Faith In Faith Or Faith
In GOD? By Hank Hanegraaff
In 1980 Harvest House published a book by
Larry Parker entitled We Let Our Son Die. The book tells the tragic
story of how Larry and his wife -- after being influenced by one of
America's numerous "word of faith" (or "word-faith") teachers -- withheld
insulin from their diabetic son, Wesley. Predictably, Wesley went into
a diabetic coma. The Parkers, warned about the impropriety of making
a "negative confession," continued to "positively confess" Wesley's
healing until the time of his death.
Even after Wesley's death, the Parkers --
undaunted in their "faith" -- conducted a resurrection service instead
of a funeral. For more than one year following their son's death, they
refused to abandon the "revelation knowledge" they had received through
the "word-faith" movement. Eventually, they were tried and convicted
of manslaughter and child abuse.
Many other similarly tragic stories could
be recounted. And yet, the carnage unleashed by this movement is not
limited to physical death. Literally thousands are swallowing the spiritual
cyanide dispensed by the word-faith teachers, leading to the shipwreck
of their faith in God.
Much has been written over the past few years
about the New Age movement and the threat it poses to historic Christianity.
As real as this threat is, I have become equally concerned about the
ominous threat that the word-faith movement poses to the body of Christ.
If the New Age movement is the greatest threat to evangelical Christianity
from without, I believe the word-faith or positive confession movement
may well be considered its greatest threat from within.
No doubt many believers will contend that
in writing about this subject, I am doing nothing more than splitting
theological hairs. Yet the extent of the controversy is not merely an
honest doctrinal difference among orthodox believers; it rather entails
a confrontation between the gospel preached by the Lord Jesus Christ
and another gospel.
Jesus said, "In this world you will have trouble,
but take heart! I have overcome the world" (John 16:33). In sharp contrast,
the word-faith teachers promise unlimited health and wealth to believers
who can conjure up their brand of faith.
Jesus exhorted His followers not to "labor
for that which perishes" but to "labor for that which is eternal" (John
6:27). The prosperity gospel, by contrast, encourages Christians to
focus on what they can receive from Christ in the here and now.
Much so-called Christian TV and radio programming
today panders to what peoples' "itching ears" want to hear: the promise
of earthly gain. Over and over again we hear the testimonies of businessmen
who "turned on to" Jesus and saw their businesses double, or atheletes
whose statistics improved as a result of their faith formulas and Christ.
Sacrifice and service have been traded in for self-fulfillment and self-aggrandizement.
And while there is an element of reality in
the message (e.g., faith is essential to effective prayer; Christ does
meet our needs), sadly, the emphasis renders it merely the skin of the
truth stuffed with a lie. Christ has become merely a means to an end,
and believers are induced through slick Madison Avenue manipulation
to come to the Master's table, not to experience fellowship and intimacy
with the Master, but to enjoy what is on the Master's table. In sharp
distinction to this message, the Jesus of the Scriptures is not a means
to an end, He is the end (e.g., Phil. 3:7-8).
Jesus predicted for His followers poverty,
rejection, and persecution. His disciples were willing to face the tyrant's
brandished steel, the lion's gory mane, and the fires of a thousand
deaths because they knew that they were not of this world. They were
merely pilgrims and sojourners in a foreign land. Perhaps Charles Haddon
Spurgeon said it best: "The Old Covenant was a covenant of prosperity,
the New Covenant is a Covenant of Adversity whereby we are weaned from
the present world and made meet [i.e., fit] for the world to come."
In Hebrews 11, often referred to as the "Faith
Hall of Fame," we read of those who were commended for their faith,
yet were destitute, persecuted, imprisoned, and suffered torturous deaths.
These men and women set examples for us, and yet their lives were characterized
more by perseverance than by prosperity. Certainly, this message will
not sell well in a self-indulgent age. Nonetheless, we had better be
glad that our heavenly Father decides what is best for us and not we
ourselves, because only He truly understands what we need and what we
can handle. One shudders to think of what would happen if God gave us
everything we clamored for.
I do not wish to be misunderstood: I believe
in divine healing and in God's provision for every detail of our lives.
In addition, I do not associate piety with poverty. I thank God for
those He has prospered who are dedicated to using their resources for
the extension of His Kingdom.
But for the word-faith teachers, healing and
prosperity became so important that they had to find some way to guarantee
them, and they did this by exalting man's faith at the expense of God's
sovereignty. Thus, they developed the doctrine that God created the
world out of nothing by faith, and that He created men as "little gods"
to exercise the same kind of faith. Faith therefore becomes a powerful
force that gets results, whether in the hands of a believer or a nonbeliever.
On the basis of this virtual deification of
human faith, the purveyors of the word-faith message promise health
and wealth to those who exercise faith in their faith rather than faith
in their God. As has been well said elsewhere, faith is only as good
as the object on which it is placed.
Walter Martin used to say, "All faith is subsumed
under the overarching biblical doctrine of the sovereignty of God."
The Creator is the Lord of the universe, not a cosmic "gofer" at the
beck and call of His creation. It is not our faith that sits on the
throne, but our sovereign God (I Chron. 29:10-12).
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