Spring
1995
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Some Cautionary Thoughts on the Present Revival Dear Saints, I would appreciate your sympathy as I try to address a
subject that is already dividing many of God's people into defensive and
opposing camps. One is put into the uncomfortable, if not dangerous, even in
raising elementary cautions, of seeming to oppose to what in the eyes of many
is holy and of the Spirit of God. Precious and mature saints of our own
knowledge testify to the indisputable blessing they are assured that they
have received. Far be it from us to dispute or denigrate what is from God.
Nevertheless, in fidelity to our own call and responsibility before the Lord
and to His people, and after much reflection, prayer and discussion amongst
ourselves, we offer the following for your thoughtful and prayerful
consideration. I venture out with some trepidation to raise some
questions about a phenomenon that is already perplexing many. Unlike such
previous moves of God as the Welsh Revival, noted from its inception for its
unmistakably holy character, the present revival generates mixed reports from
unequivocal enthusiasm to those that are dubious, critical, and utterly
rejecting. Some suggest more than one stream with a fleshly counterfeit paralleling
the God-given and authentic. What I have been able to observe via video tape
of one principal, and evidently original stream, I
found entirely repugnant. Ministers of the word were ostensibly so drunk in
the spirit that they were unable to be coherent, railing finally into a
collapse from their stupor. I found this entirely unbecoming to the dignity
of their professed call and felt the preached word to he denigrated by joking
references to the feeble results obtained by it in comparison to the effects
procured now by the experiences of the 'power' to which they were testifying.
Was it my imagination that made me sense in watching some helplessly
convulsing in laughter, that what had gripped them was already panically beyond their control and was actually causing
them a physical pain? It is a moot question if one would describe it as
'holy'. On the contrary, it appears to be irreverent if not indeed demonic
and hellish. From identical meetings others report unmistakable
benefit, instant release from depression and other dogged personality
disorders and disabilities upon receiving 'the blessing'. We are not in a
position to categorically condemn as deception the ostensible benefits to
which many testify. God is always free to bless whom He will bless. But our
point is that if the enemy can succeed in bringing the Church to viewing benefit
as the determinant by which something is judged to be of God, we may well
have been brought to the very ground of deception itself. For myself, I would choose to keep my distance from such
phenomena, trusting that whatever I might be missing is not greater than what
I am protecting and cherishing and that the Lord is not offended by a
carefulness that would rather err in a jealousy for His holiness than to risk
subverting what has already been given as pure and true (the residue of the
knowledge of God as holy, obtained through obedience and communion, cherished
and guarded over the years). What believer who has once been in that
Presence could ever countenance the entertainment-carnival atmosphere that
prevailed in the video cited above? I have not yet recovered, and trust never
will, from the eerie experience some twenty years ago of being present on the
platform at an international conference in the midst of falling bodies
(ostensibly 'slain in the Spirit') in the complete absence of the
sense of God's presence! The visible demonstration of power without the
corresponding sense of God in the midst of squeals of carnal excitement and
popping flashbulbs was more than could be borne. Whatever the consequence to
propriety, ministerial and offended relationships, I had to leave. Remarkable that though we are explicitly warned about
end-time "lying signs and wonders", (II Thessalonians 2:9; Matthew
24:24) we imagine that it is future and mindlessly trust ourselves in our
greed for experiences, empowerments, or releases to dubious personalities who
have caught the public fancy in incredible overnight popularity. I profoundly
respect God's use of the weak and the foolish thing, but I cannot for that
reason endorse what is garish, cheap, and coarse as being that.
"Holiness unto the Lord" is still the standard of God's House even
when it is unspectacular and unassuming in the eyes of the world—or even our
own. Certainly in all of the overwhelming endorsement of the
present revival-renewal phenomenon, the sober believer will not fault this
modest, hopefully redemptive voice of caution. Perhaps one of the most
ominous features of the hour is the note of warning sounded about those who have
some reserve as being 'obstructions', 'enemies', or 'threats' to this
outpouring of God. The invitation seems to be to abandon all restraint ('The
bar is open')—leap in or get out of the way of others if you cannot! God is
well able, I feel sure, to protect as well as perfect what pertains unto Him
(Colossians 1:28). I cannot help but wonder if it is man's interests that are
being so vehemently defended and that we are at the inception of what could
ultimately be finalized by the warning that "they will kill you and
claim that they are doing God a service." (John 16:2) I would insert here a caution given by T. Austin Sparks,
more appropriate now perhaps then when it was sounded decades ago, in
speaking of the Corinthians' propensity for 'sensational evidences'. How much
does it suggest that we may presently be reaping is what was mindlessly and
carelessly sown in the decades of the Charismatic Movement. The immaturity of
many was fostered in easy 'decisions', Cross-avoiding indolence,
undisciplined living, the giddy adulation of
personalities and in the superficiality, levity and lightness of our
meetings. We are in that kind of age today. It is becoming more and
more a psychic age. It is an age of the soul just spilling over, asserting
itself, taking control of everything in Christianity as
well as outside of it—a soulish age... Be
careful that you are not hankering for this realm again. Are you after the
evidence? My, how I have seen dear Christian people just prostrating
themselves, groaning and crying, almost screaming for evidence—these 'sign'
things... Christians and dear men of God, who have been greatly used, are
creating an emotional, psychic situation that is involving simple Christians
in things which are, sooner or later, going to be a great disillusionment and
an offense. It will bring 'offendedness' with the
Lord, and that is just what the devil is after. (Called Unto the
Fellowship of His Son, p. 46, published by Emmanuel Church, 12000 E.14th
St., Tulsa, OK 74128) Personally, I believe myself to be ready to risk all and
to dare all for the Lord, but certainly not for a 'blessing' or dubious
'experience' that confers some seeming good. My own preference, and I believe
that of the Scripture, is to seek out the root of depression according to the
Word (usually unacknowledged disobediences). This will be accomplished
primarily through that part of the Body to whom I am accountable and with
whom I am authentically joined. (Ephesians 4:15) When 'experience' as a
'quick-fix' alternative is preferred to these disciplines, we put ourselves
in a place of spiritual jeopardy. Is not the Lord near at hand to all who
seek Him? What is the enduring benefit when we have merely received some
alleviation from the symptoms that were occasioned by serious defects of character
and return with these defects still remaining? Whatever the future will
reveal of the present revival phenomenon, perhaps the greatest will be the
profound repentance of broken thousands upon recognizing their susceptibility
to deception, their lack of elementary discernment, and their haste to run
after demonstrations of power in atmospheres so contrary to God's known
holiness and character. Clearly, a power is at work. The question is, whose? Who is it that is mediating an alternative and
lesser joy to the immature, the carnal, and the undiscerning? We are already
discomforted to learn of the loss of interest, even the repudiation of
apostolic vision once held by those who have received 'the blessing'—as if
the one were somehow antithetical or opposed to the other! Assuming that our
fears are exaggerated and that the present phenomenon is of God, though
admittedly marred only by certain excesses, in what ways will future
'lying signs and wonders' be different from that with which we are
presently being confronted? By what criteria will these differences be
identified? Are we presently at the level of maturity and
discernment by which these important distinctions can be made? By what means
shall we come to that place if we are now prone to describe as 'enemies'
those who are only raising the questions? The very ridicule and censure
brought by the advocates of this revival to those who attempt to do so makes
suspect the very claims they espouse. The fact that something eventuates in
blessing, release, or deliverance is no sure evidence or guarantee that it is
of God. (Matthew 24:24) The same powers of darkness which have wrought the
oppressions through careless or unclean living can just as easily relieve
them—restoring even relationships broken and made miserable by them—in order
to bring about a greater deception! Even the most rapturous 'love of God' can be a
pseudo-sensation produced by spirits in the indiscriminate and slothful who
are unwilling for the sacrifices of seeking God's face in truth. Is the
'hunger for God' in fact that, or a hunger for an experience of God
that will assure the insecure soul that they are known and accepted of God?
Is this not the unrecognized motive that makes many pant
after present day prophets in hope of a 'prophetic' word of this kind? Does
not this encouraged tendency promote the immaturity of such rather than
encourage them in the faith of sons? Do we not prefer to be effortlessly
'acted upon' miraculously—rather than diligently seek God on the basis of the
promise of His Word? "And ye shall seek Me, and find Me, when ye shall
search for Me with all your heart." (Jeremiah 29:13) Are these not the last days in which we have been warned
about deception and been exhorted to test all spirits? (I John 4:1; I Thessalonians 5:21) What are our
eschatological expectations—the premises of our faith? Surely these views
will altogether affect our susceptibilities to every new thing that promises
to bless and establish us in this present life and rob us at the same time of
the alertness that would and should otherwise be ours. Are we to ignore the
prevalence of ear-splitting 'worship', high-powered offerings, calculated
theatrics, carnival bawdiness, the chilling hellish shrieks and cries that
punctuate the proceedings, the conspicuous absence of the preached word
(except perhaps in a token way), the relentless spirit-dulling testimonies in
a stupor unbecoming the dignity of God—given incoherently even by ministers
of the Word? Not for a moment would such 'phenomena' be tolerated at the
historic Welsh Revival where every care was taken to avoid even the use of
instrumental music or any intrusion of man—the very things now being
celebrated and employed. That revival was holiness unto the Lord so long
as those standards were maintained. Has He changed from being the God who insisted that His
priests mount a ramp to the altar rather than ascend by steps lest any
flesh be revealed? (Exodus 20:26) Who had them wear the golden head plate
continually on their foreheads (the very place now we so readily make
available for the touch that brings the 'blessing') 'Holiness unto the Lord'?
Who enjoined about the holy anointing oil that nothing shall be made 'like unto that' nor that it shall ever "Upon
man's flesh... be poured?" (Exodus 30:32-38) Our ache is that 'Holiness
unto the Lord' be ascribed afresh on the foreheads of priestly men and women
who will stand for Him in this age of sleaze and vulgarity that even now threatens to seep into the House of God. It is the cry of
Isaiah 52:11, "Depart ye, depart ye, go ye out from thence, touch no
unclean thing; go ye out of the midst other; be ye clean, that bear the
vessels of the Lord"—Indeed, "let us cleanse ourselves from all
filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God."
(II Corinthians 7:1). Viewing the world staggering in violence, war, the
catastrophes of earthquake, famine, flood, and fire, the Church in its
present pitiful state of shallowness and un-preparedness, should we not
rather "Be afflicted, and mourn and weep: let[ting] our laughter be
turned to mourning, and [our] joy to heaviness?" Forgive us if we are
being too cautious. We would be naive to think that deception is only a fear
for the carnal and the sensual. Final and last day's deceptions will be spiritual
"for Satan himself transforms himself into an angel of light".
(II Corinthians 11:14) "The end of all things is at hand: be ye
therefore sober, and watch unto prayer." (I Peter 4:7) Art Katz |