Four Books That the Enemy
Has Used To Corrupt Christianity
by Sandy Simpson, 9/9/13
Four men changed the world into their postmodern, communist, evolutionist, materialist, Narcissistic concept of reality. There are also four books that have corrupted Christianity worldwide. The four men who changed the world, not for the better, were Friedrich Nietzsche, Karl Marx, Charles Darwin and Sigmund Freud.
Nietzsche Marx Darwin Freud
Debunking the traditional
conceptions of both God and man, thinkers such as Charles Darwin, Karl Marx,
and Sigmund Freud portrayed humans not as moral and spiritual beings, but as
animals or machines who inhabited a universe ruled by purely impersonal forces
and whose behavior and very thoughts were dictated by the unbending forces of
biology, chemistry, and environment. This materialistic conception of reality eventually infected virtually
every area of our culture, from politics and economics to literature and art. (The
Wedge Strategy, by Keith Lankford, http://www.stephenjaygould.org/ctrl/archive/wedge_document.html)
Albert Mohler
identifies Friedrich Nietzsche, Karl Marx, Charles Darwin and Sigmund Freud as
what he calls the “four horsemen” of old atheism. These nineteenth century
men have had an incredible impact on modern society as each of them shaped his
respective field around his atheistic views: Nietzsche influenced philosophy
and is sort of a poster boy today for many postmodernists; Marx changed how
much of the world understood society and government; Darwin rewrote the
scientific textbooks and Freud redefined the human mind. It would be hard to
find anyone in the Western world who has had more influence on how we think and
live today than these four men; each of them, including his body of work and
influence, was largely the product of his denial of the existence of God. (Gary Gilley, Think on These Things, http://www.svchapel.org/resources/articles/22-contemporary-issues/587-the-new-atheism)
The four books that have changed the church by giving an introduction to the false teachings of the New Apostolic/Latter Rain (NAR), the Emerging Church/Contemplative/Catholic Mysticism (EC), pragmatic Church Growth (CG) methodologies of C. Peter Wagner, Robert Schuller and Peter Drucker, and the teachings of the World Christian Gathering on Indigenous People (WCGIP) are as follows:
These four books were widely read by Christians from virtually every denominational background before their ramifications and the movements they would spawn were known. They lay error alongside truth so were considered not to be a threat to churches. Therefore these books then became part of the consciousness of many Christians and churches, thereby laying the basis for the introduction of the modern day false teachings of the NAR, EC, CG and WCGIP that have become part of the landscape of Christendom today. I have articles reviewing these books and authors on my site as follows:
Articles on Jack Deere (NAR):
http://www.deceptioninthechurch.com/newapostolic.html#jdeere
Surprised By The Power Of The Spirit by Jack Deere - Reviewed by Richard L. Mayhue
Surprised By The Power Of The Spirit by Jack Deere - Reviewed by Alan Howe
This book is an introduction to the Latter Rain Movement of the Toronto “Blessing”, Brownsville “Revival” and many other related movements such as the Third Wave and the New Apostolic Reformation. It was read widely by many Christians because of the fact the Jack Deere had formerly been a professor at Dallas Seminary before being dismissed for promoting Arminianism and slain in the spirit.
During 1987, John Wimber
and I became close friends. My wife and I went to several Vineyard conferences
during that time. We continued to learn more about healing and the present-day
ministry of the Holy Spirit, both in the Scriptures and in practical experience. My friendship with Wimber
and my growing interest in the supernatural ministry of the Holy Spirit
eventually led me to resign from my church and resulted in my dismissal from my
teaching position at Dallas Seminary. Before I left Dallas Seminary, however, I
met another man who would also be divinely used to alter the course of my life.
His name was Paul Cain (pp. 37,38). (Surprised by the
power of the Spirit, reviewed by Alan Howe)
Articles on Richard Foster (EC):
http://www.deceptioninthechurch.com/emergingchurch.html#rfoster
Celebration
Of Discipline by Richard Foster -
Reviewed by Gary Gilley
Celebration
Of Discipline by Richard Foster -
Reviewed by Bob DeWaay
Celebration
Of Discipline by Richard Foster -
Reviewed by Ken Silva
Celebration Of
Discipline by Richard Foster -
Reviewed by Lighthouse Trails
This book was read by countless Christians and introduced them to Catholic and New Age Mysticism. This book now lays the basis for the Spiritual Formation departments of a majority of Christian colleges.
Written over
twenty-five years ago, and proclaimed by Christianity Today as
one of the ten best books of the twentieth century, the influence of Celebration
of Discipline is all but
incalculable. Foster is a Quaker, so his spiritual life is grounded in the
subjective “inner light” presupposition of the Friends. He is highly steeped in
the Roman Catholic mystics, drawing from dozens of them for his theology. More
than that, Eugene Peterson informs us that Foster has “‘found’ the spiritual
disciplines [in the mystics] that the modern world stored away and forgot” (p.
206). Foster’s views are also formed by Quaker mystics and even secular
thinking, most surprisingly Carl Jung, self-confessed demon-possessed
psychologist. (Celebration Of Discipline, reviewed by
Gary Gilley)
Articles on Rick Warren (CG):
http://www.deceptioninthechurch.com/churchgrowth.html#rwarren
The Purpose Driven Church by Rick Warren - Reviewed by Nathan Busenitz
The
Purpose Driven Church by Rick Warren - Reviewed by Rick Meisel
The
Purpose Driven Church by Rick Warren - Reviewed by Go For God
The Purpose Driven
Church by Rick Warren - Reviewed by Berit Kjos
Purpose
Driven Church by Rick Warren - Reviewed by Dennia
Costella
Purpose Driven Church by Rick Warren - Reviewed by Jim Delany
Purpose Driven Church by Rick Warren - Reviewed by Discernment Ministries Newsletter
Purpose Driven Church by Rick Warren - Reviewed by Michael Penfold
Purpose Driven Church introduced millions of church leaders to seek friendly, the church growth ideas of C. Peter Wagner (Warren’s mentor from Fuller) and Schullerism (another mentor of Warren). He give pragmatic ways to grow a church and his dissertation explains that he grew Saddleback by going door to door in that community with a survey asking people what they wanted in a church.
A primary weakness in Warren’s approach
is that he emphasizes the pastor’s ability to entertain over the pastor’s
responsibility to speak the truth. On p. 231, Warren argues: “I’ve heard
pastors proudly say, ‘We’re not here to entertain.’ Obviously they’re doing a
good job at it. A Gallup poll a few years ago stated that, according to the unchurched, the church is the most boring place to be. . .
. To the unchurched, dull preaching is unforgivable.
Truth poorly delivered is ignored. On the other hand, the unchurched
will listen to absolute foolishness if it is interesting.” While homiletics is
certainly an important part of preaching, it is not the most important part.
For Warren, the presentation seems to be more important than the truth being
presented. The Apostle Paul’s priorities, however, were just the opposite—how
he preached was not nearly as important as what he preached: For Christ did not
send me to baptize, but to preach the gospel, not in cleverness of speech, so
that the cross of Christ would not be made void. (1 Cor. 1:17) And when I came
to you, brethren, I did not come with superiority of speech or of wisdom,
proclaiming to you the testimony of God. For I determined to
know nothing among you except Jesus Christ, and Him crucified. I was
with you in weakness and in fear and in much trembling, and my message and my
preaching were not in persuasive words of wisdom, but in demonstration of the
Spirit and of power, so that your faith would not rest on the wisdom of men,
but on the power of God. (2 Cor. 2:1-5) In light of his desire for relevance,
Warren’s preaching is naturally determined more by His audience than by the
Scripture. (Purpose Driven Church, reviewed by Nathan Busenitz)
Articles on Don Richardson (WCGIP):
http://www.deceptioninthechurch.com/wcgip.html
Idolatry in Their Hearts by Sandy Simpson & Mike Oppenheimer, http://www.deceptioninthechurch.com/idolatrybook.html
The First Nations Movement – Deceiving the Nations! By Sandy Simpson & Mike Oppenheimer, http://www.deceptioninthechurch.com/ipmdvd.html
Did God Put "Eternity In Their Hearts" or "The World In Their Hearts"? by Sandy Simpson, 8/4/11
Catholic Syncretism Forms The Basis For The Teachings Of The World Christian Gathering on Indigenous People Movement (WCGIP) by Sandy Simpson, 8/1/13
Richardson introduced Christianity to Inclusivism (that people can be saved by general revelation) and inspired Bible translation societies to put the names of supreme beings in the Bible. He got Christians to think that every person has a Divine spark in them (eternity in their hearts) when that phrase is not the correct translation of Ecc. 3:11, because twice as many translations translate that verse as saying, that God “set the world in their heart”. Because of his book the worldwide cult of the World Christian Gathering of Indigenous People was formed and Richardson sits on the board of Daniel Kikawa’s Aloha Ke Akua which is a primary influence for that movement.
The preponderance
of translations stating that God "set the world in their heart" are more consistent with the whole counsel of God's
Word. Ecc. 3:11 He hath
made every thing beautiful in his time: also he hath
set the world in their heart, so that no man can find out the work that
God maketh from the beginning to the end. (KJV)
It is therefore a serious breach of hermeneutics for Don Richardson to have (1)
chosen one of only a few translations of Ecc. 3:11 to
provide a title for his book, (2) to not give the immediate context of the
verse and (3) to not take into account the meaning of this verse in the context
of the whole counsel of God's Word. (Sandy Simpson, Did God Put "Eternity In
Their Hearts" or
"The World In Their Hearts"?)
SOME NOTES ON THESE INDIVIDUALS
JACK DEERE
"Thanks
to mentors like John Wimber, C. Peter Wagner, Chuck Kraft from Fuller as well as Paul Cain and others,
Jack Deere had his orthodox view of theology systematically dismantled.
He then became instrumental in introducing the Third Wave to millions of
Christians who trusted him because he had been a professor at Dallas
Theological Seminary through his books "Surprised By the Power Of The Spirit" and "Surprised By The Voice Of
God." Though these books have some precious truths in them, they
also contain heresy. That is how false teachers ply their trade.
They lay error alongside truth so that the unsuspecting and undiscerning will
not be able to tell the difference between what is true and what is not.
Following are a few examples of just how far away from orthodoxy Deere has
gone." (http://www.deceptioninthechurch.com/deere.html)
Jack Deere, a good friend of Paul Cain who was an associate of William Branham and often spoke in his “crusades” when Branham was absent, is also a member of the International Coalition of Apostles under C. Peter Wagner. Deere ended up leaving Dallas Seminary because he was espousing teachings he had learned from Cain, Wagner and John Wimber. Deere wrote “Surprised by the Power of the Spirit” which was widely distributed among many pastors and church leaders. It laid the basis for churches to accept some of the heretical teachings of the Latter Rain that were brought forward from the false prophet William Branham by Cain and taught by him to the Kansas City Prophets, Wimber, Wagner and many others. It came out in the heyday of the Toronto “Blessing” which later spawned numerous other counterfeit revivals such as the Brownsville “Outpouring”. Deere went on to be an associate pastor in a Vineyard church in Amarillo, TX.
RICHARD FOSTER
The departure from these
teachings by Richard Foster and the host of teachers he promotes is the reason
we must withdraw from them. "If there come any unto you, and bring not this
doctrine, receive him not into [your] house, neither bid him God speed: For he
that biddeth him God speed is partaker of his evil
deeds." II John 2:10-11 Thomas Merton, Morton Kelsey, Basil
Pennington, Benedictine Monks, Ignatius Loyola, Brennan Manning, Isaac
Pennington, Basil Pennington, Madeleine L'Engle,
Thomas Keating, Harvey Cox, Agnes Sanford, Madame Guyon,
John of the Cross, Evelyn Underhill, Thomas Kelly, Tilden Edwards, William Vaswig (also of Renovare who,
like Foster learned his meditation from Agnes Sanford and a great admirer of
occultist Carl Jung and his "sitting in silence" therapy), Karen
Mains, Lynda Graybeal, Jean-Pierre de Caussade, Meister Eckhart, George Fox, Henri Nouwen, Teresa of Avila, Brother Lawrence (who also
taught the emptying of the mind), Julian of Norwich, Siang Yan Tan
(psychologist), Lao-Tse (Taoism), Zarathrustra
(Zorastrianism) and a host of other
"masters" or "spiritual directors" (past or present) of the
Traditions of Discipline that Richard Foster promotes and endorses do not bring
this doctrine, so none of them, or their teachings should be brought into our
houses or houses of worship. And by doing so, we do become partakers of
their evil deeds....yes false doctrine is evil deeds. We must command
them as Paul did Timothy to the Ephesians to "Not teach false doctrines
any longer!" Richard Foster's teachings whether or not he says otherwise,
are a blend of Eastern mysticism and gnosticism...another
Jesus and another gospel. Oh foolish Americans, who hath bewitched you? (http://web.archive.org/web/20080212062607/http:/www.abrahamic-faith.com/James/Richard-Foster.html)
Foster began to be influenced by the Catholic mystics in the 1970s. Dave Hunt wrote a warning about Foster in his book “The Seduction Of Christianity” published in 1985.
In his 1985 book, The
Seduction of Christianity, Dave Hunt labeled creative visualization such
as what Foster promotes, "mental alchemy." Hunt warned the church
that Foster promoted such mental alchemy in Celebration of Discipline, and as
we have shown, he, in fact, does. So how is it that 24 years
after Hunt's warning Foster is more popular than ever with Evangelicals?
The answer is end times deception. Now, a huge movement that claims to be a
reformation promoting Foster, Willard and their versions of mysticism does
exist (i.e., The Emergent Church). Things have gotten so very much worse. (Richard Foster—Celebration of Deception by Bob DeWaay, http://cicministry.org/commentary/issue112.htm)
Foster’s influence on the EC through his organization “Renovare” laid the basis for the contemplative prayer, labyrinth walking, repetitious mantras to empty the mind, yoga, and many other Catholic and Eastern mystical techniques that allegedly are supposed to get you closer to God and “spiritually form” you. Two of the major Christian college and university accrediting agencies such as Association of Theological Seminaries (ATS) and Association for Biblical Higher Education (ABHE) now require a “Spiritual Formation” department and curriculum to be implemented. (http://www.lighthousetrailsresearch.com/blog/?p=7733)
RICK WARREN
Rick Warren claims that he
has not compromised the Word of God with his principles and methods, that he
has only modernized them; but when I look into the book of Acts and the
Epistles, I see a different kind of Christianity, a different kind of church
there, than the one that Rick Warren has devised. Thus, I must reject Warren's
Purpose-Driven methods and I must warn those who have an ear to hear,
regardless of how small that crowd may be, that they
not heed the siren call of the contemporary church growth gurus.
Deceived
On Purpose by Warren Smith - Warren Smith is a former New Ager who
became converted to Christianity 20 years ago. Since then he has been warning
Christians, through writing and speaking, that dangerous New Age doctrines are
subtly creeping into the churches. In his most recent book, which is being
offered by Discernment Ministries, Smith recounts the considerable influence
that the Rev. Robert H. Schuller has had on the
ministry style and teachings of Rick Warren. The mystical leaven of New Age
teachings, which Robert Schuller controversially
introduced the church several decades ago, is now being reintroduced and
assimilated into mainstream evangelicalism through the writings and activities
of Rick Warren. Deceived on Purpose is a book with an easy reading style that
should be given to pastors and parishioners everywhere. The following is an
important excerpt from the book, Chapter 3. It chronicles a noteworthy example
of how Rick Warren’s "seeker sensitive" emphasis can lead straight
into dangerous metaphysical New Age doctrines. (http://www.crossroad.to/articles2/04/smith-deceived_on_purpose.htm)
I have a copy of Rick Warren’s dissertation he wrote for his doctorate from Fuller Seminary. In my opinion, and I have read a number of dissertations, this one does not really qualify to be a doctoral dissertation. It is basically the story of how he established his Saddleback church. His mentor for that project was C. Peter Wagner, former head of the NAR, whose books he cites in the bibliography of that paper most often. In writing his book on CG, following in the footsteps of his mentors C. Peter Wagner and Robert Schuller and culling principles from Peter Drucker teachings on marketing, he laid the basis for the modern mega-church “seeker sensitive” movement. In establishing Saddleback he sent out questionnaires door to door in that community asking people what they wanted in a church. He then compiled that information and formed a church based on their “felt needs” (and I thought the Church was supposed to have the Word of God as its basis!). The mega-church model set forth by Rick Warren may attract a lot of people and money but it is woefully inadequate to the task of preaching the Gospel and discipleship in sound doctrine. That is because the Gospel message and sound doctrine are seen as old methods. C. Peter Wagner put his pragmatic vision for implementing his CG ideas in his first book on CG entitled "Your Church Can Grow - Seven Vital Signs of a Healthy Church".
"... we ought to see clearly that the end DOES justify the means. What else possible could justify the means? If the method I am using accomplishes the goal I am aiming at, it is for that reason a good method. If, on the other hand, my method is not accomplishing the goal, how can I be justified in continuing to use it?" (C. Peter Wagner, "Your Church Can Grow - Seven Vital Signs Of A Healthy Church", 1976, pg. 137. - emphasis in original)
Wagner’s pragmatism laid the groundwork for a whole generation of CG advocates to be more interested in achieving the end goal of large churches and satisfying people’s “felt needs” than of remaining true to the teachings of Jesus Christ and the Apostles and following the pattern of the early church.
DON RICHARDSON
The WGCIP uses as it's
source materials certain books such as Don Richardson's "Eternity In Their
Hearts", Daniel Kikawa's "Perpetuated In
Righteousness" books by Richard Twiss and
others. I had the occasion to help research the bibliographies of those
books for Mike Oppenheimer's new articles on WGCIP teachings. I then found out
that a major source they both used was a Catholic priest named Wilhelm
Schmidt. I began to investigate other sources and was shocked to discover
that a number of their sources were quite dubious. They picked some of
the more controversial authors with a number of ideas that were not common in
Protestantism but had been mainstream for centuries in
Catholicism. That they would quote such people and base their ideas on their
conjectures illustrates just how far afield their ideas and beliefs are. … The teachings of the WCGIP and their
source materials by people like Richardson and Kikawa
constitute a new radical syncretism that is leading to the one world false
religion of "the woman who rides the beast" (Rev. 17:6-8). (http://www.deceptioninthechurch.com/catholicsyncretism.html)
Richardson’s “Eternity in Their Hearts” made its way through many mission organizations under the guise of new missiology, and many missionaries read the book back in the mid 1980s. What is amazing is that book was widely accepted and loved even though the very title of both the first edition and the updated title of the newer editions should have had people put the book back on the shelf.
At the time that book (Eternity in Their Hearts) came out no one really
saw the dangerous ideas Richardson was promoting. All they would have had to do was look at the
two subtitles of that book to understand the implications. The first subtitle in the 1981 edition read: “The
Untold Story of Christianity among Folk Religions of Ancient People.” Those
who read this book found some interesting cross-cultural ideas but apparently
missed the false premise of the book starting with the subtitle. How could
Christianity be “among folk religions” where the Gospel had not been preached (Rom.
10:14-15)? At that time Christians who read the book were apparently satisfied
that, though there was some questionable material present, it made for an
interesting discussion on how to do cross-cultural ministry. The
newer subtitle, changed from the 1984 edition, is as follows: “Startling
Evidence of Belief in the One True God in Hundreds of Cultures throughout the
World.”
This should have been a red flag for many Christians but then, who reads
subtitles? But how could
the “One
True God” be
known to Gentiles who, the Bible states, did “not know God”.
1 Cor. 1:21 For since, in the wisdom of God, the world through
wisdom DID NOT KNOW GOD, it pleased God through the foolishness of the message
preached to save those who believe.
Gal. 4:8 But then, indeed, when you
(speaking to the Galatian Gentiles) DID NOT KNOW GOD,
you served those which by nature are not gods.
1 Thes. 4:5 not in passion of lust, like
the Gentiles who DO NOT KNOW GOD;
1 John 3:1 Behold what manner of love the Father has bestowed
on us, that we should be called children of God! Therefore the world does not
know us, because it DID NOT KNOW HIM.
2 Thes. 1:8-9 He will punish those who DO
NOT KNOW GOD and do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus. They will be
punished with everlasting destruction and shut out from the presence of the
Lord and from the majesty of his power.
Eph. 2:11-12 Therefore, remember that formerly you who are
Gentiles by birth and called "uncircumcised" by those who call
themselves "the circumcision" (that done in the body by the hands of
men)—remember that at that time you were separate from Christ, excluded from
citizenship in Israel and foreigners to the covenants of the promise, WITHOUT
HOPE AND WITHOUT GOD IN THE WORLD.
(Sandy Simpson, Blasphemizing The Bible, http://www.deceptioninthechurch.com/blasphemizingthebible.html)
Richardson was warned about how the WCGIP was taking his book as a basis for their new pagan version of Christianity by an apologetics researcher back in the 1980s but instead of rebuking the former YWAMmer, Daniel Kikawa, for his book “Perpetuated In Righteousness” which is one of the inspirations for the WCGIP movement, he joined Kikawa’s “Aloha Ke Akua” organization on his board of directors.