Some of the most popular and dangerous evangelical fads of the past
fifteen years have involved waves of charismatic fervor that have sown
confusion and discord in every culture where they have been embraced.
I'm talking about the Toronto Blessing (where "holy laughter" and other
forms of pseudo-drunkenness were declared to be signs the Holy Spirit
was moving); the Kansas City Prophets (a movement led by a group of
self-appointed seers whose prognostications were usually false and whose
private morals were even worse); the Pensacola outpouring (whose major
features were gold dust and gold tooth fillings that supposedly appeared
miraculously, but the revival disbanded amid charges of fraud and
embezzled funds). Then (most recently) those movements were all eclipsed
by a supposed revival in Lakeland, Florida whose leader embodied all
those errors and turned out to be twice as much a son of hell as all the
religious scoundrels he imitated (cf. Matthew 23:15).
Here's how Charisma magazine summed up that debacle: Keep Reading...
Here's how Charisma magazine summed up that debacle: Keep Reading...
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