We can be thankful for MacArthur’s longtime passion for the truth of the gospel and for his unswerving commitment to the Word of God. He rightly reminds us that we must be bold and courageous in renouncing false teaching. At the same time, the charismatic movement is painted with too broad of a brush in Strange Fire. We can be thankful for the many good things that have occurred and are occurring in the charismatic movement as well.
John MacArthur. Strange Fire: The Danger of Offending the Holy Spirit with Counterfeit Worship. Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2013. 313 pp. $22.99.
In 1992 John MacArthur wrote Charismatic Chaos, and now he has issued a new book on the movement that is equally critical. Anything the pastor of Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, California, writes garners attention, since his preaching and writing ministry has affected and blessed so many over the years. The thesis of the book is evident from the title: Strange Fire: The Danger of Offending the Holy Spirit with Counterfeit Worship. MacArthur argues that the charismatic movement misrepresents and blasphemes the Holy Spirit, offering false worship instead of worship pleasing to God. He is concerned that so many today endorse or are passive about the charismatic movement, even though its influence is deleterious.
In using the word charismatic MacArthur refers to all three phases of the “charismatic” movement, so his indictment includes the Pentecostal movement inaugurated in the early part of the 20th century, the second wave of the 1960s and 1970s, and the third wave that began in the 1980s and continues to this day. He acknowledges there are exceptions to his indictment but maintains the movement as a whole is seriously flawed.
MacArthur calls upon readers to “test the spirits” (1 John 4:1), documenting the many abuses propagated by false teachers in the charismatic movement and focusing on the ministries of those like Benny Hinn, Kenneth Copeland, Joel Osteen, and so forth. He rightly indicts those who teach a prosperity gospel, where health and wealth are promised at the expense of the clear teaching of the Scriptures. MacArthur also recounts many examples of sin and immorality within the charismatic movement. For instance, he questions how Paul Cain could be a prophet since he struggled significantly with alcoholism and homosexuality.
No Need for Gifts
MacArthur maintains that the New Testament teaches the supernatural gifts have ceased. Signs, wonders, and miracles were given for the purpose of accrediting the ministry, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. The church is built on the foundation of apostles and prophets (Eph. 2:20), and because that foundation has been established, there is no need for such gifts today. He argues that since most agree apostles are no longer among us, there are good reasons to think other gifts have been withdrawn as well. For instance, the gift of prophecy no longer exists, according to MacArthur, since prophecy in Scripture is infallible. He argues vigorously against the notion that New Testament prophecy differs in nature from Old Testament prophecy. Prophets are tested by their prophecies, and if prophecies are mixed with error then the person is a false prophet. Similarly, the gift of tongues is limited to speaking in foreign languages. The earliest Pentecostals maintained they spoke in foreign languages; only after it became evident such claims were false did they resort to the notion that they spoke with ecstatic utterances.
Further, MacArthur sets out what the Scriptures teach regarding the Spirit’s work in salvation and sanctification, contrasting it with the teaching and practices of charismatics. He concludes the book with a letter to continuationist friends, warning them of the consequences of accepting and endorsing the charismatic movement.
Dangers and Extremes
The issues raised in Strange Fire are intensely controversial, so I should lay my cards on the table. I have traveled a road in which I was a cessationist in my early years as believer. I then became a non-cessationist and taught accordingly for a number of years. Finally, in the mid 1990s I slowly returned to a cessationist position. I am sympathetic, then, to the case MacArthur makes for cessationism. The dangers and extremes he identifies in the charismatic movement are timely and should be heeded seriously.
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