Showing posts with label Word of Faith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Word of Faith. Show all posts

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Word of Faith: Origins & Errors of Their Teaching

"...anoint thine eyes with eyesalve, that 
thou mayest see." Rev. 3:8

"Can the blind lead the blind? 
shall they not both fall into the ditch?" Luke 6:39

Keith Thompson reveals how the teachings of Joel Osteen, Kenneth Hagin, Joyce Meyer, Kenneth Copeland, Creflo Dollar, Benny Hinn, T. D. Jakes, and others are pure blasphemy. This film takes a look at the major doctrines which separate this movement from historic Biblical Christianity. Its origins and errors are documented, then contrasted by the biblical teaching with evidence and fact.

The content of the film is as follows:
  1. Introduction
  2. Are we little gods? 6:39
  3. Preaching a Different Jesus 1:06:10 
  4. Declaring Health, Wealth, and Happiness 1:58:24 
  5. Questionable Origins of the Movement 2:45:00 
(YouTube link)  

If you aren't able to view the full film, at least watch the origins of the movement. The film isn't comprehensive of all of the Word of Faith's error, but he does a nice job gathering the evidence.

Related Posts
The Word Faith Movement: Part 1

Bacchus Dionysus: god of TBN
Is There Power in the Spoken Word?
Kundalini: The False Holy Spirit - part 1, part 2, part 3

Further Research
"A Different Gospel: A Historical and Biblical Analysis of the Modern Faith Movement" by D.R. McConnell

Monday, April 30, 2012

Joel Osteen: Mormonism is Christian


Last week Pastor Joel Osteen of Lakewood Church in Houston, Texas, spoke out about Mitt Romney’s Mormon faith. He said, “When I hear Mitt Romney say that he believes that Jesus is the Son of God — that he’s the Christ, raised from the dead, that he’s his Savior — that’s good enough for me.” He then goes onto say that he wants to be “inclusive” and welcoming to those who claim they accept Christ. That's an interesting word to pick.

This isn't the first time he's made this statement. He expounded on some of his other beliefs when he was on Oprah, and that's when he told the world there are many paths to Jesus.[1]

His choice of words concerning an "inclusive church" is quite revealing on his part. It is the third leg of Rick Warren's purpose driven/communitarian "three-legged-stool". The "inclusive church", according to Warren, is a church that includes a broad spectrum of believers with a common purpose. This fits very neatly in with Warren's PEACE Plan, and kingdom building with/for the Roman Catholic church.[2]

Here's the interview with Wolf Blitzer:

(CNN link)

Shouldn't a minister of the Lord Jesus Christ be able to differentiate the truth from a lie? Since he is one of the Most Influential Christian Leaders in the U.S., he is leading many of the sheeple toward the wide gate. Let's look at some key differences between Christianity and Mormonism.

God
Christians
Mormons
  • "And they (the Gods) said: Let there be light: and there was light (Book of Abraham 4:3)
  • "God himself was once as we are now, and is an exalted man, and sits enthroned in yonder heavens!!! We have imagined that God was God from all eternity. I will refute that idea and take away the veil, so that you may see," (Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, p. 345).
  • "The Father has a body of flesh and bones as tangible as man's," (Doctrine and Covenants 130:22; Compare with Alma 18:26-27; 22:9-10). 
  • "Therefore we know that both the Father and the Son are in form and stature perfect men; each of them possesses a tangible body . . . of flesh and bones," (Articles of Faith, by James Talmage, p. 38).
 Mormon's "sacred" under garments

The Trinity
Christians
  • The Trinity is the doctrine that there is only one God in all the universe and that He exists in three eternal, simultaneous persons: The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. 
Mormons
  • The Trinity is three separate Gods: The Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. "That these three are separate individuals, physically distinct from each other, is demonstrated by the accepted records of divine dealings with man," (Articles of Faith, by James Talmage, p. 35).
 Mormons, as do other cults, uses the beehive in their symbolism. The beehive represents the Mother Goddess, and is part of Satan's Unholy Trinity (or triangle): Mother Goddess (the Queen Bee), Father of Light (Lucifer) and Antichrist, the Son of Perdition, all conspiring to take control of planet earth.[2]

Jesus
Christians
Mormons
  • Jesus is the literal spirit-brother of Lucifer, a creation (Gospel Through the Ages, p. 15).

Holy Spirit
Christians
Mormons 
  • Mormonism distinguishes between the Holy Spirit (God's presence via an essence) and the Holy Ghost (the third god in the Mormon doctrine of the trinity). "He [the Holy Ghost] is a being endowed with the attributes and powers of Deity, and not a mere force, or essence," (Articles of Faith, by James Talmage, p. 144).
 First generation temples like the one located in Nauvoo, are loaded with Hermetic symbolism. The image of the "sunstone" is known to occultists as the symbol for Ba'al.[3]

Salvation 
Christians
  • Salvation is the forgiveness of sin and deliverance of the sinner from damnation. It is a free gift received by God's grace (Eph. 2:8; Rom. 6:23) and cannot be earned (Rom. 11:6).
  • Salvation (forgiveness of sins) is not by works (Eph. 2:8; Rom. 4:5; Gal. 2:21).
Mormons
  •  Salvation has a double meaning in Mormonism: universal resurrection and . . .
    "The first effect [of the atonement] is to secure to all mankind alike, exemption from the penalty of the fall, thus providing a plan of General Salvation. The second effect is to open a way for Individual Salvation whereby mankind may secure remission of personal sins," (Articles of Faith, by James Talmage, p. 78-79).
  • "As these sins are the result of individual acts it is just that forgiveness for them should be conditioned on individual compliance with prescribed requirements -- 'obedience to the laws and ordinances of the Gospel,'" (Articles of Faith, p. 79).
Another view of the symbol for Baal, we see the pentagrams on the side of their Navoo temple. They tell their members it represents Christ's condescension and then resurrection.

The Bible
Christians
  • The inspired inerrant word of God (2 Tim. 3:16). It is authoritative in all subjects it addresses.
Mormons
  • "We believe the Bible to be the word of God as far as it is translated correctly. . ." (8th Article of Faith of the Mormon Church).
Mormonism is not the biblical version of Christianity. It is not Christian, and Mormons serve a different god than do the Christians -- a god that does not exist.  Paul talks about this in Gal. 4:8, "Howbeit then, when ye knew not God, ye did service unto them which by nature are no gods."  Only the God of the Bible exists.  There are no others. Mormonism puts its faith in a non-existent god.

Reference

Related Posts
Bill Schnoebelen and the Mormons Temple of Doom
Mitt Romney and the Royal Bloodline
Joel Osteen: A Man-Pleaser or God-Pleaser
The Power of the Spoken Word

Friday, March 9, 2012

TV Preachers and Their False Promises

Many of the Evangelical TV preachers in the signs and wonders movement have some significant false teachings in common. This excellent documentary reveals how many modern day Evangelical teachings parallel the New Age movement. Christians chase after the "gifts of the Holy Spirit," but they manifest in the same way in occult practices of New Agers. The video covers the false ideas of Godhood, false ideas of prosperity, and false healing and more.


(YouTube link)

A point not mentioned is their belief in Dominion Theology, which in itself opens a bucket of worms.

Related Posts
The Word Faith Movement: Part 1
Bacchus Dionysus: god of TBN?
Is There Power in the Spoken Word?
The Legitimate and Illegitimate "Kingdom Theology"

Friday, December 9, 2011

Wide is the Gate: The Emerging New Christianity

This trailer from Caryl Matriciana's production company provides you a look into the future of Christianity. This segment is from part 1, and was released in the spring of 2011. Part 2 is presently in production and will be released in Summer 2012. It can be pre-ordered at a discounted price.

Volume 1

(YouTube link)

Volume 2
(YouTube link)


(This is not an endorsement of Caryl Matrisciana or Pretribulation Rapture Theology.)

Order Vol. 1

Monday, July 18, 2011

Os Hillman: Change Agent in the Church

Historically, change agents in the Church have meant bad news to the Christian church. The change brought into the Church has typically been unbiblical and makes certain doctrine more palatable to the fence-sitters.

Os Hillman, the author of Change Agents, describes what is contained in his book. He teaches Dominion Theology of the Seven Mountains Mandate, which is a plan to create a theocracy worldwide.


(Vimeo link)

He has also made a guest appearance on American Family Association radio program. This is a radio station that sounds Baptist, but has Dominionist overtones.


(YouTube link)

Os Hillman works with Lance Wallnau to bring about revolution in the Church. He is a major leader in the marketplace transformation movement, a key area of focus for Dominionism to be imposed upon other nations of the Earth via corporate business mechanisms. This has to do with changing governments of other nations. This isn't Dominionism Lite!

Where did all of this Kingdom Now/Dominion Theology come from?


Based on research by Herescope:
"Three decades ago, two 'generals' in the Christian faith... Loren Cunningham, of Youth With A Mission, and Bill Bright, of Campus Crusade For Christ... were given a simultaneous supernatural message for each other. They both saw 7 strategic mountains, or 'mind molders', that shape the culture of every nation. God told each of them to inform the other that if they could capture these strategic places, they would reap the harvest of nations. These 7 mountains of societal influence are...

Business
Government
Family
Religion
Media
Education
Arts/Entertainment"
To understand the rationale that undergirds this marketplace dominionism "mandate," read the statement by Os Hillman in a letter to his supporters in April:

"When Jesus died on the cross the Bible says that 'the Son of Man has come to seek and to save that which was lost' (Luke 19:10). That means we are to restore the spiritual foundations that Jesus laid all the way back to the Garden of Eden. It is through faith in Jesus and bringing His Kingdom into the seven key areas of society that we will do this.

"When God called the people of Israel out of Egypt to form a new nation in the Promised Land, He told them that they would be the head --- not the tail --- if they obeyed the commands of the Lord. He told them to divide the land into seven parts (Joshua 18:5). They would also have to displace seven enemies that currently resided in the Promised Land."
Herescope goes onto explain that, "This heretical teaching misapplies Jesus' salvation of lost souls with "restoring" what was "lost" at the Fall of Man. It negates the work of the Cross. It falsely empowers man to complete the work that Jesus didn't finish, which is utter blasphemy. At the foundation of this Dominionist heresy is the belief that man can return to Paradise conditions in Genesis 1 by building the Kingdom of God on Earth. Nowhere is this taught by Jesus. This is not what the Kingdom of God is all about."

According to Hillman's bio, he was a member of Chuck Smith's church. Chuck was formerly ordained as a pastor by the International Church of the Foursquare Gospel. Aimee Semple McPherson founded the Foursquare Church in 1927, and impacted many notable pastors like Benny Hinn and Word-Faith teachers. Aimee admits to being influenced by the Latter Rain Movement, also known as the Third Wave Movement.

The Third Wave of the Holy Spirit is a Christian theological theory first introduced by C. Peter Wagner to describe what he believed to be three historical periods of the activity of the Holy Spirit in the 20th century and beyond. Although Aimee McPherson was influenced by Catholic clergy in her church meetings and ministry, I'm not absolutely convinced this Third Wave is the same as our discussion from the other day, just similar in name.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

New Age Concepts in Christianity

Pastor Mike Hoggard discusses how the Law of Attraction and Christianity are not harmonious concepts. When people believe they create their lives through words and thoughts, and have the ability to change everything by altering these two aspects, they eliminate God as Creator and practice self-deification.

Some Christians feel strongly that humans who manipulate the universal laws, and attempt to use words to help them change their lives, are actually putting themselves before God and His purposes. This selfish aspect of the Law of Attraction in the Church is what draws people to pursue the wealth, and prosperity movement.


(YouTube link) (First half of video)

Not an endorsement of Mike Hoggard.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Bacchus Dionysus: god of TBN?


A convenient pagan deity invented by the ancients as an excuse for getting drunk. Bacchus Dionysus was the great Olympian god of wine, vegetation, pleasure and festivity. He was depicted as either an older bearded god or a pretty effeminate, long-haired youth. His attributes included the thyrsos (a pine-cone tipped staff), drinking cup, leopard and fruiting vine. He was usually accompanied by a troop of Satyrs and Mainades (female devotees or nymphs).


Some of the more famous myths featuring the god include:
The images of Bacchus as seen in artwork around the world


Trinity Broadcasting Network

The following photographs and research were accumulated by Jordan Maxwell.

On Jordan's website, he makes a connection between the pagan images seen at TBN with that of Bacchus Dionysus. He believes this god is one in the same with 'the devil.'

 

Was this Bacchus overseeing winemaking, or is it a gargoyle. Gargoyles are said to scare off and protect from any evil or harmful spirits, and are therefore apotropaic in origin. Did TBN use this image to represent who they truly worship - Lucifer? Whatever it is, it's pure evil!

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Jesse Duplantis: Speaking Spirits


(YouTube link)

Pastor Mike Hoggard makes a connection from a teaching of Jesse Duplantis and giving life to the beast in Rev. 13. All false teaching has a purpose, and the Word of Faith teachers are making the grand set-up.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Word of Faith: Creating Power with Words


(Surveynot) (Watch 00:15 - 2:02)

Pastor Mike Hoggard serves as pastor of Bethel Church in Festus, Missouri, and is the founder and director of Prophetic Research Ministries. Prior to his seminar presentation, he made some comments about "words." His comments tie-in with the study I did on the power of words. He states quite plainly stated that "if you proclaim with faith-filled words right things you have created power with your mouth," as taught in the Word of Faith, it is witchcraft.

I will continue to go back to the teachings of the Word Faith movement, because these teachings are trickling into the true Church. It's just as hard to change the mind of a Word Faith follower as it is a Catholic.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Kundalini: The False Holy Spirit

 

(YouTube link

This is a new release by Revival School. I believe the Kundalini experience is a false manifestation of the Holy Spirit. This includes the gift of speaking in tongues.Earlier research on Kundalini: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3

 

Monday, October 11, 2010

Is There Power in the Spoken Word?


We live in a world of confusion, heresies, and blatant falsehood. A day doesn't go by when I hear of churches accepting false teachings, or disowning certain Scriptures because they don’t believe they align with the teachings of Jesus. Some Christians will have courage to speak out against them, while others decide it’s best not to make waves.

False teachings creep into the Church easily, because believers trust their sincere Jesus-loving pastors. These teachers will lay God's Word alongside a falsehood, making the principle appear to be true, thus giving continued life to a lie. It then grows and lures in others, and before you know it - they've created a monster.

The Word of Faith doctrine of “positive and negative confession” is one of these false teachings. By embracing a faulty view of faith, hundreds of thousands have been captivated by it. This teaching is inseparably linked to the belief that “faith is a force,” which maintains that words themselves actually contain the power to change reality (positively or negatively, depending on what kind of words are spoken) when coupled with the faith-force. So basically, “What you say is what you get.”

What most people don’t realize, is that the Word-Faith movement is one of the most subtle heretical systems to emerge during our lifetime. Their teachings dominate television ministries and make them appear like Biblical Christianity. Those involved in the movement have no idea of its cultic qualities and theology. The gospel of the Faith movement does produce results, but you will find that the gospel of metaphysics does as well.
Mary Baker Eddy
Some who have been in the movement may say that they have seen healing and miracles occur, but results can never be the criterion by which the truth of an idea is proven. If that were the case, Charismatics would have to claim Mary Baker Eddy as a prophetess, and Christian Science as the true Gospel. But Christian Science is not the true gospel and Word-Faith is deeply rooted in the metaphysical cult schools.[1]

Spiritual Laws and Formulas
New Agers follow a similar principal of the“Law of Attraction.” The Law of Attraction
simply says that you attract into your life whatever you think about.  Your dominant thoughts will find a way to manifest. Sound familiar? This is the same kind of rhetoric heard in the Word-Faith movement. But what is actually taking place here? Is the occult world literally trying to offer mankind the “powers of creation and lordship?” These are powers that we as believers know belong to God alone. God never gave man the right to be his own master and live according to his own will. Yet, this is precisely what those promoting occult spiritual laws want. But you will find that it is what the vast majority of today's Christian wants too.

It is, in fact, the exact same offer the serpent brought to Adam and Eve in the Garden — powers that will make you “like God.” “And the serpent said unto the woman, “You shall not surely die: For God does know that in the day you eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and you shall be as gods, knowing good and evil” (Gen. 3:4-5). 

Essentially, faith teachers are recommending “formulas” that a person should follow in order to get whatever he/she wants from God. And, of course, Scripture verses are taken out of context and misused in order to try to justify these formulas. They demote God to make Him look more human than He is. They deify man to make us look more like God. 
 

Word-Faith theology’s view of spiritual laws and formulas can really only be understood in light of the doctrine of god in the metaphysical cults. The “god” that the metaphysical cults believe in is not a personal God who sovereignly governs the universe, but an impersonal force - “the Force,” “the Infinite Power,” “the Spirit of Infinite Life,” and “the Infinite Intelligence.” This infinite, but impersonal, force rules the universe indirectly through “immutable laws” rather than directly through His presence and wisdom. [2]

How are the Word-Faith and metaphysical cults similar?

Consider the similarities between the Word-Faith and the metaphysical teachings of New Thought, Christian Science,
Unity School of Christianity, Divine Science, the Church of Religious Science, and the Society of Healing Christ.

1. Metaphysical cults say: Faith is a force that both God and man can use 

 
Word-Faith says: “Faith is a force just like electricity or gravity” (Copeland), and it is the substance out of which God creates whatever is (Capps). God uses faith, and so may we in exactly the same way in order to produce the same results through obedience to the same “laws of faith” (Capps) that God applied in creation. “You have the same ability [as God has] dwelling or residing on the inside of you” (Capps). “We have all the capabilities of God. We have His faith” (Copeland).

2. 
Metaphysical cults say: Faith’s force is released by speaking words
 

Word-Faith says: “Words are the most powerful thing in the universe” because they “are containers” that “carry faith or fear and they produce after their kind” (Capps). God operates by these very same laws. “God had faith in His own words … God had faith in His faith, because He spoke words of faith and they came to pass. That faith force was transported by words … the God-kind-of-faith … is released by the words of your mouth” (Hagin). “Creative power was in God’s mouth. It is in your mouth also” (Capps).

Consider the teaching of Joel Osteen and the power of words:


(YouTube link)

3. 
Metaphysical cults say: Man is a “little god” in God’s class
 

Word-Faith says: “Man was designed or created by God to be the god of this world” (Tilton, Hagin, Capps). “Adam was the god of this world … [but he] sold out to Satan, and Satan became the god of this world” (Hagin). “We were created to be gods over the earth, but remember to spell it with a little ‘g’” (Tilton, Hagin, Capps). “Adam was created in God’s class … to rule as a god … by speaking words” (Copeland). “Man was created in the God class … We are a class of gods … God himself spawned us from His innermost being … We are in God; so that makes us part of God (2 Cor 5:17)” (Copeland).

Consider some of the things Kenneth Copeland has said: 



(YouTube link) (Please watch the entire piece to get the jist)

4. Metaphysical cults say: Anyone — occultist or Christian — can use the faith-force

Word-Faith says: Because man is a little god “in God’s class: very capable of operating on the same level of faith as God” (Capps), and “because all men are spirit beings” (Hagin), therefore anyone, whether Christian or pagan, can release this “faith force” by speaking words if he only believes in his words as God believes in His (Hagin). “God is a faith God. God releases His faith in Words, [and we must do the same:] … Everything you say [positive or negative] will come to pass” (Capps). “Spiritual things are created by WORDS. Even natural, physical things are created by WORDS” (Hagin).

5. 
Metaphysical cults say: You get what you confess
 

Word-Faith says: The vital key is confessing, or speaking aloud, and thereby, releasing the force of faith. “You get what you say” (Hagin, Hunter). “Only by mouth confession can faith power be released, allowing tremendous things to happen” (Cho). “Remember, the key to receiving the desires of your heart is to make the words of your mouth agree with what you want” (Copeland). “Whatever comes out of your mouth shall be produced in your life” (Tilton). “They’re [his two children] 30-some years of age today, and I don’t believe I prayed more than half a dozen times for both of them in all these years. Why? Because you can have what you say — and I had already said it!” (Hagin).

6. 
Metaphysical cults say: Never make a negative confession
 

Word-Faith says: The tongue “can kill you, or it can release the life of God within you … whether you believe right or wrong, it is still the law” (Capps). There is power in “the evil fourth dimension” (Cho). If you confess sickness you get it, if you confess health you get it; whatever you say you get” (Hagin). “Faith is as a seed … you plant it by speaking it” (Capps). “The spoken word … releases power — power for good or power for evil” (Bashan). Therefore, it is very important never to speak anything negative but only to make a positive confession — hence the name of the Positive Confession movement. [3]

The following metaphysical cults, which have ties to the Word of Faith, have said the following.

7. New Thought says: “This Infinite Power is creating, working, ruling through the agency of great immutable laws and forces that run all through the universe, that surround us on every side. Every act of our everyday lives is governed by these same great laws and forces . . . In a sense, there is nothing in all the great universe but law.”


8. Unity School of Christianity says: “The mental and spiritual world or realms are governed by laws that are just as real and unfailing as the laws that govern the natural world. Certain conditions of mind that are so connected with certain results that the two are inseparable. If we have one, we must have the other as surely as night follows day.”

In other words, “every thought of the human mind causes an effect in the universe through the operation of spiritual laws.” In such teachings, man does not have to deal with a personal God, but rather with impersonal laws that can be manipulated by anyone, regardless of their standing with God. Faith is merely a formula by which you manipulate the universe, by which you manipulate things.

Kenyon and Spiritual Laws
Kenyon
E.W. Kenyon (1867–1948), the Father of the Word of Faith,  referred to “the great spiritual laws that govern the unseen forces of life,” in many of his writings. He espoused the metaphysical version of deism, a universe governed by spiritual laws, instead of by God. So, in practice, the Word of Faith “god” does not differ from the god of the metaphysical cults, and both must do the bidding of universal laws that are activated by human faith.
Therefore, the numerous healings and miracles occurring in the Word-Faith movement are not necessarily signs from God, and the Faith gospel may not be the Gospel of the New Testament. Charismatics who assume that healings vindicate truth are overlooking the fact that almost every major religion and cult the world has ever known, has produced healings. For every god there is a religion, and in every religion there are healings.

Smith Wigglesworth has also been given credit as an early proponent of the metaphysical. In 1944, the teaching that stated: “What you say will come to pass. Speak the word and the bound shall be free, the sick shall be healed,” was written by Pentecostal evangelist Smith Wigglesworth in a publication titled Pentecostal Evangel. It is viewed by some to be a significant point on the timeline of 20th century ecumenical apostasy.
Smith Wigglesworth
Granted, the Faith movement does claim to heal “in the name of Jesus,” but this proves nothing, because the New Thought movement does also. Both the Faith movement and metaphysical cults incessantly use the name of Jesus. Because of the historical connection between the two, the question that must be raised again is whether the Jesus of the Faith movement is the Jesus of the New Testament. Perhaps the Jesus of the Word-Faith movement is “another Jesus” (2 Cor. 11:4) and the gospel of the Faith movement is a “different gospel” (Gal. 1:6).

More Background on Kenyon and the Metaphysical Cults
E. W. Kenyon established his ministry in the late 1800s. Kenyon adopted the teachings of New Thought. New Thought is a spiritual movement which developed in the United States during the late 19th century and emphasizes metaphysical beliefs. It is a set of beliefs concerning the effects of positive thinking, the law of attraction, healing, life force, creative visualization, and personal power. The beliefs of New Thought are based in a variety of religious and philosophical sources, including Platonism (with its emphasis on the realm of Ideas), Swedenborgianism (biblical interpretation based on the view that the material realm has spiritual causes and divine purposes), Hegelianism (a philosophy identifying the nervous organism as the meeting ground of the body and the mind); spiritual teachings of Eastern religions like Hinduism, and especially the Transcendentalism of the 19th-century American philosopher and poet Ralph Waldo Emerson.[4]
Emma Curtis Hopkins
There have been two people who have claimed to found New Thought - Phineas Quimby (1802-1866) and Emma Curtis Hopkins (1849-1925), a former student of Mary Baker Eddy of Christian Science. Hopkins wrote High Mysticism and Scientific Christian Mental Practice and founded the Emma Hopkins College of Metaphysical Science, where the vast majority of graduates were women. The two most commonly-held and fundamental beliefs in New Thought are: (1) the Divine is in all things and (2) the mind is much more real and powerful than matter.[5]

What most people don't realize is that the New Age movement, with the help of Alice Bailey, articulated and enlarged the Spiritualism of the 19th century Helena Blavatsky, Phineas Quimby, and Mary Baker Eddy, and brought it to a new level of metaphysical sophistication into the 20th century. [6] As you watch the video, you will see how New Thought and Christian Science has been woven together. The video give credit to Phineas Quimby's New Thought as the forerunner to the New Age movement.


(YouTube link)

Does a Christian compromise his faith if he uses the metaphysical faith-force?
Are there power in words? Yes, I believe there is. Is positive confession to be used as a tool to get what a Christian wants? No, I believe that by doing this, a believer has compromised, because it uses mystical practices.
The point of magic in Witchcraft
is to make the "bendable" world bend to your will.[7] Christians are not to bend the world to our will. God has provided the Christian with prayer, and it is the only means by which we have communication with Him and convey our requests. We are given answers according to His will.

"And this is the confidence that we have in him, that, if we ask any thing according to his will, he heareth us: And if we know that he hear us, whatsoever we ask, we know that we have the petitions that we desired of him." 1 John 5:14-15

“I can of mine own self do nothing: as I hear, I judge: and my judgment is just; because I seek not mine own will, but the will of the Father which hath sent me.” John 5:30



It's plain and simple, with no formula required!
 

In Dave Hunt’s book Beyond Seduction, he said, “In the world of the occult, the metaphysical “mind power” of one’s belief is reinforced by speaking it aloud. This act releases what occultists call the “creative power of the spoken word” and brings into existence whatever one says or decrees. This occult idea forms the basis for mantras, incantations, and hexes. Nevertheless, the faith teachers continue to expound upon this unbiblical and occult thesis and represent it to be the teaching of Scripture through their ministry in the pulpit, radio, and television, and in books such as The Tongue - A Creative Force and You Can Have What You Say.

So you see, God provides boundaries, and they are for our benefit. Dabbling in the metaphysical is mysticism, and mysticism is the occult. The word "occult" means hidden, and when we hold that words have hidden powers in themselves, we are saying they have occultic powers. Contrary to what many Charismatic Christians believe about the power of their personal positive and negative confession, the practice has crossed the line. Their confessions become more like magical rituals, than an exercise of faith.


But, make no mistake, the Lord does not function through magic! It completely ignores His Sovereign Will for a person’s life as the individual attempts to operate within particular “laws” to bring about what he desires for his own life. Attempting to operate outside the Will of God and/or rebelling against His will is witchcraft (I Sam. 15:23).

Anton LaVey helps us see how Lucifer has manipulated his way at an attempt to reach the top. He wrote, “Satanic ritual is a blend of Gnostic, Cabbalistic, Hermetic, and Masonic elements, incorporating nomenclature [system of principles] and vibratory words of power from virtually every mythos ....”  In these rituals, the knowledge of the right words, appropriate phrases and the more highly developed forms of speech, gives man a power over and above his own limited field of personal action.”

Power and success are why so many people are willing to sell their soul to the devil!

The True Power of Words

In Biblical Christianity, we learn that the Word of God carries power to restrain (Psa. 119:9, 11), guide (Psa. 119:133), it is living and active (Heb. 4:12), it is a source of joy (Psa. 119: 47, 97, 162), of new life (1 Peter 1:23), and a source for spiritual food (1 Peter 2:2). The Word can deliver from troubles (Psa. 107:20), make free (John 8:32), illuminate (Psa. 119:130), bear witness (John 20:31), produce faith (Rom. 10:17), delight the heart (Jer. 15:16), and it has the ability to destroy the world in judgement (2 Peter 3:5-7).

God’s spoken Word produces a crop (Matt. 13:23). The "good seed," the truths preached, have an affect by the Gospel being preached.

In Romans 10:8-10, the Bible says that our spoken confession of heartfelt belief has the power to bring salvation. “If you confess with your lips that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For man believes with his heart and so is justified, and he confesses with his lips and so is saved.”


On the negative side, we find that words alone have the ability to wound (Prov. 26:22), sustain (Isa. 50:4), determine destiny (Matt. 12:36, 37), and stir up anger (Prov. 15:1). They can invoke a blessing upon another (Gen. 24:60; Gen. Gen. 27:4, 27) and invoke a curse (Gen. 3:17; Gen. 4:11; Gen. 9:25; Gen.9:47; Deut. 28).

Definition of Faith

(YouTube link)

Conclusion
Biblical faith is not magic.Yes, God does send His power as a result of proper faith, but faith is not the power of God in and of itself. Neither does “speaking words of faith” exercise the power of God. God exercises His own power. No human can direct or command the power of God. Humans only receive what the Lord sovereignly supplies. Faith is not the power of the mind, nor an attitude of mind over matter. Faith is trust and rest, specifically in the work Jesus did at Calvary. 

Further Research
"A Different Gospel: A Historical and Biblical Analysis of the Modern Faith Movement" by D.R. McConnell 

Related Post
Word of Faith: Part 1 

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Kundalini: The False Holy Spirit - Part 3

The Difference 
Religious ecstasy (Kundilini) was found in the mystery religions and some of the characteristics of Gnosticism were already present in the general religious attitudes in the first century A.D.  The Church, especially in Corinth, was a hub of pagan perversity and abounded in unscriptural and immoral practices.

Unlike the tongues in the Greek mystery religions, which were caused by the Kundilini experience, the tongues of the Upper Room in Acts 2 were different. The believers in the Upper Room were speaking in foreign languages, not unintelligible gibberish. The other accounts in Acts are not explicit as to form, but seem to follow the form of tongues given at Pentecost, especially since Peter, after hearing Cornelius speak in tongues, states that his experience was the same as the apostles' experience at Pentecost (Acts 11:15-16).

 The Upper Room Today

The specific instances of tongues in the New Testament set the gift apart from the tongues of the Greek religious cults, since the cults are known to speak exclusively gibberish, not foreign languages. Many of the biblical scholars state that Early Church Christianity did not borrow practices from the mystery religions, yet pagans did enter into the congregations of the Early Church. The pagan religions may have easily provided the kind of impetus for spiritual experience found in the Corinthian church. It would not be surprising that some of the Corinthians carried these pagan ideas into the church at Corinth, especially the practice of glossolalia (speaking gibberish).

Paul wrote that the ability to "speak with the tongues of men and of angels" without love is no better than his being "a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal" (1 Cor. 13:1). This may be an allusion to the use of these instruments in the mystery cults. These instruments were used to produce the ecstatic condition that provided the emotional intoxication needed to experience spiritual ecstasy. This is especially true in Dionysianism. Failure to evidence love in the expression of the gifts would be as meaningless as their former pagan rites.

Ecstatic religion by its very nature is self-oriented, not Christ oriented. Pagans were totally concerned about their own personal experience, an attitude also prevalent among Corinthian Christians,[1]and many in today's Charismatic churches.

Some of the Biblical tongues may have come in the form of a Spirit-inspired unintelligible utterance. They would be classed as a heavenly language, as directed by the Holy Spirit. [2] The utterance could be interpreted by the hearers as a known language, as such as occurred at Pentecost. But Paul did instruct that tongues, be it heavenly or foreign languages, would cease.

The Reappearance of Tongues
After the New Testament age, one of the first accounts of tongue-speaking comes from a movement of under the leadership of Montanus, circa 156. Montanism was an early church heresy initiated by a “new revelation.” He and his followers believed and claimed they were possessed by the Holy Spirit. But the Holy Spirit does not possess people, since that is not the way the Spirit works. It is likely some other spirit was involved here.

This group called themselves The New Prophecy, but church writers referred to them as 'The Phyrgian Heresy.' Another practice that the Church opposed was its use of ecstatic, semiconscious states in its religious practices. This is similar to the ‘falling out’ experienced by those ‘slain in the Spirit’ today.[2] Montanism also denied the deity of Christ.

From the third century onwards, with the decline of Montanist influence and the persistent reluctance of the Church Fathers, tongues were no longer regarded as a common practice. Most of the references to tongues concerned why the phenomenon, which occurred in biblical times, was no longer happening. [3] Over the ages, there was some discussion of the baptism of the Holy Spirit with evidence of speaking in tongues, but it was a special apostolic dispensation for evangelizing, and no more. I suspect that the tongues that were in Montanism was the time frame when the Kundilini experience re-entered the Church. I could not find references to back my claim, but the the Greek mystery religions and Christian Gnostics had been already practicing it for years, just as the Gnostics still practice Kundalini today.

Conclusion
As the days grow closer to the return of the Lord, I believe that the emphasis on gifts and spiritual experiences will increase. The future revivals planned by the New Apostolic Reformation prophets and apostles, and those who believe in Dominion Theology, will continue to open doors to counterfeit spirits, and masquerade as the Holy Spirit. What Paul feared for the Corinthians will come to pass again today:

"But I fear, lest by any means, as the serpent beguiled Eve through his subtlety, so your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ. For if he that cometh preacheth another Jesus, whom we have not preached, or if ye receive another spirit, which ye have not received, or another gospel, which ye have not accepted, ye might well bear with him."   

2 Cor. 11:3-4

Other parts of this article  

Part 1   Part 2

Related Posts 

Ecumenism and the Three Threads of the Charismatic Renewal

Inside the Modern Baptism of the Spirit

 

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Kundalini: The False Holy Spirit - Part 2

"Kabbalism is a system of Jewish mysticism and magic, and is the foundational element in modern witchcraft. Virtually all of the great witches and sorcerers of this century were Kabbalists." 
William Schnoebelen, The Dark Side of Freemasonry

The Kabbalah is not new. It’s been around for centuries. The Kabbalah is actually ancient magic. It is an exotic blend of devilish, sometimes fanciful, New Age mystical practices topped by a philosophical bent of Jewish supremacism. Orthodox Judaism, or phariseeism, is rife with kabbalism, and Jewish rabbis are the Kabbalah’s greatest promoters.[1]

Through the New Age movement and secret societies, the esoteric nature of the Kabbalah has been protected. In Texe Marrs book New Age Cults and Religions, he draws a line from the New Age movement to the Greek Mystery religions and Egyptian cults. He writes:
"The New Age movement is best understood as a 20th century revival of an ancient religious tradition - Gnosticism. Their beliefs and practices trace all the way back to Rosicrucians, the Renaissance magic societies, medieval witchcraft, the Knights Templar, to Gnosticism, and back to the Greek Mystery religions and the Egyptian cults."
It is through the Kabbalah that the practice of Kundalini can be found. The Kabbala incorporates within it the image of Sephiroth Tree of Life, which is a Gnostic symbol of both the Serpent on the Tree, as well as a map of the Kundalini serpent up the human spine through the chakras.


From a Gnostic source, the author writes:"The Kundalini is the force of the Holy Spirit that gives you enlightenment, powers. So we are not the only ones that know about the Kundalini. Many religions in secrecy also know this." [2]

This information flourished during the first century. Since Gnosticism is of the nature it is, it swiftly spread in the early heretical Church.

The Knights Templar and Baphomet
The Knights Templar had a name for the Kundalini power, which was called Baphomet. It was through the symbolic Templar kiss that the breath of life was transmitted. The "Mother of Breath" was Baphomet.

Baphomet was a pagan god, and revived in the 19th century as a figure of Satanism. The image of a black goat-god was adopted by Templar Eliphas Levi. It is the image of Baphomet that is worshiped by Freemasons and modern Satanism.

Through the occultic ceremonies of the Knights Templar and their experience with Kundalini, they had the timeless revelation of "Be still and know that I AM GOD." [3]


A Greater Gift
Perhaps you are still not totally convinced that Kundalini is being practiced in the Charismatic and Pentecostal churches. Some people say that the baptism with evidence of speaking in tongues (a manifestation of Kundalini) were stopped by the Catholic church, and Scripture doesn't support that tongues would cease. But God revealed to Paul that sign gifts would cease, when he said, "whether there are prophecies, they will fail; whether there are tongues, they will cease; whether there is knowledge, it will vanish away" (1 Cor. 13:8).

There was a specific purpose for the sign gifts of that era. Today we have been given much more than they ever had. Plus we were given the instruction that we are to be "being knit together in love, and attaining to all riches of the full assurance of understanding, to the knowledge of the mystery of God, both of the Father and of Christ" (Col. 2:1-2).

"For this reason we also, since the day we heard it, do not cease to pray for you, and to ask that you may be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding; that you may walk worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing Him, being fruitful in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God; strengthened with all might, according to His glorious power, for all patience and longsuffering with joy; giving thanks to the Father who has qualified us to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in the light" (Col. 1:9-12).
So the bottom line is: That which is perfect had come, so the sign gifts had passed away.

The decision is yours.

"My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness" (2 Cor. 12:9).

Other parts to this article:

Separate Article on Same Topic

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Kundalini: The False Holy Spirit - Part 1

The end times are prophesied to be a time of great deception; however Christians seem to feel that they are somehow immune to it. Jesus said, "An evil and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign; and there shall no sign be given to it..."

What we have emerging within the Church today is no different than before. Those who do not study Church history are doomed to repeat its mistakes. I am living proof of it.

I experience the baptism of the Holy Ghost by fire early in my Christian walk. I know it was a genuine experience, and not one born of praise and not emotionalism. As I've been studying the Charismatic movement and the falsehoods it has adopted, I still wondered about the Holy Ghost experience I had. The mainline church vehemently denies it and calls it false, but never has an explanation for it.

Kundalini, an Eastern concept of enlightenment, is the counterfeit for the true Holy Spirit. Today we have a new gnostic awakening that is taking place all over the Christian. It is being called various names, but it is no different than the early practices once experienced by the heretical early Gnostic Church.

The Kundalini awakening is referred to as a Serpent-Fire that lies asleep and awakens in an up-rushing and down-pouring streams of fire." The experience is given many names in other cultures, and is known by the Hindus, the Dakota Indians, the Hurons, the Algonquian, the African Sotho, the Bantu, and the list goes on.


From a New Age website, the Kundalini experience is described as: "the capacity to ‘wash’ away our deepest tensions, eliminate our misunderstandings (lessons and beliefs) about our true nature, and to expand the flow of creative energy and consciousness within us. It is the seat of ABSOLUTE KNOWLEDGE."

The site goes onto describe the chakras, which they believe are centers of force and consciousness located within the inner bodies of man. There are seven chakras, with the 5th, 6th, and 7th tied into divine love, divine sight, and illumination/godliness.  All of which are experienced by those who are filled with the Holy Ghost by fire.


(YouTube link)

That seat of absolute knowledge is the driving force behind the Charismatic movement. This is why the Charismatics feel they are elite compared to the rest of the Church.

The YouTube below is the second half of the video I posted the other day. I have provided a link to part 1, for those who view this at a later date.


(YouTube link) Part 1

These videos do not speak directly to the Baptism experience, rather that of the other manifestations of the Spirit. I see no difference between the two, just the degree of manifestation.

Other parts of this article
Part 2
Part 3

Related Posts
Ecumenism and the Three Threads of the Charismatic Renewal
Inside the Modern Baptism of the Spirit

Monday, August 16, 2010

Supernatural "Wealth Transfer"

These concepts support the belief that in the end times, all the world’s wealth will be supernaturally “transferred” to the Christians. Not only that, but this MUST occur before the return of Christ. This is popularly taught by Kenneth Copeland, Fred Thompson (“Money Cometh!” and “No More Empty Hands”), T.D. Jakes, Creflo Dollar, and many others. The speaker explains:


(YouTube link)

Sunday, August 15, 2010

The Truth About "The Secret"

This DVD surfaced about two years ago, but it's teachings are entrenched in the business world, the New Age, and the Church. It's not a new secret at all, as you will find. 


(YouTube link - Part 1)


(YouTube link - Part 2)

What's wrong with this thinking? According to the proponents of "The Secret" and the law of attraction, we are all “incarnations of God.” We are all our own god, able to create our own reality, able to control our own destiny. This lie is not a secret, and it is nothing new. Satan’s primary temptation has always been to obtain knowledge and thereby to become like God, “For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God…” (Genesis 3:5). Satan’s own fall from glory was this same error, “You said in your heart, ‘I will ascend to heaven; I will raise my throne above the stars of God; I will sit enthroned on the mount of assembly, on the utmost heights of the sacred mountain. I will ascend above the tops of the clouds; I will make myself like the Most High’” (Isaiah 14:13-14). The message of “The Secret” is the same message that Satan used to tempt Adam and Eve into sin: “You do not need God…you can be God!” And just as Satan will fail in his quest to be God (Isaiah 14:15; Revelation 20:10), so too will all those who seek to be their own god will fail: “'You are "gods" … but you will die like mere men…” (Psalm 82:6-7).

Do the metaphysical principles taught in "The Secret" sound familiar? It is one of the teachings of the Word of Faith movement. It is the basis of their "name it and claim it" and their use of positive profession. In reality, it treats God as nothing more than a universal energy force that we manipulate by our thoughts and feelings. The law of attraction assumes a pantheistic (God is everything) view of God, and denies a sovereign God who is omnipotent, omniscient, and perfectly in control of everything. Word of Faith followers may not realize they are treating the Lord in this manner, but they are.