Whenever we hear the word
“witchcraft” most of us are prone to conjure up images reminiscent of Harry
Potter, or of Macbeth’s witches standing over their cauldron. It is a natural
connection we draw, because our understanding of the word is shaped by our cultural
paradigm. In most cases this wouldn’t matter because most discussions on the subject
would be held in light of our mutual cultural understanding. If you and I have
the same understanding of the word then there is little room for
misunderstanding, aside from figuring out if we are speaking metaphorically or
literally, when we call someone a witch. What happens, on the other hand, when
we apply our preconceived mental picture to a usage of the word from centuries
ago, such as biblical texts? The picture of witchcraft you and I hold is based
on a concept developed in Middle Ages Europe, centuries after the Bible was
written. Our association would be meaningless to the people who wrote and
received the teachings of the Bible. So the question becomes, what do we do
with biblical teaching about witchcraft? Do we ignore the original meaning and
intent of the authors, and superimpose our own ideas, or do we seek to
understand the original intent and then prayerfully seek wisdom on how to
contextualize those passages for our modern times? I believe the answer is the
second option.
The Bible did not have in mind a Medieval European witch,
or a young wizard with a scar on his forehead heading to Hogwarts, when it
warned against witchcraft. It was specifically referring to Ancient Near
Eastern Sorcery as it was practiced by the nations surrounding Israel. At this
point, it might seem easy enough to assume that these passages hold no relevance
anymore because the “witches” in question, along with their cultures, are long
dead. So we might as well just ignore them, or go back to burning J.K. Rowling
books, because they hold no relevance to modern beliefs, right? Unfortunately,
the teachings and ideas the Bible took issue with are not a thing of the past,
as we might assume. In fact, these beliefs have experienced a resurgence in our
time, and are being taught by two very different groups. The first group which
has recycled many of the tenets of Ancient Near Eastern Sorcery is the New Age
community. The second group is actually made up of Christians! Specifically
those within the Word of Faith community.
Before
you start picking up stones to throw at me, hear me out. First off, I am not
calling people who believe Word of Faith theology witches, or trying to say
they are bad evil people, or that we should break out the old Salem pyres for
them. Many Word of Faith people are amazing men and women who truly love God
and want to serve Him with all of their hearts. Some of the people who have had
the most profound impact on my Christian walk and encouraged me to live
whole-heartedly for God, are avid Word of Faith proponents. I am in no way
seeking to belittle or condemn people who hold these beliefs. I will, however,
attempt to demonstrate that several of the fundamental teachings of the
movement hold a closer resemblance to Ancient Near Eastern Sorcery than to
sound biblical teaching, and explain how these ideas initially began to be
incorporated into Christianity. I should also disclose that I am, myself, a
charismatic/Pentecostal leaning Christian. I believe in the gifts of the Spirit
and I have personally witnessed miracles by God. Both my personal experience
and the testimonies of Scripture and Christian history make it impossible for
me to not fall into the charismatic camp to some degree. In other words, I am
not seeking herein to discredit the ideas of believer’s authority or God’s
working of miracles. I am instead addressing the fact that we charismatics
often tend to hold to really bad theological foundations seeking to support and
explain what our experience leads us to believe.
I
should also briefly share why I feel I am qualified to even be discussing this.
There are certain ministers out there, who are great men of God who know the
Scripture far better than me, who sometimes write books and go on crusades against
all Charismatic/Pentecostal/Word of Faith believers and their teachings. The
only problem is that, though they have a masterful grasp of theology and the
Bible, they honestly don’t know much at all about the beliefs they are condemning.
With this in mind, let me briefly share a few reasons that I believe I can
speak knowledgably on the subject. My knowledge on the New Age Movement and the
pagan elements of Ancient Near Eastern sorcery are based on the fact that I
spent many years, before getting saved, in the New Age Movement. I spent hours
in New Age book stores, and reading New Age books, while I sought for spiritual
truth that I didn’t think was found in Christianity. This initial personal
knowledge has been built upon over the years, especially in the realm of
Ancient Near Eastern beliefs, as I have studied the cultures which the biblical
authors encountered and lived in. As for the Word of Faith movement, I was also
a part of it myself for quite a while. I even attended RHEMA Bible Training
Center, which was considered by many to be the flagship training institution
for Word of Faith ministers. I even sat in the classroom under Kenneth Hagan
Sr. whom many Word of Faith ministers consider their father in the faith. I
have read hundreds of Word of Faith books and spent several hours a day for
several years listening to Word of Faith sermons. I am not speaking of these
movements as someone who has merely glanced at them from a distance, or even as
someone who simply attends a Word of Faith Church and hears a weekly sermon
from the pulpit, but as someone who was a part of both movements and diligently
and radically pursued their teaching, and was trained to be a minster in their
own flagship Bible College.
Perhaps
the best place to begin is with a brief overview of how elements of Ancient
Near Eastern Sorcery found their way into Christianity in the first place. As
with almost every form of heresy throughout church history, it likely was not
introduced with malicious intent to mislead and deceive the faithful. It was,
rather, the result of well-intentioned men seeking to understand spiritual and
theological issues in light of their experience and personal surroundings. Most
heresy is merely a wrong or insufficient answer to a sincere question. These
particular beliefs were largely introduced through the writings and ministry of
a man named E. W. Kenyon. Kenyon was highly involved in the New Age movement
before he was saved, and when he began to seek to understand Christian
spiritual truths, he did so through the existing paradigm of New Age thought.
Ultimately he ended up superimposing New Age ideas with Christianity and
“Christianizing” them by changing out key terms with more Christian sounding
terms like “faith” or “confession”. The result was a hybrid of classical
theological terms being used to express new ideas, or rather very old pagan
ideas which were new to Christian thought. Kenyon’s teachings became popular
among certain ministers, such as Kenneth Hagan, Charles Capps, and Oral Roberts
and over the years they built upon the foundation Kenyon had laid. As the years
have rolled on these doctrines have been reinforced through a system of
biblical interpretation that ignores important hermeneutical principles such as
the importance of interpreting the scripture in context. Verses are plucked out
of their context and held out alone, or coupled with other verses out of
context, in order to give a façade of biblical support. For the sake of
pseudo-brevity I will move on from this highly abbreviated history and
transition into discussing three pillar tenets of Ancient Near Eastern Sorcery
and how the doctrines of the Word of Faith mirror them.
One
of the major sources of power for an ANE (Ancient Near Eastern) Sorcerer was
the belief in a creative force which was found in all of creation. This force
is what gave substance to the world and held it all together. The sorcerer
could harness this creative force inside of them and release its power, through
the use of ritual or spoken words, in order to create or bring about what they
willed. Similarly, Word of Faith ministers teach that all believers have a creative
force inside of them, which they call “faith”, and that we release the creative
power of this “faith” through our spoken words. Whatever we speak and confess
we create by the power of our faith. This is why, if they hear
you saying negative things, they may tell you to “stop speaking those things
over your life” because they believe that your words release that creative
force which comes from the “faith” inside of you. It is often even taught that
not only Christians have this creative force within them, but that all people
possess this creative force because we are all made in God’s image. As can be
seen with my example above about speaking things over your life, this creative
exercise is not truly subject to God’s will, or even necessarily His direct
involvement, but is entirely contingent on what you speak and create with the “faith”
that is inside of you. Otherwise it would be impossible to speak anything into
existence that was not God’s will. This concept of “faith” diverges greatly
from the traditional and biblical concept of faith which is always rooted in
the person of God and our trust and dependence upon Him. Faith is one of the
most powerful forces in existence, but it is not a creative energy within us
that turns us into semi-autonomous “little gods”. It is rather a trust in God
which binds us together with Him in a relational manner and trusts in His
faithfulness completely.
A second, but closely related, tenet of ANE sorcery was the
belief that the world was governed by natural spiritual laws. The ANE sorcerer
was one who knew those laws and were able to manipulate them as a source of
their power. These particular powers were not necessarily the result of any
“divine or demonic act”, they were merely the recognition and manipulation of
laws which were immutable. Likewise, Word of Faith teaching is built largely
upon this same foundational premise. One of the most obvious manifestations, in
Word of Faith theology, is in the principle of “seed faith”, though it is
highly evident throughout the entire theological system. Much of the teaching
of Word of Faith ministers revolves around the idea of working “God’s laws” in
order to produce the desired results. The only real difference between ANE
sorcery and the Word of Faith on this point is that Word of Faith ministers say
the laws were established by the God of Christianity, while ANE sorcerers
believed they were established by different gods or were just part of nature.
In both cases the results rest, not upon dependency to God or even relationship
with God, but upon the knowledge and manipulation of the natural/spiritual
laws. It is certainly true that there are laws of nature and that God has
established moral and spiritual laws, but they do not work the way either of
the above groups teach. It should also be noted that Christianity is not based
on approaching God through a legal system of manipulating spiritual laws.
Christianity is not a religion of legalism, but is entirely based upon
relationship. God is the sovereign maker of laws, but He is not bound by them
in such a way that He is obligated to do anything just because we worked the
system correctly. We are never to approach God, through Jesus, on the basis of
the law.
A third path to power in ANE sorcery was rooted in the
power of a name. It was believed that if you could learn the name of a god, or
spirit, or being of power, that you could invoke that name in order to move the
named one to do whatever it is that you are invoking its name to accomplish. In
essence, knowledge of a true name gave the practitioner a claim on the power of
the being they named. We see this in the Word of Faith movement in their
doctrines concerning the name of Jesus. They interpret the phrase “In Jesus
name” overly literally and treat the name itself like it is some sort of magic
word which releases God’s power over a situation. By not understanding the
meaning of the ancient idiom of things being done “in the name of ______” they
have left behind a solid Christian interpretation and ventured into a New Age
influenced interpretation that is almost identical to ANE sorcery. What the
phrase actually means is to do something in the character and nature of the one
named, exactly how they would have done it themselves if they were there. It is
a representative phrase, as opposed to an incantation.
There are other points of convergence between the Word of
Faith and Ancient Near Eastern sorcery, but these are three of the most
prominent ones. Nothing in what I have written is meant to belittle the power
of Faith or to undermine a belief that God moves powerfully and miraculously in
the lives of believers today. God is still alive and active in the world and He
still moves powerfully on the Earth through His people, as well as sovereignly
by His Spirit. What we are in need of, is a theology that embraces the reality
of God’s power and a believer’s authority, without crossing the line into
Christian witchcraft or exalting men unduly and robbing God of glory that is
rightfully His alone. Many of the doctrines of the Word of Faith tread
dangerously close to idolatry in that they attribute to man that which belongs
only to God. Rather than focusing on a relational foundation of faith that
places all power and sovereignty in the hands of God who goes with us and works
through us, it elevates man to the level of being “little gods” exercising
autonomous creative power through the manipulation of spiritual laws and their
own creative force of faith.