New Age mix, and of course this is intentional for the new thinking involves finding your own truth. The thinking is that you can pick and choose whatever you happen to like at the moment and create your own religion and your very own God..which of course is…youself, because some entity has made you feel divine.
New Age ideas and thought do not mix with Bible teachings because they are completely opposed to each other.
In the new age, truth is found within, but the Bible teaches that we are not to trust our hearts. Jeremiah 17:9 says that “The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it.” Yet James Allen tells us to seek Ancient Wisdom and that the master is the inner voice which is self. Shinn instructs that the Bible is “a book dealing with science of the mind…telling man how to release his soul from bondage.” This person could not be more wrong about the Bible.
Jesus Christ came to release o free us from our SIN. This is bondage we face daily. The way to everlasting life is to put your faith in Jesus as Savior, who died on the cross, taking our sin upon His sinless self. He rose again from the dead, showing us His power and glory, as the Son of the true and living God.
John Ankerberg wrote this in his book, Encyclopedia of New Age Beliefs. It was difficult to find a summary passage in this large book. This section tells how children are being indoctrinated at an early age into hypnosis, guided imagery, visualization, and meditation.
In November of 1988 we received a letter from a couple involved in researching a program used in elementary schools in Florida and other states. This program used tapes called “Quieting Reflex and Success Imagery.” A mother had told this couple that her little girl had contacted an inner guide through the hypnotic techniques used in this program. The daughter, commented, “My wise person told me not to pray in the name of Jesus anymore.” Furthermore this wise person was not the guide that the little girl has chosen for herself but rather someone that had appeared unexpectedly and spontaneously in her consciousness. It claimed that it resided in the corner of a “safe place” in her mind. But it proceeded to command her to do mean and nasty things. The mother was distraught and had no idea what to do. [2]
The guidance counselor comes into the second grade class and the regular teacher leaves….The counselor turns off the lights and begins to play the audio tape. The counselor is there to enhance the children’s self-esteem…after the meditation and relaxation exercises they are instructed to picture a rabbit as a friend in the secret place. And they are told that there is a secret and that it is believing in yourself and your self-power. With it you can do anything like magic. Answers to many things come up from a bubbling spring after watching for a white light. The answers come from the deep springs. Sometimes you will hear the words in answer to your question and sometimes you will feel it.
What you have read above is a brief induction method for meditation and hypnosis. In fact, meditation, hypnosis, progressive relaxation and guided imagery or visualization have more commonalities than many people realize.
However these techniques are also taught by the spirit world as a means to become channelers, i.e., one who is possessed by spirits in order to allow the spirits to channel information out of them…..What these spirits encourage is no different than what New Age educators are now teaching children. [2]
Apparently these techniques and beliefs are also being taught in pulmonary programs. I was told by the director at Capri:
Our educational session on healthy thinking and positive self-talk draws upon the teachings contained in several highly-respected books including the Bible. Some of the material is science-based, some of it is belief-based from a variety of beliefs, and some of it is opinion. CAPRI does not subscribe to a particular religious belief, nor do we promote any particular religious beliefs. We provide material from a wide variety of sources because people approach these matters from a wide variety of beliefs and perspectives. As part of our cardiac and pulmonary rehabilitation programs, we encourage people to adopt a positive mental attitude. We trust that they will do that in a manner that is consistent with their core values and religious beliefs. We are not trying to change anyone’s religious beliefs, nor are we trying to conform to any particular religious beliefs.
1. Donald S. Whitney, “A Review of The Secret by Rhonda Byrne.
2. John Ankerberg, Encyclopedia of New Age Beliefs, pgs. 412-413



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