Wednesday 25 April 2012

April showers

Well, this week it's my vowed aim to get away from being too serious - probably. At least away from anything too controversial - probably.

I was with my wife and one of our kids at some NHS clinic thingy this week, and a test was given to our offspring and the person said to them "Don't worry, there are no right or wrong answers, everyone's different!" And it was one of those moments where I knew what she was saying re the particular task, but what she had said I just had to note down there and then. It was one of those sentences that seem to be the strap line of th3e age in which we are living - there are no right or wrong answers about life, and the answer you do give is still right, because hey, we're all different! It got me thinking - thats the problem isn't it: the post modern shift away from saying that there is no right or wrong, and its okay to be different. These are the values which now major in our culture in regard to faith and belief, philosophy, expression of self, behaviour, and yes in bringing up children. In fact in virtually everything. There are no longer absolutes being taught or stated. Not so of course within the Christian world!

This last week I came to the realisation that in the town in which I live, there are seemingly no longer any Police. Even the local police station is closed on various days, due to cuts. You never see any Police on the streets anymore, and even those funny peculiar PSO's (the gift of New Labour) have now been been cut back, due to financial realities. Now, minor crime and street dis-order is returning to our towns. We have been given a new "low priority number" 101, which we can now phone if we're concerned. Whereas last year local Police were telling me to dial 999 regardless "to just log it" ....."for statistical purposes", now the new number puts me through to a switchboard in Portishead, I think. Actually, its bit amusing. If I dial 999 from my mobile in Somerset, i get put through to a police operator in Hampshire, who then expreses complete amazement about why this has happened, and "where is that then Sir?". So instead I dial 101 and get a nice recorded voice, which then goes into a waiting stack (I think it plays music) [what should they play?] (Gilbert and Sullivan - "A policeman's lot is not a nappy one [nappy one]). So I'm trying to report some street violence from some drunk young people who are jumping in front of cars, banging on local shops fronts, jumping on and off waiting buses and being fairly crude to everyone, and get told that my call has been given the highest priority possible. But as I explain to my daughter, there's unlikely to anyone on duty except one office has to cover a  50 to 70 mile radius. So, what's the point? And, why are we paying our taxes for local Police funding when there are none to be seen for miles. Ah, but there's CTV - don't get me started!

Finally, as a local school governor who takes his kids to school, I'm desperate to do anything to help. If I seen drains that need clearing of leaves, or leaves that need sweeping up, then surely I should do what any right minded person should do? Get a broom and sweep them up? But oh no! I have to have a risk assessment done! My local head teacher patiently explains to me, that the government hasn't actually done away with the all this litigation rubbish, and in fact I still need to be trained in how to clear up leaves, just in case!

Wednesday 18 April 2012

So what has the Charismatic movement ever done for us?

Or ....as Monty Python put "...What have the Romans ever done for us?" And in fact, if you've ever watched that side splitting piece of film sequence from Python, it goes on in this very funny away of "...ok, ok, apart from the plumbing and the roads, and the heating, and the medicine ....what have they done for us? Answer Nothing!. Oh, okay then!"

Sorry, but that had to be done. More importantly, lest we "throw the baby out with the bathwater" (I've never actually been sure if this is technically possible), it would be far too easy to be dismissive then of the charismatic movement (if it is indeed a movement) and suggest that "they" have given us nothing, which would be simply wrong.

By the way, thanks for all the feedback. I hope that what I blogged on last week doesn't make this blog too serious!!

Anyway, I think the charismatic movement has given us a few things worthy of mention:

1. It has reminded us that we live and minister now in "the age of the Spirit." And in my book that means that previously the church had up until the beginings of the charismatic movement in the 1970's largely forgotten the 3rd person of the Trinity. And if theologically we affirm and hold to a Trinitarian foundation then he is there for all to tap into and use. For as any decent theological education will remind us, "one in three persons and yet distinctive." Yes, the Spirit - "he" is readily available for us to minister - him through us, and us to minister him to others.

We can pray to and in/through the Spirit as much as we do with the Father and the Son. We can invite the Spirit to move, or to put it in another way, we can welcome him. What Wimber, Pytches, Subritzky and others have shown us is that we should be quite at home with inviting the Spirit to come and to move amongst us. They seem to have reminded us too that he often comes in waves. As such, we should be aware that it is possible to block or quench (sin against?) the Spirit's work.
Fascinatingly, it was the Quakers with their famous quiet "waiting on the Spirit" to say something that models this for us. They became well known for their "quaking" or shaking in the Spirit as this did this.
Hopefully these days, we are able to hold to a Trinitarian balance in ministry - ie, it's all of them: Father, Son and Holy Spirit. But I just want to throw up a tiny question: have charismatics now over emphasised The Spirit at the expense of the Father and the Son? I ask that, because the freedom of the Spirit that the Corinthian church were criticised for by their Apostle, and which they argued gave them license to be free of him and in many cases do what they want, in some cases allowed them (the Gnostics) to argue that they were now superior to him and even to the Gospel. And I what I see in some places today is Charismatics doing exactly that, which is creating a kind of a new gospel (small g) that is not the gospel of grace and mercy. And the worst of it that in some cases that gospel seems to be turning into a gospel of works, not grace.

I heard it used the other day in terms of prayer, that God now expected more out of us in prayer, and unless we did he somehow wouldn't hear us. Huh! where did that come from in scripture?

2. It has reminded us to expect God - in the Spirit, to do something when ever we gather. And that on the whole has got to be a good thing. That when we gather in worship that it's not simply to go through a series of points on an agenda and be finished by the time the number 11 bus comes by. Rather to expect God to speak to us or move in a tangible way.
This applies for those who set out for church, as they leave their homes to expect the living God to be present, as well as for those who prepare and lead such occasions.
And that's good for us. Lets expect this where perhaps once we didn't.

But, lets not panic or have a downer if we don't seemingly feel that "God was in the house" that morning. Do our feelings suggest he wasn't? And nor should we as a result of any panic somehow feel that we then need to hastily manufacture the experience of the Spirit (can you anyway? No!) which always, always come us somehow feels fraudulent in feel and nature anyway.

And that's where we need to hold breadth in our worship. As much at home with the deep words of liturgy that bring wonder and awe and take our spirits when they are wounded and down on new journeys of the Spirit to places of grace, as with the upbeat, jubilant praise of the prophetic. I cringe ....no i get angry when so new churches roll into town and label such worship experiences as "traditional". As if somehow now they are past the traditional and have gone on to the super advanced mode!

And expecting the Spirit to move does not mean we thefore have no order of service, nor does it mean that we have to have a stringently tied down order of service, but there is balance in there somewhere! And, the Spirit of God is not about dis-order, chaos and lack of preparation.

3. It has reminded us, quite necessarily actually, that worship must have a joyful, and upbeat reality to it. That worship is about God; about his faithfullness and mercy, and power to heal and restore. That worship is as the book of Corinthians make clear a kind of body experience, not an isolated subjective set of choices of the visiting speaker for the day. That the organ is not God's annointed or chosen expression of music, and that he is an author of inifinte colours in the rainbow of worship. And the charismatic movement has given permission to a culture (the English Saxon one) that has been bound up in a "face one direction, behave, wear a suit and don't smile" kind of church behaviour.

4. It has reminded us of the New Testament basis of church function and operation, and God's giving of the gifts for that purpose. It has reminded us that a church goes forward together with those gifts in operation, as a body, not as a bunch of followers of a single human in which it traditonally deemed that everything must be done by or through.

5. It has genuinely brought the new wine of the Spirit into churches that essentially were dead, and or dying. It has started new churches, and new expressions of church, and new ministries that are not typically embedded within local church settings. It has released new people into ministry both here and overseas, who in all probability would never ever have considered themselves likely candidates.

So when all is said and done I thank the Holy Spirit for being gracious enought to visit us again, certainly in my life time. He continues to do so in every land, and in the most suprising of places. Some evern argue that he is more at work at times outside of the church than within!

If it is true - as most do agree, that we are essentially now in "post charismatic days" - whatever that means, then we should no less hunger and thirst for fresh waves of the Spirit of God.

But we do so with wisdom and growth in our hearts, seeking not to make mistakes from the past, and wanting most of all (and I passionately believe this) to be a missioning people that meet people in their struggles truthfully and honourably, and not presenting a Gospel and a God that makes you cringe, but gives you a overriding sense of reality in a broken and needy world!

Come Holy Spirit!

Friday 13 April 2012

Why I'm a charismatic and why I'm not!

Before I dive in to this blog I need to say that this blog, along with other baptist folk, is now to be published on the new Baptist Times website. So I suppose I'd better behave myself from now on!? I had mixed emotions about the invitation. this blog has been and remains quite a personal publication. I wondered whether I make this one more middle of the road and then start a different more personal one. Och well!

The title of this week's blog is intentional. For a week now this strap line has been banging around inside my head. Actually, I don't like titles that we use (and abuse) in Christian circles; they seem to box people up or state - "they're one of those then!" Actually whereas once - in my youthful student days, I would have arrogantly used this description, I now prefer to use "Spirit filled Christian." And thats as much because I think it's a more accurate description biblilically, but also because I truly want to distance myself from what I see as the very worst of charismatic Christianity.

Please don't get me wrong. Over the years - and beginning as a teenager, I've been to the conferences and done the rounds. Starting first with John Wimber's visits to the UK, Bill Subritsky's tours, and of course what was initially called "The Toronto Blessing" and which became "The Times of Refreshing." And yes, in contrast to some, I felt benefit from the Toronto wave, going to refreshment meetings at Queen's Road Baptist in Wimbledon. I've been baptised in the Spirit, and firmly believe that the gifts of the Spirit are for today, and benefitted hugely from the Power Evangelism/Healing and Bishop David Pytches phases of teaching that came to the UK church. So that's my pedigree, and it remains my practice today. BUT ...there is something within me that wants to fully distance myself from what I call charismatic abuse or as others have called charismania! You see there are some who call themselves charismatic Christians who practice and declare stuff that I just don't want to be seen dead with!

Here is some of that "stuff":
1) The seeing demons everywhere approach. Got a head ache? Then it must be a demon! Cast it out! Got an attitude problem? Then it must be a demon! Cast it out! And so it goes on. And I know the journey that this mish-mash theology has come on because I know the practitioners and writers of it, but I don't see it in the bible! I remember one of those books "Pigs in the Parlour" that suggested exactly what I've outlined above. And this is dangerous stuff, and it can really screw up Christians and make the situation worse. I think of the Derek Prince books and the Ellel Grange camp as routed in Peter Horrobin's ministries. In the worst cases, some have needed therapy to escape from those who have tried to carry out exorcism because it has just been plainly wrong!
2) The declaring that "God has told me this" brigade, which don't get me wrong, I'm not against people expecting God to speak to them, which he does of course, and we should expect him to do so, but when we get this out of control where before long people are making crazy unaccountable statements of such an individualistic nature that life becomes dangerous and careful counsell and discipleship needs to be rapidly engaged.
3) The turning of the Gospel from being one of grace to one of effort where sometimes this becomes a first and second class Christians issue. This is the Gnostic trap whereby people think that they have reached a higher plane of somehow more advanced or more spirituality because they are closer to him, or more spiritual than others because of more experiences of the Holy Spirit. So it is sometimes said - God has raised the bar of effort required or you have to push more into God to experience this revelation of God. I heard this once where some Christians were trying to divide up types of Christian along the lines of "those of the flesh" and "those of the Spirit." In the end, this all seemingly turns in a new Gospel that humans have created, rather than the Gospel of grace.
4) The placing of God on an equal level to Satan and demons - this is the ancient false teaching of dualism re-invented, and this is worked out whereby some Christians feel a need to go round in fear of the devil and his minions. This is where we start to see the "pigs in the parlour" mentality return and spirits or demons, sometimes terrortorial, hanging around at every corner ready to jump out, or hovering over towns making it dark and difficult. What this does is reduce God down onto an equal level with the devil. We devalue God's sovereignty and power, and end up living in fear of the devil, rather than living life to the full in freedom, in the way that Christ intended. This denies the power of the cross, and suggests that God is not sovereignly in control. It is correctly rooted in an Ephesians 6 setting, but bears more to the story narrative of Frank Perretti's "This present darkness" than a healthy and balanced biblical view of evil. In the end, as Nigel Wright wrote in "The Satan Syndrome" we need to "disbelieve the devil" and treat him for what he is, which is defeated!

So, the life of the Spirit can be enjoyed to the full without the weight of the extras (isn't this what the Pharisees did?) that some Christians seem to want to apply and burden us with. In the end, we don't need to conjure up God with "statements into the heavenlies", or "exorcise ley lines" in fact all this extra stuff can actually detract us from doing the Gospel properly, from sharing it and getting amongst the ordinary people of our community in a credible and effective way, because we're too busy doing wierd things, and behaving like witch doctors on the side of a hill somewhere.
In the end, I want to get excited about God, be moving in the experience, truth, gifts, fruit and power of the Spirit, and to do so knowing that I don't need to conjure up God by an emotional expereince or by whipping myself into a frenzy, because in his grace God in Jesus Christ has promised to always be there! I will clap God when I feel the freedom to do so, and I certainly don't need to be told to.
So in the end, I'm that type of charismatic. In fact, lose that word. I'm a Spirit filled Christian!