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Pentecostalism
PART 1: Pentecostalism: What is it? (by Prof.
David J. Engelsma)
Introduction
The movement that this booklet
examines is a powerful and popular force in the Christian churches today. It is
known as the Pentecostal movement, because it claims to be a "second
Pentecost" at the end of history. It is also known as the charismatic
movement, because it claims to recover and practice the extraordinary gifts of
the Spirit that are mentioned in Acts and in I Corinthians 12-14 (Greek: charismata).
In 100 years, it has spread from
a handful of people in Topeka, Kansas and in Los Angeles, California to hundreds
of millions throughout the world. The latest estimate is that half a billion
people are involved in Pentecostalism. The movement is regarded as a "third
force" in Christendom, with Roman Catholicism and Protestantism.
Pentecostalism is found in
almost all churches. Many churches are founded on Pentecostal teachings and
exist for the purpose of engaging in Pentecostal practices. Many of these
churches are large and growing. But other churches approve Pentecostalism and
welcome it within their membership and life. The Roman Catholic Church has
embraced the Pentecostal movement. Rome has hundreds of thousands of charismatic
members. Among the Protestant churches and preachers that have approved the
charismatic movement are Reformed churches and influential evangelicals. In
1973, the Christian Reformed Church responded to the then exploding charismatic
movement by adopting a report that said in part:
We call on the church
to recognize the freedom of the Spirit to bestow His gifts
according to His will, and that the Scriptures do not restrict the charismata
spoken of by the apostolic witness to the apostolic age. Let the church be
open to an acknowledgment of the full spectrum of the gifts of the Spirit
("Neo-Pentecostalism," in Acts of Synod 1973, Grand Rapids:
Board of Publications of the Christian Reformed Church, p. 481)
Among the influential
evangelical ministers and theologians who have put their stamp of approval on,
and warmly welcomed, the Pentecostal movement are J. I. Packer and Martyn
Lloyd-Jones. In his book, Joy Unspeakable: Power & Renewal in the Holy
Spirit, published in 1984, but consisting of sermons preached in Westminster
Chapel in 1964 and 1965, Lloyd-Jones declared that he "believed
passionately in the baptism with the Holy Spirit as a distinct, post-conversion
experience"; that all the gifts exist today; that the experience of the
baptism with the Holy Spirit is the only thing "that holds out any hope for
us today"; and that whoever denies the baptism with the Holy Spirit is
guilty of quenching the Holy Spirit (Wheaton, IL: Harold Shaw Publishers, 1984,
pp.13, 54, 278).
So popular and powerful is the
charismatic movement, blowing all before its mighty wind, that it is difficult
to find a denomination of churches that has resisted it. In the recent book, The
Pentecostals and Charismatics: A Confessional Lutheran Evaluation, after the
author has mentioned a number of Protestant churches that either have embraced
the movement or have caved in to it under pressure, he mentions one
denomination, and one only, that has rejected it: "Not all Protestant
bodies have extended a welcome to the charismatic renewal. The Protestant
Reformed Churches' reaction to it has been bluntly negative" (Arthur J.
Clement, The Pentecostals and Charismatics: A Confessional Lutheran
Evaluation, Milwaukee, WI: Northwestern Publishing House, 2000, pp.52, 53).
The influence of the movement
has been enormous. First, it has shifted the center of gravity of the gospel
from faith's reception of the forgiveness of sins on the basis of the cross of
Christ to the Christian's ineffable experience of God and power for ministry,
especially witnessing, on the basis of a post-conversion event known as the
Baptism with the Holy Spirit.
Second, Pentecostalism has
radically recast and revised the public worship of the church. No longer is the
pure preaching of the sound doctrine of Scripture and the proper administration
of the sacraments the heart of the service. Rather, the exuberant praise and the
exercise of various gifts by the congregation under the influence of a
freewheeling Spirit are the main things.
Third, Pentecostalism has
promoted ecumenicity. It is a trans-denominational, trans-confessional movement.
The authoritative Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements (ed.
Stanley Burgess, Gary McGee, and Patrick Alexander, Grand Rapids: Zondervan,
1988) states that the Pentecostal/charismatic movement is "one worldwide
trans-denominational outpouring of the Spirit of God" (p. 159). Members of
virtually all churches, Protestant and Roman Catholic, Calvinist and Arminian,
Baptist and covenantal, share this one "Spirit," regardless of
doctrinal differences. Therefore, there are high-level talks and conferences
with a view to organizational union; ecumenical gatherings of scores of
thousands for praise and worship; and weekly meetings of members of virtually
all churches for Bible study and fellowship—the "grass roots
ecumenicity."
The Pentecostal movement has
influence even where its main doctrines and practices are officially rejected.
The Pentecostal movement is the cause of widespread dissatisfaction with the
preaching of the doctrine of the cross and of the shrill clamor for more
emphasis on the Christian life and religious activities. There is boredom with
the structured Reformed worship according to the regulative principle of worship
and agitation to change the public worship, to make it more lively, to involve
the people more. As for ecumenicity, people from many different denominations
freely join in the praise and fellowship of Promise Keepers, which is strongly
influenced by the charismatic movement in its most radical form, Wimber's
Vineyard Fellowship.
Men and women are openly
participating in the warm fellowship of Bible studies that are explicitly and
insistently non-doctrinal (as though this were possible!) and that involve the
communion of Protestants and Roman Catholics, Calvinists and Arminians, Baptists
and Reformed, and, indeed, charismatics and noncharismatics.
The growth, popularity, and
influence of the movement are not decisive, however, as regards the fundamental,
and necessary, question, "What spirit is the spirit of the Pentecostal
movement?" The popularity of the movement does not preclude the question,
nor does it decide the answer automatically. For, first, Scripture forecasts
great apostasy in the last days, apostasy accompanied by "all power and
signs and lying wonders" (II Thess. 2:3, 9). Second, both in the Old
Testament and in the New Testament Scripture holds up the despised
"remnant," the "little flock," as the true people and church
of God (Is. 1; Luke 12:32). Third, Scripture requires us to examine, or test,
the spirits, whether they are of God (Deut. 13; I John 4:1). Deuteronomy 13
warned Israel that the false prophet might produce a "sign or a
wonder" on behalf of his religious movement (vv. 1,2).
This is what we are doing in
this booklet: testing the spirit of Pentecostalism in obedience to the command
of Scripture. The chapters that follow will test Pentecostalism's spirit
regarding specific, important doctrines and practices of the movement. This
opening chapter tests Pentecostalism's spirit in connection with the distinctive
nature of the movement and with regard to its history.
Characteristic
Teachings and Practices
Pentecostalism,
or the charismatic renewal, is the recent movement in Christian churches that
teaches a second, definite, and keenly experienced work of God in Christians
after regeneration, or conversion, that is known as the Baptism in, or with, the
Holy Spirit (hereafter, BHS). This event has as its purpose to give the
Christian a wonderful experience of God and power for ministry, especially
witnessing to others. The evidence, or sign, of this baptism is speaking in
tongues, understood by Pentecostals, not as the ability to speak in foreign
languages without formal, academic study, but as the ability to speak unknown,
heavenly languages.
This is how authoritative
Pentecostals define their movement. The Dictionary of Pentecostal and
Charismatic Movements describes the Pentecostal movement this way:
"Pentecostals subscribe to a work of grace subsequent to conversion in
which Spirit baptism is evidenced by glossolalia (that is, speaking in
tongues)" (p. 1). The Dictionary describes the charismatic movement
as follows: "The occurrence of distinctively Pentecostal blessings and
phenomena, baptism in the Holy Spirit with the spiritual gifts of I Corinthians
12:8-10, outside a denominational and/or confessional Pentecostal
framework" (p. 130).
Pentecostal preacher and writer
Don Basham describes the BHS, which is the heart of Pentecostal teaching and
practice, this way: "The baptism in the Holy Spirit is a second encounter
with God (the first is conversion) in which the Christian begins to receive the
supernatural power of the Holy Spirit into his life" (A Handbook on Holy
Spirit Baptism, Monroeville, PA: Whitaker Books, 1969, p.10).
In further explanation of the
fundamental Pentecostal teaching of a BHS, first, Pentecostals hold that in this
act of God one receives the Holy Spirit Himself, so that he is filled with the
Spirit. The Spirit Himself indwells the man or woman who is baptized. One is
baptized, not by the Spirit but with the Spirit.
Second, the BHS is distinct
from, and later than, the first saving work of God in a sinner, namely,
regeneration, or conversion. It is basic to Pentecostal teaching that there are
two distinct works of grace in one's life and experience. The first work is
performed by the Holy Spirit and gives one Jesus Christ and His salvation,
especially the forgiveness of sins. The second work of grace, upon which
Pentecostalism puts the emphasis, is performed by Jesus Christ and gives one the
Holy Spirit.
Because the first work—the work
of salvation—is signified by the sacrament of baptism with water,
Pentecostalism teaches two baptisms. This at once raises the question,
"What about Paul's teaching in Ephesians 4:5 that in the church there is
'one baptism'?" The seriousness of this question for Pentecostalism is that
Ephesians 4:5 makes "one baptism" the basis of the unity of the
church. Pentecostalism, on the other hand, has a church is which some have only
the first baptism, while others have also the second baptism, which is supposed
to bestow on them more wonderful experience and much greater power. In addition,
Pentecostalism as an ecumenical movement makes the second baptism the ground of
the unity of the church, whereas Paul made the baptism with water the basis of
the unity of the church.
According to Pentecostalism, the
second work of grace—the BHS—is for all Christians. God wants all to have it.
It is available to all, but we must seek it and fulfill certain conditions in
order to obtain it.
Only the teaching of a first and
second baptism is the 'full gospel." Whatever message omits the BHS as
Pentecostalism conceives it is less than a "full gospel." Only
Pentecostalism has the "full gospel."
Third. the BHS is a mysterious,
wonderful event in one's own experience. Often, there are physical effects and
manifestations, such as a feeling of tingling all over the body, or falling down
"slain in the Spirit," or laughing uncontrollably (the "holy
laughter" of the Toronto blessing), or making noises like an animal.
Fourth, the purpose of the BHS
in modern Pentecostalism is three-fold: more wonderful experience of much closer
union with God, more desire and ability to praise God, and power for witnessing.
Emphasis falls on the feeling of union with God. Not an unlettered "holy
roller," but Martyn Lloyd-Jones said, "It is the most wonderful and
glorious experience a man can ever have in this life. The only thing beyond the
experience of the baptism with the Spirit is heaven itself" (Joy
Unspeakable, p. 141). The BHS does not increase one's holiness, or
strengthen one's faith, or give one growth in doctrine, or deepen one's
knowledge of his misery, redemption, and gratitude.
Fifth, the invariable and necessary
evidence, or sign, is tongues: the utterances of peculiar sounds and noises,
which are said to be unknown, heavenly languages. In view of Pentecostalism's
claim that the BHS is for all Christians and in view of the fact that tongues
are the necessary evidence of the BHS, all Christians can and should speak in
tongues. But the apostle asks in I Corinthians 12:30: "Do all speak with
tongues?" clearly implying that even in the apostolic age not all the
saints spoke in tongues, or were intended by God to speak in tongues.
The BHS is one fundamental
Pentecostal doctrine and practice. Another teaching that obviously is essential
to Pentecostalism is that all the gifts of the Spirit that were present in
apostolic times are present in the church still today. Pentecostalism rejects
the classic Christian and Protestant position that the extraordinary gifts of
the Spirit were for the time of the apostles only and that they ceased after the
death of the apostles. This was the position of Augustine, Luther, Calvin, and
the Lutheran and Reformed churches. B. B. Warfield argued this position
convincingly in his book, Miracles: Yesterday and Today, True and False.
Plainly, there were in the
apostolic churches the gifts of tongues, interpretation of tongues, miracles of
healing, casting out of devils, and the like. I Corinthians 12-14 establishes
the presence of the extraordinary gifts in the church at Corinth beyond any
doubt. Pentecostalism argues that since the special gifts were present in the
church then, they must also be present today. This argument is an implication of
the still more basic Pentecostal belief, namely, that there can and must be a
repetition for churches and Christians today of that which happened on the Day
of Pentecost according to Acts 2. Just as there were two distinct saving events
for the apostles, conversion to Christ prior to Pentecost and the BHS on the Day
of Pentecost, exactly so must our experience be today. Pentecost must be
repeated over and over for churches. Each believer must have his own
"personal Pentecost." Whatever happened in Acts can and should
happen now.
The biblical basis for these two
main teachings of Pentecostalism with their corresponding practices is the book
of Acts and I Corinthians 12-14. If these passages are not the exclusive
biblical text for Pentecostalism, they are certainly the predominant and
decisive text.
One other passage is of great
importance: Joel 2:23. Joel 2:28-32 was quoted by Peter in Acts 2 to explain the
outpouring of the Spirit on Pentecost: "And it shall come to pass afterward
that I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh," etc. In verse 23, a few
verses before the passage that Peter quoted, the prophet said, "[The Lord
your God] hath given you the former rain moderately, and he will cause to come
down for you the rain, the former rain and the latter rain in the first
month." Pentecostalism has to explain why the Christian church did not
teach or experience Pentecostalism's BHS from the time of the death of the
apostles until about A.D. 1900. Pentecostalism explains this by appealing to
Joel 2:23. The rain of Joel 2:23 is symbolic of the BHS and the extraordinary
gifts accompanying the BHS. Pentecost was the "former rain," and the
present-day Pentecostal, or charismatic, movement is the "latter
rain," just before the end of the world.
This raises the question: 'What
is the history of the Pentecostal-charismatic movement?
The History of Pentecostalism
The history of
the Pentecostal movement is history that many of us have lived through and been
eyewitnesses of. When I was a college student in the late 1950s, one Sunday
evening several friends and I paid a visit to a Pentecostal church in the area
of Franklin and Eastern in Grand Rapids, Michigan. The church was an exclusively
black congregation meeting in a ramshackle storefront building. Today, the same
worship-shouting, arm-waving, falling to the ground, dancing in the aisles,
speaking in tongues—that fascinated us as college students goes on in the
mainly white, well-educated, sophisticated Assembly of God Church in its
multi-million dollar building on 44th Street in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
I was pastor of a Protestant
Reformed congregation in Loveland, Colorado during most of the 1960s and the
first half of the 1970s in the midst of Protestant churches that exploded with
the charismatic movement. I had to struggle to understand and judge the
movement, whether it was friend, foe, or neutral to the Reformed faith.
Later, in the second half of the
1970s in South Holland, Illinois, I witnessed in the village the dramatic
playing out of a valiant effort to combine the Reformed faith and the
charismatic movement. Circumstances dictated that the Protestant Reformed Church
of South Holland take a stand on the question, whether the Reformed faith and
the charismatic movement are compatible and whether a Reformed Church may accept
charismatic members. (The valiant effort in South Holland to combine the
Reformed faith and the charismatic movement was a failure. The gifted Reformed
minister began by insisting that he would complement Reformed orthodoxy with
charismatic fervor. He ended by offering his "dusty books of Reformed
doctrine for sale cheap" and by trying to raise the dead.)
The history of Pentecostalism is
astounding. Whether one is for the movement or against it, he must be amazed at
the fact that a movement that began only 100 years ago among a handful of
lower-class people (I intend no disrespect; I am deeply conscious that God
always delights in the base and no-account) has engulfed Christendom, has become
the "third force," and has captivated Roman Catholic cardinals and
evangelicals such as Packer and Lloyd-Jones.
The history of Pentecostalism is
not only interesting and informative. It is also decisive for determining
whether the movement is of God. This is not sufficiently reckoned with in
analyzing the movement. The history of Pentecostalism—the history!—is
decisive, whether Pentecostalism can possibly be accepted as a movement of the
Spirit of Jesus Christ, as it claims, or whether Pentecostalism is of the devil.
This, it must be remembered, is our concern in this booklet in obedience to the
command of the apostle, "Try the spirits, whether they are of God."
As I relate the history, the
reader should keep in mind my assertion at the outset, that the history of the
Pentecostal/charismatic movement decides our judgment of the movement. To
paraphrase the German philosopher, the history of Pentecostalism
is the judgment of Pentecostalism.
My account of the history is not
controversial. It is based on the accounts given by Pentecostal scholars
themselves, including the Dictionary of the Pentecostal and Charismatic
Movements, Donald W. Dayton, Vinson Synan, and others.
The Pentecostal movement was
conceived in the womb of Bethel Bible College in Topeka, Kansas on New Year's
Day, 1900. The movement was born into the world on Azusa Street in Los Angeles,
California in 1906.
Conception is first. Late on the
last day of 1899, or early in the morning of the first day of 1900, the
itinerant preacher Charles Fox Parham laid hands on Agnes Ozman, so that she
would receive the BHS as a second work of grace. Agnes received the baptism and
spoke in tongues as evidence of it. This is known in Pentecostal circles as the
"second Pentecost."
Birth followed six years later
in revival meetings in a dilapidated building on Azusa Street in Los Angeles.
The preacher who brought Pentecostalism to the birth—Pentecostalism's
obstetrician—was the Rev. W. J. Seymour. He laid his hands on the people in his
little group, and they received the BHS and spoke in tongues. Seymour was an
amusing fellow. The revivals went on night after night for several years.
Seymour would mostly sit behind the pulpit with his head in an empty shoebox as
the lively meeting raged in the room before him. The meetings were wild:
tongues, rolling on the floor, falling and lying prostrate, crying, laughing,
convulsing, and even levitation. Vinson Synan, himself a Pentecostal and a
historian of the movement, gives this description of the meetings on Azusa
Street, and of the peculiar behavior of Rev. Seymour:
A visitor to Azusa Street during the
three years that the revival continued would have met scenes that beggared
description. Men and women would shout, weep, dance, fall into trances, speak
and sing in tongues, and interpret the messages into English. In true Quaker
fashion, anyone who felt "moved by the Spirit" would preach or sing.
There was no robed choir, no hymnals, no order of services, but there was an
abundance of religious enthusiasm. In the middle of it all was
"Elder" Seymour, who rarely preached and much of the time kept his
head covered in an empty shoe box behind the pulpit At times he would be seen
walking through the crowds with five- and ten-dollar bills sticking out of his
hip pockets which people had crammed there unnoticed by him. At other times he
would "preach" by hurling defiance at anyone who did not accept his
views or by encouraging seekers at the woodplank altars to "let the
tongues come forth." To others he would exclaim: "Be emphatic!
Ask for salvation, sanctification, the baptism with the Holy Ghost, or divine
healing" (The Holiness-Pentecostal
Movement in the United States, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1971, pp.108, 109).
The relation between the
conception of the Pentecostal movement in Kansas in 1900 and the birth of the
movement in Los Angeles in 1906 is that Seymour had learned the BHS from Parham
at a meeting in Texas.
Soon, people were flocking to
Azusa Street from all over Los Angeles, from all over California, from all over
the United States, and from all over the world, to get the BHS and bring it
home. The direct result was the formation of the Assemblies of God (Pentecostal)
Churches in 1914 and the worldwide spread of Pentecostalism.
From 1900 to about 1960,
Pentecostal teaching and practices were confined to Pentecostal churches.
The established churches looked down on these Pentecostal churches as "holy
rollers." This would change in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
The 1960s saw the spread of
Pentecostal doctrine and practices into all the established denominations:
Baptist, Lutheran, Presbyterian, and even the Roman Catholic Church. This is the
charismatic movement, or charismatic renewal, in distinction from
Pentecostalism. The charismatic movement is simply Pentecostalism in the
previously non-Pentecostal churches. The name "charismatic," which the
established Protestant and Roman Catholic churches prefer, suggests that in
these churches the special gifts, the "charismata," are
emphasized more than other aspects of the old Pentecostalism. Pentecostalism in
the established churches is also known as "neo-Pentecostalism."
Largely responsible for the
penetration of Pentecostalism into all the churches were a man and an
organization. The man is Dennis Bennett, Episcopal clergyman in Van Nuys,
California, who told the story of his own BHS in the book, Nine O'clock in
the Morning. The organization is the extremely influential Full Gospel
Business Men's Fellowship International (FGBMFI). One effective method of FGBMFI
to spread the message of Pentecostalism and gain converts to the movement has
been their breakfast meetings. Professional people and leaders in various
churches are invited to a breakfast at which a charismatic pitches the message
of the charismatic movement.
Pentecostalism became
respectable. It crossed all doctrinal and ecclesiastical boundaries and divides.
All the churches accepted Pentecostalism and approved the Pentecostal spirit as
the Spirit of Jesus Christ.
One later development of the
Pentecostal/charismatic movement demands mention: the "signs and
wonders" movement of John Wimber and his new denomination, The Vineyard
Fellowship. This phase of the charismatic movement claims to possess the power
to perform mighty miracles, which promote "church growth." Related is
the infamous "Toronto Blessing," characterized by "holy
laughing" for hours on end. Wimber's church and movement are not an
unseemly aberration. They are part and parcel of the Pentecostal movement as the
movement develops the extraordinary gifts. Pentecostals call this development
"the third wave" of Pentecostalism.
If the history of Pentecostalism
following the birth of the movement in 1900/1906 is astonishing, the history
leading up to Pentecostalism's birth is decisive for our judgment, whether
Pentecostalism is of God. Pentecostalism derives directly from the theology of
the 18th century English preacher John Wesley, particularly from Wesley's
teaching of a "second blessing" in the life and experience of the
Christian. According to Wesley, there is a second work of grace in the Christian
after conversion that brings one to a higher level of salvation: the level of
"sinless perfection." This second work of grace is a dramatic
act in one's experience at a certain moment. The second blessing is more
important than the first, which "merely" gives the forgiveness of
sins. Wesley taught that this second blessing, which he also referred to as
"entire sanctification," must be sought by every Christian. If the
Spirit is to grant this glorious experience, the Christian must fulfill certain
conditions.
Wesley's teaching of the second
blessing resulted in the "Holiness Movement" in the 1800s both in
North America and in England. Revival meetings were held at which the Spirit
would grant this second blessing of perfect holiness and a higher Christian
life. One of the leading evangelists preaching up this supposedly more wonderful
work of the Spirit was Charles Finney. At these revivals, the reception of the
second blessing was accompanied by all the strange phenomena that later attended
Pentecostalism's BHS.
All that Pentecostalism did was
to call Wesley's second blessing the BHS and to insist that the one necessary
evidence is tongues, with one notable exception. When Pentecostalism baptized
Wesley's second blessing, that is, took it over as the BMS, it changed Wesley's
second blessing in one, fundamental respect. Pentecostalism denied that this
second blessing, now known as the BHS, consisted of holiness, indeed perfect holiness.
Pentecostalism teaches that the BHS has nothing to do with holiness at all. The
BHS has instead to do with mystical experience and with power and gifts for
ministry. Wesley would have been appalled at this hijacking of his second
blessing.
This history, which is
Pentecostalism's own account of its history, conclusively proves that
Pentecostalism is not of God, proves that the spirit of Pentecostalism is not
the Spirit of Jesus Christ.
How so?
Its Spirit
The
Pentecostal/charismatic movement is proved heretical by the simple fact that it
is the fruit of the theology of Wesley, and Wesley's theology was the false
gospel of salvation by the will and work of the sinner himself (Arminianism).
Wesley taught that God loves all alike, that Christ died for all alike, and that
the Spirit wants to save all alike, but that salvation depends upon the sinner's
choosing to be saved by his own free will. In his passionate commitment to this
gospel, Wesley hated the truth of salvation by God's free, particular, sovereign
mercy. Wesley is guilty of the worst blasphemies against the gospel of grace
that have ever been uttered. His doctrine of the second blessing, which in
Pentecostalism has become the BHS, was in perfect harmony with his basic gospel
of free will. Whether one received the second blessing depended upon a person's
own will and effort.
The theology of Charles Finney,
who as a leading preacher of the "holiness movement" was the link
between Wesley and Pentecostalism, was the same as that of Wesley. Finney was
originally a Presbyterian. But he detested Calvinism. Deliberately and
aggressively, he went up and down the land preaching salvation—and the second
blessing of perfect holiness—by the free will of sovereign man.
Pentecostalism is the natural
outgrowth of that gospel. It is the fruit on Wesley's tree of salvation by man's
will. In every respect, Pentecostalism is a message and movement of free will.
The first baptism in Pentecostal-charismatic teaching—the saving of a man from
sin, his conversion—is due to one's accepting Jesus by free will. The second
baptism—the BHS—likewise is dependent upon a man's will and work, for he
cooperates with the Spirit by fulfilling the necessary conditions.
That Pentecostalism is Arminian
through-and-through is the open, clear, unashamed testimony of the Pentecostals
themselves. Don Basham has written:
The Holy Spirit is a gentleman. He
works in our lives only to the extent that we are willing. He prompts and
leads and woos and persuades but He does not force. To become a Christian a
person must will or want or accept Christ, and he can. To be filled with the
Holy Spirit a Christian must will or want to receive, and he can.
Baptism in the Holy Spirit is available for every Christian (Handbook
on Holy Spirit Baptism, p. 35).
Vinson Synan, one of the most
respected and influential Pentecostal teachers and leaders, summed up
Pentecostalism this way:
Although the Pentecostal movement began
in the United States ... its theological and intellectual origins were
British. The basic premises of the movement's theology were constructed by
John Wesley in the 18th century. As a product of Methodism, the
holiness-pentecostal movement traces its lineage through the Wesleys to
Anglicanism and from thence to Roman Catholicism. This theological heritage
places the Pentecostals outside the Calvinistic, reformed tradition.... The
basic pentecostal theological position might be described as Arminian,
perfectionistic, premillennial, and charismatic (The
Holiness-Pentecostal Movement in the United States, p. 217).
This is why Pentecostalism is
acceptable to the Roman Catholic Church. The gospel—the message of salvation—of Pentecostalism is Arminianism, and Arminianism is
semi-Pelagianism, which is the gospel—the message of salvation—that Rome
proclaims.
But the gospel of free will is a
false gospel. It is another gospel that is no gospel. Scripture declares it so
in Romans 9:16: Salvation "is not of him that willeth, nor of him that
runneth, but of God that sheweth mercy." The one, true gospel is the good
news of salvation by God's grace alone, apart from man's will, which is in the
bondage of sin. Ephesians 2:8 clearly proclaims the gospel of grace: "For
by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift
of God." The source of this gracious salvation is God's eternal election,
as the apostle teaches in Ephesians 1:3, 4: "The God and Father of our Lord
Jesus Christ. .. hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places
in Christ: according as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the
world, that we should be holy and without blame before him."
This one fact, namely, that
Pentecostalism is the development of Arminian theology and is itself
consciously, avowedly, and thoroughly Arminian—this one fact all by itself
conclusively proves that the entire Pentecostal/charismatic movement is not of
God and of Jesus Christ. For Jesus Christ will not give His Spirit as a fruit of
the lie of the false gospel. The Spirit Himself will never work a grand,
glorious work of salvation in history (as Pentecostalism claims that it is) by
means of a false gospel. The Spirit will not honor a movement that hates the
gospel of God's grace and glory and that promotes a gospel exalting man, by
gracing that movement with His presence and power.
Can the Spirit who inspired
Romans 9:16 work a work in the world that stems from, and proclaims, a gospel of
salvation by man's own will? Can the evil tree of a false gospel bear the good
fruit of a genuine movement of the Spirit of Christ?
To judge the
Pentecostal/charismatic movement, it is not necessary to explain why the
believers who lived through the event of Pentecost did have two distinct
spiritual experiences, namely, conversion to Christ prior to the day of
Pentecost and then the BHS on the day of Pentecost. It is not necessary to
debate whether the extraordinary gifts ceased with the apostles or continue to
the present. It is not necessary to carry out a careful exegesis of I
Corinthians 12-14. This is not to say that these things should not be done, or
that they are unimportant. I have myself explained why there were two distinct
works of grace in those who lived through Pentecost and demonstrated that the
extraordinary gifts have ceased in my booklet, "Try the Spirits: A Reformed
Look at Pentecostalism" (South Holland, IL: The Evangelism Committee, repr.
1988).
But one thing is necessary, and
every believer can do this necessary thing: knowing the gospel of the Bible,
compare Pentecostalism's gospel with the gospel of Scripture. If the gospel of
Scripture is the message that man must save himself by his free will,
Pentecostalism may possibly be a genuine movement of the Spirit. If the gospel
of Scripture, however, is the message of sovereign grace—Calvinism—Pentecostalism is a spurious religious movement. Since
the gospel is, in fact, the good news of grace, Pentecostalism is exposed as
part of the great apostasy at the end of history that unites all the false
churches and leads to Antichrist (II Thess. 2; Rev. 13).
The Spirit of Christ, who gives
Himself to His own, through the gospel of God's grace, does not demand faith of
us as a condition for salvation. Rather, He gives us faith as a free gift
on the basis of the death of Christ that earned faith for us. That faith, the
apostle says in Ephesians 2:8, is "not of yourselves: it is the gift of
God." Through this faith Christ gives us Himself in His indwelling Spirit.
This saving work of Christ by His Spirit is the biblical baptism with the Holy
Spirit, which all believers have and the sign of which is baptism with water.
Faith in Jesus Christ does all
the things that Pentecostals look for in their BHS.
Is tongues-speaking supposed to
be the evidence of Spirit baptism? Faith and its confession that Jesus is
Lord is the real evidence of salvation and Spirit-baptism (I Cor. 12:3).
Is Pentecostalism's BHS regarded
as wonderful communion with and experience of God? Faith is the real
communion with and experience of God (Eph. 3:16-19).
Is Pentecostalism's BHS desired
as the power for witnessing? Faith is the real power that loosens our
tongue, to confess and witness (Rom. 10:9, 10).
Is Pentecostalism's BHS boasted
of as the ability to do wonderful deeds, for example, laughing for hours,
barking like a dog, or falling on the floor? Laying hold as it does on the
risen Christ, faith is the real power to perform truly wonderful works:
repenting of sin, enjoying peace with God through pardon, lighting sin in one's
own life and in the world, obeying the Lord, bearing one's burdens patiently,
enduring trials, and overcoming the world (Heb. 11; I John 5:4).
Let the Pentecostal repent of
his confession of a false gospel and, by God's grace, believe the true gospel.
In this way, he will enjoy peace with God and possess power to carry out his
Christian calling.
Let those who are tempted by the
charismatic movement test Pentecostalism's message, its gospel, by the standard
of Scripture's teaching, not primarily on gifts and experiences, but on the
gospel.
And let us who do believe the
gospel, and thus believe in Jesus Christ, be assured that by faith in Jesus
Christ, by faith alone in Jesus Christ, "we are complete in
him," for "in him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead
bodily" (Col. 2:9, 10).
PART 2: A Biblical Analysis of the the
Gifts of the Spirit in Pentecostalism (by Rev. Wilbur Bruinsma)
Introduction.
I was deeply
involved in the sermon I was preaching. It seemed as if the congregation was
too. What happened next came without any warning. I was cut off mid sentence by
what sounded like the howl of a dog that was being choked to death. I stopped
and looked toward the back corner of the church, from which the strange noise
was coming. My family, which was sitting in the front row, had come close to
jumping off the bench. No one else in the congregation seemed too disturbed by
the sound. They were used to it. But this was the first time I was introduced to
the gifts of the Spirit in that small, back-hill church of Jamaica. It happened
once or twice more during the service, each time interrupting my preaching.
After the service I asked the
lady who had interrupted our worship with her outbursts why she had done this.
She told me that she could not help herself. The Spirit had taken hold of her
heart and voice and she could not hold the loud shrieks in. Incidents of this
sort led me to my first earnest study of the Holiness and Pentecostal movements
and their influence. This also led me to examine more carefully the particular
incidents of speaking in tongues, healings, and revelations recorded in
Scripture in order to come to a biblical understanding of them.
The gifts of the Spirit (charismata,
which is Greek for "gifts") are vital to the Pentecostal religion.
The bestowing of these gifts of the Spirit on the members of the church is the
one, outstanding tenet of Pentecostal thought and worship. Though Pentecostalism
claims to believe in all of the various truths of the Bible, nevertheless the
overwhelming emphasis in its teaching and in its worship is baptism in or with
the Holy Spirit. This baptism results in many different "charismata,"
gifts. Anne S. White, a writer, teacher, and counselor in the charismatic
movement during the 1960s and 70s, in her book Healing Adventure uses I
Corinthians 12:4-7 to enumerate what she believes to be the nine essential
"gifts of the Spirit." "... St. Paul described the
nine gifts (or manifestations) as: the utterance of wisdom ... the utterance of
knowledge... faith ... gifts...gifts of healing... the working of miracles...
prophecy the ability to distinguish between spirits ... various kinds of tongues
... the interpretation of tongues."
Out of these nine
"charismata," Pentecostals place the most emphasis on three: speaking
in tongues, gifts of healing, and prophecy or on-going revelation. There is a
proliferation of writings on these gifts and their attainment, and they are
available everywhere. Most of these books use personal experience as the
foundation for their claim that these gifts of the Spirit are yet present in the
church of today. Though many Scripture passages are quoted by these authors,
none of the passages are carefully exegeted to discover the validity of the
"charismata" today. Rev. James Slay, a minister and teacher in the
Church of God, has written a book entitled This We Believe, in which he
attempts to prove from Scripture the presence of the gifts of the Spirit in the
modern church. Some of his arguments we will be considering.
1. The
Gifts in Pentecostal Thought.
A. Speaking in
tongues.
We mentioned that there are
three gifts of the Spirit that the Pentecostal movement emphasizes above all
the others: speaking in tongues, faith healing, and on-going revelation. Of
these three, speaking in tongues is the most prominent.
The first recorded incident of
speaking in tongues is found in the events that transpired on the day of
Pentecost. In fact, it is in this event that the presence of the Spirit and
speaking in tongues are linked. This is also why those who today yet maintain
the gift of speaking in tongues are often referred to as Pentecostals.
We read of this event in
Acts 2:1-4:
And when the day of
Pentecost was fully come; they were all with one accord in one place. And
suddenly there came a sound from heaven as of a rushing mighty wind, and it
filled all the house where they were sitting, And there appeared unto them
cloven tongues like as of fire, and ii sat upon each of them. And they
were filled with the Holy Ghost, and began to speak with other tongues, as
the Spirit gave them utterance.
It is to this third sign of
the Spirit's presence in the church, viz., speaking with other tongues as the
Spirit gave them utterance, that the Pentecostal calls our attention. He does
so because, of these three signs, this was the only one that continued after
that day of Pentecost. The miracle that was performed that day is easily
explained: when the Spirit entered into the hearts of the disciples of Christ,
they began to speak in "other tongues," that is to say, in foreign
languages. These men, who were simple Galileans and not scholars in foreign
languages, suddenly by means of the Holy Spirit began to speak in many
different foreign languages so that many who were present from other countries
could understand what they preached on that day. Neither did this sign of the
outpouring of the Spirit cease upon that day.
The Pentecostal directs our
attention to what he believes are four other instances in Acts that speak of
this.
The first is found in Acts
8:14-17, where we find the church of Jerusalem sending Peter and John to
Samaria, where the evangelist Philip had preached.
Now when the apostles which
were at Jerusalem heard that Samaria had received the word of God, they sent
unto them Peter and John: who, when they were come down, prayed for them,
that they might receive the Holy Ghost: (For as of yet he was fallen
upon none of them: only they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus.)
Then laid they their hands on them, and they received the Holy Ghost."
Although it is not explicitly
stated, it is argued, and that reasonably so, that, when Peter and John laid
their hands upon the Samaritans, the Spirit came upon these Samaritans so
that, as a result, they spoke in other tongues. This is why Simon the Sorcerer
wanted to buy the power to bestow this gift on others.
The second instance of the
pouring out of the Spirit on someone which resulted in speaking in tongues is
that of the apostle Paul himself and his conversion in Acts 9:17. "And
Ananias went his way and entered into the house; and putting his hands on him
said, Brother Saul, the Lord, even Jesus, that appeared unto thee in the way
as thou camest, hath sent me, that thou mightest receive the Holy Ghost. And
immediately there fell from his eyes as it had been scales: and he received
sight forthwith, and arose, and was baptized." This verse does not
necessarily establish the claim of the Pentecostals that Paul spoke in tongues
at that time, but it does establish the fact that the Holy Spirit was poured
out on him. Later too, in I Corinthians 14:18, Paul testifies to his speaking
in tongues.
The third instance of speaking
in tongues is recorded for us in Acts 10 and 11, where we read of Peter's
preaching the gospel to the household of Cornelius, a Gentile centurion. In
verses 44-46 of Acts 10 we read:
While Peter yet spake these
words, the Holy Ghost fell on all them which heard the word. And they
of the circumcision which believed were astonished, as many as came with
Peter, because that on the Gentiles also was poured out the gift of the Holy
Ghost. For they heard them speak with tongues, and magnify God.
In this instance there can be
no debate. The miracle of speaking in tongues indeed took place upon the
conversion of Cornelius and his household.
The fourth and final instance
recorded in Acts is found in chapter 19:1-7 where twelve Ephesian men, who had
heard the preaching of John the Baptist and were baptized by him, now heard
the gospel of Christ by the mouth of Paul. Paul explained that John had
already then preached and baptized in the name of Christ. These men were then
baptized by Paul, and the Spirit fell on them, and we read that they spoke in
tongues.
These are the only instances
we read of in Acts. But attention is also drawn by the Pentecostal to Mark
16:15-18.
And he said unto them, Go ye
into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature. He that
believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be
damned. And these signs shall follow them that believe; in my name shall
they cast out devils; they shall speak with new tongues; they shall take up
serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them;
they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover.
Our attention is drawn to the
undeniable Word of our Lord Himself: this miracle of tongues would take place
with the coming of the Spirit. Tongue-speaking, therefore, was an activity
that definitely took place in the early church. This is evident, too, in I
Corinthians 12-14, where this whole subject is addressed by Paul. Obviously,
in the churches established by Paul on his missionary journeys, speaking in
tongues also took place.
Concerning these proofs of
speaking in tongues, Rev. James Slay writes (p.90):
Of such spiritual endowments
were to be for only those who lived in Apostolic times, why would the Holy
Spirit allow such information to be included in His word? Why should we be
told, in such precise terminology, about the regulation of a gift if it were
not in the plan of God for us to be given such? Why tell the children of a
pauper how to spend the inheritance of one who has left them nothing?
Again Slay writes (p. 91):
The Holy Spirit baptism and
the tongues phenomenon have an affinity that is unmistakable. This
experience is not the "uprage of the subliminal" nor is it
"babblings" of an ignorant population segment. We have scriptural
evidence for this remarkable spiritual manifestation, and of late the cloud
of witnesses, testifying to its reality, is becoming of such moment as to
elicit the attention of national press.
The argument that is adduced
by the Pentecostal therefore is simple: unless proof is brought to the
contrary, the Bible teaches that this gift of the Spirit is in the church
today. There is no reason to believe that this gift has disappeared. The
reason it cannot be traced into the church after early times is simply that
the church apostatized and neglected this gift.
B. The gift of
healing.
The same reasoning is applied
to the gift of healing. Jesus Himself, it is reasoned, spent the majority of
His earthly ministry healing people. From His example to us it is evident that
He came to heal not only our souls but our bodies too. It was this gift of
healing He has promised to His church after Pentecost. Again, we read of that
in Mark 16:17-18 (quoted above). Several different instances of healing are
recorded for us in the New Testament. Peter was given power to heal (e.g.,
Acts 3:1-11; 5: 15). The deacon Philip, when he preached in Samaria, healed
people who were sick of the palsy (Acts 8:5-7). We read in Acts 6:8 that to
the deacon Stephen was also given the power to perform miracles and wonders
among the people, though we are not told just exactly what these were. The
apostle Paul on many different occasions healed the sick and cast out demons
(e.g., Acts 14:8-10; 19:11, 12).
Just as with the gift of
speaking in tongues, so also with this gift of healing, the Pentecostal
reasons that if Scripture does not explicitly state that this gift has
disappeared, we certainly may not erroneously reason that it has. This gift
Christ yet gives to men today. Not everyone receives this gift, however only
those who are able to exercise themselves mightily in the faith.
In fact, together with this
gift the charismatic has developed his whole idea of the power of prayer, an
idea that has taken the church world by storm. He claims that if only one
believer who has been given the special power of faith and prayer by the Holy
Spirit prays fervently enough he can heal another. Or if this does not work,
then believers can band together in prayer groups or in prayer chains and
storm God's throne with their prayers that as a result they will be able to
heal the sick! Faith healing and fervent effectual prayer go hand in hand with
the charismatic.
C. The gift
of on-going revelation.
Finally, there is also the
gift of on-going revelation. This particular gift of the Holy Spirit is based
on the prophecy of Joel which Peter quoted in his sermon on Pentecost in Acts
2:17, 18:
And it shall come to pass in
the last days, saith God, I will pour out of my Spirit on all flesh: and
your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see
visions, and your old men shall dream dreams: and on my servants and on my
handmaidens I will pour out in those days of my Spirit; and they shall
prophesy...
Here, too, is a gift of the
Spirit, it is emphasized by the Pentecostal, that existed in the early church.
Although the instances of it are not as frequent as with the other gifts, they
are there. For example, in Acts 21:8, 9 we read of the four daughters of
Philip who prophesied concerning Paul's capture by the Jews. Likewise, it is
pointed out that the church in Corinth (I Cor. 12-14) was deeply involved in
prophesying. From these passages and a few others, we can assume that the gift
of prophecy still continues in the church today. Nowhere does the Bible inform
us that this gift is no longer present with the church.
Neither is this gift to be
equated with the preaching, in the mind of the Pentecostal. This custom of
some churches leaves no room for the spontaneous work of the Spirit. There are
those in the church, however, who by spontaneous utterance of the Spirit speak
words that are extra-scriptural. They can still today predict future events by
means of the Spirit. The Spirit takes hold of the heart and tongue of a person
who is exercising himself in the Spirit and leads him to speak things that he
cannot control, just as did the prophets in the old dispensation.
D. How these
gifts are acquired.
These are the charismata, the
gifts of the Spirit. And it is on the acquiring of such gifts that the worship
service in Pentecostal churches focuses much of its attention. Frederick Dale
Brunner in his book A Theology of the Holy Spirit, writes (pp. 132,
133):
The Pentecostal church
meeting has been described as pew-centered, and the description is apt. In
contrast to generally pulpit-centered Protestantism and altar-centered
Catholicism, Pentecostalism finds its center in the believing community. The
Pentecostals are concerned, as one put it, that "we never reach the
point where our congregations are composed of on-looking spectators rather
than participating worshippers. To avoid this deflection Pentecostals
attempt to offer every believer an opportunity actively and personally to
participate in the church's life. The paramount focus for this participation
is the church meeting. Here the gifts are to find their most proper and
prominent sphere of operation.
There is a certain excitement
about the Pentecostal worship service. Everyone in the church is led to feel a
certain anticipation or readiness to receive one or more of these gifts.
All kinds of means are used to
evoke this high level of emotion: soul-stirring music, a powerful speaker,
testimonies, shouted hallelujahs and amens, even laughter. Then it begins to
happen. The souls are stirred and the Spirit is said to enter the worship of
the church. People break out in tongues, others mount the pulpit and claim to
be interpreting the tongues, while still others bring a word that God has told
them personally. Some sing a song or get up and dance. Some may fall on the
floor and shake uncontrollably. At times there is even special time that is
set aside when certain men are given opportunity to heal the sick.
This then is the Pentecostal
experience. These are the charismata —the gifts of the Spirit.
II. A Biblical Analysis of
the Gifts of the Spirit.
A. In general.
It is important that we
analyze the arguments of Pentecostals on the basis of God's Word. The Word of
God is the objective standard according to which every teaching must be tested
to see if it is true. This means that we do not merely in a superficial way
read a few passages of the Bible that seem to say something they do not. It
means that we examine the Word of God to see what the Spirit truly says to the
church.
This booklet does not intend
to analyze every aspect of the Pentecostal's teachings on the gifts of the
Spirit. This would, no doubt, take a book. What constitutes proper speaking in
tongues by the Pentecostal can be criticized; what is behind the so-called
"supernatural" healings can be exposed; the improper use of prayer
can be refuted; the abuse and misuse of the worship service can easily be
critiqued. But the aim of this booklet is specifically to analyze positively
the biblical position on the gifts of the Spirit.
There are two criticisms of
the charismatic movement's undue stress on the acquiring of the gifts of the
Spirit.
First of all, the emphasis
that this movement places on the gifts of the Spirit robs God's people of the
necessary knowledge of the Scriptures. This is not to say that the Pentecostal
movement does not quote and use many different passages of Scripture. Their
writings are full of them. Neither does this mean that there is no time at all
(though it is little) spent on preaching in the worship of the Pentecostal
church. But the stress which is placed in worship and life on the acquisition
of the gifts of the Spirit discourages any careful study of God's Word. In the
foreword to James Slay's study in doctrine the admission is made:
The Church of God knows what
it believes and preaches, and prints what it believes, but to this point the
Church has not systematized it in a definitive work. That such a work
has not been completed does not represent a lack of interest in the
theology. Rather it probably comes from our historic dependence upon the
sheer Word as our doctrinal guide.
That is quite an admission for
a Pentecostal denomination that had been in existence for over seventy-five
years at the time of the writing of that book! There is no emphasis on
objective knowledge in the Scriptures. The Old Testament Scriptures are
virtually ignored. The New Testament is used, in the main, as a means to
prepare the members of the church to receive the gifts of the Spirit or the
joy of rebaptism. That this is true is manifest in the almost total lack of
biblical proof for their contention that the charismata still exist today! It
is also evident from the total disregard for the true work of the Spirit
taught in Scripture. Truly, what the prophet Amos spoke in Amos 8:11
characterizes this movement: there is a famine of hearing the Word of God!
A second critique that can be
leveled against this movement, generally speaking, is that it is man-centered
rather than God-centered or even Christ-centered. The worship of the
Pentecostal does not center in the preaching of the Word. Again, not that
there is not occasional preaching. But there is little stress placed on
hearing the voice of God through a careful exposition and explanation of His
Word by one who is called and trained to do so. The worship of the Pentecostal
is, rather, caught up in trying to prove to others that one has the gift of
the Spirit in him. Attention is called to the man who has the ability to speak
"off the cuff," so to speak, in front of people. It is drawn to that
singer with the most beautiful voice or that one who is experienced in making
sounds that might seem like he is speaking in an unknown tongue. This breeds
disappointment and despair in the hapless souls who are trying still to find
the Spirit. They begin to feel like second-rate Christians!
There are other criticisms
that can also be made of the stress that the charismatic places on the
acquiring of the gifts of the Spirit, but we wish at this point to analyze
positively the biblical position on these gifts.
B. Specifically.
James Slay identifies
correctly the point of disagreement between the Pentecostal and those who deny
his claims. He writes (p.92):
Of this experience (speaking
in tongues - WB) was to have been for only the Apostolic period, there must
have been some logical reason for its not being extended to the rest of the
church. Did the apostles, who had all known the Lord, need this special
enduement to shore up their faith? Had the contemporaries of Jesus need of
this extraordinary sign to convince them, in spite of the fact that they too
had seen and heard our Lord?
These are rhetorical questions
that Slay intends to answer with a "no." Our answer to these
questions, however, is "yes"! Both the apostles and the church of
Christ at that time did need this extraordinary sign to convince them
of the work of the Holy Spirit in the church! This rests in the fact that
speaking in tongues is a sign! A sign! Here is the one term that very few pay
attention to in this entire discussion.
A sign is, in the very nature
of the case, something that disappears when the reality comes. When we see a
sign along a road advertising that a restaurant is coming at a certain exit,
then that sign points us to the reality that is coming. When we pass that
exit, however, there is no more sign. Why? Because when the reality comes,
then there is no more need for the sign. That is the nature of a sign. It
disappears when replaced by the reality.
Well, speaking in tongues and
faith healing were both signs. Is that not what Jesus said about them in Mark
16, that "signs" shall follow them that believe?
1. Tongues.
This is true, first of all, of
the gift of speaking in tongues. Paul writes in I Corinthians 14:22,
"Wherefore tongues are for a sign, not to them that believe, but to them
that believe not." The question is, of what was the speaking in
tongues a sign? Certainly, it did not simply point to the pouring out of the
Holy Spirit. Then either this third sign of Pentecost would have ceased on
Pentecost with the other two, or the other two would still be prevalent in the
church today too. The meaning of the sign of speaking in tongues is found
specifically in this: it was a sign that the Spirit was poured out on all
nations, peoples, and languages of the earth! This sign of speaking in
foreign languages was meant to prove conclusively to every one that God would
now gather His church from all peoples and kindreds of the earth. Salvation in
Christ through the Spirit was no longer going to be limited to the Jews but
was going to be given to people of every language, race, and nation under
heaven. Of that, speaking in tongues was a sign.
The apostles who had known
Christ, and others who had seen and known our Lord, needed this
extraordinary sign to convince them that salvation was no longer of the Jews!
Why did the disciples of Jesus speak in different tongues on the day of
Pentecost? In order that Jews from all over the world, Jews out of the various
nations of the world, might be brought to faith and repentance by the work of
the Spirit.
Why did the Samaritans in Acts
8 speak in tongues after Peter and John laid their hands on them? To prove, to
the skeptical Jews who had had for centuries ingrained into them that
salvation was only of the Jews, that the Samaritans now also shared, with the
Jewish converts, in the blessings of Christ which the Spirit pours out upon
His church. The Samaritans were hated by the Jews as foreigners to the
covenant. Now God proved that the Samaritan would be a part of that church and
covenant. How? Who could deny the existence of the Spirit in their hearts if
they spoke in tongues as on the day of Pentecost?
The same was true when Peter
went to Cornelius and his household and preached to them and they were saved
by means of that preaching. Who would believe that the Gentiles could be a
part of the church, could be the objects of the Spirit's work in their hearts?
But when the Spirit worked in them, then they too spoke in tongues the sign of
the presence of the Spirit. And when the Jews in Jerusalem contended with
Peter about this, Peter simply said, in Acts 11:17, "Forasmuch then as
God gave them the like gift as he did unto us, who believed on the Lord Jesus
Christ; what was I, that I could withstand God?" To this word the Jews
then responded in verse 18, "When they heard these things, they held
their peace, and glorified God, saying, Then hath God also to the Gentiles
granted repentance unto life."
This sign no doubt accompanied
the preaching of Paul in other places too. It did evidently in Ephesus, where
the twelve Ephesians who were first baptized by John the Baptist's baptism
were now clearly shown that they too were incorporated by that baptism into
the blood of Christ. How was the church of Ephesus, as well as Paul, assured
of this? These men spoke in tongues. Obviously, this same sign was used in the
church in Corinth. This is indeed evident in I Corinthians 12-14. When Paul
writes to this church, however, it was to admonish them for their abuse of
this once good gift. "Tongues are for a sign, not to them that believe,
but to them that believe not!" Tongues are a sign to prove, to those who
did not believe, that the Spirit could be poured out upon the Gentiles, not to
those who indeed believe that it is. Paul's point in I Corinthians 14:22 then
is this: why are you, who believe that the Spirit is among you, still using a
sign that is meant to prove this to those who do not believe this fact?
In chapter 12 of I
Corinthians, Paul places this gift on the bottom of his list, in importance.
In chapter 14 Paul places strict limitations on the use of the gift — the
women may not use it in the worship service, neither can one use it unless
there is another who can interpret what is said. In chapter 13 Paul states
literally (this does not come out in the English translations of the Greek) in
verse 8: "whether there be tongues, they shall cease of themselves."
Why? What is the logical reason for their end? They were but a sign that God
would now gather His church from out of all nations of the world. Once that
fact, once that reality, was established, there was no more reason for the
sign. It slowly vanished. The church now knows that the Spirit works in the
hearts of all believers from every nation and kindred and kingdom of this
world. That is why there are no more tongues today. That is why they were
needed only during the apostolic period.
2. Healings.
What about healings? Jesus
tells us that these were a sign too in Mark 16. Of what were they a sign?
Well, they clearly did not signify the same thing as did the sign of speaking
in tongues. The gift of healing was not a sign used on Pentecost to prove that
the Spirit was poured out. Paul does, however, reveal to us of what they were
a sign. Notice: II Corinthians 12:12, "Truly," Paul writes to the
Corinthians, "the signs of an apostle were wrought among you in
all patience, in signs, and wonders, and mighty deeds." In Acts 4:29, 30
the apostle Peter asks God to confirm the apostles by means of the sign of
healings: "And now, Lord, behold their threatenings: and grant unto thy
servants, that with all boldness they may speak the word, by stretching forth
thine hand to heal; and that signs and wonders may be done by the name
of thy holy child Jesus." Here was a sign that indicated to others
apostolic authority and power. Paul used this to prove to those in Corinth who
vocally questioned his apostleship that he was an apostle.
It was to the twelve
disciples, and a little later to seventy men who followed Him, that Jesus
during His earthly ministry gave authority to cast out spirits and heal people
of their sicknesses. After Pentecost we no longer read of these seventy men.
We read only of the apostles performing the work of healing others. There are
only two other men who were not apostles, Stephen and Philip, who were given
the authority to heal. We read of no one else receiving this power to heal
people. This was given strictly to those men who were appointed by God to the
work of establishing the New Testament church. it was given to the apostles
only, and then given by them to two others who were instrumental in
establishing the church. When these men died, this special authority and power
to heal died with them. It did so because it was a sign! There was no more
need to prove the authority of these men and their special office in the
church since they were now gone. The church was established. Ministers of the
gospel were ordained to carry on the work of the ministry. Apostolic authority
was no longer needed. The sign was no longer needed.
3. On-going
revelation.
What about the gift of
on-going revelation? It is not difficult to prove the fallacy involved in the
claim that men still have this gift today. Some months ago I received in my
e-mail the writings of a man who claimed that God had spoken to him by direct
revelation. He was then burdened by God, so he explained, to share this all
important revelation with others. So, he sent me the first installment with
the explanation that the second one would be coming shortly. I could not help
but chuckle when I read some of what he wrote. Grammatically his writings were
horrific! Strangely enough, he also tried to write in the old English, as if
this lent an air of authority to what he wrote. Evidently, God had spoken to
him in old English. Besides all of this, what he wrote was nonsense, some of
it hardly understandable. I wrote him back and told him I was not interested
in the second installment.
Some years ago a Pentecostal
radio pastor declared to his audience that God had appeared to him. He said
that God had told him that if his followers did not come up with some
exorbitant amount of money (the amount escapes me) God was going to take his
life. The man soon after was able to raise that money and then some! Do you
see where the foolishness of on-going revelation leads us?
Revelation was not a sign of
the work of the Spirit in the early church. Revelation, however, was indeed
given to a man by the Spirit. The Spirit used revelation in order to establish
the objective record of God's Word. Once that canon of God's Word was
established, revelation ceased. There is no longer any need for it today. We
have contained in the Scripture, according to its own testimony (II Tim.
3:15-17; II Pet. 1:19-21), the infallible standard of all truth. We have there
all that is necessary to know for salvation. We do not need any on-going
revelation of men.
We live in the last days. John
tells us that in these days there are going to be false prophets claiming that
what they say is the truth. John tell us in I John 4, the first few verses,
that we must try these spirits! How do we do that? By judging what they say
over against the objective Word of God.
III. An Admonition
Concerning the Gifts
There are two
warnings that we must heed when considering the error of Pentecostalism. First,
it is not enough to know what is not the work of the Spirit. In this
booklet we have only exposed the error with respect to the work of the Spirit.
As believers we are also obliged to know what the proper work of the Spirit is.
Take time out to study that. The Spirit is the Spirit of Christ who reveals to
us the work of Christ for us on the cross. It is that Spirit that works in our
hearts, quietly and powerfully, the blessings of salvation that Christ has
merited for us in His death and resurrection. Study these blessings!
One other warning: let our
worship and our lives in this world be theocentric, God-centered. Much of the
church world has caved in to Pentecostal influence. Perhaps many have not
embraced the extremes of this movement, but many have given in to the reasoning
behind this movement. The face of worship is changing, the idea of prayer is
altered, the need for doctrine is belittled. Feeling has replaced objective
truth! We must be careful that these trends not creep into those churches where
we are members! May we stand on the Word of God. May God's name be glorified.
May He be the beginning and the end of all our lives and of our worship. To God,
who sent His Son to die for sinners, be the glory.
PART 3: Pentecostal View of
the Christian Life (by Rev. Charles J. Terpstra)
Introduction
The movement known as
Pentecostalism continues to be very popular and powerful in this country and,
indeed, throughout the world. It is considered to be part of mainstream
Christianity and has been accepted as such by most churches and Christians.
Pentecostalism has had its critics, but it seems to have weathered the storm of
protest that initially came against it. It still has its critics, at least of
its extreme forms, but by far the majority of the church world approve and even
laud what it represents and has brought to the church.
But we in the Protestant
Reformed Churches (PRC) are not part of that majority. We belong to a minority
that is still highly critical of this movement and its fundamental teachings. We
find Pentecostalism seriously defective, not just in its practices, but also in
its principles; not just in its doings, but also in its doctrines. We posit that
it is at odds with the Scriptures and with the historic Christian faith, with
Protestantism and the Reformed faith. Hence this series of papers.
Pentecostalism is as varied and
diverse as Protestantism and modem Evangelicalism. It has many sub-streams
running off its main river. Yet some basic themes and teachings have been
established. Some of these have already been dealt with in the preceding papers.
In this presentation, we want to examine a few more of these as they relate
specifically to Pentecostalism's view of the Christian life.
Pentecostalism has developed a
distinctive view of the Christian life too. That stands to reason. Doctrine and
life, principles and practice, always go together. What one teaches by way of
Christian doctrine will always produce a certain way of life, a form of
practical Christianity. That is certainly true of the Reformed faith. The
doctrines of sovereign grace we believe and teach bear the fruit of a
distinctive view of the Christian life. So too does Pentecostalism. Because of
her emphasis on the Holy Spirit and special gifts and blessings, Pentecostalism
in general promotes a Christian life that is marked by spiritual experience -
deeper, higher, fuller, richer spiritual life. In a word, Pentecostals crave more
through the Holy Spirit. And the life Pentecostals live is marked by the
seeking of and the striving for that "more" of the holy Spirit.
There are many areas we could go
into in connection with this subject of the Christian life: charismatic worship,
prayer, spiritual warfare, guidance, etc. But we will limit ourselves to three
areas: First, the idea that there is a special post-salvation blessing called
the baptism with the Holy Spirit, which Christians are to seek and strive for.
Second, the element of perfectionism, i.e., that Christians should be and can be
perfectly holy (sinless) in this life. And third, the Pentecostal concept of
what true Christian joy is. We will put these in the form of three questions,
which we will then answer in the light of the holy Scriptures, and in the tight
of the historic Reformed, Christian faith as summed in the church's great
creeds.
I. Should Christians Seek the
Second Baptism?
The first matter to consider is
a vitally important one. It lies at the very heart of Pentecostal teaching. It
controls and colors their whole view of the Christian life. It is the doctrine
of the baptism in the Holy Spirit. According to them this is the blessing
to be sought, the experience to strive for, the greatest and
highest achievement of the Christian man and woman.
What is this great spiritual
blessing? It is a special post-conversion gift and experience in which the Holy
Spirit is poured out on you in all His fullness, with special power to enable
you to have things and do things you cannot have and do otherwise.
Pentecostals teach of course, as
we do, that all believers have the Holy Spirit. You cannot be saved without His
indwelling and inward work (cf. Rom. 8:9). According to them, all
Christians are regenerated and sanctified by the Spirit when they are converted.
But there is something better
and greater than this for the believer, a blessing higher and deeper — the
baptism of the Holy Spirit! A special outpouring it is, like that which came on
the disciples at Pentecost, filling them and empowering them in a special,
unique way.
It is then a tremendous
spiritual experience, available to all who seek it and strive after it. And
according to them, that's what you must do. As one Pentecostal has put it,
"Most Christians have the pilot-light burning; I want to run on all the
burners." The problem is that only some actually attain to and
receive this blessing. And according to them, the initial evidence of this
baptism is speaking in tongues.
It would be good at this point
to quote from some Pentecostal documents on this supposed great
"extra" blessing which some believers obtain. Let us hear first from
the Assemblies of God Churches, a major Pentecostal denomination. This is taken
from their home page (www.ag.org), Point 7 on "The Baptism of the
HG":
All believers are entitled to
and should ardently expect and earnestly seek the promise of the Father, the
baptism in the Holy Spirit and fire, according to the command of our Lord
Jesus Christ. This was the normal experience of all in the early church. With
it comes the enduement of power for life and service, the bestowment of the
gifts and their uses in the work of the ministry.
Second, we quote from the
Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada, as also set forth on their web page:
The baptism in the Holy Spirit
is an experience in which the believer yields control of himself to the Holy
Spirit. Matt. 3:11; Acts 1:5; Eph. 5:18. Through this he comes to know Christ
in a more intimate way, John 16:13-15, and receives power to witness and grow
spiritually, 2 Cor. 3:18; Acts 1:8. Believers should earnestly seek the
baptism in the Holy Spirit according to the command of our Lord Jesus Christ,
Luke 24:49; Acts 1:4,8. The initial evidence of the baptism in the Holy Spirit
is speaking in other tongues as the Spirit gives utterance, Acts 2:1-4, 39;
9:17; 1 Cor. 14:18. This experience is distinct from, and subsequent to, the
experience of the new birth, Acts 8:12-17; 10:44-46.
The Pentecostal arguments
defending this special blessing are interesting and important. They refer first
of all to the biblical passages that speak of this baptism, namely, John the
Baptist's words about the work of Christ, Matthew 3:11 (cf. the parallels in Mk.
1:8; Lu. 3:16; Jn. 1:33): "I indeed baptize you with water unto repentance:
but he that cometh after me is mightier than I, whose shoes I am not worthy to
bear: he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost, and with fire."
Then they go to the book of Acts
and the promise Jesus gave His disciples just before His ascension. For John
truly baptized with water; but ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not many
days hence" (1:5). From there, they point to the accounts of the pouring
out of the Holy Spirit on the 120 disciples on Pentecost (Acts 2:4) and on
various people after Pentecost (8:1 4ff., Peter and John with the Samaritans; 10
& 11, Peter and Cornelius; 19:1 ff, Paul and about twelve Ephesian
believers).
In all these cases,
Pentecostalism argues, people received the baptism of the Holy Spirit after
believing, as a separate, special gift and experience. And in addition it says
that all these cases are normative for today. This is still the way the Holy
Spirit works. This is what every Christian may receive, i.e., if
certain spiritual conditions are met.
In fact, Pentecostals even argue
from the life and experience of Jesus Himself! They say that He too received His
special baptism after He trusted in God, prayed, and obeyed (cf. Matt.
3:16,17). Besides, they also make appeal to the experience of the believers in
Corinth, namely, to the special blessings these Christians received even after
they were already converted. And for further proof they refer to Ephesians 5:18,
"...Be filled with the Spirit."
Therefore, because this is its
teaching, this is what Pentecostalism tells its followers to seek. They are
really taught not to be content with "ordinary" salvation. "Seek
this, pray for this, do all you can to obtain this baptism of the Holy Spirit!
Get to the next level of blessing and experience! If you truly want to have it
all, go after this!"
Now this teaching concerning
what is to be expected in the Christian life has gained wide acceptance in
Protestantism, even in the Reformed camp. Most of the mainline churches endorse
and allow this view: Presbyterian, Methodist, Baptist; even the Roman Catholic
Church. And some Reformed denominations have shown great sympathy for this
position.
The family of the Rev. Martyn
Lloyd-Jones did not do the Reformed faith any favor either when they published
his defense of this doctrine in Joy Unspeakable (Shaw, 1984). That has
proved to be very influential in many Evangelical and Reformed circles.
What must we say about this
doctrine by way of evaluation? Should Christians be seeking this second
blessing, this baptism with the Holy Spirit? Is there something more for us? We
say a resounding no! This is emphatically not something to be sought, because it
is not a blessing God has promised His people! This Pentecostal teaching is a
deception of the most serious sort! It has confused, misled, and shaken the
faith of many. It is to be condemned and rejected, categorically!
Why? First of all, because the
Bible simply does not support this position. What John the Baptist promised in
connection with the work of Christ was promised to each and every believer, not
to a select few. When the elect are saved, they are all baptized with the Holy
Ghost and with fire. That is their one and only baptism with the Holy Spirit. At
that moment they are purified and empowered to lead sanctified lives and to
serve God for whatever He calls them to do and wherever He places them. At the
moment of conversion, believers are filled with the Spirit, fully equipped with
all they need for living the Christian life of holiness. They are in need of no
second blessing; no further, greater, better salvation; no other baptism to seek
for. They are complete in Christ, Colossians 2:10; they are given "all
things that pertain unto life and godliness" (II Pet. 1:3).
To be sure, they must "be
filled with the Spirit" (Eph. 5:18), but that's not to obtain something
they do not have. That is to live in accordance with what they already have
received through the Spirit of Christ. This is similar to every other admonition
the believer receives. The imperatives of Scripture are always based on the
indicatives. That is, we are admonished to do something based on what the gospel
says we have been given in Christ. So we are called to be holy, because we are
holy in Christ (cf. I Pet. 1:2 with vv. 15, 16). So we are
called to walk in the Spirit, because we already live in the Spirit (Gal. 5:25).
But what about those instances
in Acts? We must understand these in connection with the once for all event of
Pentecost. Pentecost was the fulfillment of John's promise concerning Christ,
and of Christ's own promise in Acts 1:5 (as well as in John 14-16). On
Pentecost Christ baptized His church with the Holy Spirit. Through His other
Comforter He filled her with all the blessings of salvation He had purchased for
her. And that Holy Spirit and those blessings came on all; not on some
only.
Let it be remembered, that that
great baptism of Pentecost can never be repeated, any more than Christ's death
and resurrection and ascension can be. The things that happened to those special
groups of people following Pentecost were simply further manifestations or
applications of that once-for-all event. These were indeed special events,
because it needed to be demonstrated outwardly and visibly that the Spirit had
indeed come. And it needed to be shown that others besides the Jews were now to
receive the fullness of the Holy Spirit and the blessings of salvation (hence,
the coming of the Spirit on the Samaritans, Cornelius, the Ephesians, etc.).
Therefore today, whenever a
person is saved, the Spirit of Pentecost comes to dwell in him and fill him with
all the blessings of salvation and service that are in Christ. Such a wonder of
grace is not a repetition of Pentecost, but an application of it! And again we
emphasize that this blessing is for all of God's people. This is what the
Scripture declares with unmistakable clarity in I Corinthians 12:13, "For
by one Spirit are we all baptized into one body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles,
whether we be bond or free; and have been all made to drink into one
Spirit." Hence also Ephesians 4:5 speaks of the church receiving "one
baptism." This is all the experience and blessing they need!
Interestingly, the Christian
Reformed Church at one time took this strong position too. In a 1973 Synodical
Statement she declared, "Synod affirms and testifies that according to the
Scriptures a believer receives the baptism in or with the Holy Spirit at the
time of his regeneration-conversion, as the apostle Paul declares..., I Cor.
12:13, so that in Christ we all 'have access in one Spirit to the Father' (Eph.
2:18) and 'are builded together for a habitation of God in the Spirit' (Eph.
2:22).
... Synod rejects, therefore, the teaching that the baptism with the Holy Spirit
is a second blessing distinct from and usually received after conversion, and
declares that this doctrine is not to be taught or propagated in the Christian
Reformed Church."
In this connection, there are
other points of argument we might raise against the Pentecostal teaching. For
example, if this is just an important teaching, why is it not found throughout
the epistles, which set forth all the fundamental doctrines of the church? Why
are there no plain explanations of this second blessing and no clear admonitions
to seek for it? The obvious reason is that this doctrine was not revealed to the
apostles. It simply is not the truth of God in Jesus Christ. Therefore our
confessions say nothing of this either. Read the ecumenical creeds of the early
church, and you will not find this doctrine. Read the great Reformed and
Presbyterian creeds of the age of the Reformation, and you will find nothing of
this teaching. It simply is not the historic teaching of the church.
Further, from a practical
standpoint, consider what this two-level or two-tiered view of the Christian
life results in! People searching and seeking for something that is not there! A
chasing after the wind! Vanity of vanities! Such teaching also creates pride,
envy, and competition among the saints. And it leads in many cases to false
manifestations of the Spirit, as people pretend to get what they think is
promised them.
What a different picture the
Scriptures give to us of believers and the church! All baptized with the Holy
Spirit of Christ, all equally blessed, all sharing in Christ's great salvation,
living together in love and humility and holiness to the glory of God. That's
the practical fruit of the truth concerning the baptism of the Spirit.
II. Can the Christian Be
Perfectly Holy?
The next Pentecostal teaching we
wish to examine is that of perfectionism. At first glance, this may not seem to
be all that significant. And it must be admitted that perfectionism is certainly
not stressed very much in modern Pentecostalism. It is not a foreground matter
for them, and therefore we might be tempted to say that it should not be a
foreground issue for us. This teaching has become buried under the rug of the
baptism of the Spirit and the seeking with tongues and other special gifts.
But the fact is that
perfectionism remains part of Pentecostal teaching, and it does surface in
Pentecostal writings to this day. The writer also remembers a personal incident
of this teaching in a former church member who became Pentecostal and within a
short time claimed to go through periods of sinlessness.
This issue is important because
it also touches on the heart of the Christian life, what we call sanctification
or the life of holiness.
When we deal with this teaching
in Pentecostalism, we must go back to its historical roots, because the doctrine
of perfectionism was imbedded in Pentecostalism from the very beginning. Any
historical study of Pentecostalism brings this out. Vinson Synan in his book, The
Holiness-Pentecostal Tradition (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1997) traces this
quite clearly and extensively. He sees John Wesley, the eighteenth century
Anglican minister and founder of Methodism, as "the spiritual and
intellectual father of the modern holiness and Pentecostal movements"
(p.1). This is significant because Wesley taught the doctrine of Christian
perfectionism. As Synan sums his view, perfectionism was the second blessing or
experience of the believer. The first was conversion, and the second was
sanctification. The first blessing took care of one's actual sins but still left
him with "inbred sin." The second blessing purified the believer of
this indwelling sin and enabled him to have perfect love for God and the
neighbor (p.6).
Synan points out what Wesley
meant by this: not total sinlessness., but nevertheless "perfection of
motives & desires." "...The sanctified soul, through careful
self-examination, godly discipline, and methodical devotion and avoidance of
worldly pleasures, could live a life of victory over sin." And this
blessing could be achieved "instantly" by a second work of grace, or
by "gradual growth in grace" (p. 7). This was known as "entire
sanctification."
This perfectionist doctrine of
Wesley has been one major influence on Pentecostal teaching and practice. But it
is not the only one with respect to this doctrine. Synan goes on to point out
that this same teaching of perfectionism was brought into Pentecostalism by the
American evangelist Charles Finney in the eighteenth century. According to
Finney, "After a true experience of conversion a person could achieve the
coveted state of Christian perfection or sanctification simply by exercising
free will and cultivating 'right intentions.' Sin and holiness ... could not
exist in the same person" (p. 15). Interestingly, Finney is also the first
one to tie this special blessing of perfectionism to the baptism of the Holy
Spirit.
Finally, Synan traces the
Pentecostal roots of perfectionism to the Keswick movement, another eighteenth
century holiness movement that stressed the believer's ability to attain to full
sanctification of life, to consistent and continued victory over sin.
This then is what has found its
way into the Pentecostal teaching concerning the Christian life. And this stream
of perfectionism is still found. For example, we find this in the Assemblies of
God statement of faith: "Sanctification is realized in the believer by
recognizing his identification with Christ in His death and resurrection, and by
faith reckoning daily upon the fact of that union, and my offering every
faculty continually to the dominion of the Holy Spirit (emphasis
mine, CJT). This last clause at least implies that the believer is able to
attain to this at times in his life here and now.
We find this perfectionist
statement from the United Pentecostal Church International: "After we are
saved from sin, we are commanded, 'Go, and sin no more' (Jn. 8:11). . . We must
present ourselves as holy unto God (Rom. 12:1), cleanse ourselves from all
filthiness of the flesh and spirit (2 Cor. 7:1), and separate ourselves from all
worldliness (James 4:4). .. .No one can live a holy life by his own power,
but only through the Holy Spirit. Ye shall receive power, after the HG is come
upon you (Acts 1:8)." Again, it is at least implied, if not explicitly
expressed here, that the Christian is able to live sinlessly in this life.
Out of this teaching, then,
comes the practical pursuit of the people. For this perfectionism becomes
something they must seek and strive for. Pentecostalism says to them, "Aim
for this special blessing too. Seek perfection, for it too is within your reach!
With special power from the Holy Spirit you can also attain to this level of
spirituality! Surrender to the Spirit completely and be without sin; yield to
His power and you can be perfect!"
Of course, those who held to
this doctrine always claimed that they had biblical support. They argued from
the examples of Noah and Job and Hezekiah, whom the Scriptures describe as
"perfect" men. They reasoned from the commands of Scripture to be
perfect (Matt. 5:48; II Cor. 7:1). And they claimed that the perfect work of
Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit demanded it.
What must be said about this
teaching on sanctification? This doctrine too we must reject as being unbiblical
as well as contrary to the historic position of the church as expressed in her
creeds. The perfectionism of Pentecostalism is nowhere taught in the Word of
God.
It is true that there is a sense
in which the believers are already perfectly holy. Because of the work of Christ
and by virtue of their position in Him, the elect are indeed already made
perfect. They may be said to have the full victory over sin in Jesus Christ. But
they are not personally and practically perfect in holiness. The holiness we are
given and are able to practice through the presence and power of the Holy Spirit
is always placed alongside of the sin that remains in us until we die. This
remaining sin is what the Bible calls the "flesh" and the "old
man of sin," and it is with every believer to the end of his life.
For this reason our life of
sanctification is always described as a great struggle, conflict, and battle (cf.
Gal. 5:16,17; Rom. 7:14ff.; Eph. 4:22-24; I John 1:8-10; the Heid. Cat., LD 44,
Q&A 113-115). And this is the real spiritual experience of God's
people as long as they live. Not perfection, but imperfection. Always fighting,
fleeing, falling back, and then going forward. O, they long to be perfect! They
strive to be! But they never can or will be here. Only when they die, and their
sinful nature dies with them, will they be perfect. Only when they arrive in the
perfection of the life to come.
It is also true that we find
commands to be perfect in Scripture and examples of saints who were said to be
perfect. But this must be properly understood. Of course God is going to set
perfection before His people and call them to it — for the reason that He is
perfectly holy and cannot lower His standard of holiness because of our
imperfection. We are His children, recreated in His image through the Holy
Spirit; we ought to be like Him. Therefore He calls us to this: "Be ye holy
as I am holy."
As far as the saints being
described as perfect is concerned, the word itself does not point to
sinlessness, but to their being complete, whole, sound; people who were true,
sincere, and full of integrity. In addition, the word points to the maturity of
their faith, something we must all seek to develop. Yet, let us not forget that
at the same time the Bible records the sins of these saints, showing us that
they were not perfectly holy. As our catechism puts it, "even the holiest
men, while in this life, have only a small beginning of this obedience"
(Q&A 114).
III. What Is the Nature of
Christian Joy?
The third and final matter to be
dealt with in connection with Pentecostalism's view of the Christian life is
that of the nature of true Christian joy.
Most are aware that much is made
of this fruit of the Spirit by Pentecostals. It is not too much to say that they
elevate this virtue to the primary spot. For Pentecostals, as for Reformed
Christians, joy is a deep gladness in the Lord because of salvation. There is
joy in the assurance of what the Lord is to us and has done for us.
But, typical of Pentecostalism,
the emphasis falls on joy being yet another spiritual experience and emotional
state you reach in the Holy Spirit by working yourself up into it; another
higher, special state you attain, not a normal everyday condition. And therefore
the emphasis falls on the outward manifestations of joy. This is evident from
the way Pentecostals act in their assemblies as well as in every day life.
For example, in worship
Pentecostals display carefree exuberance, clapping, shouting, singing, etc., all
supposed evidence of their joy in the Lord and their life in the Spirit. Some of
them even have such joy that they exhibit "holy laughter" (the Toronto
blessing)! But they also try to demonstrate this joy in their everyday lives.
Pentecostals tend to be always smiley, apparently carefree, as they speak their
"Praise the Lord's" and "Hallelujah's."
Pentecostalism also applies this
concept of joy to other areas involving the Christian life, for example,
suffering. Many (not all) Pentecostals teach that God does not want His people
to suffer, especially physical ailments. According to them, suffering does not
come from the Lord but from the devil. Therefore believers do not have to be
content and joyful in afflictions. Rather must they fight suffering and find joy
in seeking to be delivered through some miracle of healing!
Prosperity is another area where
this teaching is applied. Many Pentecostals argue that if you want to find real
happiness, seek material blessings, because God wants you to have them and they
are available for you. You can claim them in the name of Jesus and through the
power of the Holy Spirit. Such is the health and wealth gospel promoted by many
Pentecostal TV preachers, most notably Paul Crouch and his TBN network.
But with this Pentecostal
teaching we must also take issue. We reject their concept of joy and its
application to the Christian life. It is our contention that this is not true
Christian joy, not the real fruit of the Spirit.
According to Scripture, the
Christian's joy is not in external things. It is not based on our outward
circumstances. Nor is it a mere emotion and experience. Neither is it a special
'high' attained only by some believers. Rather, true Christian joy is first of
all an objective state the believer is in because of the grace of God to him in
Jesus Christ. And then secondly, this joy is a condition of his heart because it
is given to him and worked in him by the Holy Spirit. And therefore, thirdly,
this joy is also the Christian's personal, spiritual, and, yes, emotional
experience. It is so for all Christians. Galatians 5:22 shows this is a fruit
(blessing) given to every believer. Every Christian has joy in the Lord because
of his saved position in Christ.
This true joy then is the
Christian's state of being glad in the Lord because of salvation, because he is
a forgiven sinner, a justified sinner before the face of God, an adopted child
of the heavenly Father! It is the joy of the personal assurance of salvation. It
is gladness in the comfort and peace of the sovereignty of God at work in all
his life and walk, such that all is well with his soul because Father's hand is
always working all things together for his good.
Such joy is present and real no
matter what one's outward circumstances may be, whether he is healthy or sick,
whether rich or poor. Just call to mind Paul's beautiful expression of the
believer's joy in his epistle to the Philippians. As he sits in prison, withheld
from the regular work of his ministry, he is not sad and gloomy. No, he is
rejoicing because of what he has personally in the Lord and because the Lord's
work goes on through others! And he keeps instructing these believers to be
joyful too, for the same reasons!
Because this is the nature of
Christian joy, we must also criticize the Pentecostal practice of joy. True joy
is certainly expressed in outward actions and words. But not by the
out-of-control, wild, chaotic behavior displayed by many Pentecostals. Nor is
its true expression found in artificial smiles and superficial phrases. We must
remember that joy is in harmony with all the other aspects of the fruit of the
Spirit, including temperance (self-control). True Christian joy is expressed in
the believer's normal, sanctified activities as he lives and moves in the
various spheres of his walk. He rejoices in his worship, in his singing to the
Lord, in his prayers to Him, in his fellowship with Him day by day. The
Christian rejoices in his daily work and service to the Lord. He is glad in his
marriage and home life. And he shows this gladness in his godly attitudes,
sanctified emotions, and holy speech.
In the midst of his great joy in
the Lord, the Christian also experiences real sorrows. Joy and sorrow are often
mixed together in this life. That's reality too. And therefore he looks forward
to the day of perfect joy when all sin and suffering and sorrow is past, when
every tear is wiped from his eye.
Conclusion
In this series of articles,
we have tried the Pentecostal movement in its basic roots and tenets. We have
considered its history and origin; its emphasis on the special gifts of the Holy
Spirit; and now its view of the Christian life. And in every case, having been
weighed in the Bible's balances, it has been found wanting. It fails the test of
what constitutes orthodox Christianity.
Therefore our conclusion has to
be that this movement is not a great blessing for the church, but a dangerous
heresy. This we say not lightly or hastily, but carefully and humbly. For we
know that there are many professing Christians deceived by and ensnared in this
movement.
Yet we also state this boldly -
so that we warn Reformed church members, including our own, to be aware of and
flee from these serious errors. And so that we call those caught up in the
movement to examine it biblically and confessionally, and to return to the
historic faith of Protestant Christianity. May God be pleased to shed the light
of His truth on all our hearts and paths.
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