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Freedom from the Faith
Movement The Personal Testimony of Jeff Beard
"God, I want more of you in my life!"
That was the prayer that pushed me through eight
years of intense involvement in what is commonly called the
"faith movement" and the "positive confession
movement."
I began my journey in 1980. I often reflect on
those years — the teachings I devoured, the ministers who proclaimed
"faith" interpretations of God's Word, and the thousands of
people who followed them. Like so many others, my hunger for a more
intimate walk with God was accompanied by the question: How? So, when
I heard Christian ministers describing how they had personally heard
from the Holy Spirit, worked tangible miracles, and had visions in the
spirit realm, I listened. This must certainly be the fruit of an
intimate walk with God. I reasoned.
I was introduced to the faith movement through
the Kenneth Copeland television broadcast, and soon found a church in
line with Reverend Copeland's teachings and the faith movement. I was
quick to attend a three-day meeting that featured faith teacher
Charles Capps. He delivered a message on faith and positive confession
entitled, "Calling Those Things That Are Not as Though They
Were." He knew more Bible than I did and spoke with such
authority that I was led to trust his exposition of Scripture. Not
realizing it at the time. I was subtly buying into the idea that I had
the ability to alter reality or even create it, all by using the power
of faith.
Sensing a call to the ministry two years later,
I attended the only school I knew of that trained its students in the
"true" power and revelations of the Bible. That was Rhema
Bible Training Center (RBTC) in Tulsa, Oklahoma, founded by Dr.
Kenneth E. Hagin, the grandfather of the faith movement. The next two
years at Rhema were nothing less than a spiritual roller coaster. RBTC
and Kenneth Hagin Ministries overlapped one another, and everything
revolved around one man's vision, prophecies, and interpretations of
Scripture. This man was a prophet, I and many others thought, and
his divine calling was attested to by tales of visitations from angels
and, of course, Jesus Christ Himself.
It was made clear to me and other students
during the first week of orientation that "thou shalt not touch
God's anointed one" — whether in a friendly way or an
aggressive way. After all, we were told, "Dr. Hagin is much too
busy with the ministry and walking in the spirit for our questions or
problems."
I can now relate to how easy it is to become
caught up in cultic groups. The best way I know to describe what
happened to me is the "boiling frog" experiment. In this
experiment, a frog is placed in a jar of water and then placed over a
small flame. While the water temperature ever-so-slowly rises, the
frog sits calmly and is completely ignorant of what is really
happening. Over a period of time, the water eventually reaches the
boiling point and so goes the frog. Never feeling the change in
temperature, he dies — unaware that anything was ever amiss.
For the entire time I was devouring this
heretical "faith" theology, I honestly believed I was
learning historic orthodox Christianity. I was convinced that the
so-called educated scholars at other universities only knew the letter
of the law and had no real grasp of spiritual things.
I recall sitting in one class at RBTC in which
everyone was instructed on how to prophesy and how to speak in tongues
with interpretation. Another class entitled "The Laws of
Giving" addressed the issue of how to work God's laws of giving
and receiving. From Dr. Hagin, we learned about healing and spiritual
growth, along with a smorgasbord of other subjects. I attended such
classes because I wanted "the anointing" something I had
heard was necessary to effectively help the sick, the hurting, and the
lost, I was convinced by what I had heard from the faith teachers that
this was indeed the road to a more powerful spiritual life.
I met my wife, Lisa at RBTC and we were married
after her graduation in 1985. We soon accepted a position as associate
pastors and Bible school directors in another state and shoved off to
put to use all we had been taught. To prepare for my Bible classes, I
studied for hours in the Bible alongside the writings of A.W Pink.
(No, Rhema did not endorse or promote the writings of Pink.) This was
probably the best thing I had going for me. After a few months of
Pink's writings conflicting with my Rhema theology, I knew I needed
some answers.
I decided to visit two Bible teachers I knew in
Tulsa and explained that I could not find verification in the
Scriptures for many of the things I had learned and observed in the
faith movement and at RBTC. The answers I received were like poison to
my soul, which led me even further from the truth. "You have to
realize, Jeff, that there are some things in the spirit that cannot be
found in the Bible; you just know it's right by the witness
within," I was told.
Yes, I was hungry enough for spiritual power to
accept this feeble reasoning. I was told that the faith prophets who
had attained this deeper spiritual level had done so by hours of
praying in the spirit and fasting. So, I "fueled my engine"
and began my spiritual search once again, more determined than ever. I
soon ended up in the "Latter Rain movement," which put me in
the circles of "deliverance" and "intercessor"
groups. I was told that every Christian had demons, even though they
were born again.
I continued to pastor a church for two years,
practicing the "faith" equations, formulas, and confessions
I had learned — trying to "help Jesus set the captives
free." But I grew weary and frustrated because I was not seeing
the results I was told would come. "Something must be
wrong," I thought to myself. I was ready for some real answers
— scriptural answers.
My eagerness for answers was soon satisfied, for
I received a book from John MacArthur, Jr., that addressed many of the
concerns I had — and he used Scripture. I then purchased a book by
G. Campbell Morgan, and was given still another book by Dr. Martyn
Lloyd Jones. For the first time, I felt I was eating real spiritual
food. The Bible was coming together at last, and I saw clearly that
God was a personal God and not just a bunch of spiritual laws to tap
into.
Things continued to look better and better. My
wife and I soon took a pastorate in Bakersfield, California where we
were introduced to CRI's "The Bible Answer Man" broadcast
with Dr. Walter Martin. "Where has this man been hiding?," I
asked myself. I felt like an Israelite being led out of Egypt by
Moses. The Lord used this broadcast to place real spiritual food on my
plate as fast as I could swallow and digest it.
My wife and I came to realize that there is
nothing wrong with faith — that is, biblical faith. We learned that
the faith movement had completely redefined faith. "The Bible
Answer Man" broadcast clarified this for us, and day after day we
were fed a steady diet of orthodox systematic theology.
During this time, I purchased a book that played
a major role in clearing up many of the false beliefs I had held to:
The Kingdom of the Cults, by Walter Martin. I read about the teachings
of Christian Science, Mormons, metaphysics, and others, and I was
stunned to find bits and pieces of what I had been formerly taught.
Now, I am not calling the faith movement a cult, but the movement does
have many cultic elements. I know firsthand.
Today, having left the faith movement, I am
happy to say that I am solidly entrenched in historic orthodox
Christianity. And, like an ex-alcoholic cares for other alcoholics, I
hurt deep within for those deceived by aberrant and heretical
doctrines. I feel that my eight years in the faith movement has
enabled me to better help those who are now involved in the movement,
and I have a burden for them.
Some may ask, "Do your present beliefs,
doctrines, and theology differ that much from what you learned at
Rhema?" I would answer "most definitely"! In fact, in a
short testimonial article like this, it is impossible to mention all
the doctrinal issues I would like to address. I now hold to what is
popularly called "Reformed theology" — an orthodox
theology rooted in the Reformers of the sixteenth century. Unlike
Reformed theology, the faith movement focuses on health, wealth, and
how much power one can obtain. Reformed theology is God-centered; the
faith movement is man-centered. I can honestly say that for the
duration of my stay at Rhema, not once was the sovereignty of God
mentioned. Today, I know that God would not be God at all unless He
were sovereign (see Ps. 103:19; Dan. 4:17, 25,34:5:21; 7:14; Eph.
4:11).
At Rhema, I was taught the heretical doctrine
that Jesus had to die spiritually, which, by the way, renders Jesus'
work on the cross insufficient for man's redemption and justification.
I remember Kenneth Copeland telling us that when Christ died on the
cross, the Second Person of the Godhead was broken off from the other
two Persons. I now know that Jesus Christ is God and God cannot die,
nor does God ever cease being God, for He changes not (Mal. 3:6; Heb.
13:8; James 1:17). Moreover, in dire contrast to faith teaching,
Scripture is utterly clear that Jesus completed the work of redemption
at the cross (see John 19:30; Col. 2:13-14).
As I look back over my experience, it becomes
clear to me that there were two primary frustrations that led me to
question the faith theology I was preaching to my church congregation.
First, I was consistently disappointed because people were not truly
being helped with their problems and their heartaches. According to
faith theology, these people should have been helped, but they
weren't. By contrast, today I find that people are receiving comfort,
strength, and hope as they rest in their faith in the Savior (biblical
faith, that is). And what a joy it is for me to rest in God's grace
and His sovereignty!
The second frustration I had relates to the
motivation for my spiritual search ("God, I want more of you in
my life!"). My desire for God has finally been satisfied. Today,
I have a true knowledge of the true God — a knowledge based on
Scripture. The "god" of the faith movement is fashioned to
fit experiences, but I know that experiences must fit properly with
Scripture and the true character of God, or they are as the flowers of
the grass that fade away.
I close with a word of caution and
encouragement. To those who are involved in some of these faith
teachings, you are like the frog in the jar of water over a small
flame. I challenge you to test everything in the strictest manner with
the Scriptures, and have an open heart that settles for nothing less
than the truth. For those with loved ones caught up in this movement,
pray that their understanding will be enlightened, and love them.
Learn what they believe and become equipped with Scriptures to lead
them to the truth. May they, like my wife and I, find freedom from the
faith movement, and exercise biblical faith based on the objective
Word of God.
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