In the 1960's a new movement took shape,
sharing the basic doctrines of Pentecostalism but advocating a “stay
in” rather than a “come out” policy with regard to church
affiliations. This movement is commonly known as the Charismatic
movement. It involves not only various Protestant churches but Roman
Catholic churches as well. In fact, if one is able to “speak in
tongues” or if he has experienced a “healing,” he is accepted by the
Charismatics with little or no regard to his church affiliation or
doctrinal deviation. When you hear Roman Catholics talk about how
their “baptism in the Holy Spirit” has given them a greater love for
the Mass, you know that this cannot be attributed to the Holy Spirit,
but rather to a false spirit.
In the 1980's, yet another movement
appeared on the religious scene which made the Pentecostal/Charismatic
false teachings even more appealing and dangerous. Why? Because this
movement promoted the same, basic unscriptural doctrines held by
Pentecostals and Charismatics while, in its inception, disclaiming any
relationship to either of these groups, thus making it especially
attractive to evangelicals and fundamentalists who did not want to
wear the label of either group because of their deviant teachings and
practices.
The impetus for this new movement came
largely from several widely circulated books and many lectures to
evangelical groups around the world by Dr. John Wimber, founder of the
Vineyard Christian Fellowship, and Dr. Peter Wagner of Fuller
Theological Seminary Institute of Church Growth. Both men greatly
influenced each other and, as they experimented with various teachings
and practices related to “healing, miracles, signs and wonders,” they
soon went even beyond the Pentecostal and Charismatic errors. They
claimed that the exorcising of so-called “territorial spirits” was
essential to complete the task of world evangelization; and, that God
had re-established the offices of prophet and apostle with those
supposedly holding these offices receiving direct messages from God
for the church, and exercising divine authority over the church. This
newest movement is often referred to as Power Evangelism, Healing,
Signs, Wonders and Miracles Evangelism, or the Third Wave of the Holy
Spirit. Ecumenical in scope and decidedly worldly in practice the
three so-called “waves of the Holy Spirit” (Pentecostals, Charismatics
and Power Evangelism teachers) have now blended into a powerful
coalition which is rapidly spreading. This poses a great threat to the
purity of the church and the gospel.
Others have dealt at length with the
dangers of the Charismatic movement and how scripturally unsound the
movement is. Our purpose in this leaflet is to briefly point out some
of the real dangers of this movement so that God's people will be
informed and forewarned. We realise that there are many true believers
involved in this movement. But that fact in no way decreases the
dangers inherent in it. It is important to look at principles,
doctrines and positions and not to look solely at the individuals who
compose this movement. The Word of God must be the only basis for
conclusions drawn—we must not judge by personal relationships or
prejudice.
The Charismatic Movement Is Dangerous
Because...
1.
It accepts tongues, interpretation of tongues, visions, dreams,
prophecies, etc., as being messages from God to His children today.
This is a grave danger. Once you accept extra-biblical messages
(those which are in addition to the Bible but not necessarily contrary
to the Bible per se) it is not long before you will be accepting
anti-biblical messages as being valid (those which directly
contradict God's Word) . The Charismatic movement has done and is
doing exactly that. In reality, all extra-biblical messages are
anti-biblical messages because God's Word specifically warns against
adding to the Scriptures (Deuteronomy 4:2; Revelation 22:18, 19). The
Charismatic movement defends these extra-biblical, anti-biblical
messages on the basis that, “New winds of the Holy Spirit are
blowing.” They say, “Who knows what the Holy Spirit may do?” Let no
one forget, however, that the Word of God is a completed revelation
and was given by the Holy Spirit (2 Peter 1:19). We can be sure of one
thing: the Holy Spirit will never contradict Himself. It was the Holy
Spirit Who warned about adding to the Word of God. Therefore, those
who add to God's Word cannot claim to be authorised or empowered by
the Holy Spirit..
2.
It encourages its followers to stay in apostate Protestant
churches as well as Roman Catholic churches and other churches which
preach and teach a false gospel by asserting that if the supposed
“gifts of the Spirit” are present in false religious systems then
joining them in evangelism, worship, service, etc., must be an
acceptable ministry. God's Word plainly tells believers that those who
preach another gospel are “accursed” (Gal.1:6, 9) and that those who
fellowship with false teachers are partakers of their evil deeds (2
John 10, 11). Satanic deception through false tongues, miracles, and
the like help to bring together what God's Word declares must be kept
separate. The Charismatic movement is promoting the Ecumenical
movement and the Roman Catholic Church by overlooking serious
doctrinal error, with eternal consequences, for the sake of “unity in
the Spirit.” This is very dangerous!
3.
It sells and promotes, like the New Evangelical movement, most
of the new Bible versions and translations, many of which add to or
take from the Word of God. This is also very dangerous because it
destroys confidence in the written Word by causing the reader to
question the divinely preserved text. The new Bible versions water
down and actually change vital teachings of the Word of God as well.
4.
It places unscriptural and undue emphasis on physical healing.
This stumbles many precious believers who are falsely taught that it
is always God's will to heal. Both the Scriptures and experience teach
that God may use physical afflictions for refining, correcting and
chastening (Heb. 12:3-11; Job 23:10). God's Word teaches that He can
heal anyone, anytime, but that He does not heal everyone, every time.
Paul learned this truth when God explained why his thrice repeated
prayer for personal healing was not granted (2 Cor. 12:1-10); and,
also, when one of Paul's faithful helpers, Trophimus was unable to
accompany him because of sickness (2 Tim. 4:20). When we pray for
healing for ourselves or others, we must never forget that such
healing is always God's prerogative based upon what He knows is best
for each of His children, not upon “demanding” or “claiming” such
healing as do the Charismatics.
5.
It, unlike its predecessor, Pentecostalism, fosters and
encourages a spirit of worldliness in the church and in the individual
believer. Instead of striving for true holiness and godliness in
speech, dress, hair, music, entertainment, etc., the Charismatic
movement prides itself in using worldly means to entertain their own
and attract the lost. This is also very dangerous and unbiblical (1
John 2:15-17).
6.
It encourages women to forsake their God-given place in the
home and church. This results in disorderly homes and disorderly
churches with women assuming places of leadership in direct violation
of the Word of God. It is strange, inconsistent and sad to hear
Charismatics using the fourteenth chapter of First Corinthians to
justify speaking in tongues as a gift of the Spirit for our day when
that very same chapter says plainly, “Let your women keep silence in
the churches...” (1 Cor. 14:34). To countermand God's command
to women is dangerous—for women, for the home and for the church.
7.
It promotes and encourages what is called “coming under the
power,” a dangerous practice in which certain leaders lay hands on
people causing them to “swoon, faint slump down, experience the power”
etc., thereafter remaining unconscious or semi-conscious for several
seconds or longer. The Charismatics attempt to use John 18:6 to
justify this practice which is another example of how they twist the
Scriptures to justify and defend their practices. There is no
Scriptural precedent, example or command for this experience. Hypnotic
suggestion and the desire for an extra-biblical experience opens one
up to either pretended or demonically energised results which parallel
those of the occult.
8.
It glories in “miracles” and often uses a “miracle” as the
basis for validating a person's message or practices, even though the
message or the practice is unscriptural. This is dangerous since the
Scriptures plainly teach that the last days will be days of great
deceitfulness (2 Tim 3:13). God warns that the coming of the
Anti-Christ will usher in a time of “power and signs and lying
wonders” (2 Thes. 2:9-11). We read in Revelation 13:3 that the
deadly wound of the Beast was healed and that the “second beast”
deceived men by the use of miracles, even having the power to give
life to an image (Rev. 13:18). The validation of a man's message and
methods today is not miracles, it is conformity to the Word of God. It
is dangerous to accept any other basis of judgment. The false notion
that miracles must accompany the preaching of the gospel in order for
the lost to be saved today is definitely unbiblical. The one true
gospel of salvation by faith alone in Christ Jesus is still,
and will ever be, God's power unto salvation to every one who believes
the simple gospel message (Rom. 1:16). Undoubtedly multitudes today
are trusting in a Charismatic experience for their salvation due to
these false teachings rather than upon the sure promises of God's Word
(John 1:12; 3:36; 5:24; Rom. 10:13-17).
9.
It confuses and misleads believers as to Scriptural teachings
concerning prayer. Using Matthew 18:19 (...if two of you shall agree
on earth as touching any thing...) as a basis for claiming healing,
financial blessings or solution of any problem. It seems they ignore
what God says in 1 John 5:14,15 that “if we ask any thing according to
his will, he heareth us.” The Charismatic teaching that it is never
God's will for any believer to be ill or in trouble of any kind is
neither Scriptural nor is it actually true in their own ministries and
personal experiences. Yet, over and over again, Charismatic leaders
say to people in public meetings or to multitudes over the airwaves,
“Let's agree together that every person listening or watching be
healed-in Jesus' name.” Are all such healed then or later? Of course
not! By twisting and misapplying the Scriptures, they are deceiving
millions.
10.
It promotes dangerous and unscriptural teachings concerning
the present power of Satan and the believer's attitude toward the
“prince of the power of the air” (Eph. 2:2). Charismatic leaders whip
their audiences into a veritable frenzy as they speak of binding
Satan, casting him out of individuals and into the pit, etc. They talk
of “stomping on Satan” and “chasing him out of this world.”
Such teaching completely ignores the believer's Scriptural
instructions. We are to resist the devil (James 4:7); to
put on the “whole armour of God” that we may be able to stand
against his wiles and quench all his fiery darts (Eph. 6:10-17), not
forgetting the Scriptural example of Michael the archangel's attitude
when dealing with the devil (Jude 9).
We firmly believe that speaking in
tongues ceased with the completion of the canon of Scripture (1 Cor.
13:8). We firmly believe that it is wrong to teach believers to tarry
for or seek the baptism of the Holy Spirit. The Bible clearly teaches
that all believers have been baptized by the Holy Spirit into the body
of Christ (1 Cor. 12:13) and that those who do not have the Spirit of
Christ are not His at all (Rom. 8:9).
We firmly believe that the erroneous
teachings of the Charismatic movement have obscured many true and
blessed teachings regarding the ministry of the Holy Spirit Who
convicts the world of sin (John 16:8-11), intercedes in prayer to the
Father on behalf of the believer (Romans 8:26, 27); comforts, teaches
and guides believers into the truth of the Word (John 14:15-26; 16:7,
13); and Who has “sealed [us] unto the day of redemption” (Eph.
4:30). The Holy Spirit has a blessed and important ministry in the
life of every believer and we dare not neglect, belittle or pervert
this wonderful ministry. The Holy Spirit uses the written Word which
He gave through the apostles and prophets to guide us into all truth.
The Holy Spirit will never lead us to do or say anything contrary to
the Bible, God's Holy, inerrant, infallible, eternal Word (2 Tim.
3:16) .
Someone may ask, “What if the
Charismatic movement is right and you are wrong about speaking in
tongues being for our day? Is it possible that God does want His
people to have this gift now?”
The answer is clear: If speaking in
tongues is for our day, then surely it ought to be practiced and used
according to the Scriptures and not what is being practiced in the
modern “tongues” movement. Not all believers could expect to have this
gift (1 Cor. 12:4-11, 28-31) and tongues speakers should remain silent
unless an interpreter was present (1 Cor. 14:28). The one speaking
spoke in an unlearned, foreign language (it was never unintelligent
gibberish) and unless an interpreter would make the message or prayer
known to the rest of the church, his understanding would be
“unfruitful” (unprofitable) with respect to the edification of
the rest of the church (1 Cor. 14:4-6, 12-17 cf. 12:7). Also, men were
to have the leadership in the church and the women were to submit to
their Spirit-enabled ministry; no woman was to speak in tongues in the
churches (1 Tim. 2:11,12; 1 Cor. 14:34). Charismatics scorn these
truths.
If the Charismatic movement were of the
Spirit of God, it would be exercising spiritual discernment and
calling for separation from false prophets, apostate churches and
unscriptural practices. It would also be exposing the false gospels
and other heresies taught by the Roman Catholic and Orthodox Churches,
not joining with them in evangelism, prayer and “worship.”
For all of these reasons and many others
like them, we sound this word of warning: The Charismatic
movement is dangerous, Watch Out For It!
.