Evangelical Mysticism?

Thanks to Ray Gano from Prophezine who send me this article in the PZ Insider Report.

By T.A. McMahon

I find myself increasingly grieved these days by what I see taking place among those who profess to be evangelicals. I know the term “evangelical” has undergone radical changes regarding its meaning and practice. Yet when I use the term, I’m going by a very simple definition: I’m referring to those who claim to accept the Bible alone as their authority for knowing and receiving God’s way of salvation and for living their lives in a way that is pleasing to Him. Thirty years ago, it was young adult evangelicals who were used wonderfully by the Lord to help open my eyes to the fact that I was eternally separated from God and that the religious system I was depending on to get me to heaven was a false hope. That wasn’t easy for me to accept at the time. Although my commitment to the Roman Catholic Church had weakened during my late twenties, the attitude “I was born a Catholic, I’ll die a Catholic” was woven into the fabric of my mind. As I think back on those days, I recognize that I was a young man in bondage. Certainly, I was in bondage to sin, as is everyone who is not born again. But there was another bondage that also gripped me: the bondage of Roman Catholic tradition, with its sacraments, liturgies, rituals, and sacramentals. Not only were such things unbiblical-they were works of the flesh and devices of demons. In my own life, as well as throughout the history of the Church of Rome, they were soul-gripping superstitions advanced under the guise of spirituality. I trusted in relics of dead so-called Saints; holy water; making the sign of the cross; votive candles; baptism for salvation (infant or otherwise); a “transubstantiated” piece of bread alleged to be Christ; apparitions of Mary; a scapular; a “miraculous medal”; statues and images of Jesus, Mary, and the saints; endless Rosaries, Novenas, the Stations of the Cross; abstaining from meat on Friday; Lenten abstinences; the Last Rites to get me into Purgatory and indulgences to get me out of Purgatory; Mass cards; graces dispensed from Mary; the confessional, with absolution of my sins by a priest; penance and personal suffering to purify me of my sin; worshiping a piece of bread at the Eucharistic Holy Hour; the Holy Father as the Vicar of Christ on earth, etc., etc. Therein lies a bondage that few evangelicals understand. Many brush these things aside as non-essentials of the Christian faith or minor theological aberrations unique to Catholicism. Not true. They are essential to the gospel that Rome declares-a gospel of meritorious works that the Bible condemns (see Galatians, Romans, Ephesians, et al.) as a rejection of the completed substitutionary atonement of Christ our Savior. Catholicism’s Tradition, which is declared to be equal in authority to Scripture, is made up of those things (such as cited above) that are necessary for, or supportive of, a Catholic’s entrance into heaven. According to the Word of God, anything that is added to Christ’s finished work on the cross is a denial of the gospel: that Christ paid the full penalty for the sins of humanity.

The Roman Catholic Church, which claims infallibility in its Councils and theological teachings, clearly and emphatically denies the biblical gospel. The Council of Trent declares:

6th Session, Canon 9: If anyone says that the sinner is justified by faith alone, meaning that nothing else is required to cooperate in order to obtain the grace of justification…let him be anathema. 6th Session, Canon 12: If anyone shall say that justifying faith is nothing else than confidence in the divine mercy which remits sins for Christ’s sake, or that it is this confidence alone by which we are justified: let him be anathema. 6th Session, Canon 30: If anyone says that after the reception of the grace of justification the guilt is so remitted and the debt of eternal punishment so blotted out to every repentant sinner, that no debt of temporal punishment remains to be discharged either in this world or in purgatory before the gates of heaven can be opened, let him be anathema. 7th Session, Canon 4: If anyone says that the sacraments of the New Law [canons and decrees of the Church] are not necessary for salvation but…without them…men obtain from God through faith alone the grace of justification…let him be anathema.

“Anathema,” in these decrees (which are still in force), damns to hell anyone who rejects the Roman Catholic Church’s false gospel of works. Starting with the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s, where only superficial changes were made (because infallible dogmas cannot be changed!), Rome launched an ecumenical program aimed at seducing Protestants worldwide and, specifically, evangelicals in the United States. The goal was and is to bring all of Christendom under the rule of the Roman Catholic Church with the pope as its spiritual head. Predictable progress has been made in Europe and the U.S. among liberal denominations that have long abandoned the Scriptures. Astonishing, however, is the success the scheme has had among American evangelicals. Billy Graham was the first and most notable evangelical to support Catholicism’s ecumenical efforts. Others followed, including Bill Bright, Pat Robertson, J. I. Packer, Timothy George, Robert Schuller, Hank Hanegraaff, Benny Hinn, and Jack Van Impe. Evangelicals and Catholics Together, under the leadership of Chuck Colson and Catholic priest Richard John Neuhaus, declared Catholics and evangelicals to be “brothers and sisters in Christ” and exhorted them to work together in spreading the gospel. Obviously, and conveniently, that gospel was never defined. Although the acceptance of things Roman Catholic among evangelicals grew steadily over the years after Vatican II, it increased exponentially with the popularity of ultra-conservative Catholic Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ. His dramatization of one of Catholicism’s most sacred rituals, The Stations of the Cross, so captured the hearts of evangelicals that their eagerness to purchase mass quantities of tickets accounted for the movie’s great financial success. Following that achievement, Inside the Vatican made this insightful observation: “For evangelicals, the film has given them a glimpse inside the Catholic soul, even the traditional Catholic soul. Many evangelicals, reflecting on what they saw in the movie, say they are beginning to ‘get’ the whole Catholic thing: Lent…the ashes on the forehead…no meat on Friday…the sorrowful mysteries…the Stations of the Cross…the emphasis on the Eucharist…the devotion to Mary…the enormous crucifix hanging above every Catholic altar. They may not be rushing out to buy rosaries, necessarily, but some of the things no longer seem so strange, so alien.”1organization to Rick Warren’s .

“Many Christian leaders started searching for a new approach under the banner of ’spiritual formation.’ This new search has led many of them back to Catholic contemplative practices and medieval monastic disciplines,” Brian McLaren writes approvingly. Tony Jones, co-editor of An Emergent Manifesto of Hope has written a manifesto of mysticism for emerging churches titled The Sacred Way: Spiritual Practices for Everyday Life. Jones’s acknowledgement of those who supported his effort reads as a Who’s Who of emergent leaders, not to mention the Catholic priests he thanks and the ancient Orthodox and Catholic mystics he quotes. What then is this mysticism they are promoting? Catholic mysticism is thoroughly subjective and experiential. Like its parent, Eastern mysticism, it claims that God can neither be known nor understood through human reason but only experienced subjectively through various techniques. It is the antithesis of what the Bible teaches: “Come now, and let us reason together, saith the Lord” (Isaiah 1:18); “Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all thy getting get understanding” (Proverbs 4:7); “According as his divine power hath given unto us all things that pertain unto life and godliness, through the knowledge of him” (2 Peter 1:3). Furthermore, the goal of mysticism is union with God, i.e., the merging of one’s soul into God. This is an impossibility that reveals mysticism’s pantheistic and panentheistic roots, that God is everything and is in everything. No. God is infinite and transcendent, absolutely separate from His finite creation. What evangelicals also “got,” which their leaders enthusiastically endorsed as “biblically accurate,” were numerous scenes based upon the imagination of an 18th-century Catholic mystic, the portrayal of Mary as co-redemptrix in the salvation of mankind, and a very Catholic gospel that has Christ atoning for sin by suffering the unrelenting physical tortures of the Roman soldiers.2 The Passion of the Christ had a stunning effect on evangelical youth and youth pastors. Not only did “[Catholic] things no longer seem so strange, so alien,” but they were showing up in the youth ministries of evangelical churches. The Stations of the Cross ritual became popular, although it needed to be downsized from 14 stations to 11, eliminating some stations that were too foreign to Scripture (such as Saint Veronica capturing the image of Christ’s bloodied face on her veil). Prayer altars were erected, featuring icons illuminated by candles and fragranced by burning incense, and prayer labyrinths were painted on large tarps placed in church basements or cut into church lawns. For young evangelicals too often raised on empty, repetitive worship choruses little different from secular music, and religious instruction leaning heavily upon entertainment to keep them interested, the Catholic and Orthodox liturgies seemed far more spiritual. This all became “spiritual” fodder for the Emerging Church Movement (ECM), much of it a reaction against the consumer-oriented marketing approach to church growth popularized by Robert Schuller, Bill Hybels, and Rick Warren. Many ECM leaders, most of whom have evangelical backgrounds, saw Catholic ritual and mysticism as a necessary spiritual ingredient that was lost for evangelicals at the Reformation. Sola Scriptura was a major rallying cry of the Reformers against the abuses stemming from Roman Catholic tradition; the Bible as one’s only authority practically shut down the influence of the Catholic mystics known as the Desert Fathers. Yet Catholic mysticism has returned with a vengeance. Its occult techniques can be found nearly everywhere, from Youth Specialities to Richard Foster’s Renovaré Purpose Driven Life

The Sacred Way endorses numerous mystical techniques that are gaining acceptance among evangelicals today. An awareness and understanding of them is therefore critical for discernment. Centering Prayer utilizes a single word (e.g., “love” or “God”) upon which one focuses to clear the mind of all other thoughts. The belief is that the so-called pray-er will hear directly from God in his silence before Him. Tony Campolo declares, “In my case intimacy with Christ has developed gradually over the years, primarily through what Catholic mystics call ‘centering prayer.’ Each morning, as soon as I wake up, I take time-sometimes as much as a half hour-to center myself on Jesus. I say his name over and over again to drive back the 101 things that begin to clutter up my mind the minute I open my eyes. Jesus is my mantra, as some would say.”3 The Jesus Prayer has the pray-er repeat a sentence such as “Lord Jesus, have mercy on me” continuously, hundreds-even thousands-of times. The repetition supposedly fixates one’s mind upon Jesus. Yet it blatantly rejects His command not to use vain repetition in prayer as the heathen do (Matthew 6:7). Moreover, its constant repetitions turn prayer as a form of communication with Jesus into an act of nonsense. Lectio Divina, meaning “sacred reading,” is a technique that is far removed from normal reading and studying of the Bible. Its methodology aims at going beyond the objective meaning of the words and the straightforward instructions to that which transcends normal awareness. Jones writes, “As you attend to those deeper meanings, begin to meditate on the feelings and emotions conjured up in your inner self.”4 He then summarizes this mystical contemplative technique: “True contemplation moves beyond words and intellect and into that ‘thin space’ where time and eternity almost touch. It’s in moments like these that some of the greatest [Catholic] saints in the history of the [Catholic] church have had a ‘mystical union’ with Christ.”5 It’s clear from God’s Word that the spirit with which they had a “mystical union” in their contemplative altered state of consciousness was not Jesus. Ignatian Examen is an occult visualization technique taught by Ignatius Loyola, who founded the Jesuits in the 16th century. His exercise teaches one to visualize oneself in the presence of Jesus and then interact with Him during his earthly events, e.g., “at the Last Supper and the Garden of Gethsemane, at the foot of the cross, and laying Jesus’ body in the tomb.”6 This has one adding content to Scripture from his imagination and opens a person to demonic manipulation (2 Corinthians 11:4; Galatians 1:8). Prayer Labyrinths are concentric paths created by the Catholic Church in the 13th century to experience in one’s imagination Christ’s Via Dolorosa, or “walk of sorrows,” when He carried His cross to Calvary’s hill. Rather than subject themselves to the dangers of a pilgrimage to Jerusalem during Holy Week, Roman Catholics in Europe could gain the same indulgences (to shorten their time in Purgatory) by walking labyrinths at certain cathedrals while prayerfully meditating upon Christ’s crucifixion. Likewise, observing the “sacred” ritual of the Stations of the Cross became a substitute for a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. As a former Catholic, it’s hard for me to fathom the evangelical church buying into the religious occultism of Roman Catholicism. It makes no sense. Visit any country where that religion is taken seriously. What becomes obvious is a people who are in the bondage of superstition. On the other hand, I shouldn’t be surprised. Apostasy is growing rapidly, the religion of the Antichrist is taking shape, and mysticism, whether it’s the Catholic variety, the Sufism of Islam, yoga and the gurus of Eastern mysticism, the Shamanism of native religions, or otherwise, is a common yet powerful magnet that draws all religions together.

We need to be watchmen on the wall as we see this evil invading the church, warning especially-should our Lord delay His return-our next generation of believers. They are the clear targets of this mystical seduction.

8 Responses

  1. Do you realized what you just did by posting this? You were an open vessel to witness to me directly (and I am certain to many others as well). I have been working with a gentleman who is Catholic. He attends the Bible group we have at work and we have been talking constantly. I have been a little hesitant on exposing the truth to him. He even has fellow Catholic co-workers warn him of my friendship. They warn him of my protestant ways. God has opened up an avenue of friendship and communication between him and I and I have known that it is for the sole purpose of me leading him away from the ill ways of Catholicism. I have been scared to approach him with the truth. Scared of not knowing what to say, not being a good messenger. My brother in law was Catholic, well, until he walked into my church and got saved….I use his testimony to witness all the time. I have never found a more relevant, urgent message to show Catholics the truth until I read this.

    So Wickus, what you have done is this: By writing this you have encouraged me to speak to him. The urgency that I felt when I read this was over whelming. Thank you for writing such a personal and spirit inspired testimony. Please know, that if you never feel that you have ever impacted anyone through this blog, then remember my name and this article and the unnamed coworker I wrote about. Thank you for helping open his eyes to the truth. For HE, Yeshua, is the truth.

    Thank You for being a willing vessel!
    Holly

  2. Thank you Holly. Our God is good.

  3. I too have become aware of the Evangelical Mysticism that has infiltrated the church–starting with song and spreading into prayer. It has been adopted from the Vineyard Movement in California.
    People hungry for spirituality and a connection to the Divine have embraced emotionalism, proclaiming love for a God they do not know. They long to hear the voice of Jesus so that they may have eternal life, but they do not. Consequently, they have not been born again spiritually.
    It is next to impossible to tell anyone that their worship is heresy when they insist on practicing it in the belief that they are experiencing the Divine.
    It is only when one feels the void in one’s soul that a person can be approached with the Gospel of Jesus Christ and receive it. “Blessed are you who are poor in spirit…

  4. Jake,

    There is a definite line between emotionalism and true worship. When we are in a corporate worship enviornment, it is no different from worshipping in your own home. There are times when the Holy Spirit moves and you are moved to tears. That is not works of the flesh, but of the conviction of the Holy Spirit on your heart. Should they hold back tears because YOU see it as “emotionalism” or should they openly express the impact of the Holy Spirit on their heart? We cannot assume what anyone’s intent or motive is when worshipping. We are in no position to judge them. Some are so moved that they cry or dance or shout loudly. I do not find that offensive. It is MAN that feels uncomfortable, not the LORD. I have been in services where individuals have weeped, or shouted to the Lord. I have been in services where there was silence. I would not judge a fellow believer. When I go to church I go for corporate worship; however, I also go for my personal worship to my Lord Jesus. I am with Him alone, raising my hands to him, singing loudly, professing my love and adoration…to some I may seem loud and over emotional. But what I know is this…I am praying to Jesus, over-whelmed by what He did and who He is. I love to publicly tell him. I am not ashamed of Him, nor ashamed to worship MY GOD. When I see Jesus, there will be no pews or man made church laws. There will just me me and my maker. He gave me feet to dance, a voice to praise and sing and tears to cry in adoration…all of these gifts for His glory. I will be like David and dance for him and sing for him and shout his glory for He is the only one worthy of any scale of emotion that is in me. I find my deepest revelations and presence of Him alone when I am praising Him…for in our praised He resides….I love my God and you should widen your scope of what is correct praise and what is emotionalism. I fear that what this article stated about Catholisim..meaning man made rules may also apply to you, you have limited your ability to praise to what is comfortable to your eyes and what you deem ok. The Bible has David dancing and prophets of singing and instruments and of praising His name from the ends of the earth! It is man that has put God in a box..deeming what is acceptable not Jesus. I believe that Jesus loves loud voices as much as He loves the silent whispers. Pray hard my friend that you find freedom and truth in worship and PLEASE becareful who you judge.

    YSIC,
    Holly

  5. By the way….. How loud is to loud to cheer a football team, how many tears is too many when they win or loose? HMMMMMMMMM…But our maker, to worship Him, to praise HIM…..what is the scale to which we judge that?

    I FOR ONE WILL SHOUT FROM THE ROOF TOPS! I WILL SING ABOUT HIM IN THE CHURCH, IN THE CAR, IN THE STORE AND IN MY WORK! I WILL WEEP WHEN I REMEMBER WHAT HE DID ON THE CROSS AND WHAT WAS FORE TOLD OF HIM IN THE BOOKS OF THE OLD TESTIMENT! I WILL NOT KEEP SILEN, NOT FOR ZION SAKE!

    AMEN, AMEN AND AMEN TO YESHUA….WHO IS WORTHY OF ALL PRAISE!

  6. These are the types of heresy I am speaking of. I contend that the “Praise & Worship” employed by many contemporary churches is the same packaged stuff designed to evoke and emotional and even an erotic response to the spiritual vibe created by the music, prayer and song. See for yourself if this situation applies to your church. I judge no one, but I have been given the gift of spiritual discernment. Things in church are seldom as they seem.
    http://www.piney.com/RmHymns.html

  7. I read the link. So Jake, what is acceptable worship? What songs are appropriate? What movement is ok? Was David wrong or was He seeking a fleshly desire. I love my God and He knows why I sing to him. There are people who worship out of Fleshly intentions but you can find anyone in a church doing things with the wrong intentions. I be careful to say that you are gifted with spiritual discernment. There are many spirits out there and apparently you are hooked to the waste on a man made one….not one in the Bible. We are built for the glory of God in every way. And you are right….I am passionate about my Jesus. What else is there passionate to be about? Not over exaggerated emotion in church but true praise is singing to him and loving him from your heart. If everyone in the Bible was not passionate about God then nothing would have taken place. Hey, lets go tell Peter to calm down, and why dont you let David know that YOU did not approve of his dancing.Wish they would have had this in site before the Cannonization…they probably should have omitted that….Pray hard jake and so will I
    Holly

  8. We are going to forget about what two believers say (Holly and Jake) and go to the ultimate authority, The Holy Bible, NIV. The following is what IT says about Praise:

    Praise as defined in the NIV:
    The Joyful thanking and adoring of God, the celebration of his goodness and grace. This is fundamental to the live of the believer in the old testament and new testament.

    PS 9:1-2
    For the director of music. To the tune of “The Death of the Son.” A psalm of David.

    1 [a]I will praise you, O LORD, with all my heart;
    I will tell of all your wonders.

    2 I will be glad and rejoice in you;
    I will sing praise to your name, O Most High.

    PS 33:2
    Praise the LORD with the harp;
    make music to him on the ten-stringed lyre.

    PS 103: 1-2
    raise the LORD, O my soul;
    all my inmost being, praise his holy name.

    2 Praise the LORD, O my soul,
    and forget not all his benefits-

    MT 5:16
    the same way, let your light shine before men, that they may see your good deeds and praise your Father in heaven.

    MT 11:25
    25At that time Jesus said, “I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and learned, and revealed them to little children.

    Eph 1:3,6,12,14
    3Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ.

    to the praise of his glorious grace, which he has freely given us in the One he loves.

    12in order that we, who were the first to hope in Christ, might be for the praise of his glory.

    14who is a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance until the redemption of those who are God’s possession—to the praise of his glory.

    PRAISE IS KEY TO YOUR RELATIONSHIP TO GOD.

    Deborah ( Nurse to Rebekah) A charasmatic leader of the tribes of Israel. The victory song of Deborah (Judges 5) is one of the oldest passages in the BIBLE:

    Judges 5

    he Song of Deborah

    1 On that day Deborah and Barak son of Abinoam sang this song:

    2 “When the princes in Israel take the lead,
    when the people willingly offer themselves—
    praise the LORD!

    3 “Hear this, you kings! Listen, you rulers!
    I will sing to [a] the LORD, I will sing;
    I will make music to [b] the LORD, the God of Israel.

    4 “O LORD, when you went out from Seir,
    when you marched from the land of Edom,
    the earth shook, the heavens poured,
    the clouds poured down water.

    5 The mountains quaked before the LORD, the One of Sinai,
    before the LORD, the God of Israel.

    6 “In the days of Shamgar son of Anath,
    in the days of Jael, the roads were abandoned;
    travelers took to winding paths.

    7 Village life [c] in Israel ceased,
    ceased until I, [d] Deborah, arose,
    arose a mother in Israel.

    8 When they chose new gods,
    war came to the city gates,
    and not a shield or spear was seen
    among forty thousand in Israel.

    9 My heart is with Israel’s princes,
    with the willing volunteers among the people.
    Praise the LORD!

    10 “You who ride on white donkeys,
    sitting on your saddle blankets,
    and you who walk along the road,
    consider 11 the voice of the singers [e] at the watering places.
    They recite the righteous acts of the LORD,
    the righteous acts of his warriors [f] in Israel.
    “Then the people of the LORD
    went down to the city gates.

    12 ‘Wake up, wake up, Deborah!
    Wake up, wake up, break out in song!
    Arise, O Barak!
    Take captive your captives, O son of Abinoam.’

    13 “Then the men who were left
    came down to the nobles;
    the people of the LORD
    came to me with the mighty.

    14 Some came from Ephraim, whose roots were in Amalek;
    Benjamin was with the people who followed you.
    From Makir captains came down,
    from Zebulun those who bear a commander’s staff.

    15 The princes of Issachar were with Deborah;
    yes, Issachar was with Barak,
    rushing after him into the valley.
    In the districts of Reuben
    there was much searching of heart.

    16 Why did you stay among the campfires [g]
    to hear the whistling for the flocks?
    In the districts of Reuben
    there was much searching of heart.

    17 Gilead stayed beyond the Jordan.
    And Dan, why did he linger by the ships?
    Asher remained on the coast
    and stayed in his coves.

    18 The people of Zebulun risked their very lives;
    so did Naphtali on the heights of the field.

    19 “Kings came, they fought;
    the kings of Canaan fought
    at Taanach by the waters of Megiddo,
    but they carried off no silver, no plunder.

    20 From the heavens the stars fought,
    from their courses they fought against Sisera.

    21 The river Kishon swept them away,
    the age-old river, the river Kishon.
    March on, my soul; be strong!

    22 Then thundered the horses’ hoofs—
    galloping, galloping go his mighty steeds.

    23 ‘Curse Meroz,’ said the angel of the LORD.
    ‘Curse its people bitterly,
    because they did not come to help the LORD,
    to help the LORD against the mighty.’

    24 “Most blessed of women be Jael,
    the wife of Heber the Kenite,
    most blessed of tent-dwelling women.

    25 He asked for water, and she gave him milk;
    in a bowl fit for nobles she brought him curdled milk.

    26 Her hand reached for the tent peg,
    her right hand for the workman’s hammer.
    She struck Sisera, she crushed his head,
    she shattered and pierced his temple.

    27 At her feet he sank,
    he fell; there he lay.
    At her feet he sank, he fell;
    where he sank, there he fell-dead.

    28 “Through the window peered Sisera’s mother;
    behind the lattice she cried out,
    ‘Why is his chariot so long in coming?
    Why is the clatter of his chariots delayed?’

    29 The wisest of her ladies answer her;
    indeed, she keeps saying to herself,

    30 ‘Are they not finding and dividing the spoils:
    a girl or two for each man,
    colorful garments as plunder for Sisera,
    colorful garments embroidered,
    highly embroidered garments for my neck—
    all this as plunder?’

    31 “So may all your enemies perish, O LORD!
    But may they who love you be like the sun
    when it rises in its strength.”
    Then the land had peace forty years.

    See…we must praise and remember it is to GOD you praise. He loves you and made you in the image of Himself….

    God Bless you all,
    Holly

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