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PHIL: Well I promised last week to ask you some questions about the more outlandish…
JOHN: May I introduce you first?
PHIL: Yes, go ahead.
JOHN: This is my long-term friend Phil Johnson who just celebrated his…what anniversary
with us? Thirty…
PHIL: Thirty years.
JOHN: Thirty years in serving here and I remember the first Sunday he and Darlene sat on the
front row right there when they came 30 years ago and for how many years with Grace To You?
PHIL: Thirty
JOHN: All thirty…all thirty years, now leading Grace To You for many years, so thank you,
sir. (Applause)
PHIL: Thank you. It’s thirty years that have gone by in a flash and it’s just as
exciting to me today as it was then.
JOHN: Really?
PHIL: Yeah.
JOHN: Good. That’s good.
PHIL: Yeah, it is.
Now last week I promised I would ask you some questions about the more outlandish televangelists
and the snake handlers and sort of other ranked charlatans which are part of the Charismatic
Movement. And I thought about it over the two weeks and if we have time, we might get
to that, but I was left last time with several theological questions I want to ask you and
most of the people in our audience aren’t as likely to be confused by someone like Benny
Hinn or Paula White as they would be with some of the continuationists who hold to more
traditional confessions of faith, closer to us theologically and so that’s what I’m
really concerned about. And I think it would be helpful if I began with some questions
about doctrine and Scripture and I want to try to ask you the kinds of questions that
I think our Charismatic friends who share our commitment to the gospel might want to
ask you if they were up here with you. And then if we have time left over at the end,
we’ll get to the other things.
JOHN: Okay.
PHIL: I’ve had several Charismatics tell me that to them cessationism sounds an awful
lot like skepticism so that, you know, instead of accepting the testimony of people who say
that the Holy Spirit is doing miracles today, we tend to begin our position from a place
of Agnosticism, or skepticism as if our presumption is kind of state of disbelief. From the Charismatics
point of view, can you see why that would be a concern?
JOHN: Well yeah, they see it as skepticism because they think they’re right. It’s
that simple. If you think you’re right, then you’re going to view some rejection
as skepticism and nothing more. You’re not going to say, “Well, that person could be
right, that’s reasonable, that’s rational, that’s biblical. You’re just going to
bag it in the bag of skepticism.
I would say the rejection of the Charismatic Movement as such is not skepticism, it’s
just outright rejection. I’m not skeptical about it in the sense that I’m questioning
the legitimacy of it, I’m not really asking that question anymore. I think it’s illegitimate.
PHIL: Right.
JOHN: So this is not skepticism, this is just rejection. I just don’t think there’s
a biblical case for that Movement. So if you want to…if you want to call it skepticism,
that’s simply a reflection of the fact that you don’t believe what I’m saying and
you affirm the Movement. So you simply dismiss it as skepticism. The problem with that is
they endeavor to take that skepticism and apply it not to the Movement, but to the Holy
Spirit.
PHIL: Right.
JOHN: So then they say you’re skeptical of the Holy Spirit, you’re skeptical of
the power of the Spirit, you’re skeptical of the work of the Holy Spirit.
PHIL: No, you don’t believe in the Holy Spirit…
JOHN: Or you don’t even believe in the Holy Spirit. I’ve heard people say through the
years, you know, “John MacArthur has an effective ministry, just imagine what he’d
be if he had the Holy Spirit.” Literally. “Well what would happen in his ministry
if he didn’t reject the Holy Spirit? If he was open to the Spirit?” So I understand
that to be labeled skeptical of the Movement is their way of dismissing me and then they
want to extend it and they never want to say, “Let’s go to the Word of God and discuss
the issue of tongues, let’s go to the Word of God and discuss the issue of prophecy.”
It’s much more effective to dismiss me by saying, “He denies the Holy Spirit.”
PHIL: What would you say to a Charismatic to reassure him that you are not skeptical
of all things miraculous?
JOHN: I’m not skeptical of anything that fits Scripture. I affirm everything that is
scriptural. Do I affirm miracles? Of course, in the biblical sense as defined in the Bible,
as revealed in the Bible. But I will not accept a miracle claim from someone that cannot be
verified and that does not fit the biblical pattern.
PHIL: Yeah, sub-biblical miracles are really….
JOHN: Well, you know, people throw that word around. You know, “I went to the mall and
there was a parking place near Sears. It was a miracle.” That’s not a miracle.
PHIL: Yeah. In fact, hold that thought because I want to get to that. I have a question about
that very thing.
JOHN: You’ve had that miracle in your life?
PHIL: Yes, it happens to me all the time. Yeah…yeah. No, my question is going to be
with regard to…”If that’s not a miracle, what do you call it?” But let me get there.
There was a…last year a famous pastor issued a video that went on the internet in which
he said, “Cessationism is a kind of deism.” He was basically making this charge that at
the root of it is a spirit of unbelief…
JOHN: Okay, I need to stop and define that. Cessationism, for you that don’t know what
we’re talking about, is the belief that the gifts that, the sign gifts, the miracle
gifts that belong to the Apostles ceased when the Apostles ceased. We talk about cessationism,
we’re talking about the fact that at the end of the era of the Apostles, the signs
of an Apostle ceased which were miracles and signs and wonders. Just so you understand
that.
PHIL: Yeah, 2 Corinthians 12:12 refers to those…
JOHN: Signs of an Apostle. And by the way, in the book I have right here, chapter 5 may
be the most important chapter in the book, this is a pre-publication copy, and it shows
how the Apostles have ceased. And if Apostles have ceased, then everything that was attendant
upon the Apostles’ ministry ceased when the Apostles ceased because it was inimitable
to them.
Now the second thing you said in that was…
PHIL: Well, he’s saying it’s a kind of…it has at its heart a spirit of unbelief. He
says it’s a worldly way of thinking that has more in common with atheism…
JOHN: Oh yeah, deism. Yeah…well deism, just to define deism, deism is the notion, it’s
an old notion, some of the founding fathers of America were deists, the idea that God
made everything, created everything, there is a God, He made everything and then He just
walks away and just kind of lets it all go. That’s the view of deism. You believe in
God, you believe in God as Creator, you believe in God as power, but God’s not involved
anymore, He walks away.
So when people accuse me of not believing in the supernatural, not believing in miracles,
they say that’s akin to being a deist, that God started everything and He’s no longer
involved.
PHIL: Or that He shut Himself off from working.
JOHN: Yeah, He’s transcendent without being imminent.
PHIL: Yeah, so respond to that.
JOHN: Well, of course, that’s absurd to say that God…because God…because I say
God is not healing people in the way they did in the Apostles’ era, He’s not raising
dead people the way Jesus did. He’s not doing signs and wonders. He’s not creating
limbs and food and all those things. Is not to say that God is not active at all. God
is the one in whom we live, and move and have our being. If God for one split second took
His power and His presence out of the universe, it would cease to exist.
And then you can go beyond that to spiritual life. The great miracle that God is doing,
you saw a testimony of three of those miracles tonight, the miracle of new life. “If any
man is in Christ, he’s a new creation.” God is doing spiritual work of salvation.
He’s also doing the spiritual work of sanctification as He conforms believers to the ministry of
the Holy Spirit by the Word into the image of Christ. He’s doing the work of conviction
through the Holy Spirit, convicting the world of sin and righteousness and judgment. We’re
begotten again by the power of the Spirit which is the work of God through the Word.
We’re sanctified through the Word. The Word is alive and powerful. That the Scripture
is made alive and active in our own lives. We’re led by the Holy Spirit. We…we are
informed by the Holy Spirit. That is to say we are illuminated as to our understanding
of Scripture by the work of the indwelling Holy Spirit.
So and I guess maybe I could sum it up by saying, “How could you say that God’s
not involved when He lives inside the believer?” No one is denying that. We’re simply talking
about the manifestations of God that were miraculous associated with Jesus and the Apostles
having ceased. In fact, keep this in mind, the miracles that Jesus did and the miracles
the Apostles did when Jesus was ministering were powerful miracles done in an era where
the fullness of the Holy Spirit had not yet really come. Because Jesus said, “He is
with you, He shall be in you.” And that happened on the Day of Pentateuch. So, rather
than saying God is less involved at this period after the ministry of Jesus and the Apostles,
that would lead me to believe that He is more involved. The Holy Spirit was with you and
shall be in you is a question of degree. In some way the fullness of the Spirit has come
as the fullness of the revelation of God has come, and He has gone back to heaven and sent
His Holy Spirit. So I don’t believe in less of God’s power and presence and Spirit,
if anything, I believe in more of it. It’s only the question of how it manifests itself
and whether or not those very unique things that were occurring in the time of the Apostles
continue after the Apostles, which would be very confusing because they were to mark out
the Apostles and validate their message before there was a Scripture, before Scripture was
compiled. Now that it’s compiled, we don’t need miracles to validate a prophet, all we
need to know is how he matches up with Scripture. And that’s the problem. Benny Hinn claims
to do miracles to validate his ministry. The problem is, he has terrible theology and misrepresents
Scripture. And God’s not going to validate that through miracles. If you compare him
with Scripture, and he doesn’t match the Scripture, then he’s a false prophet.
PHIL: If somebody came to you and said, “I want to understand the ministry of the Holy
Spirit today,” what passages of Scripture would you point them to?
JOHN: Well, first of all, if you’re talking about the work of salvation which would be
the great work that the Holy Spirit is doing, you would start with a couple of things. You
would start, first of all, with John 16, He convicts the world of sin and righteousness
and judgment. So how is this darkened sinner, this dead sinner, this blind sinner, this
double-blind sinner, blinded by his own fallenness, double blinded by Satan’s development of
a system that holds him in bondage, how is he supposed to see the truth? How is he supposed
to be convicted about his sin? How’s he supposed to feel badly about what he loves
to do? Men love darkness rather than light because their deeds are evil. So how do you
flip him and have him hate what he loves? That’s a work of the Holy Spirit. That’s
not a work of man. The Spirit convicts the world of sin and righteousness and judgment.
You also have to believe that the natural man, 1 Corinthians 2, doesn’t understand
the things of God, the only way he can understand Him is through the Holy Spirit because they’re
spiritually discerned and it is only the Spirit that gives clarity on Scripture. So we would
say that the Spirit convicts of sin, and the Spirit illuminates the mind to understand
the truth. And then the Spirit regenerates, the Spirit literally gives life, we’re born
of the Spirit, John 3, begotten by the Holy Spirit.
So that’s where the ministry of the Spirit in a human being begins. But I would even
back up one spot before that on a broad level and say this, the world is bad but the world
is not as bad as it could be. Okay? I mean, it’s not as bad as it could be, right? You
can take a vacation to a beautiful place, you can interact with people who aren’t
Christians, you can go to a hospital and get good care from people who have no knowledge
of Christ. The world is bad but it’s not as bad as it could be.
Do you know why the world is not as bad as it could be? Because it is restrained. It
is restrained by the one that Paul writes about in 2 Thessalonians who is called the
restrainer. So even before the work of conviction and illumination and regeneration and sanctification
and glorification, there is the restraining work of the Holy Spirit. In the future there
is coming a period of time that the Bible identifies as the Great Tribulation when the
restrainer no longer restrains. Then the world will be essentially as bad as it can be. That’s
when you read about the things that are in the book of Revelation, horrendous, horrific
things…a number of things will happen. The Antichrist will take power. The false prophet
will aid and abet him. Sin will run rampant over the world. People will be slaughtering
each other, killing within the family, hell will open up and demons out of hell will overrun
the world in a way that they don’t now. That’s when the restrainer stops restraining.
That doesn’t mean during that time that the Holy Spirit isn’t here. He’s omnipresent,
He is here. He is here and the gospel will be preached, and people will be saved in those
seven years. More people will be saved, I think, than any other period in history from
every tongue and tribe and people and nation. But He will no longer restrain. Those works
of the Holy Spirit go on all the time through human history until the end.
PHIL: Now see, if you ask me, “Help me understand the ministry of the Holy Spirit in the church
today,” I would give that person your messages from Romans 8.
JOHN: Sure, and that’s where this whole thing started. It was when I was preaching
through Romans 8, I don’t know when, some time ago, what?
PHIL: A year ago, a year and a half, maybe.
JOHN: A year ago, or a year and a half ago. I started into Romans 8 and I wanted to show
the true ministry of the Holy Spirit in Romans 8. That’s where you would go. I mean, that’s
what you’re driving out. I would start in the gospel of John in chapter 16, I would
look at 1 Corinthians 2, and then I would end up in Romans 8 because there you have
what life in the Spirit is. If you want to know the full range of the Spirit’s ministry,
that’s where it is. And by the way, that’s the three chapters before the final chapter,
dealing with Romans 8 and the true ministry of the Holy Spirit. No one is denying the
true ministry of the Holy Spirit. What we’re denying is a phenomena or the absence of a
phenomena, a claimed phenomena, a falsely claimed phenomena attributed to the Holy Spirit
that has nothing to do with Him.
PHIL: Actually I was driving at all of those. I’m glad you mentioned John 16 and all those
other passages because all those that you named are the key passages on the ministry
of the Holy Spirit today, and not one of them says anything about speaking in tongues.
JOHN: No. It doesn’t say anything about miracles either.
PHIL: Right. Now respond to this. In one of his books, Jack Deere, Jack Deere was a professor
at Dallas Seminary who converted to Charismatic theology and he’s written a few books on
the subject. In one of his books he says…he suggests the following hypothetical, he writes,
“If you were to lock a brand new Christian in a room with a Bible and tell him to study
what the Scriptures have to say about healing and miracles, he would never come out of that
room a cessationist.” And elsewhere he adds, “No one ever just picked up the Bible, started
reading and came to the conclusion that God is not doing signs and wonders anymore, or
that the gifts of the Holy Spirit have passed away. The doctrine of cessationism did not
originate from a careful study of the Scriptures. The doctrine of cessationism originated in
experience.” Respond to that.
JOHN: What he’s saying is that we’re cessationists because we haven’t had the experience.
PHIL: Right.
JOHN: You know, that is really bad history. That is terrible history. At the end of the
book…
PHIL: I was going to say the same thing because between the Bible and that guy…
JOHN: Between the Bible…
PHIL: And that guy locked in the room, you’ve got…
JOHN: William Fox Parham(?) who invented this stuff.
PHIL: You’ve got twenty centuries…
JOHN: You’ve got twenty centuries when nobody was affirming that except aberrant groups.
Voices from church history, we have John Chrysostom, the fourth century, Augustine, Theodoret7
of Cyrus in the fifth century, Martin Luther in the fifteenth and sixteenth century, John
Calvin, John Owen, Thomas Watson, Matthew Henry, John Gill, Jonathan Edwards, James
Buchanan, Robert Dabney in the nineteenth century, Charles Spurgeon in the nineteenth
century, George Smeaten in the nineteenth century, the great Abraham Kuyper in the nineteenth
and a little into the twentieth, William Shedd in the nineteenth, Benjamin Warfield in the
twentieth century, Arthur Pink, D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, they all are cessationists. They
all declare that these things have ceased.
So to say that there has been a continual stream of legitimate, biblical scholarship
conviction and confidence in the sign gifts is just not the case.
PHIL: Yes, and the other side of that is, if you cite those instances throughout church
history, and there are some where people claimed miracles happened, and you examine those claims,
you find a lot of them are just rooted in superstition. They’re Catholic stories about…
JOHN: Yeah, well how about the latest two that are going to make Pope—which one of
the popes?
PHIL: Pope John Paul.
JOHN: Pope John Paul now is going to be sainted because they found that he did two miracles.
Both are bogus claims. So yeah, there are still people trying to claim miracles happen
but upon examination…but look at that, if he’s a saint and he was old when he died,
and they can only find two questionable miracles? And this is all that a saint can produce who’s
such a saint that he ends up being the saint of all saints over all other saints?
PHIL: Not only that, he’s being canonized probably faster than any…
JOHN: Faster than anybody else, yeah. Well it’s like they’ve got to get something
good in there with all the disaster that’s going on. But…yeah, Jack Deere’s(?) comments
about that being the norm, you would have to literally be ignorant of church history
to buy into that. That kind of argument would do well with a lot of folks who don’t know
the truth about the history of the church and they would buy into that. But anybody
who knows the history of the church, knows that the idea of cessation didn’t get invented
in the twentieth century by us. That’s just bizarre.
PHIL: Well, and as you pointed out two weeks ago, even the contemporary things that are
happening that are claimed as apostolic signs and so on, really aren’t like the signs
described in Scripture. Speaking in tongues today is, you know, just a lot of random syllables,
not a recognizable language. In the Scripture that was…
JOHN: No, and back to the issue of John Paul, I read an article today which completely debunks
the miracle that supposedly causes him to be canonized.
PHIL: What kind of miracle was it?
JOHN: I don’t know, it was some healing, but there are people who have… who are very
cynical that any such thing ever happened. So…
PHIL: Right. I want to get to healing but let’s go back to the word “miracle.”
You indicated that, you know, it’s loosely used these days. We ought to define it. That
word is tossed around and abused these days so that virtually every remarkable providence
or stunning answer to prayer is categorized as a miracle. You have in…I think in your
commentary on 1 Corinthians, you define miracle this way. It’s a supernatural intrusion
into the natural world and its natural laws explainable only by divine intervention.
JOHN: Yeah.
PHIL: Warfield had a similar definition. He said that distinguishing characteristics of
a true miracle, the thing that makes them different from the counterfeits are one, it
occurs in the external world and it’s therefore objectively real and not merely a mental phenomenon,
not just, you know, something that happens in somebody’s mind. And number two, he said,
its cause is a new supernatural force intruded into the complex of nature and not a natural
force. And he said that’s true even if it’s a natural force under the providential control
of God, that’s not a miracle, it’s an act of providence. Would you agree with that
distinction?
JOHN: Yeah, absolutely! A miracle in the biblical definition has no natural explanation. It
has…there’s not even the possibility of a natural explanation. Sometimes when somebody
goes through cancer treatment and the cancer is somehow disappears and they go into some
kind of remission and time goes by, people say that’s a miracle.
PHIL: Or the unexpected parking space. Things as simple as that.
JOHN: That’s not necessarily a miracle because that is not manifestly supernatural. That
is not something that has no other explanation.
PHIL: And yet we wouldn’t deny that that could well be God at work. God orchestrated
that as He does all things, providentially. Right?
JOHN: Providentially, providentially God…God can work in the human body in wonderful ways.
The body is an amazing thing to begin with. And God works through the science of medicine
and God can supernaturally be involved in those kinds of things. But God has placed
in human life order and system and human wisdom and knowledge and opportunity and all of that
that can bring about providentially those kinds of things. And I think particularly
in the world in which we live. If you’re living during the Black Death when millions
and millions and millions of people are dying all over Europe, you know, that’s not a
real good time to be a miracle working evangelist. You’re not going to be running around gathering
people into a tent and saving their life. But in a world where you have so much science
so highly developed that people can be helped, it’s very easy to sort of say, “Well,
this is a miracle and that’s a miracle,” when that would not be the only possible explanation.
If God’s going to do a miracle, there isn’t going to be any other explanation. That’s
going to be when you see a guy come back from Afghanistan who had his right leg blown off
and the next time you see him he’s got a leg. That’s a miracle. That’s…that’s
something for which there is no human explanation.
PHIL: A key element of your definition and Warfield’s is that it’s something that
contravenes the natural order of.
JOHN: It violates the natural order. It intrudes into the natural order. Providence is where
God manipulates the natural order.
PHIL: Now let me read you a contrasting definition. This is from Wayne Grudem and it’s much
broader. He says, “A miracle is a less common kind of God’s activity in which He arouses
people’s awe and wonder and bears witness to Himself.” So it’s anything that God
does that’s out of the ordinary that would bear witness to Him and arouse your awe. So
I would guess by Grudem’s definition, the parking space, he would classify that as a
miracle.
JOHN: Phil, what does out of the ordinary mean?
PHIL: Well, an open parking space at the mall. That’s out of the ordinary. At least it
is for me anyway.
JOHN: You know, that kind of silliness attached to God is beneath Him.
PHIL: Yeah, but…here’s the point I want to make. You might say that something, even
something as mundane as that, would be an answer to prayer, right?
JOHN: Well, you know, yeah here’s why. That wouldn’t be at the mall. Any time you can
find a parking place to the mall, things go bad right away.
PHIL: Yeah, okay.
JOHN: Yeah, cause you start rolling out the credit card…that’s not good. That’s…but,
if you’re racing to the hospital and you’ve got a dying child in the backseat, and you
don’t know where you’re going, you can’t find your way, and all of a sudden you have
a thought, maybe I should turn right here. You pull in and you’re at the emergency,
you could say there’s a divine providence working at that point that delivered you at
that place at that critical time for the salvation of life, for saving a life. I think those
kinds of things…we all know stories about the ambulance arrived just in time, or the
rescue came in just in time, or I was about to pull out and a truck went flashing by and
something caused me to stop. Those kinds of providences that God works in the world, I
don’t question the providences of God in that.
PHIL: Yeah, the Puritans used to refer to that as an extraordinary providence.
JOHN: But I don’t like that phrase either because all providence is extraordinary. Right?
Or it isn’t divine providence. But some of it is more wonderful than others…
PHIL: That’s right and that’s what they meant by extraordinary. It was the kind of
thing. It grabbed your attention and you said, “God did that.”
JOHN: But the miracle would be…the miracle would be that you didn’t need a car to go
to the mall.
PHIL: Right.
JOHN: You just were there.
PHIL: Here’s my question….Here’s my question. Is that…cause I think that’s
an important distinction. I’m not sure Wayne Grudem would say it’s an important distinction.
He seems to treat it very casually. But I would say it’s critical whether you classify
that as a miracle or an act of providence.
JOHN: It is critical.
PHIL: Because with providence, what we’re recognizing is that God is at work in everything
that happens.
JOHN: Look, in my life I would say there’s rarely a day that goes by that I’m not surprised
by providence. I mean, a day goes by that I’m not surprised by providence. Somebody
comes across my path, something happens that is so obviously divinely orchestrated. I live…that’s
my entire life, that’s how I live. I see the divine providence of God in and out of
my life on a daily basis. And I know there are times that I don’t even see it but His
providence works. So I would never deny that God is at work, accomplishing His purposes
through me in ways that are imperceptible to me. That goes on in the lives of His people
and in the world. But a miracle is a completely different reality. It is not God orchestrating
the natural events. It is God stopping the natural events and injecting a clearly supernatural
event.
PHIL: Right.
JOHN: And to say you believe in miracles and then redefine miracle as nothing but a providence…
PHIL: Doesn’t really help anything, does it?
JOHN: It doesn’t help.
PHIL: Plus, the point I’ve tried lovingly to make with my Charismatic friends is…whose
faith is deficient?
JOHN: You still have Charismatic friends?
PHIL: I do…I do. They’re very persistent friends. But whose faith is deficient? Is
it the guy who sees that God is at work in providence in everything that happens, or
is it the guy who thinks God’s only working when He does a miracle? The deficient faith
is the guy who thinks God’s only working if He’s doing miracles. And so when somebody
says to me…You don’t believe in the Holy Spirit because you don’t believe in miracles…
JOHN: Guess what. That is such a good point, Phil. It’s really a very good insight. The
deficient faith is to think that God only works in miracles, but only when He suspends
things. And, of course, when you think that’s the only way God works, you invent that stuff
in your own mind, to create a reality. And I said this last time, I’ll say it again.
These people don’t have great faith, they have doubt looking for proof. They don’t
have great faith. Great faith sees God at work in everything. I would say I have a far
greater understanding of the power of God in the world than they do because I see God’s
providence working in everything, absolutely everything.
You know, there’s a certain calm in me, even in the most challenging and stressful
realities of life because I’m not panicked hoping for a miracle. I’m absolutely settled
on the fact that God is providentially at work and will accomplish His perfect will
which is always right and best. And that’s a settled place of peace. I can’t imagine
anything else.
At the Strange Fire Conference, Joni Eareckson Tada is going to come and she’s going to
talk about a life without a miracle. You know, there are so many people who’ve laid hands
on her, prayed for miracles to happen, told her she lacked faith. She sees the providence
of God in her life every day. She has a greater view of the power of God than a Charismatic
asking for a miracle. As if that could actually happen. And you know in a sense…
PHIL: That’s a great point.
JOHN: You don’t need a miracle if God is orchestrating everything. That is the miracle.
What miracle do you need? Do you want something other than God orchestrating everything? What
would be better than that?
PHIL: In fact, the historic Protestant view is that in history and in Scripture, miracles
serve a definitive purpose.
JOHN: Absolutely.
PHIL: And what is that purpose?
JOHN: To authenticate the messenger of God and the work of God at a given point in time.
We talked about it last time. Go to the whole Old Testament. The Old Testament covers hundreds
and hundreds of years, from the creation to the New Testament, four thousand years. Try
to find miracles, as I said last time, when God does intervene, most of the time people
die. It’s judgment. There are two periods of miracles around Moses and Egypt and around
Elijah and Elisha and that’s it. Until you get to the New Testament, an explosion of
miracles to validate the person of Jesus Christ. We said that in the gospel of John, right?
I mean, He’s demonstrating His deity through these miracles and He’s authenticating His
Apostles or preaching the truth in a world of lies. How do you know who the true teacher
is? The one who is validated by visible, undeniable, supernatural invasions into the natural world.
But when the ministry of Christ is done, and the ministry of the Apostles is done, even
as you get to the end of the book of Acts, the miracles begin to completely disappear.
People stay sick. They don’t get healed. And in no epistle in the New Testament is
anybody ever told to look for a miracle, seek for a miracle, pray for a miracle.
PHIL: Here’s what John Calvin wrote about that, tell me if you agree with this. “It
is unreasonable to ask for miracles, or to find them where there is no new gospel. The
miraculous attestation of that one single gospel suffices for all lands and all times
and no further miracles are to be expected in connection with it.” Do you agree with
that?
JOHN: That is a great statement. And we would expect that from maybe the greatest mind that
biblical theology has ever known, John Calvin, and a biblically, scripturally saturated mind
at that, yeah, to seek for miracles would be to assume a new revelation from God in
some way replacing the old one.
PHIL: Then that leads to this question. This is a little tougher. Do you then totally rule
out miracles today? That is do you deny the possibility of miracles? Is there any biblical
or doctrinal argument that suggests that God limits Himself from working in that fashion?
Or if God decided to, could He do a miracle now?
JOHN: Oh, if God decided He could do anything. I mean, that’s obvious. God has not chosen
to do miracles in this era because He has revealed Himself in His Son and the record
of His Son is on the pages of Holy Scripture and Scripture is the miracle. Scripture is
God, that is the miracle. Could God do a miracle? Of course. Will He do some in the future?
Absolutely. They will come back powerfully at the end of the age. Clearly. And again
when they come back powerfully at the end of the age, for the most part they’re going
to be judgment miracles again. They’re going to be miracles that the world isn’t going
to want to see, supernatural miracles that will be devastating to the world.
But I do think there will be other miracles. There will be visions and there will be prophecies
and revelations at the end of the age. I mean, that’s the promise of Joel, reiterated at
the Day of Pentecost and affirmed for the end times.
PHIL: What would you say to the Charismatic who says that is being fulfilled today, that’s
what the Charismatic Movement is all about?
JOHN: It just doesn’t match up to the biblical standard. The moon hasn’t turned to blood.
The stars aren’t falling out of the sky. Those eschatological events, I think, are
associated with the time of those miracles.
Here…the bottom line is this. They keep talking about miracles and no one can verify
any of them. They can’t verify any of them. I mean, just healing lower back pain is not
convincing.
PHIL: No, although…
JOHN: It’s all that invisible stuff. And, you know, psychosomatic…people…disorders
people think they have things…but you don’t see a real visible, demonstrable verifiable
authenticated miracle. How many people have gone after that? I mean, in the book we talk
about that. People have gone after…they’ve got to Benny Hinn and take…you give me your
best five miracles and we’ll survey every one of them…and they come up with nothing…nothing.
They don’t happen. And this is the guy at the top of the food chain doing miracles.
People went after Kathryn Kuhlman’s miracles…supposed miracles. They couldn’t verify any of them.
I read an entire book trying to validate her miracles. There was no validation possible.
So…and this would be your experience, right? You’ve never seen a dead person made alive.
You’ve never seen a person without a limb get a limb. You’ve never seen somebody in
a wheelchair with muscular dystrophy or some kind of severe disability and we have hundreds
of those precious people around here, get out of a wheelchair. And the question I always
ask is why are they at Grace Church and not Church on the Way? What are they doing here.
Because if those people can do miracles, that’s where they ought to be. The answer to that
is they’ve been there. And now they’re here.
PHIL: All right, and yet I know you and I know that you pray for people to be healed.
JOHN: Sure, I pray that because I’m told to pray that…in Scripture. To pray for those
that are sick. To pray…
PHIL: What is your expectation…
JOHN: Okay, let me give you a parallel.
PHIL: Okay.
JOHN: I pray for people to be saved because I’m commanded to pray for people to be saved.
Right? Paul says that to Timothy.
PHIL: Right.
JOHN: We’re commanded to pray for the salvation of people. I pray that but because I know
God has told me to pray that and God supernaturally can save people. If I’m told to pray for
the sick, which I am in Scripture, I have to believe that God can bring wellness to
a sick person. I believe that. The question is, how does He do that? Does He save people
today by slamming them into the dirt on the Damascus Road? No. He saves them invisibly
by the ministry of the Holy Spirit in his heart ….
PHIL: Through the means of the gospel…
JOHN: Through the means of the gospel. And I think the healings that God does and I believe
God heals, I believe when, you know, a few years ago when Patricia had her car accident,
I think it’s been twenty years, and broke her neck and broke C2 and C3 above the respiration.
I think God providentially ordered those little bones in her neck that it completely shattered
and fragmented, He kept them from touching her spinal column. When I had blood clots,
DVTs on both lungs, I believe the Lord kept those from going through my heart and killing
me. I think God works that way.
PHIL: When I had lower back pain, you prayed for me and…
JOHN: I did. Did it go away when I prayed for you?
PHIL: Well, after I had surgery, yeah. (Laughter)
JOHN: Oh yeah. See, that’s exactly…that’s not a miracle, that’s not a…I prayed that
you would find the right surgeon. That’s what I prayed.
PHIL: Well, and I believe…actually…
JOHN: I had back pain and I had surgery.
PHIL: And I say this with absolute seriousness, I believe the Lord answered your prayers.
But He did it through means.
JOHN: Did it through means rather than stopping the natural process and invading the natural
process. But having said that, Phil, it is clear that there is a limit to how His providence
works. If you have a stone-blind person, blind from birth with non-functioning eyes, praying
that God will give that person two new eyes, God has demonstrated that that is not the
way He works in this era. If you’re talking about a person who is wheelchair bound from
birth, praying that they will wake up one morning and have a completely healthy, whole,
functioning body is not the way God works.
So having said that, we are basically back to providence again. We’re back to the fact
that God does work providentially in mysterious ways in the natural order of things, accomplishing
His will. But He does not suspend what is natural and completely invade it with a supernatural
act as He did during the ministry of Jesus and the Apostles, that is critical. All those
definitions are critical. And I think that’s why we reject this Movement because it fails
to recognize reality. Take a look around. That’s not happening. That’s not happening.
And so rather than trusting and rejoicing in the providence of God and what He is doing,
they beg God to do things that He is not doing. And the fallout, let me tell you, the fallout
is not good.
PHIL: A lot of disillusionment, yeah. This is a crucial point. The question is not is
God working, it’s how is He working.
JOHN: How is He working?
PHIL: It’s not does God do miracles but will He do miracles?
JOHN: Can He do miracles? Of course. Has He chosen to do them in this age? No. But He
didn’t choose to do them throughout human history except at rare occasions.
PHIL: Is there anything spiritually unhealthy about looking for and longing for miracles?
JOHN: Yes, and you’ve already pointed it out. It is a failure to accept God in the
way that He works now and to praise Him and honor Him and glorify Him and thank Him for
what He’s doing now.
We were talking this morning with a father in our church in the elders prayer time, you
were there, and he came in and he was telling about his little seven-year-old boy who has
cycle-cell anemia and they tried to do a bone marrow transplant and the red corpuscles were
accepted by the…from the donor and the white ones were not. They don’t know exactly why.
And so his whole immune system is completely suppressed. They didn’t know that until
eight weeks after when they were supposed to get the final, and now he’s supposed
to go back in and have the whole thing and hope it works again. You’ve got eight weeks
of waiting again and hope and if it doesn’t work, you know, really tragic things begin
to happen. He’s at the best place he can be, I think. This is going to surprise you
maybe. I think he’s at the best place he can be, he’s in the Children’s Hospital
of Los Angeles. That’s better than being in a Benny Hinn meeting, I promise you…I
promise you. Because if God’s going to work, God is going to work through the means that
God has allowed man to use to do the best they can for that little life. But there are
people…people who would drag that kind of a child to a meeting and never get to the
platform, believe me…never get to the platform to be videoed. They’d be eliminated in the
process of screening and go away horribly disillusioned.
So yes God works, but He works in the way that He has chosen to work and to fail to
recognize that is to dishonor God. So I think there’s a worship issue. They want to say
that they’re the ones who really believe in God and the Holy Spirit and they are the
ones who are the most exuberant worshipers of God. And again, this is not a great expression
of faith, nor is it a great recognition of God and how He works, this is a failure to
believe and a failure to recognize how God is working.
PHIL: Yeah, it’s always been hard for me to grasp how a Reformed guy who supposedly
believes in the providence of God can sort of cling to Charismatic theology which seems
to contradict the whole idea of divine providence.
JOHN: Yeah, when he says Reformed he means people who believe in the gospel the right
way. Right?
PHIL: Well yeah…yeah. But people who believe in the sovereignty of God in every element
of life.
What…this is a bigger overarching question, what in your view is the single most dangerous
element of the Charismatic Movement?
JOHN: It’s utter lack of commitment to a sound interpretation of Scripture. Everything
is a feeling, intuitive, rightly dividing the Word is the key to everything. If you
don’t do that, you have no discernment. And if you have no discernment, then everything
goes flying apart. So the great problem in the Movement is, and you can back up to this,
and you would know this, the clergy are untrained, right? I mean, almost universally in the Charismatic
Movement you have untrained ministers, untrained pastors. And if they have had some level of
training, they haven’t developed the skill or the commitment to the Word of God to do
the hard work of really exegeting and expositing the Word of God so that they get it right.
So that is at the heart of the matter.
Alongside of that, and this may surprise people, is they have a low view of Scripture. So they
don’t work on the Scripture because they view their own intuition and their own experience
as equal or superior to Scripture. I’ve had people…I remember when I was writing
Charismatic Chaos, I had a quote in there from some woman prophetess who said, “I
really don’t care what Scripture says, I know what I feel.” Well that’s defining
the system. So they have a low view of Scripture, and if you have a low view of Scripture, you
don’t have a high view of exegesis and interpretation, hermeneutics, and the study of Scripture.
What you’re trying to do is simply understand your feelings. And that is the problem with
the Movement. And even the people who are, you know, good theologians who kind of give
them cover, those reformed continuationists, I think give them way too much space to follow
their feelings. Look, feelings follow truth accurately and properly and normally.
People think of me as sort of unfeeling, unemotional. That’s not true. You know, I’m not an
up-and-down kind of person temperament wise, but my life is full of joy, gratitude, thankfulness,
fulfillment, satisfaction all the time, I live in a realm of joy and really nothing
diminishes that joy. There are times when there are things that capture my heart that
are things to be concerned about, but nothing assaults that joy. It’s not artificial,
it’s real, it’s connected to what I know to be true about God.
On the other hand, if you don’t have those kinds of confidences, you sort of need to
be whipped into that kind of artificial emotion and that’s what you see in so much of that
Movement because they don’t have a substantial theology that can produce a real lasting kind
of joy. They have to be stirred up on the emotional level.
PHIL: Yeah, that’s exactly what I would have said as well. In fact, I’ve been to
a couple of Charismatic churches that are sounder than most, have a sound commitment
to the gospel and all that, where in their morning services they open up a time for people
to stand up and say, “Here’s what the Lord has revealed to me this week.” And
in effect, in doing that they reopen the canon. They’re hearing things from God that aren’t
in Scripture and this becomes…they treat it like some sort of authoritative prophecy
then, or possibly some sort of erroneous, possibly erroneous prophecy which downgrades
the idea of revelation. Either way it does damage to the authority of Scripture.
JOHN: Yeah, there’s a chapter in here on that and I remember going back that there
was a guy who wrote a book on prophecy in the church, and he said this…I think it’s
in the Charismatic Chaos book, “We know that when Tom or Mary stand up in the church
and say “thus saith the Lord,” it is either true or it isn’t.”
PHIL: Yeah.
JOHN: Really, that is not helpful. So by what measure do we know that it’s true or it
isn’t? That would be the view of the contemporary continuationists, fallible prophecy.
PHIL: Right. Fallible revelation.
JOHN: If it’s prophecy, we’ve got to leave room for it. It may not be true. Well, you
know what happened to prophets who lied in the Scripture, they were to be *** and
I don’t think God’s lowered His standards, so there’s plenty of information in the
book that addresses that issue, because it’s a very important issue. How can you say God
is speaking, we think, but we’re not sure.
PHIL: Yeah, that puts divine revelation on the same level as the horoscope in the newspaper.
It might seem uncannily correct, but then again it might just be totally far-fetched.
Who knows? What good is that? I couldn’t read the horoscope for that kind of guidance.
JOHN: And there’s something else about the horoscope while we’re talking about it,
people can…
PHIL: You read mine this morning.
JOHN: No, I didn’t read it. But people will, if they keep reading that stuff, conform their
lives to it and make a self-fulfilling prophecy. And the same thing happens in the Charismatic
Movement. You keep giving prophecies to people like you’re supposed to marry Alice over
here, and you have three months and if you don’t marry her in three months, somebody
else is going to come in. And so, somebody rushes to Alice who hasn’t got the message
and says, you know, I’m supposed to marry you. Whoa, whoa, wait a minute. And if you
don’t marry me, you’re going to have a fate worse than death.
I mean literally, people will take those kinds of things…that’s a rather simple illustration
of the fact…and they’ll make themselves fulfilling prophecies.
PHIL: It worked for me. That’s how I got Darlene to marry me.
JOHN: I knew there had to be something more than just…
PHIL: We’re running out of time quickly here…
JOHN: We are? Goodness.
PHIL: Yeah we are, sadly. Let me just…
JOHN: Phil and I talk like this all the time and this is true.
PHIL: Yeah, we could go on for hours.
JOHN: We have these tremendous discussions all the time.
PHIL: In fact, I’ve got several more pages here.
JOHN: Oh Phil.
PHIL: We’ve gotten a couple of…
JOHN: Shall we do it again?
PHIL: I’ll do one more.
JOHN: You want to do one more? One more? (Applause)
PHIL: We’ve seen a couple of responses from pretty well-known Charismatics who know that
we’re having this conference in October and they’ve written and it’s the Browns,
I guess. Rodney Howard Brown and Michael Brown, no relation to one another, but both of them
say they find it astonishing that you would criticize a Movement that has so many followers
worldwide. Here’s their arguments. Rodney Howard Brown writes, “These men—he’s
talking about people like you and me—
JOHN: He, by the way, is the guy who started the laughing revival.
PHIL: He calls himself the Holy Ghost Bartender.
JOHN: Yeah.
PHIL: And he makes people drunk in the Spirit. He says, “These men—the people who are
speaking at our conference in October—think that because of excesses in the church, they
have a right to write off the fastest growing sector of Christianity, over eight-hundred-million
people in the earth today…he says…that would be as bad as writing off Jesus because
one of the Twelve was Judas Iscariot.”
JOHN: Boy, there’s some real clear logic.
PHIL: I’ll let you respond to it. Let me read Michael Brown who says, “More people
have been saved wonderfully saved, as a result of Pentecostal…of the Pentecostal Charismatic
Movement worldwide than through any other Movement in church history to the tune of
perhaps a half billion souls.”
So the argument is, the Lord is obviously using this ministry to grow the size of the
visible church, how can you criticize it?
JOHN: First of all, because it’s full of biblical error and…
PHIL: That would be reason enough.
JOHN: Yeah that would be reason enough. But secondly, this is the really frightening thing,
there are probably eight-hundred-million people who think they’re saved because they’ve
made some kind of connection. That’s the frightening reality. But then, what would
that prove anyway? There are more people than that in India who aren’t saved in one country.
So we could conclude then that Hinduism is a work of God. They’re more people than
that who aren’t saved in Islam, so we can conclude that Islam is the truth. That proves
nothing. And, in fact, the parallel with Jesus and the disciples is a horrendous lack of
reason because Jesus was killed by the society He was in, and all there were were a few hundred
followers of Jesus after a three-year ministry. So does that prove that He was not of God?
I mean, that kind of reasoning is the kind of reasoning that’s consistent with that
Movement.
PHIL: And you have to keep in mind that Jesus Himself said there would be multitudes…
JOHN: Well few there be that find it. And Jesus said, “Many will say, ‘Lord, Lord,’
and I’m going to say, ‘Depart from Me, I don’t know you.’” Many will say Lord,
Lord.
PHIL: And the thing those people would point to was the great works they did, the miracles
they performed, all the Charismatic…
JOHN: Well that’s what they say. We’ve…you know, we’ve done many miracles in Your name,
and we’ve preached in Your name. And He says, “Depart from Me, I don’t know you.”
That…that Matthew 7 passage is pretty direct at the Charismatic Movement. The idea that
eight hundred million people around the world have bought into this also has to be clarified
further. The statistics that we have and I think we can remember them in the book, are
somewhere close to ninety percent of those people believe in the prosperity gospel. So
the attachment they have to Jesus primarily connects with the fact that if they come to
Jesus, they’re going to get money. They’re going to get success, a false offer. So that’s…but
that’s how I would expect them to defend it because they couldn’t defend it biblically,
they couldn’t defend it doctrinally, theologically. To defend anything on the basis of the number
of people that are in the Movement is a foolish thing. It’s the very opposite of what Jesus
said to expect.
Well, then the worst, to give those people the notion that they’re Christians because
they’ve made some motion of their hand, or prayed some simple prayer, and think Jesus
is the key to getting them what they want.
PHIL: And that, by the way, is not merely a Charismatic problem. The evangelical Movement,
Charismatic and non-Charismatic, is filled with people who have made false professions
of faith, or who are self-deceived, that’s been one of the themes of your ministry over
the years.
JOHN: That goes back to the Gospel According to Jesus and all the other books on the gospel,
trying to preach the gospel to the church. You know, when I went through seminary, you
know, they try to prepare us because, you know, we’re seminary students, way back…I
graduated from seminary in ’64. And there were current issues, this is what you need
to know to answer these current issues. Nobody told me that when I came out of seminary,
I was going to have to clarify the true gospel for the evangelical church, but that’s what
we’ve spent a lot of our years trying to do, starting with the book on The Gospel According
to Jesus; The Gospel According to the Apostles. The third one in the trilogy is…down the
road maybe in a while, The Gospel According to Paul. We did a conference on Truth Matters
on the gospel according to Paul. Always trying to clarify the gospel because Satan wants
to deceive people. He doesn’t…he doesn’t want to chase people away from Christianity,
he wants to bring people in to Christianity on false premises so they feel comfortable.
PHIL: Good point. JOHN: Yeah.