When the devil wants to hijack the advancement of God's people, he
introduces subtle, yet destructive deceptions. Deceptions that are easy
for us to embrace as truth, even though they are not presented in
Scripture ... anywhere!
I want us to consider one of these
deceptions and its severe implications to every single Christian or
church who has bought into the lie.
Why Does the Devil Hate the Holy Spirit?
One
of the enemy's favorite topics to target is the Holy Spirit. This is no
coincidence. The more the enemy can confuse the church about the role
of Holy Spirit, the more he can gain influence.
Consider this. The
very Spirit of God that empowers ordinary men and women to be a
restraining force to darkness in the earth has become reduced to being a
controversial doctrine that we tolerate, at best, and ignore, at worst.
This should not be so!
Satan hates Holy Spirit intensely for one
key reason. The Christian who fully embraces the revelation that he or
she is actually filled with the same Spirit that raised Jesus from the
dead becomes a spiritual Joshua or Caleb who enters into and releases
the promise land of heaven on earth. We begin thinking, speaking, and
acting like people who are, quite literally, possessed by God. Surely,
this throws a wrench into Satan's diabolical plans.
This is why
the enemy so persistently perpetuates lies about the Spirit. He's done
this since the beginning of church history, causing division about how
equal (or non-equal) the Holy Spirit is to God the Father and God the
Son. Controversy has continued all the way up into our modern era, where
everything from speaking in tongues to the continuation of miracles to
being "slain in the Spirit" is on the table for theological debate and
division. Yet, while Christians are dividing over the Spirit, darkness
is gaining ground. This must stop if we are going to see a great
worldwide revival prior to the Second Coming of Jesus.
The Lie that is Impacting Millions
There
is a lie that is being widely circulating in the evangelical (and yes,
even the charismatic) church that shuts down expectation concerning the
Spirit's movement. In many ways, this lie is robbing the people of God
from embracing (let alone sustaining) the supernatural culture that is
the inheritance of every single believer. So, what's the lie?
Have
you ever heard someone say, The Holy Spirit wouldn't do that ...
remember, He's a gentleman. That's the lie right there. "He's a
gentleman." We've taken this to mean that the Spirit of God will not
move with unusual power or force. He won't make us uncomfortable. That's
a lie. You know how I know? Because God's chief concern is not
mankind's comfort; it's His kingdom.
Jesus never seemed to consider comfort when he healed the sick or
drove out demons. These kingdom-advancing activities always brought
great freedom, while simultaneously attracting significant reproach from
the religious community.
This false idea about the Holy Spirit
has put a ceiling on what we are expecting from God in our lives, church
services and in our world today. As C.S. Lewis wrote of Aslan, "He's
not a tame lion, but he is good." Yes, the Holy Spirit comes to
faithfully represent King Jesus who is kind, compassionate, gentle and
caring. Yet, this Jesus is also a King, Warrior and Conqueror. He is
Lamb, yes, but also Lion. He blesses little children one moment and
casts out devils in the next.
I don't want a containable, in-a-box Jesus. Likewise, why should we place the same expectation on Holy Spirit?
I'm
most concerned about the definition we've assigned to "gentleman."
While I don't believe the Holy Spirit forcibly causes us to experience
something we don't want to, my concern is how we have lowered our
expectations of what He can do, will do, or wants to do. Even
Charismatic communities tremble at the prospect of "opening the service
up" to the Spirit, in fear of what He might do.
Is there risk?
Always. Is there potential for disorder? Certainly. As long as human
beings are involved, you will have those who behave out of order. Is it
worth it all to watch God crash in and transform people's lives forever?
Ask John and Carol Arnott, pastors of the Toronto Airport Christian
Fellowship during the Toronto Blessing. Ask John Kilpatrick as he
pastored the Brownsville Revival. Ask Steve and Kathy Gray, leaders of
Smithton Community Church. Ask Randy Clark and Heidi Baker. Ask Bill
Johnson and Leif Hetland. Ask Dr. Michael Brown and R.T. Kendall. The
answer is yes. To pay the price of risk and experience the move of God
in exchange is always worth it.
Consider the multiple scriptural
accounts of how the Holy Spirit moves. In the Old Testament, he comes
upon the judges and prophets with great power, anointing them for
supernatural exploits. Even from His grand entrance on the Day of
Pentecost, it's quite obvious that He's not tame. He invaded that upper
room as a mighty rushing wind (Acts 2:2-3) and it's been His will to
bring heaven's mighty transformation ever since. So why aren't we seeing
it as much today?
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