Thursday, September 20, 2007

Method or Madness?

…Jesus I know, and Paul I know: but who are ye?
(Acts 19:15)

This passage is very clear. These exorcists had seen the casting out of demonic spirits by Paul, and how it was done. They presumed upon the method, using the name of Jesus, having faith in the power of His name, but not in Him. Does this sound familiar? It parallels what is being done today with regards to prayer formulas, over emphasis upon seed-faith, and a host of other method driven types of “faith”, all of which can easily lead to a presumptuous belief about God.

Perhaps this is why we see Jesus using all sorts of different “methods”, like spittle, when He healed, and why we see the shadow of Peter or the cloths of Paul used in miracles. The point that the Spirit is trying to make is that it isn’t the cloth or someone with “faith” whose shadow heals; it is God. So-called “points of contact” can be helpful, perhaps, but often this is abused in almost comical ways. The problem of taking the biblical text out of context, or in an overly literal way, or conversely by over spiritualizing it is a matter that can have disastrous consequences.

People think just because God says so that they can just say so, and the devil has to run, but that isn’t the case, as this passage teaches. It wasn’t just that they got the formula wrong by saying, “whom Paul preaches”; it wasn’t the formula that was wrong it was their faith that was wrong. Indeed, this points out a very serious danger with regards to spiritual warfare. The full armor of God mentioned by Paul in Ephesians 6 talks of the wiles of the devil, the war against our spirit, the attack on the mind. It is not addressing the possible physical attack from a demoniac.

You have to learn how to use the shield of faith. It isn’t some mantra you repeat in the morning or before you enter a tough situation and then expect that you are “covered” somehow just because you repeated a few positive affirmations. Just because you repeat some formula about wearing the full armor of God doesn’t make it so. The power of God is not a play toy, and isn’t a magic incantation that we can use regardless of our personal state.

In wanting to develop their spiritual life, people sometimes look for a special knowledge or formula. What they are attempting, whether they realize it or not, is to circumvent the will of the Lord, trying to progress in the things of God without having a real fellowship with God on the terms He wants. It is a compartmentalized faith; we go through the motions with no real heart emotions. We can perform the duty but not have our heart in it, or we can have out heart in it to the extent that we think we need to in order to get the job done, and then forget about it later. We want the power without the sacrifice; we want the benefit without the commitment.

While it is true that we have a certain authority in Jesus, recall the casting out events of Scripture; Jesus, Paul, the disciples, etc., encountered those who were possessed they didn’t go looking for every one of them. Certainly the Apostles didn’t try and break the demonic stronghold over cities. Likewise, Paul was bitten by a poisonous snake, proving Mark 16:18, but he did not go about handling them all the time as a sign.

Unfortunately we have seen some churches teach this bizarre ritual, a sure sign of the presumption of faith if there has ever been one. Just because something has been done doesn’t mean we are to go and do it, presuming that our “faith” makes it God’s will. Just because we have seen it in the Bible does not mean that it is a mandate for us. Biblical persons are not biblical precedent, and biblical narrative is not biblical normative, necessarily.

Another example of this presumption can be seen with how people turn Matthew 10:8 into a personal or corporate manifesto for a church or denomination. Taking this verse out of its context, teachers tell their followers that they are called to “heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, and cast out devils”. To those that do believe in the present day ministry of the Holy Spirit through miraculous signs and wonders, this seems like a ready prescription to base their own ministry upon. They are just following what Jesus told them to do, they might say.

Yes, this was indeed what Jesus empowered His disciples to do, and we are His disciples as well. The problem is that this verse does not stand by itself. Jesus also told them not to go to anywhere but to the Jews (vs.5-6). If we were to be faithful to the text that would mean that we could only heal Jews, or that we would never have been saved ourselves if we are Gentiles! No, Matthew 10 is about Jesus enabling the disciples for their mission of that time, not about a mandate for all times. We simply cannot use “verses in a vacuum” to support our own pet doctrines. We must use more than one verse or passage to form our doctrine upon.

Fortunately we do have a mandate to minister (Matthew 28:19-20), and we have promises to depend on (2 Peter 1:4). However, the promises are more about perfecting holiness in the fear of God (2 Corinthians 7:1) than they are about “naming it and claiming it”. Jesus may allow us to raise someone from the dead, but we must not presume that it is always God’s will to do so.

We cannot use the Bible like a magic book.


“Living For Today With An Eye For Tomorrow”©

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

"Biblical persons are not biblical precedent, and biblical narrative is not biblical normative."
Those comments in red sum up the message well.

Matt Gumm said...

The "magic book" comment reminds me of the gnostic gospels (Infancy Gospel, maybe), where Jesus uses his power in a mystical way, but to now benefit, either for those around Him or for the object of his power. So different from how godly power is displayed in the canonicals.

Even So... said...

Matt,

How right you are, and how many today just want to see the display. Jesus refuted this idea exactly in Matthew 4 / Luke 4 when tempted by the devil to jump off the Temple.

Rileysowner said...

Excellent post. Oh to the shame of the church, how many people without faith in the Lord thought that the prayer of Jabez would make them rich and comfortable, but without Christ it is words in the wind and an abomination to God (Proverbs 28:9)

Sober words to remind all of us to look to the Lord and his grace.

Kristine said...

A very close friend and I were really captivated by this kind of erroneous bible teaching, before I was a Christian (it's the perfect compromise; all the perks of Christianity without all that suffering and repentance!). I found very quickly though, with simply a one-time read-through of the NT alone, that the bible clearly refutes these teachings.

Biblical illiteracy and a self-centered church, combined with our fallen nature has allowed the "name it, claim it", word faith movement to spread like a deadly cancer.

This kind of teaching feeds the postmodern culture exactly what it wants: "spiritual encounters/experiences" minus personal sacrifice, submission or committment to Jesus Christ.

Thanks for writing on this.

Even So... said...

Yep, it is about His terms, not about finding out what will "work"...what God wants for us, not what we want from God...fundamental difference that, if anyone takes the time to step back and look at, they will see the glaring problem...unfortunately, we have a huge, glaring lack of discernment these days...these type "ministries" should be dismissed out of hand, and their proponents forbidden from the pulpits of our churches, and their para-church ministries grounded…if only people knew the Word…

Anonymous said...

if only people knew the Word…

If only we put knowing the Word first and foremost in our daily lives then the heresies will be recognized for what they are and we(believers)will all become true disciples indeed.

Anonymous said...

knowing the Word and living out what we know.

Brad Williams said...

So what you're saying is that even if I whack someone with my preaching Bible, they still won't get what I'm saying?

Even So... said...

Actually they would "get it"...the headache anointing that is...

I bet you could bottle that anointing and sell it for 49.95 per whack, er I mean dose, at the sooper dooper special elite anointed apostles of prophecy mega-fest...

Even So... said...

On second thought, maybe they will get it, but only if it is KJV...

Bill Gnade said...

My dear Even So,

You're the man! This is an outstanding post. Thank you for sharing it with us.

A couple of thoughts. Jesus healed the sick: he made the lame to walk, the blind to see, the deaf to hear. Jesus raised the dead. Jesus walked on water. Jesus fed 5,000 men with table scraps. And yet (!) -- he told his disciples, "Greater things than these shall you do when I go to my Father"! Huh?! Greater things than these? What could be greater than healing the sick, walking on water, raising the dead?

In other words, perhaps we are all too prone to be awestruck at the wrong things; perhaps what is great is not so great; what appears first is indeed last. Moreover, we might hear in Christ's words something like this: "You may marvel that I walk on water, but I pray that you learn to marvel that there is any water to walk on." We all fall short; and we all fall short of apprehending that all of creation is a miracle (and a privilege).

Then, of course, there remains the spirit of Simon: he wants to buy the Holy Spirit! Is this not typical of the 'lottery-ticket' spirituality we see in the Church: put in a dollar, get out millions? We don't want anything to come with too great a price; we don't want to have to work to get that glorious pearl, that wonderful treasure. Nay, faith alone wins the prize -- all the treasures of heaven. But, as you say, faith is not some interior willfulness, some sort of cognitive commitment uttered with conviction. Faith is not some sort of extortion; it is not some incantation that forces God ('He promised!" or so it goes) to act because we have said the right thing the right way with the right amount of faith. True faith is a life lived in obedience to Christ, a life lived in holy devotion; faith is an act of the whole person. And, sadly, most resist the one fact of the full Christian life: it involves suffering!

So much to say. But thank you for saying so much in such a lovely essay. The Bible is not a book for wizards; there is such a thing as Christian occultism, or Christian witchcraft. Thank you for confronting it.

Peace,

BG

Even So... said...

Bulls eye Bill!

We miss the forest from all the trees...we look to the little things, and play with toys while the real deal sits in the garage...

Your writing is insightful, and well done, very well done...I read every bit of that with joy in my heart, friend...

I treasure your input, Christ's flavor is all over it...

Bill Gnade said...

My dear Even So,

You are too kind. Thanks for the encouraging words. But the compliment is only properly received if properly reciprocated. You write with grace, wit, insight; the Spirit is here.

Of course, now let me fall prostrate and beg for humility! (I can't exhort you to do the same, as that wd. be presumptuous.)

Peace and mirth,

Gnade