Our Precious Faith - Part 2
by
2 Peter 1:2
GC 61-3
John MacArthur
All Rights Reserved
Tonight we're coming to the Word of God again and looking at 2 Peter chapter 1.
We have recently begun our study of this second epistle of Peter. We're just
getting started really still dealing with his introduction. And as we come to 2
Peter chapter 1 again, I want us to major on verse 2. Let me just read it to
you and then I want to digress for a rather lengthy time and then come back to
it. I think when I come back you'll understand its meaning. "Grace and peace
be multiplied to you in the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord."
Now the key word in that verse is "knowledge." Grace and peace are multiplied
to those who have the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord. Our precious
faith is built on knowing the truth and knowing the source of truth. Now you
might think that's fairly obvious. And it is. But amazingly it does not appear
to be so obvious to everyone today. In fact, in our day it seems to be rather
obscure. Let me show you why.
A recent issue of the National Revue magazine, there's an article called,
"Paganism American Style," written by John Wok(?). This is what he said. "The
New Age Movement is not about discovering reality but about making it. It is
about power rather than truth," end quote. That's a very insightful statement.
That is a very encompassing statement. The culture in which we live is not
interested in discovering what is. It is interested in creating what it wants
to be. They talk about mind power, the power of positive thinking. Because you
believe it strongly enough to be so, it will be so. Because you say it is so,
it will become so. While all of this New Age stuff has sort of an intellectual
veneer it is not about reality, it is not about objectivity, it is not about
truth, it is not about fact. It is about feeling, it is about intuition, it is
about experience, it is about self‑generated power.
One very popular New Age writer is Joseph Campbell who has written a book called
The Power of Myth. The thesis of the book is that you can imagine something to
be so and it becomes powerful. Campbell's credo comes in three words, "Follow
your bliss...Follow your bliss." Whatever would make you blissful, whatever
bliss you can imagine, follow that.
Now in that system you have to create your own reality. You have to create your
own values. What you choose to create with your mind power, whether it's the
power of positive thinking or whether it's the power of personal choice, whether
it's the power of spoken words, whether it's the power of the imagination, they
say what you choose doesn't really matter as long as you choose it. And if you
choose it you can make it so. Spiritual power in your mind is the key to
controlling the perception, to controlling the perception to the degree where
you can perceive something so clearly that you create the reality you want.
In other words, spiritual power in your mind fine tunes a perception of what you
want and wanting that perception clearly and strongly enough makes it a
reality. Your mind can create. That's New Age thinking. That's popular today.
Now in the pursuit of this inner power there is a combination of four things
that sort of interplay a little bit, or four ideologies. Let me just share them
with you. The first one is evolution. There is an evolutionary principle
behind this that says you can wish something to be. That's basically
evolution. Once there was a snake who wanted to fly and so he wished himself
wings. That's basic evolution. There's a few steps in the process but that's
basically it.
Evolution also indicates that everything that exists is equal. We're all in a
long chain. Man is no more significant than anything else, he's just the latest
result of monkeys' wishing. He is sort of the final accident, at least for now,
but he has no more value than a rock, no more value than a bird, nor more value
than a cat, nor more value than a tree, nor more value than a dolphin because
that's evolution. Evolution is just this process of wishing things to be and so
they came into existence in a long chain of all equal products of wishing. And
that is why there is no particular concern for man as over against any other
part of this evolutionary chain.
There's a second ideology bound up in this New Age thinking and that's
pantheism. Since there is no creator, there is no God, the creation itself is
God and since it created itself it's the God of its own creation. And since
everything in the process bears something of the power to create itself, it is
all God. Pantheism sees the only God then as the energy that exists in
everything. You hear people talk about pyramid power. And some people will
walk around with a wire pyramid on their head, or hang a pyramid over their door
in their house. They talk about tree power. I don't know if you've read any
about that. Talk about rock power. There's energy in all of these things.
That's what mind power is. It's the God energy that exists in everything.
Everything is equal to everything else and everything is God so everything has a
right to its own identity and a right to its own free course so there have to be
human rights but there also have to be animal rights, there have to be tree
rights. I noticed in the paper today a man wanted to remove a Sycamore tree in
front of his house out in Santa Clarita valley and the city is in an uproar that
he would think about cutting down a Sycamore tree. Begs the issue to ask them
if the houses in the Santa Clarita valley happen to be built out of wood.
Everything is seen as having some kind of theistic energy in it. Everything is
God. Everything has power. Everything has energy. And you want to plug in to
that energy. Now we just had Earth Day. And I ask myself on a number of
occasions, "What is Earth Day?" And I realize what it was, for some people it
was an elevating of environmental consciousness which is certainly good. All of
us would like to do something to enhance our environment and to protect the
creation of God. And that's very good. But to the orchestrators and the
fanatics, Earth Day was based upon a Pantheistic view and it was "let's stop the
world and worship the earth." We'll all worship the earth. I was very
interested in the fact that down at the beach there was a huge Earth Day
celebration and everybody left and nobody cleaned up a horrendous mess. The
Earth is God, let's stop and worship the Earth. It doesn't seem to be a problem
for the government to tolerate that, I can't imagine what would happen if
somebody decided to have a God day or a Jesus Christ day. See, nothing has more
value than anything else. Save the rain forests, save the whales, save the
dolphins, save the oak trees, don't kill a cat in medical research even if it
might save thousands of people from death.
In fact, as I analyze it the only living creature that I can think of that
doesn't have any rights is an unborn baby. Everything else has rights. I heard
last night about someone who is now very upset that people step on bugs. This
is true. And he had a huge layout of all of these bugs and was trying to
convince people that bugs have enough self‑consciousness not to like being
stepped on. It is incredibly inconsistent to me, isn't it, that many of the
same people who want to save the trees and save the cats and the whales and the
dolphins are the same ones that want to kill the unborn babies. Nothing has
more value than anything else except unborn babies which have absolutely no
value. Pure pragmatism. The baby will get in the way. Pantheism is typical of
man's religion. It's very pragmatic. And pantheism has to be abandoned if it
invades their hedonism and their selfishness. They are only true to their
religion if it doesn't cramp their life style.
There's another component, another ideology in this besides evolution and
pantheism, that's what we'll call amoralism. If everything is equal to
everything else and everything is God, then all behavior is acceptable because
it's just the energy of this pantheistic religion. The only moral value is
whatever you decide is moral. You're your own God and if it feels good and
there's energy in it, then do it. So we have left in our society one moral law
and that is that there are no binding moral laws, only whatever anybody feels is
good for them. Morality is what I create. There's no standard outside of
myself. Any kind of sexual behavior is perfectly fine. If I want to have sex
with people outside of marriage, if I want to be a homosexual, if I want to be
involved in bestiality and recently there is an escalation of the most bizarre
unthinkable unimaginable kind of interaction with animals that I wouldn't even
describe to you but know about from medical doctors who are having homosexuals
come into the hospital in conditions that are absolutely indescribable. But,
you see, it's all okay because there's no morality except the morality that you
create.
Now all of this stuff isn't intellectual at all. Facts, if you look at facts,
would totally defy all of it. If you want to look at fact and reality, you're
not going to come up with evolution, right? The facts disprove evolution. If
you're going to look at truth and reality and fact, you're not going to come up
with everything is God and God is everything, you're going to come up with the
true God. If you're going to look at fact, you're not going to come up with an
amoral kind of value system. Facts tell us that an amoral society will destroy
itself. That's false knowledge, that's neo‑gnostic paganism, that's the new
gnosticism, it masquerades as knowledge, it isn't knowledge at all.
Now it is built on the fourth ideology and the fourth component and that's
mysticism. Mysticism is the foundation for all of this kind of thinking we have
today in the New Age. You say, "What is mysticism?" Let me give you my
MacArthur definition. Mysticism is beliefs and ideas which are the product of
personal intuition. Let me say it again. Mysticism is beliefs and ideas which
are the product of personal intuition. Further, assumed to transcend ordinary
understanding. That's mysticism. It is a system of beliefs and ideas which are
the product of my own personal intuition which I assume transcends ordinary
understanding. To put it simply, it is sheer speculation believed to be
reality...sheer speculation believed to be reality. Mystical belief systems are
collections of ideas that have arisen out of emotion, out of self‑authenticated
ideas unrelated to objective fact or evidence.
In a paper in our community this article appeared last week. "God revealed
Himself to a Canyon Country man and made him the leader of a church whose
members are absolved from sin by having sex with church priestesses. God spoke
to him in his Santa Monica bungalow April 24, 1984 and ordained him as the high
priest of the church after explaining the sex oriented doctrines." Then it
says, "Wilbur Tracy is the man acting as the couple's attorney himself said God
appeared to him in the form of a six‑foot tall man with white hair and a white
beard who was surrounded by a bright white light." He added that the man was
elevated and was wearing a white transparent robe which was open in the front.
Tracy said, "God explained to him the purpose of life and the creation of the
world in about an hour and a half. But Tracy declined to discuss it any
further. I was told to tell no man what the specifics were, he said, I was told
only to tell those who believe. Tracy said he learned the importance of sexual
rituals he said are required before one's sins can be forgiven. The religion of
the goddess is what you might say a sexual religion. He explained the vision to
his wife who later agreed to become the high priestess. God told him that the
priestess had to have sex with a thousand men before getting such an
appointment.
Now our culture has a very difficult time arguing with this lunatic, a very
difficult time. Why? Because we have already allowed people to spawn out of
their own minds any kind of imaginary kind of reality that they choose. That's
the ultimate bizarre form of mysticism. On the one hand he might be lying. On
the other hand he might have been engaged with demonic beings. But it's very
possible also that this man spun out of his own mind some kind of
self‑authenticated justification for his own absolutely rampant lust. Mystical
belief systems then are collected inside a person, arising out of
self‑authenticating ideas and emotions utterly unrelated to objective fact or
evidence.
New Agers will tell you that yoga meditation and even wordless New Age music
induces these kinds of internal intuitions. No objectivity, no reality. Just
inward subjective non‑rational intuitive feelings that then become fact. Andrew
Greely(?) relates the following as an example of the kind of thing we're
discussing, this is very simple. "A troubled young man had been listening to
Beethoven's Ninth Symphony on a phonograph in his apartment. He turns off the
music and begins to work on a term paper but he makes little progress. The
doubts, the fears, the thoughts of self‑destruction that have harassed him
return. Then in counterpoint he hears the hymn of the Ode to Joy and something
takes possession of the room and of him. The doubts, the fears, the anxieties
are dispelled forever. The young man knows there is nothing to worry about,"
end quote.
Now really happened in time and space to that young man? How did he know there
was nothing to worry about? He didn't. He didn't know there was nothing to
worry about, he didn't know anything. There's no reality to that. You don't
listen to an Ode to Joy and conclude, "O, I have nothing to worry about." Ode
to Joy induced a movement within him that was emotional. In the emotion he had
feelings of well being. He translated those feelings of well being into
reality. But it isn't reality. That young man's self‑generated feeling of well
being didn't mean he wouldn't be dead in 24 hours. It meant absolutely
nothing. People come along and say, "Well, with your mind you can accomplish
healing." OH? How does that work? I can tell myself I am healed, I can tell
myself I will never be ill, but that is purely my own imagination, has nothing
to do with reality. Viruses don't know I said that. And even if they did,
there's no indication that they wouldn't go ahead and do whatever they were
going to do. This is not knowledge. Such an internal subjective experience
provides no knowledge, no reality and worse, it provides a silly illusion which
becomes a false hope. To know something is to have accurate fact about reality,
then you know it...then you know it.
You know, we border on this. Some times we'll say, "Well I think everything is
going to be right." Well how do you know that? "Well I just kind of feel..."
You don't know that. That is an illusion induced by your own mind. That is
mysticism. And it can concoct anything, a system of belief, a system of
religion, a system of healing, anything. Arthur Johnson in his very interesting
book Faith Misguided writes, "There are two aspects of mysticism that we must
recognize to avoid confusion. First, there is a psychological aspect often
called the mystical experience which is an event completely within the person,"
totally subjective and easily counterfeited...I added that. Then he says,
"There are the beliefs that arise from that experience. These philosophical
religious beliefs constitute a set of ideas collectively called mysticism."
Now what frightens me is this has wholesale invaded the church. And it's come
into the church primarily through the Charismatic Movement where people are
creating assumed illusory reality out of their own imaginations unrelated to
fact. No doubt there was stuff like this floating around in Peter's time. No
doubt Peter was writing to churches as he penned this letter who were dealing
with some of this kind of belief that you could transcend the natural, you could
transcend objectivity. You could surpass normal understanding. Listen to me
very carefully. Christianity is not mystical. Christianity is totally and
utterly and completely and fully contrary to anything and everything that is
mystical...contrary to believing in imaginary feelings, Christianity believes in
objective historical revealed actual rational truth from God. That must be
understood. The mystic, he rejects reason for experience and the line between
truth and lies is erased. So the mystic reads the Bible and that's truth and
has an experience and that's truth and truth and lies overlap.
The basic lie of mysticism is that my inner feelings tell me the truth about
what is. That is not true. My inner feelings do not tell me the truth about
reality. The lie of mysticism is my experience self‑interpreted gives the truth
about reality. That's not true. That's not so. What is really appalling about
this is that it's in the church and all of a sudden Christianity instead of
being objective historical revealed actual rational truth from God is literally
a mish‑mash of revealed truth and intuition and experience. The contemporary
Charismatic Movement is full of this kind of stuff. People say, "Well the Lord
showed me in my heart that this will not happen." Oh? That has nothing to do
with whether it will happen or not. "The Lord showed me in my heart that that
won't happen." Oh? That has nothing to do with it. Now those are mild forms.
A stronger form is what is commonly called "positive confession." We talked
about Kenneth Hagan, Kenneth Copeland, Fredrick Price, Robert Tilton, a number
of people like that, Paul Crouch, Oral Roberts, those kinds of people who say if
you verbalize it and if you say it and if your mind conjures it up and you
positively affirm it, you will create it. That is sub‑ Christian
mysticism...not Christianity.
Another form of it that's come recently is called
visualization...visualization. This runs the gamut all the way from a
psychological counseling technique clear over to a religious situation with many
in the Charismatic Movement. The man who today is known as the pastor of the
largest church in the world is a man by the name of Paul Yunge Cho...C‑h‑o. His
church, the largest in the world, is located in the city of Seoul in Korea. And
Yunge Cho is heavily into visualization, into the idea that you can create
reality with your mind if you visualize it. Dave Hunt, of course, has dealt
with him in his book on The Seduction of Christianity. Just as a little bit of
a refresher, let me bring you up to date on this man who is the pastor of the
largest church in the world and one who is very central to the Charismatic
Movement today. This is what Dave Hunt has indicated, "Anyone who imagines that
because he thinks certain thoughts or speaks certain words God must respond in a
certain way has slipped into sorcery. And if not playing God is at the very
least attempting to manipulate God. Pastor Cho declares `By the spoken
word...this is a quote...by the spoken word we create our universe of
circumstances. You create the presence of Jesus with your mouth. He is bound by
your lips and by our words,'" end quote.
Cho declares that it was through the power of imagination that God created the
world. This is in his book called The Fourth Dimension which I've read...that
God created the world through imagination and that because man is a fourth
dimension spirit being like God, he too...listen to this...whether occultist or
Christian can create his own world through the power of imagination. Occultists
have long known that the most powerful way to tap into the spirit dimension is
through visualization, says Cho.
Whether you're an occultist or a Christian, you can use your imagination to
create your own world. No where in the Bible does it indicate or even imply
that the people of God are to use the same methods or power as the pagans.
Pastor Cho, however, not only says that miracles must all conform to his law of
the fourth dimension but that anyone including occultists can apply the law of
the fourth dimension and perform miracles. Nevertheless, Pastor Cho assures us
that he learned this from the Holy Spirit when he asked in prayer why occultists
could do miracles just like Christians. Cho, in fact, commends the Japanese
Buddhists occultists, the Sogogaki(?) for performing miracles through
visualizing a picture of prosperity, repeating phrases over and over and
developing the human spiritual fourth dimension and he scolds Christians for not
doing likewise. He says they do it in the occult movement, why can't we do it?
He believes that you can create your own reality.
Further, although he probably does not realize it, Pastor Cho, says Dave Hunt,
has laid out basic occult theory, an apologetic for nature religion or
witchcraft. He states that because God includes the entire physical universe,
He can therefore create matter out of Himself. How does He do it? By
incubating, which is Cho's term for visualizing.
The Bible never suggests much less teaches, that God creates through any
technique visualizing or other. This sets up for the delusion that if we can
somehow use the same technique, we can do what God does.
Thus the next error in Cho's reasoning process is if possible even worse than
its predecessor that because man is also a fourth dimension spirit being we too
can visualize, incubate and create reality just like God. In his sequel to The
Fourth Dimension Pastor Cho writes and I quote, "We've got to learn how to
visualize and dream the answer as being completed as we go to the Lord in
prayer. We should always try to visualize the end result as we pray, in that
way with the power of the Holy Spirit we can incubate that which we want God to
do for us. The main thing is that we should know the importance of
visualization." Now that's the end of the quote.
When you look at those people over there in Korea and we are so amazed at their
long involved times of prayer, realize, dear friends, they do not pray in the
manner that you and I pray to God pursuing His will, they pray in the process
that is very much occultic, a visualizing and attempting by visualization to
create their own reality, to make themselves God. If visualization was so
important you'd think the Bible would say something about it. It says
absolutely nothing about it. It's mystical.
Now one who follows Cho's fantasy approach and its confusion has become very
prominent. His name is John Wimber(?). He started out teaching a class at
Fuller Seminary on healing techniques and things like that. Founded a group of
churches known as Vineyard Fellowships. He is crisscrossing the world at this
time, you can catch him on channel 40 in our area. He is leading the Movement
back to mysticism...clairvoyants, extrasensory perception, mind power, trances,
mass hypnosis, visions, all those are techniques of Eastern healing cults and
they are all finding a place in the new Charismatic Renewal Movement,
particularly in the methodology of this American healer by the name of John
Wimber.
The Reformation gave people back their minds. The Roman Catholic Church during
the Dark Ages became very mystical. The Reformation gave people back their
minds. The Reformation swept away superstition. The Reformation abolished
mysticism and reestablished rational thinking. And the new Charismatic Movement
is bringing back the confusion and the bondage and the anti‑intellectual
non‑rationalism of mysticism.
Jonathan Edwards once wrote, quote: "Beware of living your life by impressions,"
end quote. And that is precisely what such charismania advocates. John Wimber,
et al, and others in the Movement, believe they can all relive the miraculous
days of the Apostles and Jesus. But the fact is they have fallen into a very
non‑apostolic and sub‑Christian mysticism, vulnerable to Satanic deception and
closer to Hinduism than to the Bible.
Let me be specific. John Wimber acknowledges that sinners must hear some
rational presentation of the gospel to be saved, yet he believes the power that
will actually sweep people into the Kingdom is not the Holy Spirit invisibly
attending the Word as it comes to people's minds. The power that produces
salvation comes rather in the experience of God's presence as Christians
exercise supernatural powers and do signs and wonders.
Listen to that. That is at its core, of course, Arminianism, the belief that
people come to salvation because of their own being convinced rather than
because of some divine operation. And what he is saying is that salvation, the
power in salvation is not the Spirit working the Word in the heart, the power in
salvation is the speaker being so convincing and so dramatic because he can do
all these miracles that that overpowers the people. Sinners resistance to the
gospel message is removed, he says, by encounters of power. So he calls it
Power Evangelism, that's the name of his book. And these power encounters
literally shock people, blow them away. They transcend the mind. They are
inexplicable. They are non‑ rational. And so salvation is not the Spirit
illuminating the mind as it receives the truth but rather the power exploding on
people something that is irrational, inexplicable, miraculous. And that is much
more effective. In fact, that's what does it. That's why they say the simple
gospel is not enough. You have to have signs and wonders because they do not
affirm that the truth in the power of the Spirit changes a heart. They believe
while the truth has to be there, it's the energy in the messenger that effects
the drama that makes people convinced. The power that makes evangelistic
preaching effective then comes from the miracles that accompany the Word and not
the Word itself.
Mysticism then says people are saved by power encounters with miracles. But
what does the Scripture say? Just the opposite. All you have to do is go back
and look at the life of Christ. He went through Palestine, did miracle after
miracle after miracle after miracle after miracle. At the end of it, what did
they do to Him? Killed Him. John 2:23, "When He was in Jerusalem at the
Passover, during the feast, many believed in His name." Why? "Beholding His
signs which He was doing." Sure, they were attracted by the signs. They
believed that He was from God. "But Jesus on His part was not entrusting
Himself to them for He knew all men and because He didn't need anyone to bear
witness concerning man for He Himself knew what was in man." Sure they believed
but they didn't believe unto...what?...salvation. Sure they said, "Oh wow!
That's supernatural. He's from God." That didn't save them. They had no other
explanation. It was a superficial belief, it wasn't salvation. Look at John 4
verse 48, Jesus condemns them. He says, "Unless you people see signs and
wonders, you simply will not believe." Same kind of shallow non‑saving faith.
You've got to see the signs and wonders. But it didn't change their hearts
because only the Holy Spirit can change the heart.
Look at John chapter 6 verse 2, "A great multitude was following Him because
they were seeing the signs He was performing on those who were sick." Sure, it
attracted a crowd. Verse 28, "After seeing these signs and wonders and the
miraculous way in which Jesus fed them all, they said to Him...verse 28...what
shall we do that we may work the works of God?" What do we do to do these
things? This is fantastic. He said, "This is the work of God that you believe
in Him whom He has sent. They said therefore to Him, What then do You do for a
sign that we may see and believe You?" That is an incredible statement. This
is the same crowd, saw Him healing people all day long. This is the same crowd
that just ate the food He created. And they said, "Do another sign so we can
believe You. What work are You going to perform?" It's unbelievable. No,
signs produce a very superficial curiosity and they may convince that this is a
supernatural being. The sign itself cannot save. In fact to show you the
character of these people, go all the way to the end of the chapter, verse 66,
some of them started to follow Him. When it became apparent what His message
was, verse 66 says, "Many of His disciples withdrew and were not walking with
Him anymore."
Verse 63 sums it up. "It is the Spirit who gives life. The flesh profits
nothing, the words that I have spoken unto you are Spirit and are life." That's
objectivity, my friend, that's revealed rational truth. You might be interested
to know that John the Baptist did no miracles. And John the Baptist was the
greatest prophet who had ever lived up until his day. He did no
miracles...none. Miracle power is not saving power. That we must understand.
The passage that I was looking up, John 10:41 says John the Baptist did no
miracles.
Now how is a person converted then? Look at Romans 10:17, Romans 10:17. Listen
to this, "So faith, saving faith, comes from miracles." Is that what it says?
"Comes from signs and wonders." No, it comes from what? "Hearing and hearing
by...what?...the Word of Christ." But I say surely they have never heard, have
they? Indeed they have, their voice has gone out into all the earth, their
words to the end of the world. They have to hear.
Go back to verse 13. "Whoever will call upon the name of the Lord will be
saved. But how are they going to call upon Him in whom they have not believed?
And how will they believe in Him whom they have not...what?...heard? And how
will they hear without a preacher?" They need a preacher, not a miracle worker.
Now listen to me very carefully to what I say. The miracle working power of
Jesus and the miracle working power of the Apostles was not for the purpose of
saving people. That is the miracle work of the Spirit in regeneration. That's a
whole different thing. Listen carefully. The miracle working power of Jesus
and the miracle working power of the Apostles was not for the purpose of saving
people but of authenticating the preacher. Very very important. You've got ten
people coming into town and they all say "I speak for God," who do you believe?
You believe the one with miracle power but it is the truth he preaches that
saves. The miracle is simply to convince you that he speaks the truth because
in those days there was no Bible to test him by. That's why today we don't need
miracles. I'll tell you by listening to a person whether he speaks the truth, I
don't need a miracle, I just have this book, I'll compare him with this, right?
Miracles were never intended to save people. Miracles were intended to
authenticate messengers. And messengers are now authenticated by whether they
square up with the Word of God which is a very interesting situation. You've
got a person like John Wimber who is out there trying to authenticate himself by
miracles while violating the only authenticating source there is, the Bible.
Signs were never to make the gospel work in someone's heart. They were never
intended to activate saving faith. That is the work of God. They were to
authenticate the preacher so they could know he was from God and could be
believed. Jesus didn't come to heal people in order to get them saved. He came
to heal people to authenticate Himself as God's messenger. We don't need
repeated authentication, all we need is to preach the authentic Word.
So all of that healing business that is supposedly absolutely necessary if we're
going to gets people saved misses the whole point. Furthermore, John Wimber
belittles, rational truth. He belittles knowledge. He belittles thinking. Let
me tell you why. He says that western thinking is too rationalistic. And we
must adopt the Eastern way of allowing for the more mystical and spiritual. He
calls us to a third world paradigm, is a term that he and Peter Wagner at Fuller
Seminary used. We must remember, he says, quote: "That the Bible was written in
the Middle East, not with a rational assumption but an experiential assumption,"
end quote. That is not true. That is absolutely not true. The Bible was
written in the Middle East but are you saying that everybody in the Middle East
and those who were inspired by God were operating on a mystical basis?
Ridiculous. The Bible was not written on an experiential assumption, it was
written on a rational assumption. The Middle East was not mystical, neither is
God. And neither were the writers of Scripture.
Further he said in a tape, "When are we going to see a generation who doesn't
try to understand this book but just believes it?" Now that is a statement of
mysticism. You don't have to understand it, you don't have to deal with it
rationally, you just believe it mystically. The Bible is then surveyed to find
texts to affirm their experience and their mysticism. At the Evangelical
Theological Society meeting, John Wimber said, "We're just now developing a
theology for the things we do." You see, truth rises from intuition and you've
got all of this experience and intuition floating around and we're trying to
figure out how to pull it together into a theology. It's a totally
reverse...you start with Scripture, you interpret Scripture, Scripture gives you
a theology by which you evaluate experience. John Wimber belittles preaching,
we would assume he would, because it's cognitive. In power evangelism, Wimber
goes beyond merely suggesting that some preaching is dull, he rejoices openly
that the Charismatic Movement has toppled preaching from its central role in
worship. Wimber as a professional jazz musician before his conversion
repeatedly affirms how pleased he is to see dance, theater, innovative hymnity
and singing in tongues diminish the place of preaching. Of course because
preaching is fact, preaching is content. The power evangelist further claimed
that church growth rarely occurs through preaching alone, either in biblical
times or subsequent church history. Signs and wonders are the catalyst for
evangelism. And they're back to that. In addition to these imbalances power
evangelists share with other Charismatics an uncritical attitude toward people
who claim to be God's prophets today. And this leads to another problem. If
you take this as your approach to truth, then who can you question, right?
Cause if this guy over here says I saw a six‑foot Jesus dressed in robes who
told me to start a religion where your sins are absolved by sex, on what basis
do I say that man's wrong? That's his experience. In fact, John Wimber said,
and I quote, "I'm sort of a have experience, will travel person." That's a very
dangerous thing, very dangerous.
The rapid growth in this Movement is another part, I think, of the cultural
reaction to naturalism, a reaction that's producing a new fascination with the
supernatural. The New Age is capitalizing on this and these poor sad people are
falling prey to it. They've adopted occultic inner healing, mystical
experience, they even link up sometimes with Roman Catholics who are in to the
same thing. An interesting quote from E.V. Scott in Passport Magazine, "If
Catholic inner healers are having remarkable success, having people visualize
the Virgin Mary, why bother with Jesus?" R.C. Sproul calls this sensuous
Christianity, quote: "The new sensuous Christian doesn't need to study the Word
of God because he already knows the will of God by his feelings. He doesn't
want to know God, he wants to experience Him," end quote.
It is pretty much characteristic of the Charismatic Movement while on the one
hand they affirm the truth of Scripture and there are many scriptures they
understand and believe, that they also generate their perception of interpreting
that revealed Word and they also generate their perceptions of life from out of
their own experience. And as I said in the beginning, that line is erased and
so the thing is blurred. Wimber himself campaigns for a perception change,
transforming the outlook from historic Christianity to Eastern mysticism. And
again this is a new gnostic pagan mysticism, dethroning reason, they say, so the
soul can be free.
But what does God say? Well all of that to take you back to verse 2 of 2 Peter
1. And if you don't understand this verse now, you haven't been listening.
"Grace and peace be multiplied to you in the experience..." is that what it
says? In the what? "In the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord."
We return to our first thought. Grace and peace come in unending large abundant
streams to those who know God and who know Jesus our Lord. Listen, Peter
remember is teaching us how to face false teachers. In chapter 2 he presents
those false teachers. In chapters 1 and 3 he talks about our defenses. The
first defense is to know our salvation, and that's what he's into here in
chapter 1. Last time we talked about the fact we need to know the source of our
salvation, it's God. Now in verse 2 we need to know the substance of our
salvation...the substance of it.
Let's begin at the end and just go back through that verse. "In the knowledge
of God and of Jesus our Lord." "In" could be "through." In the knowledge, or
through the knowledge, indicating the sphere. The word "knowledge," listen
carefully, is epignosis, it is a strengthened form of gnosis. It implies a
personal complete knowledge. It's the strongest of the two words. We could say
gnosis would be sort of basic information, epignosis would be full exact rich
intimate knowledge. Sometimes epignosis appears to have a very special unique
meaning. But you cannot ascribe it to necessarily salvation. For the knowledge
mentioned in Hebrews 10:26 and 2 Peter 2:20 was knowledge that did not save and
in both cases it is epignosis. So you don't want to make too much out of this
word. But it does tend to convey the idea of a full knowledge. Most of its
uses have to do with a saving knowledge. Generally it has the idea of a real
complete thorough knowledge involving some intimate understanding.
Paul loves to use it in the pastoral epistles and he uses it with relation to
the truth. In 1 Timothy, 2 Timothy and Titus he talks about the knowledge of
the truth, the knowledge of the truth. One, two, three, four, five times...the
knowledge of the truth, the knowledge of the truth, the substance of our
salvation, beloved, is the knowledge of the truth. It is emperical, is
objective, it is rational. "You shall know the truth and the truth shall make
you free." "You cannot become a Christian until you hear the truth about
Jesus," Romans 10:17. The Bible says your heart will lie, your heart will
deceive you, your emotions will deceive you, the truth is not in us. The truth
is outside us. A man is a fool and not only does he not understand the
objectives and the power of salvation, he doesn't understand depravity if he
thinks that man can create divine truth out of his own fallen heart. Salvation
substance is not based on intuition, it's not based on emotion, it's not based
on experience, it's based on the revealed truth, the knowledge of the truth.
But Peter goes further. Truth does not come from non‑ rational urges. He says
it's not only the knowledge of the truth as Paul called it, but here he says
it's the knowledge of a person, two persons, "God and Jesus our Lord." The
substance of our salvation, we know God through knowing Jesus, right? It is
knowledge. We know the truth and we know the person who revealed the truth.
I'm sure Peter got this wonderful phrase, "the knowledge of God," from his Old
Testament learning. The Old Testament uses the concept of knowing the Lord over
and over and over. Pharaoh is quoted in Exodus 5:2 as saying, "I do not know
the Lord." Judges 2:10 speaks of a whole generation of people who didn't know
the Lord. First Samuel 2:12 describes the sons of Eli as corrupt because they
didn't know the Lord. Hosea describes the people as possessing the spirit of
harlotry and they didn't know the Lord. Hosea records that God said, "I will
betroth you to Me in faithfulness, however, and you shall know the Lord."
Proverbs 2:5 says, "You will understand the fear of the Lord and find the
knowledge of God." That's an Old Testament concept. Man's relation to God is
not only described as knowing the truth about God but it's knowing God through
His truth. I wish I had time to fully develop that. That's why at the end of
this epistle in 2 Peter 3:18 he says, "Grow in grace and in the...what?...the
knowledge...the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ."
Beloved, the substance of our salvation is not mystical. The substance of our
salvation is knowing the God of truth, the Christ of truth and the truth they
revealed. There's no place for a passive mind. There's no place for mysticism,
imagination, visualization, any of that other stuff.
Continuing our backward trip through the verse, "In the knowledge of God and
Jesus our Lord, grace and peace are multiplied to us." That's the reality. We
live in grace. Romans 5 says in the sphere of grace we have peace with God.
Grace, that's charis, free unmerited favor for sinners giving them full
forgiveness through Jesus Christ forever. Did you hear that statement? Grace
is free unmerited favor for sinners giving them full forgiveness in Jesus Christ
forever. Peace, eirene, is the effect of grace. It is the state of blessing
flowing out of the forgiveness that Christ has given.
Be multiplied to you is a wish. My wish for you and it is a reality is that in
an ever increasing greater abundance, grace and peace will be multiplied to
you. As the true genuine intimate knowledge of the truth of God and Christ
grows through the Word there is the multiplication of the blessings of grace and
peace, more grace for every sin, more grace for every weakness, more peace for
every temptation, more peace for every trial. And so, beloved, we must
understand our salvation. If we're going to stand against false teaching like
the stuff floating around, you've got to know the source of your salvation is
God and the substance of your salvation is knowledge...knowledge. That will help
you put on what Paul in 1 Thessalonians 5:8 calls the helmet of the hope of
salvation. Shall we bow together in a word of closing prayer?
Father, we have had an interesting journey of thought tonight, all the way from
what is wrong to what is right. We thank You that You've given us a clear word
and You haven't left us to the deceptions of our own heart which is deceitful
above all things as Jeremiah said, that You revealed Your truth. And then You
not only revealed Your truth but You gave us a resident truth teacher in the
Holy Spirit. Father, may we build our lives on the truth and in the knowledge
that is the substance of our salvation, the knowledge of the truth and the God
of truth and the Christ who said He was the truth, may we know the abounding
multiplication of all grace and all peace and so in understanding our salvation
be able to stand against the errors of our time, we'll thank You in Christ's
name. Amen.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "MacArthur's Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
Box 119
Columbus, New Jersey, USA, 08022
Websites: www.biblebb.com and www.gospelgems.com
Email: tony@biblebb.com
Online since 1986