Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Reading 1 Peter Together: 1 Peter 1:1-2

Today begins our month-long journey through the book of 1 Peter.  I hope you’ve already read the entire book once today.  If you missed it yesterday, there is an introduction here that will help you understand the background of 1 Peter.  Today we’ll focus our attention on the first two verses.

Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ, 
To those who are elect exiles of the Dispersion in Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia, according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, in the sanctification of the Spirit, for obedience to Jesus Christ and for sprinkling with his blood: 
May grace and peace be multiplied to you. 

Peter’s epistle begins with a brief introduction, but there is much to learn in this first sentence.

As you read through the entire book of 1 Peter today, you might have noticed that the word fear appeared several times. This is interesting, because if you’re familiar with the life of Peter you know that fear was a constant problem for him.  He had the faith to step out of the boat and walk on water, but then became fearful and sank (Matthew 14:22-33).  He promised to follow Jesus even unto death, but then denied knowing Jesus three times even after being warned that he would do so (Matthew 26:69-75).  Even later in his life, Paul had to confront him because he would not eat with Gentiles when the Judaizers were around out of fear (Galatians 2:11-14).  This after Peter was the very Apostle who received a vision from God instructing him that the unclean animals were no longer considered unclean and Peter was sent to preach the gospel to the first Gentile converts! (Acts 10-11)

As a follower of Jesus, what fears do you have?  How does the life of Peter encourage us as we face our fears, sometimes with faith and sometimes lacking faith?

Peter writes to the elect exiles dispersed in Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia.  The word elect or chosen is often a source of controversy among Christians, but Peter makes no apologies or qualifications.  He simply tells the believers to whom he is writing that they were chosen.  He then calls them exiles even though most of the recipients were probably living in the regions where they were born and raised.  

What is your reaction to reading that you, a follower of Christ, were chosen by God? How does knowing that you were chosen by God help you in times of fear or doubt?

How does seeing yourself as an exile, sojourner, or alien even in your home country affect the way you live?  Where is your true citizenship?

These believers, and all believers, were chosen according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, in the sanctification of the Holy Spirit, for obedience to Jesus Christ and for sprinkling with his blood.  We see here Father, Son, and Spirit - one God in three persons - all working together in perfect harmony for the salvation of those who believe.  God the Father chose us in eternity past, Jesus' blood redeemed us, and the Holy Spirit sanctifies us (see Ephesians 1:3-14 for Paul's lengthier explanation of this same truth).  We also see what followers of Jesus were chosen for or to: obedience to Jesus Christ.  It’s very important to note that were not chosen because of our obedience, but were chosen for obedience.  Obedience to Jesus no matter the cost is the major theme of Peter’s letter.

The reference to sprinkling with Jesus’ blood is a reference to Exodus 24:3-8.  After Moses received God’s Law, he read the Law to the people of Israel and they agreed that they would obey God and be his people.  Moses took the blood from sacrificed animals and sprinkled it on the people, signifying the covenant that they were entering into.  Peter is telling us that that event was a type (prefigurement) of Christ and his people, the church.  We have entered into a covenant with Jesus figuratively being sprinkled with his blood, and although that covenant is secured by Christ’s obedience and not our own, when we agree to follow Jesus we are agreeing to submit to His sovereign authority and obey all that he has commanded.  The final words of Jesus recorded in Matthew’s gospel are commonly known as the Great Commission, in which Jesus says, “Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you” (Matthew 28:19-20a, emphasis mine).  

We often think that the purpose of salvation is Heaven, but have you ever thought about the fact that God you chose to obey him while you remain on earth?

Based on your first reading of 1 Peter today, or anything else you know from Scripture, is there any area of your life in which you are not obeying God? 



Reading 1 Peter Together: An Introduction to 1 Peter

Introduction to 1 Peter

Philip Lee

The Author

Have you ever thought that it would be so much easier to trust Jesus, to live a life completely devoted to Him, to avoid the temptations to sin if you could just spend some time with Him face-to-face?  It is easy to think that, but the Bible is full of stories of men who experienced God in the Old Testament or walked with Jesus in the New Testament but remained deeply flawed, committed grievous sin, still struggled with faith.  There is perhaps no greater example in the entire Bible than Peter, a man whose life recorded in the Scriptures alternates between incredible boldness and faith in one instance followed by seemingly unbelievable failures the next.  

The life of Peter serves as a great encouragement to followers of Christ.  Being a follower of Christ does not mean that we are perfect.  Just as Peter did on numerous occasions, we will sin, we will lack faith, we will deny Christ with our words or actions.  Peter always repented of his sins when he realized his sin and Jesus always forgave and restored him when he did.  In the same way, God always stands ready to forgive and restore us when we confess and repent of our sins.  
Peter seems an unlikely choice to be the first among the apostles, yet in every list of the twelve apostles he is listed first (Matthew 10:2-4, Mark 3:16-19, Luke 6:13-16, Acts 1:13).  He was not trained religiously.  In fact, Acts 4:13 says that he was “untrained and uneducated.”  He and his brother Andrew ran a fishing business in the town of Capernaum along the Sea of Galilee, where he owned a home (Mark 1:16-29, Matthew 4:18-19).  Andrew, who was previously a disciple of John the Baptist, was also one of the twelve and the gospel of the apostle John records that it was Andrew who introduced Peter to Jesus saying, “We have found the Messiah” (John 1:40-42).  Peter’s birth name was Simon, but it was at this first meeting that Jesus said, “You are Simon the son of John; you shall be called Cephas.”  Cephas is the Aramaic (Peter’s native language) word for “rock”.  The Greek word is Peter.  

Throughout the gospels Peter is referred to as Simon, Peter, and Simon Peter.  Interestingly, the name Simon is often used after his failures.  In The Bible Exposition Commentary on 1 Peter Warren Wiersbe says, “Peter was a man with three names. Nearly fifty times in the New Testament, he is called ‘Simon’; and often he is called ‘Simon Peter.’ Perhaps the two names suggest a Christian’s two natures: an old nature (Simon) that is prone to fail, and a new nature (Peter) that can give victory. As Simon, he was only another human piece of clay; but Jesus Christ made a rock out of him!”
In Matthew 16:17-19, after Peter confesses that Jesus is “the Christ, the Son of the Living God,” (v. 16), it is recorded: “And Jesus said to him, “Blessed are you, Simon Barjona, because flesh and blood did not reveal this to you, but My Father who is in heaven.  I also say to you that you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build My church; and the gates of Hades will not overpower it.  I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; and whatever you bind on earth shall have been bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall have been loosed in heaven.”

This humble fishermen, prone to impulsive verbal and physical outbursts, often lacking in faith, is the man whom Jesus chose to be the first among His disciples, part of his inner circle along with James and John (Mark 5:37; 9:2), and the rock upon which He would build His church.  Jesus builds his kingdom through forgiven but not yet perfect men and women, who, like Peter, sometimes display great faith and sometimes commit great sin.

In John 21:15-17 Jesus asked Peter three times if Peter loved Him, three times Peter answered yes, and three times Jesus told Peter to take care of His sheep.  The number three is not insignificant in light of the fact that Peter denied Jesus three times on the night of His arrest.    

Following the ascension of Jesus back into Heaven, Peter was clearly the leader of the apostles and the early church.  He took the lead in choosing a replacement in the 12 for Judas (Acts 1:15-26).  He was the preacher on the Day of Pentecost when the Holy Spirit came down and 3,000 souls believed in Jesus and were baptized (Acts 2:1-42).  In Acts 3-4 Peter boldly preached the gospel even facing the threat of imprisonment and beatings.  In Acts 5 he brought about the first case of church discipline before being beaten and thrown in prison.  In Acts 9 he raised Tabitha from the dead.  In Acts 10-11 God used Peter to open the gospel to the Gentiles through his encounter with Cornelius.  The historical account of Peter’s life in the Bible concludes in Acts 15 at the Jerusalem Council.

According to church tradition, Peter’s life ended in Rome around 65-66 AD under the persecution initiated by Nero.  Tradition holds that Peter was crucified upside down, at his request, claiming that he was not worthy to be put to death in the same manner as Jesus.  He probably wrote 1 Peter from Rome shortly before his death, most likely in 62-64 AD.  

Questions Surrounding Peter’s Authorship

As with every book of the Bible, there are scholars who challenge the authenticity of the book.  Those scholars raise four objections to Peter’s authorship: 1) it is not listed in the Muratorian Fragment, a list of canonical books compiled in Rome between 180-200 AD, 2) the Greek is too polished for an “uneducated” (Acts 4:13) fisherman from Galilee, 3) it is too similar to Paul’s writings in Romans and Ephesians, and 4) the description of persecution in 1 Peter better fits a later date, such as Emperor Trajan (AD 98-117).

Those objections do not give serious reason to doubt Peter's authorship.  According to B.F. Westcott in A General Survey of the History of the Canon of the New Testament the Muratorian Fragment is damaged and is missing at least one line of text.  Peter was not completely uneducated, but rather untrained in a Jewish rabbinical school.  Being from Galilee he was likely bilingual in Aramaic and Greek from an early age.  1 Peter 5:12 also suggests that Peter used Silvanus (Silas) as a scribe in composing the letter, which would account for both the high level Greek and the similarities to Paul’s writing, as Silas was also Paul’s missionary companion and scribe.  Finally, 1 Peter does not seem to suggest empire-wide persecution, as he would not be likely to stress submission and honor to government authorities under such a scenario.  The persecution Peter refers to was more likely coming to a limited degree from local governments but to a greater degree from individuals.     
There is nothing in 1 Peter or from outside sources that causes doubt in Peter’s authorship.  

The Original Recipients

1 Peter is written to “those who reside as aliens scattered throughout Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia” (1:1).  These areas were provinces in the Roman Empire located in modern day northern Turkey.  It is not known how the gospel spread to these regions as there is no record of Peter or anyone else ministering there.  Paul ministered in parts of Galatia and Asia, but is not recorded visiting Pontus, Cappadocia, or Bithynia.  He was actually forbidden by the Holy Spirit from going to Bithynia (Acts 16:7).  It is possible that the churches Peter was writing to were founded by early Jewish converts who had spread out from Jerusalem, but this is not certain.  

Peter used a number of Old Testament quotations and allusions in this letter leading some scholars to believe that his original audience was primarily Jewish  converts to Christianity.  Other passages in the letter seem to indicate a predominately Gentile audience.  In 1:14 he warns the readers against conforming to former lusts which were theirs in ignorance.   Jewish converts would not have been ignorant of God’s Law.  In 2:9-10 Peter tells them that they are now a people, in fact the people of God, where they formerly were not a people.  A Jewish audience would have already believed that they were the people of God.  Also, in 4:3 he tells them the time is past to pursue the desires of the Gentiles.  It therefore seems likely that Peter was writing to a mainly Gentile audience.    

The believers who received Peter’s letter were believers suffering for their faith.  In her commentary on 1 Peter Karen Jobes writes, “Virtually all commentators understand the persecutions referred to in 1 Peter to be sporadic, personal, and unorganized social ostracism of Christians with varying intensity, probably reinforced at the local level by the increasing suspicions of Roman officials at all levels.”  These were believers whose transformed lives had left them out of step with the surrounding culture and even their own families.

Cities, trade guilds, and families all worshipped their own gods and expected their members to do the same.  Worship of such false gods often involved immoral practices contrary to the teachings of Jesus.  The Christians who abandoned such practices were seen as counter-cultural, denied job opportunities, and even cut off from their families.  
The Bible is full of promises that following Jesus will result in persecution.  Jesus Himself said in John 15:18-21, “If the world hates you, you know that it has hated Me before it hated you. If you were of the world, the world would love its own; but because you are not of the world, but I chose you out of the world, because of this the world hates you. Remember the word that I said to you, ‘A slave is not greater than his master.’ If they persecuted Me, they will also persecute you; if they kept My word, they will keep yours also. But all these things they will do to you for My name’s sake, because they do not know the One who sent Me.”  Paul wrote in 2 Timothy 3:12, “Indeed, all who desire to live godly in Christ Jesus will be persecuted.” 

It’s important to understand that Peter was not writing to people who were suffering because of sin, but were suffering for their faithfulness to Jesus Christ.  The recipients of Peter’s letter were not facing government endorsed persecution at this time, but personal persecution from people around them who didn’t understand why they were different, didn’t understand why they wouldn’t engage in the same sinful acts that they had previously and everyone else still did.  Government persecution has existed in various places throughout church history and continues in many places around the world today, though the persecution most believers around the world suffer is not at the hands of government; rather, it comes from friends, family, co-workers and bosses, neighbors, etc. who ridicule, discriminate against, or even commit violence against believers because of their faith.  

Purpose

The purpose of 1 Peter was to encourage the suffering believers to remain strong in the faith.  The key to the book is found in the first two verses:  “Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ, To those who reside as aliens, scattered throughout Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia, who are chosen according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, by the sanctifying work of the Spirit, to obey Jesus Christ and be sprinkled with His blood: May grace and peace be yours in the fullest measure” (emphasis mine).  

The issue of how and why God chose people for salvation has been greatly debated throughout church history.  One thing is clear though, Scripture clearly teaches that before the foundation of the world God chose a people for salvation (Eph. 1:4).  Some have claimed, based on Romans 8:29-30, that God’s choice was based on foreknowledge of who would believe, but there is little Scriptural basis for that belief beyond those verses and the knowing in Romans 8:29-30 indicates intimate personal knowledge.  The teaching of Scripture from Genesis through Revelation indicates that God chooses people as part of a sovereign plan.  Those that are chosen are not chosen because of anything good or deserving that exists within them, but only because it pleases God to bestow love and mercy upon them and grant them salvation.  

What those who believe in election and those who do not can agree on is that with salvation comes an expectation of obedience.  In verse 1:16 Peter quotes the often repeated statement of God from Leviticus (11:44; 19:2, 20; 20:7) “You shall be holy for I am holy.”  To be holy is to be set-apart, completely free from sin.  The process of becoming less like our old selves and more like Christ is called sanctification and it is the Holy Spirit that brings about that change in our lives (Romans 8:12-13).  Obviously in our fleshly bodies we will never be completely free from sin but that should be the goal and desire of every believer.  In Exodus 19:6 God told the people of Israel that they were to be to Him “a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.”  In chapter 2 Peter applies this to New Covenant followers of Christ.  Just as the nation of Israel in the past was to be holy, set-apart, a display of God’s love, mercy, compassion, justice, etc. for all the world to see; followers of Jesus should be a display of God’s character to the unbelieving world around them wherever they are, and in whatever circumstances they find themselves.

Peter reminds the believers that they are on display for the unbelieving world to see and encourages them to stand firm in the faith, enduring the hardship in the present time with an eye on the future reward.  He begins the letter with an explanation of the joy and privileges that come with being chosen to obey.  The bulk of the letter details some of the challenges of being chosen to obey in society, the workplace, the home, and through suffering.  The letter concludes with a reminder of some of God’s expectations for His chosen people and the expectation of a reward for those chosen people.       




Monday, June 29, 2015

Reading 1 Peter Together - An Invitation

Following the announcement of the Supreme Court’s decision on same-sex marriage Friday I sent out the following tweet:

After thinking things over for a few days I’ve decided to invite all of you to join me in a month long study of the book of 1 Peter.  Here’s what I’m planning and asking you to consider doing with me:


  • Read the entire book of 1 Peter every day in the month of July.  It’s a short book that should only take 10-20 minutes depending on your reading speed.
  • Monday-Friday during July I’ll do my best to post a short video or something written to explain some things in a paragraph or two of the text and give you some questions to consider.  The blog and my social media accounts will be open for comments, thoughts, and questions.

That’s it.  Simple.  Read a short book of the Bible every day for a month in order to become familiar with what God, through the Apostle Peter, spoke to a first century group of persecuted believers. Then, five days a week, give a little extra thought to a small portion of the book as we work our way through from beginning to end.  

Why 1 Peter?  1 Peter was written by the Apostle Peter to churches in the first century where believers were suffering for the faith.  American Christians have heard about persecution for most of our lives, but have never really had to count the cost of following Jesus.  Sure, Hollywood, the media, and the academy may have mocked us and insulted us, but that’s largely been the extent of our suffering.  Things are going to change though, and I think it will happen sooner and more severely than most professing Christians are prepared for.

We’re not going to see Christians fed to lions or used as human torches to light the White House garden.  We’re not going to meet in secret, afraid of making too much noise and knowing that the police could burst into the room at any moment and carry us away to labor camps.  But we will be shunned, we will be denied career opportunities, jobs and small businesses will be lost.  In the years to come, fines and arrests may be come to those who preach God’s law and the gospel of Jesus Christ.

When Christians have brought this up the advocates of gay marriage have told us we’re paranoid, but one only needs to listen to the words being spoken about Christians by the culture at large and look at what is currently happening in places like Canada and the UK to see what the future holds for the U.S. Persecution is coming, and the church needs to be ready.

1 Peter was written to believers in a similar situation.  They weren’t yet facing Roman Empire-wide persecution.  It was local, coming from family, neighbors, trade guilds, and perhaps local governments.  Peter wrote to them reminding them of who they were and what they had in Christ, then instructed them how to live as sufferers for the sake of Christ.  His words will have great relevance to American Christians in the years ahead.


We'll begin July 1.  I hope you'll join me, and invite some friends to join in as well.

Monday, June 22, 2015

Why I Post the Things I Post

In late 2011 I went to church one Thursday for our weekly young adults meeting.  Someone I knew was there already and watching a sermon on a computer.  At this point my theological education was still in its infancy.  I had done my Old Testament Surveys, Systematic Theology I and II, a preaching class, hermeneutics, and a couple of other non-Bible classes.  Even then, watching just about 5-10 minutes of the sermon I could tell something was off.  

The pastor could not stop talking about himself.  The Bible verses he was yanking out of their contexts didn’t really even support the points he was trying to make.  

It was a life-changing moment in a very real sense.  I realized then, as an aspiring preacher and teacher in Christ’s church, that the local pastor’s voice is not the only voice that most Christians are going to hear.  Social media and podcasts have made it easy for any gifted communicator to build a large audience.  Some of those preachers are Biblically faithful preachers of the gospel, some are not. 

A few months later I took Systematic Theology III, which had a primary focus on the church.  As part of that class I began examining what was happening in the broader church world.  Specifically, for my major paper I looked at the Charismatic movement.  

In Acts 17 we’re told that as Paul saw all the idols in Athens, his spirit was provoked within him.  While I don’t know exactly what that was like for Paul, I think I experienced something similar as I started surveying the global church.  

I saw all kinds of nonsense taking place in Charismatic circles, and not only taking place but being attributed to the Holy Spirit of God.

I saw theological liberals denying the inspiration and inerrancy of Scripture, picking and choosing which parts of the Bible they want to keep based on nothing more than their own feelings about what is true.

I saw the seeker-sensitive megachurch movement engaging in all sorts of gimmicks to get people to attend church, where the pastors then deliver Christless sermons full of practical advice for life improvement.

Missing from all these movements, which combined together contain the majority of professing Christians in the world today, was Christ and him crucified.  Missing from all of these movements was a clear articulation of the gospel - that all people were born dead in trespasses and sins, that God being holy and just cannot simply overlook our sins, that God being holy and just has righteous wrath towards sin and sinners, but that God being rich in mercy and because of his great love sent his Son Jesus to live a perfect life on our behalf, suffer God’s wrath in our place on the cross, and rise three days later proving that sin and death are defeated and guaranteeing our own resurrection to eternal life, provided we obey Christ’s command to repent and believe the gospel. 

Seeing all of this, continuing to see all of this, I cannot stay silent.  

I’ve ruffled a lot of feathers over the last few years with the things I’ve posted on social media and the blog posts I’ve written.  I’ve been called judgmental, arrogant, divisive and worse.  

It seems that some people think I look for fault in every famous Christian and attack every one I disagree with over any minor point of theology.  That’s not the case at all.  I could go down the list of all my favorite theologians and pastors and tell you where I differ with them on secondary and tertiary issues.  I disagree with my Presbyterian and Lutheran friends over infant baptism.  I disagree with John MacArthur’s eschatology (end times theology). I disagree with Matt Chandler and David Platt’s belief in the continued existence of the sign gifts of the Spirit.  I think Wayne Grudem’s teaching on fallible prophecy has done great harm to the global church. Yet all of these men are rock solid on the truth of God’s word and the proclamation of the gospel.

Many other popular preachers, teachers, and authors either preach a distorted gospel, like the prosperity gospel adding temporal health and wealth to the gospel or the seeker-sensitive prosperity-lite promising better marriages, better kids, better sex, and better careers.  Some, like Bill Johnson who I mentioned yesterday, are actually heretical in their teachings on the person and work of Christ. 

None of this is surprising.  Jesus warned about false teachers.  Paul warned about false teachers.  John warned about false teachers. Peter warned about false teachers. Jude warned about false teachers.

Almost all of the New Testament after the Gospels and Acts was written to correct false teaching or wrong practices in the early church.  What’s baffling to me is that the very issues that the New Testament letters were written to correct are the same issues that concern me today!  2000 years and we still haven’t learned what God in his goodness had written down for us.

My heart is for the church.  My heart is to warn people to flee from false teaching and false teachers.  And here’s the truth - I don’t go looking for false teaching.  I’m not a “heresy hunter”.  Day after day after day I see my Facebook timeline and Twitter feed full of quotes from and links to some of the most dangerous false teachers on the planet today.  I’m not hunting it; I can’t escape it.

I’ve used my social media accounts to fight back, in a sense.  Why would I stay silent when I see error?  Why should I let the false teachers use social media to build their audiences while I sit back and post nothing but happy, positive, encouraging thoughts?  I can’t. I won’t.  

This is personal.  People I know and love, people whose souls I care for, are being led astray by wolves masquerading as pastors of Christ's sheep.  

I cannot stay silent.  I will not stay silent.  

I do acknowledge that perhaps in my zeal to combat error I haven't made it clear enough why I'm so zealous.  In trying to point out the counterfeit gospels I may not have not done a good enough job of articulating the true gospel.  I started this blog in an attempt to develop thoughts beyond 140 character tweets or short Facebook posts.  I can't say that I haven't had time to write over the last few months, but I haven't had the mental energy as the last few months were challenging on a number of fronts.  Numerous times I sat down to write something and just couldn't get the words from my brain to the keyboard.  

I want everyone to know that I'm always open for conversation about the things I post.  If you think I'm wrong, let's talk about it.  If you think I'm being unnecessarily offensive, let's talk about it.  I only ask that you come prepared to talk about what God has actually said in His written word, so the discussion will be based on God's truth and not our personal feelings.  





  

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Why You Should Stop Singing Bethel Redding and Hillsong Songs in Your Church

At 34 years old, I’ve lived roughly half my life with the Internet and half without.  I’m old enough to remember a time when pornography wasn’t a mouse click away.  20 years ago Playboy was the most well-known name in porn.  I remember people joking about having Playboy or other pornographic magazines so they could read the articles.  It was absurd, of course.  No one who possessed a Playboy magazine was interested in reading the articles.

But can you imagine parents buying a Playboy magazine, cutting out all the pictures of naked women or any references to anything sexual and then giving their child a Playboy to read the articles?  No.  There are thousands of other books, magazines, or newspapers that a child could read.  Giving a child a Playboy, even with the nudity removed, would be exposing that child to something harmful to his or her soul while giving an endorsement that the magazine was okay.  

What do the preceding two paragraphs have to do with the title of this post, you ask?  My answer: singing the music of Bethel Redding or Hillsong in your church is akin to giving your child a Playboy magazine with the nudity removed.  

How?  Let me explain.

Bethel Redding is a cult.  By any definition of a cult, Bethel Redding qualifies.  Bill Johnson, lead pastor of Bethel Redding, teaches that Jesus was not God when he performed miracles, teaches that Jesus was born again, and teaches that anyone who interprets Paul’s thorn in the flesh as a sickness or illness is guilty of preaching a different gospel.  It is, in fact, Bill Johnson who is preaching a different Jesus and a different gospel.  That is not a charge I make recklessly.  It is also not a charge I make alone.    

Tony Miano has recently started a blog to catalogue some of the false teaching that is coming out of Bethel Redding.  You can read and see more here if you’d like to.

Bethel Redding is dangerous, and thousands of people from around the world are traveling to Bethel to be a part of what is taking place there.  

Hillsong is a little more difficult to pin down, but I believe Hillsong should also be classified as a cult.  Discernment with Hillsong is a little more difficult than with Bethel Redding because the leaders of Hillsong don’t really teach anything doctrinal.  Every time I listen to a sermon by Brian Houston, Carl Lentz, Christine Caine, or anyone else associated with Hillsong, the phrase that comes to mind is “empty words.”  A lot of words are being spoken, but they are empty words, devoid of any real Biblical truth.  

You will not hear anyone from Hillsong confront people with the reality of their sinfulness.  You will not hear anyone from Hillsong call people to repentance and belief in the gospel, the very message that Jesus preached.  

Hillsong absolutely teaches a form of the prosperity gospel.  The Hillsong teaching is that Jesus will make every aspect of your temporal, earthly life better, if only you’ll let him.  

If you read the words of Jesus and the Apostles recorded in the New Testament, if you read the earliest writings of the church fathers, and then listen to or read what Bill Johnson and the leadership of Bethel Redding are teaching, and listen to or read what Brian Houston and other leaders of Hillsong are teaching, it should be obvious that Bethel Redding and Hillsong are both in their own ways teaching an entirely different religion than the faith once for all delivered to the saints.

And here’s the thing, both Bethel Redding, through their music team Jesus Culture, and Hillsong have intentionally used their music teams to build their global empires.  It is through their music that most people are first exposed to Bethel Redding and Hillsong. 

When we sing their songs in our churches, and give credit to Bethel or Hillsong for the song, we are giving our people a silent though full endorsement of those churches and their teachings.  Though the songs themselves may be theologically sound, we are exposing our people to spiritual poison, and telling them to drink it down.  

Once we’ve given that endorsement, how do you think our people are going to respond when a Bill Johnson video or article shows up on their social media feeds?  How do you think they’re going to respond when Hillsong or Jesus Culture come to your town for a money-making concert worship experience? 

When I bring up these thoughts in conversation I’m often met with resistance.  I hear things like, “Chew the meat and spit out the bones,” or, “Don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater.” Those cliches don’t mesh with the Biblical teaching.  

The Biblical teaching is to avoid such men as Bill Johnson and Brian Houston (2 Timothy 3:5).  The Biblical teaching is that an elder (pastor) in a church must both teach sound doctrine and rebuke those who contradict it, to silence them (Titus 1:9-11).  

People will often say we just need to trust our people to exercise discernment.  In a sense that’s true.  Spiritual maturity is like physical maturity, we raise a person from newborn to maturity and trust them to make the right decisions.  In any church there are going to be mature, theologically sound saints, and there are going to be baby saints who don’t yet have a grasp of sound doctrine.  Do you want to tell your new believers that Bethel Redding and Hillsong are okay, and then have them believe Bill Johnson when he teaches that Jesus was not God when he performed miracles?  Do you want to tell them that Bethel Redding and Hillsong are okay, and then have that believer thinking it’s their own fault or their own lack of faith when they find out they have cancer and healing doesn’t come?

No.  

Pastors are called to shepherd their sheep, which involves feeding their sheep the nutrition they need and protecting them from danger.  Singing songs by Bethel Redding and Hillsong in your church is opening your sheep pen to the wolves and offering them a buffet.  You’re essentially handing your children a pornographic magazine with the pornographic images removed, and trusting that he or she will grow up to recognize pornography as something evil and soul-destroying.