APOSTASY ALERT - By Jackie Alnor - February 7, 2010
PREFACE
In analyzing a book that promotes itself as a manual on "how
to become a part of the supernatural generation," it must be approached with
prayer and humility. The temptation to condemn everything in the book risks
trampling upon holy things. John Crowder, in his book "Miracle Workers,
Reformers and the New Mystics" mixes the holy with the profane. Discerning
between the two, especially in gray areas, is a giant task for any believer to
take on.
So this analysis will highlight the spiritual quicksand in
the book so that fellow pilgrims won't fall into the mire, just like the two
travelers in the book, "Pilgrim's Progress" put up a road sign warning others
not to go the way leading to the
slough of despond.
We must watch out for the schemes of the enemy of our souls
and hold fast to the Word of God. God is supernatural and His gifts are not to
be rejected. But the counterfeit powers of the spirit of antichrist are also
metaphysical but are a snare to our souls leading many into spiritual
quicksand.
In the parables of the kingdom of heaven in the 13th chapter
of the book of Matthew, Jesus told us ahead of time that the enemy would sow
tares among the wheat while men slept. He also told His servants not to gather
up the tares lest they uproot the wheat with them, but to wait until the
harvest when all things would be revealed.
With that in mind, we can't say whether the author of "The
New Mystics" is a tare or a wheat. Nor can we say with authority what the final
resting place is for the mystics he uplifts throughout the book. All we can do
is test all things and hold fast to that which is good and reject what is
false. Jesus said, "by their fruit you will know them."
As the return of the Bridegroom nears, the work of the
spirit of antichrist is in high gear. The antichrist comes with lying signs and
wonders to fool even the elect. Yet at the same time our sovereign God is a God
of the miraculous. The Holy Spirit is still working in our day and is our Guide
into all truth. The unholy spirit, on the other hand, counterfeits the working
of the true Spirit of God, but is worldly and carnal and those attributes can
be recognized as unclean. We await the day when that unclean spirit is
defeated:
"'It shall be in that day,' says the LORD of
hosts, 'that I will cut off the names of the idols from the land, and they
shall no longer be remembered. I will also cause the prophets and the unclean
spirit to depart from the land.'"
-Zechariah 13:2
BACKGROUND
To understand where the author of The New Mystics is coming
from, it is important to know the background of the movement from which he
sprang. Crowder makes reference to this in his book.
During what is possibly the last major outpouring of the
Holy Spirit in true revival, known as the Jesus Movement of the 1960s and 70s,
two church leaders were in the forefront, Chuck Smith and John Wimber.
The devil immediately reacted to the move of God that began
with a confused generation of hippies and spilled over into the long
established denominations. He sowed tares that resembled the wheat on the
outside, but who brought in the unholy spirit, resulting in metaphysical
confusion. While true miracles were being wrought by the Holy Spirit, the
unholy spirit counterfeited the power by convincing those who were not grounded
in the Word that they could learn to do these miraculous things too through
following methods and formulas. Gifts could be taught when not caught. This
attack against righteousness is the devil's pattern to destroy the works of God
using his own servants of light. (2 Cor. 11:13-15)
In the early days of the Jesus Movement, Pastor Chuck
Smith's Calvary Chapel was the place to be. John Wimber was one of his
assistant pastors who was zealous about what he called "doing the stuff." His
focus was on the experience and he divided from Pastor Chuck who insisted on
doing things orderly.
Wimber joined up with the Vineyard movement where no
limitations were put upon any metaphysical manifestations, no matter how
unruly. This split the Calvary Chapels between those who wanted to get grounded
in the Word of God and those who wanted to operate unhindered in the
supernatural. The former stayed with Calvary and the latter followed Wimber to
the Vineyard.
After the Outpouring of the Holy Spirit ran its course, the
former hippies, now grown-up with families of their own, faced a spiritual
quandary. Should they focus on growing up in the faith by getting saturated in
the Word of God or follow the wonder-workers and get saturated in the spirit of
metaphysical experience? One way could lead to dead orthodoxy while the other
path could lead to a never-ending quest for power.
For true servants of the Lord there is the narrow balanced
road to keep in the faith once and for all delivered to the saints. Put on the
full armor of God in order to stand in this evil day. The armor includes the
sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God, along with the shield of faith
for quenching the fiery darts of the wicked one. A review of the 6th chapter of
Ephesians reveals who the true enemy is - not one another, but the rulers of
darkness of this world that disguise themselves as angels of light who come
against us. "We wrestle not against flesh and blood."
The end-times church that Jesus promised to keep from the
time of trial that is soon coming upon this world did three things right: they
kept His word, did not deny His name and had but a little power (see Revelation
3:8). The new mystics, as we shall see, do not follow that pattern.
Now we'll look at the book, The New Mystics, the fruit of
the late John Wimber and a backlash against the bible-centered position of
Chuck Smith. It is a blueprint for the formation of the Great Harlot, Mystery
Babylon, and a guide book for "doing the stuff" without the dunamis of
the Holy Spirit.
FORERUNNERS
Crowder attributes his theological understanding that is
evident throughout "The New Mystics" to his favorite teacher, Rick Joyner. "Special
recognition is due to Rick Joyner," he writes in his acknowledgments, "whose
thoughts one may find echoed in many respects throughout these pages; it comes
from long years of saturating in his insightful writings."
Joyner is the author of the book, "The Harvest," subtitled,
"Strategic Vision for Mobilizing the Army of God." Joyner's views of an
end-times overcoming army of conquering saints stem from the heretical Latter
Rain movement of the late 1940s. [For an understanding and history of the
movement, read "The Latter Rain Legacy" by Charles S. Graves.]
The New Mystics gives a blueprint for the building of this
end times army. Crowder targets young people who he sees as untainted by his
perceived enemy: the old guard of the church that he characterizes as "the
spirit of religion." To attract the youth he glamorizes the things he thinks
they will approve of, such as hip styles, tattoos, piercings, and ghetto talk
and wields them as bait.
Crowder, as you may recall, made his splash upon the church
scene during the height of the Lakeland Revival in 2008 that was headed up by
his friend, Todd Bentley, the tattooed convicted child
molester-turned-evangelist who pronounced healing upon people in the name of
"God the father, son, and holy bam!" The "revival" ended when Bentley left his
wife and children for a younger woman. The couple, now married and living in
adultery, both serve under the authority of Joyner who has restored them to
ministry.
Although The New Mystics was written in 2006, Crowder was
fairly unknown until he took to YouTube during Lakeland
with his blasphemous video, "Tokin' the ghost," in which he simulates smoking a
joint as if filling up on the Holy Spirit. In fact, throughout the book Crowder
consistently uses unseemly things to compare to the power of whatever spirit he
imbibes. He compares his spiritual highs to getting "loaded," "buzzed,"
"plastered," "sloshed," and to heroine.
Consistent with the older Latter Rain ideas, Crowder and
company look to the formation of this army that will triumph over the world
before the coming of Christ. This new church rules the Kingdom without the
physical presence of the King, puts down all God's enemies, and performs great
feats that impress the world. He explains:
"There is an upcoming generation which will carry
these mantles of old, as well as new ones. They will walk in the spirit of
Elijah, preparing the way for the return of the Lord...even as John the Baptist
came in the spirit of Elijah before Jesus' first coming, so will that same
spirit rest on an entire church before His second coming. Even the least of us
will be greater than John. This will be an entire age of forerunners" (pg. 21).
What are these "mantles of old" that he says the new church
will carry? The so-called lost powers of the mystics and Catholic monks of the
Dark Ages that he sees are the rightful property of the church that is ours for
the taking.
Although John the Baptist showed no signs and did no
miracles, this new "Elijah company" will astound all with their power and
authority over the forces of nature. Though Elijah is recognized by Bible
scholars as one of the two witnesses in the book of Revelation, along with a
second witness whose bodies will lie in Jerusalem after being killed by the
antichrist, a company of Elijahs is nowhere referred to in Bible prophecy. This
idea came via extra-biblical revelation.
Crowder affirms the acceptance of postmodernism in the
church that has taken on the label, the Emergent Church. Attractive to younger
Christians and popularized by such universalist teachers as Brian McLaren, the
emergents have rejected biblical inerrancy for a more liberal approach to the
Bible, throwing out theology as something that puts God in a box. In exchange
for known quantities, a return to mystery and unknowing has taken on more of an
appeal for emergents who have resurrected ancient monastic practices in an
effort to make some mystical connection with God through tangible sacramentals.
These include the use of icons, candles, incense, relics, among other things,
along with the rediscovery of contemplative prayer.
The New Mystics adapt the Emergent Church's practices into
the so-called apostolic/prophetic movement to create a new hybrid or long
awaited new breed of saint to fulfill the latter rain prophecies of Joel's
Army, that in reality is identified as a demonic horde of locusts in Revelation
9. But Crowder goes way beyond Emergent leaders and adopts the darkest mystical
practices that can be found in church history. The only thing missing, but
still alluded to, is the return to the Inquisitions and open persecution of all
opposition: the true saints.
This new church will be filled with those who aren't
interested in intensive Bible studies. "They are not seeking a religion of
distant theological theory," Crowder writes. "They want hands-on interaction
with a tangible, emotive God....The age of pat answers is over" (pp. 365-366).
OLD MANTLES
Crowder slams the age of rationalism that ended the Dark Ages
saying that the use of reason in testing truth was a bad turn for the church.
"The tales of medieval miracles sound quite farfetched to
the modern reader," wrote Crowder, "and even the most Spirit-filled Christians
are more apt to dismiss them as mythology than as legitimate history...We now
use the word 'legend' or 'legendary' to describe something that is untrue or of
fairy tale value" (p. 167).
On the next page he describes such a miracle that he feels
is falsely called a "fairy tale." He writes, "No doubt most of us would scoff
to read that Nicholas of Tolentino...brought the partridges on his dinner plate
back to life. But the medieval mind gave no thought to such a possibility when
discussing the God of the universe. There is something remarkable about that"
(p. 168).
So he concludes that "It is important to acknowledge the
miracles of the Middle Ages, simply because many of them were completely off
the charts...so it is good to know at least that God has worked in uncanny ways
throughout history. In that sense, there is precedent. As in days of old, the
coming revival will be marked by unusual miracles. Just as 'God' worked unusual
miracles by the hands of Paul, so will bizarre feats come through the hands of
this people" (ibid).
The mantles to be reclaimed by the new mystics belonged to
some very questionable characters from the past including:
St. Francis of Assisi, who preached to animals, subdued nature, and
displayed the stigmata (painful, bleeding nail prints of the crucifixion);
Herman of Alaska, who stopped waves and befriended bears;
Seraphim of Sarov, who was loved by wild animals, visited by dead
people, angels and Jesus himself;
Meister Eckhard, considered the father of German mysticism;
St. Bernard of Clairvaux, who summoned Catholics to kill in the Crusades
and had a gift of miracles;
St. Joseph of Cupertino, the flying friar who levitated so much a rope
had to be tied to him so he would not leave the atmosphere;
St. Teresa of Avilla, mystic and stigmatist;
St. Christina, who sat up in her coffin at her own funeral.
Crowder's new breed will surpass the mystics of the Dark
Ages in their powers and impress the world. Bi-location, levitation,
interaction with dead saints, angels and demons and control over nature will
mark the new Christians who "spit out fire" and "put new agers to shame." Whole
congregations will be able to fly as he says Adam could back in the Garden of
Eden.
NEW MANTLES
Today the new mantles, that Crowder says are a reclamation
of the old ones, are being manifested by his heroes of the faith. These mantles
were handed down by various 20th century movers and shakers who paved the way
for the new breed. He refers to them as God's Generals, a term attributed to
Roberts Liardon's book and video production of the same title. (Liardon has
just recently been restored to ministry in England by Elim's Colin Dye after being forced out of ministry due to a homosexual affair.)
These forerunners of the Elijah forerunners run the gamut
from Charles Parham who "popularized tongue-talking" and fell from grace after
his arrest on sodomy charges; to William Branham, the leader of the Voice of
Healing Revival in the late 1940s who later in his ministry denied the doctrine
of the Trinity saying it was a pagan concept. Other generals include an
assortment of ministers in an assortment of scandals, from heavy drinking,
adultery, homosexuality, spousal desertion, financial frauds. psychopaths to
one who faked her own kidnapping to cover up an alleged extramarital affair.
From these dirty streams sprang more recent heroes of
Crowder who not only walked in the same "anointing" of the earlier forerunners,
but were plagued with the same immoral stumbling blocks. Crowder jokingly says
that many great ones stumble on the "3 G's" -- gold, girls, glory."
Crowder follows the progression from the early 20th century
to today via revivals, movements and new revelation that has taken on a life of
its own. But the streams are so muddy and lead to what he calls a big river
that an honest onlooker could only identify as the River Styx, the name of the
river descending into the underworld in Dante's Divine Comedy.
Crowder's current hall of fame come out of disastrous moves
of the unholy spirit such as the Kansas City (false) Prophets, the Toronto
Blessing (curse), and the Lakeland Revival. He singles out the late John Wimber
and Lonnie Frisbee (a hippie evangelist who broke from both Calvary Chapel and
the Vineyard when he got too radical for either movement; an open homosexual,
he died of A.I.D.S.) as the stream that led to others.
In fact, some of his most prominent mentors such as Paul
Cain, Bob Jones, and Todd Bentley have been scandalized over sexual immorality.
But that doesn't deter Crowder from following their lead in spiritual matters.
UNITY OF THE NEW ORDER CHURCH
The author identifies certain key factors that are necessary
for the new mystics to reach their goal of world domination and godlike powers
in their kingless kingdom.
The key ingredient is altered states of consciousness by the
practice of contemplative prayer or as he calls it, "soaking" prayer. He
learned this tool from the writings of the late Trappist monk Thomas Merton who died in
1968 in Bangkok, Thailand as he was preparing to join up with some Buddhist
monks. Merton (not to be confused with Merlin) was a follower of Zen that he
felt was adaptable to Christianity. A recent obsession with Merton in
Protestant circles is seen by the Roman Catholic hierarchy as a feather in
their cap for claiming supremacy over non-Catholic Christians.
"The mystical dimensions of our faith are being
reawakened," writes Crowder. "A revival of contemplative, soaking prayer has
been key in this hour, because the Lord is first of all returning us to the
place of His presence. The place of intimate abiding, out of which all
revelation flows" (p. 368).
And this is the bottom line of the new breed, Latter Rain
church. It has access to God by way of a spiritual dimension one must access
via an altered state of stillness. The Bible, as one of his heroes Tommy Tenney
says in his book, The God Chasers, is the old words of yesterday and hanging out
in the 3rd heaven is the new breed's link to God. This is the paradigm shift
that must take place in a professing Christian's life to enter into the new
breed status. He compares this silent place with God as the bed chamber and
uses other sexual terms to describe the new breed's relationship with the
divine. He describes this "ultimate union" as an "erotic practicing the
presence," "rivers of pleasure," and other colorful metaphors. The new breed is
not bound to the earth realm. Crowder explains:
"Some of today's leading prophets have regularly
encountered the spirit of the Dalai Lama himself as they were being drawn by
God through the second heavens, into a third heaven encounter. He was there,
trying to block them from ascending. The second heavens, of course, are made up
of that spiritual realm where the angelic and demonic wage war. Much of our
low-level prophetic knowledge is from God, but it comes filtered from the
second heaven" (p. 174).
He calls it a dark place where all sorts of evil things dwell,
but that the new breed with embrace the darkness of this "wasteland." There is
no biblical precedence for this, but that doesn't bother someone like Crowder
who does not give the Bible as much authority as he does the current prophetic
revelation he gets from the likes of false prophets like Bob Jones and Rick
Joyner. Other like-minded prophets Crowder praises are John Sandford, Heidi
Baker, Mike Bickle, C. Peter Wagner, Che Ahn, and Bill Johnson.
Another key is the willingness to accept things that are
contradictory to the faith. "Sometimes we find ourselves rebuking a voice, just
to find out it was really God," Crowder says. "But an active and living faith
will always be marked by paradigm shifts, in which our existing framework of
faith is constantly challenged...Our faith is best stretched and grown, when we
are challenged to step into areas that are seemingly contradictory to that
faith" (p. 239).
The third key to the new breed is unity between Protestants
and Catholics. We shouldn't concern ourselves with the doctrinal errors of
Catholicism he says, since all churches have error. Error should not be a
deterrent to unity. He sees the acceptance of transubstantiation by
non-Catholics as a key to unifying with Rome. When all the ancient streams of Catholicism
join up with the river of Toronto, Kansas City, or anywhere else the circus
spirit of signs and wonders operates, then the formation of the end times bride
will be complete. Too bad that bride in reality is the Whore of Babylon,
mystery religion.
After the unification of Christianity, Crowder indicates a
unification of all mankind will be next. After all, there is truth in all
religions he affirms. "Even false religions have practices and world views with
some redeemable value," he asserts (p. 159). "To say that Buddhism is
completely void of truth is insane. There is plenty of wisdom and redeemable
spiritual exercise there...What if our society was centered on Christian
meditation, as Tibet is centered on Buddhist meditation? ...We need to take back
this ground....It will be those believers who arise from non-Christian cultures
that will offer some of the most breathtaking new perspectives on the faith."
WILL NOT TOLERATE JEZEBEL
Crowder sees the Bible Christian as the biggest opposition
to the new mystics efforts to draw all men to themselves. He labels them
Gnostics because they use the knowledge taught in Scripture to test all things
- they put that knowledge, doctrine, above the mystical now-word of the spirit.
Since the actual definition of gnosticism points a finger at the mystics, new
and old, who claim higher knowledge from a mystical source, he no doubt threw
that in there to throw off the unsuspecting.
Throughout the book Crowder criticizes all voices of reason
and terms the "critical" and "judgmental." He admonishes his readers to turn a
deaf ear to all voices of warning. He writes:
"Now is not the time to hesitate. We must advance.
Satan has sought to oppose this army even before its birth. Today, you can type
'Joel's Army' into a search engine and a thousand heresy hunter Websites pop
up, decrying the very mention of it. Religious spirits despise the fierce
aggression with which this army will take ground."
In fact, Crowder points to an authority in the prophetic
movement who prophesied death will be the fate of the opposition. On page 295
he quotes the "prophecy":
"'When this army comes, it is large and it's
mighty. It's so mighty that there's never been anything like it before...they
won't be able to kill this army,' says respected author and prophetic teacher
Jack Deere. 'Not only does Joel say this army is invincible. The Lord Himself
will take the lives of those who oppose them.'"
Crowder uses the author Jesse Penn-Lewis as an example of
the Jezebel Spirit that will no longer be tolerated by the new breed. He
demonizes her efforts to assist evangelist Evan Roberts, who during the Welsh
Revival of the early 20th century, was terrified by the works of an unclean
spirit in his meetings. Mrs. Penn-Lewis took him in and ministered to him,
resulting in the Christian classic book, War on the Saints. Crowder writes:
"Evan's life is a classic example of a prophetic
destiny being cut short by a Jezebel spirit...It will be important for the
coming generation to learn how to defeat this foe. She is the killer of God's
prophets and the supporter of satan's...One thing we must never do is make
peace with her...Toleration is not an option" (pp 293.294).
CONCLUSION
There is a real war going on - a war not even mentioned in
this book - the war to win souls to Christ before the time of trial approaches.
As we see the day approach, the true church is driven to get the truth of the
Gospel of Jesus Christ out to a dying world.
True Christians believe the words of the Master who told us
that the world will not accept us, but will hate us, even as it hated Him. We
will not impress the world by our commitment to the Lord Jesus Christ, but will
be hated by all - an aroma of death to those who are perishing. But to those
who are being saved, an aroma of life.
We, the body of Christ, will rule and reign with Christ
Jesus when we return with Him at the end of the Tribulation. To demand that
position now is certainly premature and not our mission. Those holding to the
Latter Rain, Kingdom Now heresies will find themselves united into a spiritual
whore that will be destroyed by the antichrist and judged by the God they think
they're communing with in the occultic stream in which they abide.
"The Invisible War," written by the late Donald Grey
Barnhouse in 1965, revealed the real war and exposed the devil's opposition to
"the kingdom of God by the direct act of the Lord" with two false views of the
kingdom. He penned these words:
"The one effort has been to build a temporal
religious kingdom and claim all the promises for it; the other has been to deny
the material reality of the future kingdom and look for the gradual coming of
some kingdom of sweetness and light by the efforts of man. The one has been
largely Roman Catholic, the other has been largely Protestant...There is
nothing more liberating than to be loosed from the blindness that makes men
grope in the darkness of kingdom-building."
The latest effort of kingdom-building by the new breed of
the Latter Rain with its accompanying cheap signs and wonders goes way beyond
the efforts of the past. This end time army has a very deplorable purpose and
destiny as seen in Revelation. We can know them by their fruits - and can say
without hesitation that when Peter spoke on the day of Pentecost, declaring
this is that fulfillment of the prophecy of Joel regarding the outpouring of
God's Spirit, today the true church can look at the signs the new breed chases
and say, this is NOT that; nothing holy can come out of something so filthy.
"These are
spots in your love feasts, while they feast with you without fear, serving only
themselves. They are clouds without water, carried about by the winds; late
autumn trees without fruit, twice dead, pulled up by the roots; raging waves of
the sea, foaming up their own shame; wandering stars for whom is reserved the
blackness of darkness forever" (Jude 1:12-13).
Unedited :: Link to Original Posting
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