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	<title>The Issachar Ministry &#187; False teaching</title>
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		<title>The Issachar Ministry &#187; False teaching</title>
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	<itunes:author>Peter McArthur</itunes:author>
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		<title>Protection from Deception</title>
		<link>http://issacharministry.org.au/teachings/protection-from-deception/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Jan 2010 06:23:28 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Teachings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Discernment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[False manifestations]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[False teaching]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Prophetic Message]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Wolves in sheep&#8217;s clothing : false shepherds . An article by Derek Prince Signs and Wonders do not determine Truth There has been in recent years a worldwide explosion of signs and wonders. Some have been biblical and helpful. Others have been bizarre and unbiblical. Signs and wonders are not new. They are recorded in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://issacharministry.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/wolf11.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-857" title="wolf1" src="http://issacharministry.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/wolf11-293x300.jpg" alt="" width="293" height="300" /></a></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong><em>Wolves in sheep&#8217;s clothing : false shepherds</em></strong></span></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong><em><br />
</em></strong></span></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: #ffffff;">.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">An article by Derek Prince<br />
<strong>Signs and Wonders do not determine Truth</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p>There has been in recent years a worldwide explosion of signs and wonders. Some have<br />
been biblical and helpful. Others have been bizarre and unbiblical. Signs and wonders are<br />
not new. They are recorded in various passages of the Bible and in different periods of<br />
church history. However, the current explosion extends more widely than any particular<br />
church or denomination and has attracted widespread attention in both the religious and the<br />
secular media.</p>
<p>I want to make it plain that I have no personal prejudice or anxiety concerning unusual<br />
manifestations. In actual fact, I have in my own lifetime experienced quite a number of them.<br />
They do not frighten me. I am not negative about them. As I recorded in my booklet <em>Uproar<br />
in the Church</em>, my own personal encounter with Jesus in World War II began in a very<br />
unconventional way. In the middle of the night, in a barrack room of the British Army, I spent<br />
more than an hour on my back on the floor, with my body first racked by convulsive sobs and<br />
then filled with a river of laughter which grew continually louder.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Next morning, I found myself a completely different person, changed not by any act of my<br />
will but by yielding to the supernatural power that had flowed through me. I then looked up<br />
various passages in the Bible that speak about laughter.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">To my surprise, I discovered that (for God&#8217;s people)  laughter is not primarily, as we imagine,<br />
a reaction to something comical, but rather an expression of triumph over our enemies.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">In Psalm 2:4, David actually depicts God Himself as laughing: <em>He who sits in the heavens<br />
shall laugh: The Lord shall hold them in derision.</em> Here God&#8217;s laughter is not a reaction to<br />
some comedy that is being enacted on earth. Rather, it is His response to the ridiculous<br />
human midgets who have the effrontery to oppose His purposes. It is His expression of<br />
triumph over all the forces of evil.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Sometimes, God fills us with His own laughter that we may share in His triumph over those<br />
who are both His enemies and ours.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Later I pastored a fellowship in London that met on the top floor of a five- story building. One<br />
evening a lame man was miraculously healed and threw away his crutches. We all burst into<br />
spontaneous praise. At that moment the building began to tremble and shake with the power<br />
of God. The praise and shaking continued for about thirty minutes.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">I realized that something similar was recorded of the early church in Acts 4:31: <em>And when<br />
they had prayed, the place where they were assembled together was shaken; and they were<br />
all filled with the Holy Spirit, and they spoke the word of God with boldness</em>.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">At that particular time, our fellowship was conducting several evangelistic meetings each<br />
week in the streets of London, and we certainly needed more than natural boldness.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">But with regard to any kind of manifestation, there are two questions that I always want to<br />
ask. Number one: Is it a manifestation of the Holy Spirit of God? Or is it a manifestation from<br />
some other source? And number two (and this is related to it): Is the manifestation in<br />
question in harmony with Scripture?  In 2 Timothy 3:16, Paul says, All Scripture is given by inspiration of God.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">In other words, the Holy Spirit is the author of all Scripture, and He never<br />
says or does anything to contradict Himself. Every genuine manifestation of the Holy Spirit<br />
will, in some way, harmonize with Scripture.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Now, I want to begin with some warnings of Jesus, particularly related to the end time period<br />
in which I believe we are living. These are warnings against deception. They are found in<br />
Matthew chapter 24, verses 4, 5, 11 and 24. In other words, four times in 21 verses, Jesus<br />
specifically warns us against deception in this period of the close of the age.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">The first thing  Jesus said about the events leading up to His return, in Matthew 24:4: &#8220;<em>Take heed that no<br />
one deceives you</em>.&#8221; Verse 5: &#8220;<em>For many will come in My name, saying, &#8216;I am the Messiah<br />
(Christ),&#8217; and will deceive many</em>.&#8221; Verse 11: &#8220;<em>Then many false prophets will rise up and<br />
deceive many</em>.&#8221; And then in verse 24: &#8220;<em>For false messiahs (christs) and false prophets will<br />
rise and show great signs and wonders to deceive, if possible, even the elect</em>.&#8221;</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">So, Jesus warns us four times against deception. Anybody who shrugs off that warning or treats it<br />
lightly does so at the risk of his own soul. The greatest single danger in this End Time is not<br />
sickness, nor poverty, nor persecution. It is deception. If anybody says, &#8220;It could never<br />
happen to me,&#8221; it has already happened to that person, because that person is saying<br />
something could never happen that Jesus said would happen. That is a sufficient indication<br />
that such a person is deceived.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Next, I want to say something important about signs and wonders. They do not determine<br />
truth. It is very essential to understand that. Signs and wonders do not determine truth! Truth<br />
is already determined and established, and it is the Word of God. In John 17:17, Jesus is<br />
praying to the Father, and He says, &#8220;<em>Your word is truth</em>.&#8221; And in Psalm 119:89, the psalmist<br />
said, <em>Forever, 0 Lord, Your word is settled in heaven</em>. Nothing that happens on earth can<br />
ever change the smallest little sign or letter of the Word of God. It is forever settled in<br />
heaven.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Now, the Bible speaks about signs and wonders. It says some things about them that are<br />
good, and some that are very frightening. I want to turn to 2 Thessalonians chapter 2 and<br />
read a few verses there, beginning at verse 9. <em>The coming of the lawless one</em> [that is the title<br />
of the Antichrist] <em>is according to the working of Satan, with all power, signs, and lying<br />
wonders, and with all unrighteous deception among those who perish, because they did not<br />
receive the love of the truth, that they might be saved. And for this reason God will send<br />
them strong delusion, that they should believe the lie, that they all may be condemned who<br />
did not believe the truth but had pleasure in unrighteousness</em>.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">So, Paul says here there are such things as lying signs and wonders. There are true signs<br />
and there are lying signs. True signs attest the truth. Lying signs attest lies. Satan is fully<br />
capable of supernatural signs and wonders. Unfortunately, many in the Charismatic<br />
movement have the attitude that if something is supernatural, it must be from God. There is<br />
no scriptural basis for that assumption. Satan is perfectly capable of producing powerful<br />
signs and wonders to attest his lies, and the reason such people are deceived is because<br />
they did not receive the love of the truth. On such people God will send strong delusion.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">That is one of the most frightening statements in the Bible. If God sends you strong delusion, you<br />
<strong><em>will</em></strong> be deluded. I think that is one of the most severe judgments of God recorded in<br />
Scripture, sending these people strong delusion. They will be condemned, these people,<br />
because they did not believe the truth but had pleasure in unrighteousness.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Therefore, signs and wonders are not a guarantee that something is the truth. There is only<br />
one sure way to know the truth. It is in the Word of God. Jesus said in John 8:32, &#8220;<em>You shall<br />
know the truth, and the truth shall make you free</em>.&#8221; There is no other way to be sure that we<br />
can escape deception in these days except that we know and apply the truth of God&#8217;s Word,<br />
the Scripture.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">In 1994, for the first time, I was brought into fairly direct contact with one of the groups where<br />
those manifestations were occurring. A group of leaders went to some of their meetings and<br />
returned all excited, saying they had experienced something wonderful and we all needed to<br />
experience it. They said, &#8220;Now, you don&#8217;t test it. You don&#8217;t try it out. You don&#8217;t examine it.<br />
You just open up to it and receive it.&#8221; That was the first time that I really began to be<br />
suspicious of some of these things, because such a statement is directly contrary to<br />
Scripture.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">In 1 Thessalonians 5:21, Paul says to Christians, <em>Test all things: hold fast what is good</em>. So, if<br />
we do not test things, we are disobeying Scripture, and anybody who tells us not to test<br />
things is, himself, not in harmony with Scripture. Our hearts cannot be relied upon to give us<br />
the truth. Proverbs 28:26 says, <em>He who trusts in his own heart is a fool</em>. So do not be a fool.<br />
Do not trust your own heart. Do not rely upon what your heart tells you, because it is not reliable.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Again, in Jeremiah 17:9 the prophet says, The heart is deceitful above all things,<br />
and desperately wicked: who can know it?</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">That word deceitful in the Hebrew is a very interesting word. In 1946, I was attending the<br />
Hebrew University in Jerusalem as a guest student studying the nature &#8211; or the law &#8211; of the<br />
Hebrew language. I was listening to the head professor in this field at that time talking about<br />
this verse: Jeremiah 17:9: <em>The heart is deceitful above all things</em>. He gave reasons which I<br />
cannot carry over from Hebrew to show that this form of the word deceitful is active, not<br />
passive. It does not mean that your heart is deceived. It means that your heart deceives you,<br />
so you cannot trust your own heart.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">The professor gave a very vivid picture of what it means to find out the truth about your own<br />
heart. He said it is like someone peeling an onion. You peel off skin after skin, but you never<br />
know when you have reached the last skin &#8211; and all the time your eyes are watering. So that<br />
has remained with me now for 50 years &#8211; such a vivid, scriptural warning against relying on<br />
my own heart to tell me the truth. There is only one source of truth, and that is the Scripture.<br />
<strong> </strong></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Mixture produces confusion and division</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Now I would like to give briefly my summation of this whole phenomenon or movement or<br />
whatever-you-want-to-call-it, based partly on personal observation and partly on what I<br />
believe to be reliable reports. My summation is very simple: it is a mixture of spirits, both the<br />
Holy Spirit and unholy spirits. They are mixed together.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">In Leviticus 19:19, God warns us against mixture. He is opposed to mixture. God says this,<br />
&#8220;<em>You shall keep My statutes. You shall not let your livestock breed with another kind. You<br />
shall not sow your field with mixed seed. Nor shall a garment of mixed linen and wool come<br />
upon you</em>.&#8221; So, God warns against three things: breeding mixed livestock, sowing with mixed<br />
seed and wearing a mixed garment.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">We could say that sowing with mixed seed represents the message that we bring, when it is<br />
partly truth and partly error. Wearing a mixed garment would be like a lifestyle that is partly<br />
scriptural and partly of this world. And letting livestock breed with livestock of an<br />
incompatible kind would be equivalent to a Christian ministry or group aligning itself with a<br />
group or ministry that is non-Christian.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">It is an interesting thing about such breeding; its product is always sterile. For instance, you<br />
can mate a horse with a donkey and the product is a mule. But a mule is always sterile; it<br />
cannot reproduce. I think that is one reason why there are so many &#8220;sterile&#8221; operations in<br />
Christendom &#8211; they are being bred with the wrong mate.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Now, I have observed this carefully, and I have had grievous experience of this condition of<br />
a mixture of spirits. I find that it is something which the Scripture warns us against. For<br />
instance, there is a character in the Bible, King Saul, who had a mixture of spirits. At one<br />
time, he prophesied in the Holy Spirit; at another time, he prophesied in a demon. His career<br />
is really a warning. He was a king who ruled for forty years. He was a successful military commander.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">He had a lot of successes. But mixture was his undoing, and his life closed with<br />
tragedy. On the last night of his life, he went to consult a witch, and the next day he<br />
committed suicide on the battlefield. Surely that offers no encouragement to any of us to<br />
cultivate any kind of spiritual mixture in our lives.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">I have observed that the result of mixture is two things: first of all, confusion; and then<br />
division. For instance, we have this mixed message, part of which is true, part of which is<br />
false. People can respond in two ways. Some will see the good and focus on it, and<br />
therefore accept the bad. Some will focus on the bad, and therefore reject the good. In either<br />
case, it does not accomplish God&#8217;s purposes.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Once upon a time I was a pastor, a long time ago, but I remember that the most difficult kind<br />
of people to deal with were people who were a mixture. I will give you a little imaginary<br />
example. We have Sister Jones in our congregation. One Sunday she gives a beautiful,<br />
prophetic message and everybody is uplifted, excited. But two Sundays later, she stands up<br />
and gives a revelation which she had in a dream. The further she goes with this revelation,<br />
the more confused and confusing it becomes. Eventually, as pastor, I have to say to her,<br />
&#8220;Sister Jones, I thank you, but I really don&#8217;t believe that is from the Lord,&#8221; and she sits down<br />
- but that is not the end. After the meeting, Sister White comes to me and says, &#8220;Brother<br />
Prince, how could you talk to Sister Jones like that? Don&#8217;t you remember that beautiful<br />
prophecy she gave two Sundays ago?&#8221; And when Sister White is gone, Brother Black comes<br />
to me, and he says, &#8220;If that&#8217;s the kind of revelation she has, I won&#8217;t listen to any more of her<br />
prophecies!&#8221;</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">So, you see what we have? Confusion, and out of confusion, division. I believe that is<br />
exactly what is happening in the church: confusion resulting in division. Certainly there is<br />
tremendous division! I believe confusion will always produce division.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">The Bible gives us no liberty to tolerate the incursion of evil into the church. We are not to be<br />
passive; we are not to be neutral. Proverbs 8:13 says, <em>The fear of the Lord is to hate evil</em>. It<br />
is sinful to compromise with evil. It is sinful to be neutral toward evil. In John 10:10 Jesus<br />
spoke about the thief, the devil, who comes: to steal, to kill and to destroy. We always need<br />
to remember, whether it is in an individual life or in a congregation, the devil only comes with<br />
three objectives: to steal, to kill and to destroy. I can remember many times I have been<br />
speaking with a person who needed deliverance from an evil spirit, and I have said to that<br />
person, &#8220;Remember, the devil has three reasons for being in your life: to steal, to kill and to<br />
destroy. You need to take a stand against him, not be neutral &#8211; you must drive him out.&#8221;<br />
What is true of an individual is true of a congregation. It is true for the body of Christ,<br />
worldwide.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Some of these unusual manifestations have been compared with unusual manifestations<br />
that accompanied the ministry of John Wesley, George Whitefield, Jonathan Edwards and<br />
Charles Finney. Undoubtedly there were unusual manifestations in the ministries of those<br />
four men, and I have studied some of them myself, but I think the differences are greater<br />
than the similarities with the present situation. Let me point out to you three differences:</p>
<ul style="text-align: justify;">
<li><strong>First of all</strong>, all those men majored on the strong preaching of God&#8217;s Word. They hardly did<br />
anything until they had preached the Word of God, or apart from the preaching of the Word of God.</li>
<li>Finney, himself, commented somewhere about his ministry, &#8220;I usually spoke an hour<br />
or two.&#8221; I do not know how many contemporary Christians in the West would listen to a two-<br />
hour sermon, but Finney gave the Word in its purity and in its power.</li>
<li><strong>Second difference</strong>: All those men made a strong call for repentance. That was their primary<br />
demand on the people to whom they ministered. Some people call what we are seeing today<br />
&#8220;a refreshing,&#8221; but in Acts 3:19 Peter says that refreshing must be preceded by repentance.<br />
Any refreshing that bypasses repentance is not scriptural.</li>
<li><strong>The third difference</strong> is that in the ministry of those men, there is no record as far as I know<br />
that any of them laids handson people. I am not saying that it is unscriptural to lay hands on people,<br />
but there is a difference. There is a situation in which people receive directly for themselves from the<br />
preached Word and another situation in which people have hands laid on them by others.</li>
</ul>
<p style="text-align: justify;">If I could take a simple example. It is like rain. If you are out in the open and the rain falls upon<br />
you, you have received your rain direct from heaven. But, on the other hand, if rain is caught<br />
and stored in some kind of a cistern, then you are not receiving that rain direct from heaven.<br />
You have to take into account the cistern and the pipes through which you receive the rain.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">This is very vivid for me, because my first wife, Lydia, and I lived in Kenya for five years in a<br />
house where our water came from rain caught on the roof and channeled into concrete<br />
cisterns. Although the water came from heaven, we quickly learned by experience that if it<br />
stayed for any length of time in the cistern, worms developed in it and, consequently, we<br />
always had to boil our drinking water. There was nothing wrong with the rain as it came<br />
down, but something happened in the channel through which the rain came to us, and it was<br />
no longer pure. I think this can be true of laying on of hands. It is a channel which is not<br />
always pure.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Recently some ministers have moved from actually laying on hands to some other action of<br />
the hands &#8211; such as waving or pointing. However, this does not change the fact that<br />
something is being transmitted through the hands. Otherwise, there is no reason to use the<br />
hands at all. The important question still remains: Are those hands pure channels through<br />
which only the Holy Spirit can flow?</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">For instance, Ruth and I were in a meeting fairly recently where ministers deeply involved in<br />
the current move were speaking. We were sitting about two rows behind a woman who was<br />
having a terrible experience. She was like somebody continually trying to burp or trying to<br />
vomit, and she just went on and on and on. Eventually, I said to Ruth, &#8220;I think we ought to try<br />
to help her.&#8221; So, although it was not a meeting for which we were responsible, we went over<br />
quietly and started to talk to her. We discovered very quickly that she was speaking in a<br />
tongue, but for both of us it was evident that it was a false tongue; it was not a Holy Spirit<br />
tongue. We challenged her to confess that Jesus is Lord, and she was not willing or able to<br />
say that. So I conclude that she had a false spirit.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Later on, the people who were with her came over and talked to us and asked us what they<br />
should do about it. I asked them, &#8220;How did it happen?&#8221; And they said, &#8220;Well, she went to a<br />
church that&#8217;s involved in this move and somebody laid hands on her and this is the way she<br />
has been since then. But,&#8221; they said, &#8220;she&#8217;s convinced it&#8217;s from God. We can&#8217;t help her.&#8221;<br />
That is just an example of &#8220;rain&#8221; that came through a &#8220;cistern&#8221; that was not pure.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Also, in the present move, there is a great deal of emphasis on love. I agree that love is the<br />
greatest thing. But the trouble is that people are not always clear about the nature of love as<br />
it is described in the New Testament. First of all, love in us is expressed by obedience to the<br />
Lord. Any kind of love that does not result in obedience is unscriptural love.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">In John 14:15, Jesus said to His disciples, &#8220;<em>If you love Me, keep My commandments</em>,&#8221; or, in<br />
a perhaps better text, &#8220;<em>You will keep My commandments</em>.&#8221; In other words, what is the<br />
evidence that you love Him? The evidence is keeping His commandments. Then in verse<br />
21a. Jesus says, &#8220;<em>He who has My commandments and keeps them. it is he who loves Me</em>.&#8221;<br />
And in 1 John 5:3, it says, <em>For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments</em>.<br />
Therefore, any kind of love that does not result in obedience to the will of God revealed in<br />
His Word is not scriptural love. It is a counterfeit, a substitute for the real thing.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Then, we need to consider the way that God expresses His love toward us. True, God is our Father,<br />
and He loves us. But as a Father, if necessary, He is prepared to discipline us. In the<br />
messages to the seven churches depicted in Revelation, I would say that Laodicea is<br />
probably the one that corresponds most closely to the contemporary church in the West. And<br />
to that church the Lord said, &#8220;<em>As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten. Therefore be zealous<br />
and repent</em>&#8221; (Rev. 3:19).</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">So, God&#8217;s love is not sloppy. It is not sentimental. It is right down-to- earth. If we are straying<br />
from His ways and if we are disobedient, His love is expressed in rebuking us and<br />
chastening us, and He commands us to repent. Once again we have the problem of trying to<br />
get what God promises, but bypassing the basic condition of repentance &#8211; which is a<br />
deception.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">I recently read the following comment by a British Bible teacher: Some Christians take the<br />
text &#8220;God is love&#8221; and turn it around to mean &#8220;Love is God.&#8221; In other words, nothing can be<br />
wrong if it is rooted in love. However, any love that comes between us and God is an<br />
illegitimate love &#8230; Likewise any love that diverts us from obedience to God&#8217;s Word is<br />
illegitimate.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>The identity of the Holy Spirit</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">In all of this that we are speaking about. this worldwide phenomenon, I believe there is one<br />
central, underlying issue which is often obscured. In fact, very seldom do we come really to<br />
grips with this issue. This issue is the identity of the Holy Spirit. How do we recognize the<br />
Holy Spirit? How do we know what the Holy Spirit is like? And how do we distinguish the<br />
Holy Spirit from other spirits? I read a statement recently by some New Ager in which she<br />
said about the &#8220;New Age,&#8221; &#8220;When the holy spirit comes, then the New Age will be here.&#8221;</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Of course I am sure most of you would understand that when she talks about the holy spirit, she<br />
is not talking about the same Holy Spirit that the Bible speaks about. This is one of various<br />
indications that there is a counterfeit holy spirit. It is nothing new for Satan to produce a<br />
religious counterfeit. Since the time of Jesus, history records a whole series of counterfeit<br />
messiahs who have risen among the Jewish people. All of them had a following. Some like<br />
Sabbetai Zvi, had a widespread and enduring influence. The latest of them died in 1994.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Another religious counterfeit is the being titled the &#8220;blessed virgin Mary.&#8221; With all the claims<br />
that have been made for her and all the titles that have been ascribed to her, she bears no<br />
resemblance to the humble Jewish maiden who became the mother of Jesus, and later of<br />
His brothers and sisters. Yet over the centuries this counterfeit has claimed the devotion of<br />
millions of sincere Christians. We need to be on our guard, therefore, that we do not<br />
entertain a counterfeit &#8220;holy spirit.&#8221; I want to suggest to you three ways to identify the Holy<br />
Spirit, to recognize who the Holy Spirit is.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>The first way</strong> I refer to in my little booklet <em>Uproar in the Church</em>, which I wrote about two<br />
years ago. I will just quote a few paragraphs: Another danger that threatens those who<br />
minister in the supernatural realm is the temptation to use spiritual gifts to manipulate or<br />
exploit or dominate people. At one period in my ministry I found myself casting spirits of<br />
witchcraft out of church-going people. Eventually, I asked the Lord to show me the true<br />
nature of witchcraft. I believe the Lord gave me the following definition: Witchcraft is the<br />
attempt to control people and get them to do what you want by the use of any spirit that is<br />
not the Holy Spirit. After I had digested this, the Lord added: And if anyone has a spirit that<br />
he can use, it is not the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is God, and no one uses God.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">That&#8217;s very important. The Holy Spirit is God, and no one uses God. Then I went on to say, Today I<br />
tremble inwardly when I see or hear of a person who claims that he has spiritual gifts which<br />
he is free to use just as he pleases. It is surely no accident that some of those who have<br />
made such claims have ended in serious doctrinal error.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">It is important to see that there is a difference between the Holy Spirit Himself, as a Person,<br />
and the gifts of the Holy Spirit. In Romans 11:29, Paul tells us that the gifts &#8230; of God are<br />
irrevocable. In other words, once God has given us a gift, He never takes it back. We are<br />
free to use it, not to use it, or to misuse it. But even if we misuse it, God does not take it<br />
back. Otherwise it would not be a genuine gift, it would only be a conditional loan.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">It is a fact that people do misuse gifts of the Holy Spirit.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Paul provides a clear example in 1 Corinthians 13:1:<em> Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels,<br />
but have not love, I have become as sounding brass or a clanging cymbal</em>. Obviously the Holy Spirit Himself<br />
does not become a clanging cymbal. But the gift of speaking in tongues &#8211; when misused -<br />
can become an empty, discordant noise. Unfortunately this often happens in Pentecostal<br />
and Charismatic circles.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">I believe it is possible to misuse other spiritual gifts &#8211; such as a word of knowledge or a gift of<br />
healing. This can happen when a person uses a spiritual gift to achieve a result or promote a<br />
movement which is not in harmony with the will of God. One obvious misuse would be for<br />
personal gain. In such a situation, our safeguard is to be able to recognize the Holy Spirit as<br />
a Person and to distinguish between Him and His gifts. This, then, is the first and most<br />
important fact about the Holy Spirit: HE IS GOD. And we need to relate to Him and treat Him<br />
always as God.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>The second fact</strong> about the Holy Spirit is that He is the servant of God the Father and God the<br />
Son. This is an exciting revelation because it gives such a high value to servanthood. Many<br />
people today despise the idea of being a servant. They feel it is demeaning and undignified<br />
to be a servant. But I think it is wonderful that servanthood did not begin on earth. It began in<br />
eternity and it began in God. God the Holy Spirit is the Servant of the Father and the Son.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">This does not demean Him or make Him less than God. But it is a fact that we have to<br />
recognize about Him, which directs His activities and the things He does. In John 16:13-14<br />
Jesus gives us a glimpse of the Holy Spirit&#8217;s ministry and activity: &#8220;<em>However, when He, the<br />
Spirit of truth, has come, He will guide you into all truth: for He will not speak on His own<br />
authority [literally: from Himself] but whatever He hears He will speak: and He will tell you<br />
things to come. He will glorify Me, for He will take of what is Mine and declare it to you</em>.&#8221; So<br />
we see: the Holy Spirit does not speak from Himself; He has no message of His own.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Isn&#8217;t that remarkable? He only reports to us what He is hearing from the Father and the Son.<br />
Secondly, His aim is not to glorify Himself, nor to attract attention to Himself, but always He<br />
glorifies and focuses attention on Jesus. That is the second important way to identify the<br />
Holy Spirit.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Now, I want you to listen to this carefully, because it is revolutionary. Any spirit that focuses<br />
on the Holy Spirit and glorifies the Holy Spirit is not the Holy Spirit. It is contrary to His whole<br />
nature and purpose. Once you have grasped that, it will open your eyes to many things<br />
which are going on in the church that are otherwise difficult to understand. For example, we<br />
have a very beautiful chorus that we sing about the Father, the Son and the Spirit. The first<br />
verse says to the Father, &#8220;Glorify Thy name in all the earth.&#8221; The second verse says to Jesus<br />
the Son, &#8220;Glorify Thy name in all the earth.&#8221; The third verse says to the Spirit, &#8220;Glorify Thy<br />
name in all the earth.&#8221; I love to sing the first two verses, but I decline to sing the third verse,<br />
because I do not believe it is scriptural. The Holy Spirit never does glorify His own name. His<br />
purpose is to glorify the One who sent Him.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Let me make another statement which may surprise you. I have not found in the Scripture<br />
anywhere an example of a prayer addressed to the Holy Spirit. So far as I can understand,<br />
no one in the Scripture ever prayed to the Holy Spirit. You probably would do well to check<br />
that for yourself, but I have looked carefully and have not found one example. You might<br />
ask, &#8220;Why so?&#8221; And I would give you this answer: It is a question of heavenly &#8220;protocol.&#8221;</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">There is so little respect nowadays for protocol on earth that we sometimes do not realize<br />
that there is protocol in heaven. It is protocol relating to a master-servant relationship. In<br />
such a relationship, when you are dealing with a servant, you do not speak to the servant,<br />
but to the master. You ask the master to tell his servant what to do. It is wrong to directly<br />
address a servant when his master is available for you to speak to. I believe that is heaven&#8217;s<br />
protocol. When you recognize the relationship of the Holy Spirit to God the Father and God<br />
the Son, you understand that we never give orders to the Holy Spirit. When we want the<br />
Holy Spirit to do something, we address our request to the Father or to the Son.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">When I was looking through this, I found a passage in Ezekiel chapter 37 which I thought, at<br />
first, was an exception. It is part of Ezekiel&#8217;s well-known vision of the valley full of dry bones<br />
with no life in them. First of all, he prophesied and the bones came together, but they were<br />
still lifeless corpses. Then, in verses 9 and 10: Also He said to me, &#8220;<em>Prophesy to the breath,<br />
prophesy, son of man, and say to the breath, &#8216;Thus says the Lord GOD: &#8220;Come from the four<br />
winds, 0 breath, and breathe on these slain, that they may live.&#8221;&#8216;&#8221; So I prophesied as He<br />
commanded me, and breath came into them, and they lived, and stood upon their feet, an<br />
exceedingly great army</em>.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">So, I thought that the &#8220;breath&#8221; is really a picture of the wind &#8211; or the Holy Spirit &#8211; and so<br />
Ezekiel was praying to the wind. But he was not praying. He was prophesying.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">And it did not come from himself. He merely passed on to the wind a command that he had received<br />
from God Himself. Therefore, as far as I have been able to discover, there is not a single example<br />
anywhere in the Scripture of praying to the Holy Spirit. Now, I am not seeking to make a big<br />
issue out of that. On the other hand, I think it is very important as we try to discern the nature<br />
and the ministry of the Holy Spirit. You would say to me, &#8220;Well, doesn&#8217;t God hear our prayer<br />
when we pray to the Holy Spirit?&#8221; I think He does. But we are not praying in full accord with<br />
heaven&#8217;s protocol. If we really want to please the Lord and show respect for Him, we will<br />
show respect for His protocol.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>The third important fact</strong> about the Holy Spirit is what is indicated in His name: He is Holy.<br />
This is His primary title: the Holy Spirit. In Hebrew it is the Spirit of Holiness. He has many<br />
other titles: for instance, the Spirit of Grace, the Spirit of Truth, the Spirit of Power, and so<br />
on, But they are all subsidiary. His name and His primary title is the Holy Spirit. Anything that<br />
is unholy does not proceed from the Holy Spirit.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">The Scripture also speaks of the beauty of holiness. There is a beauty in holiness when it<br />
proceeds from the Holy Spirit. It is not necessarily external. It may be internal beauty. For<br />
instance, in I Peter 3:4, Peter speaks about the hidden person of the heart, and he speaks<br />
about the adornment of a meek and quiet spirit, which in the sight of God is of great price.<br />
This is not external beauty. It is internal beauty, which comes from the Holy Spirit. I want to<br />
say, however, with the utmost emphasis: Anything unholy or ugly does not proceed from the<br />
Holy Spirit.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">I will give you a list of 12 adjectives, all of which I believe cannot be applied to the Holy Spirit<br />
or to anything that is the product of the Holy Spirit. As I go through the list, I suggest you<br />
check mentally and see if you agree with me. Here, then, are words that would never apply<br />
to the Holy Spirit:</p>
<ol style="text-align: justify;">
<li>self-exalting</li>
<li>self-assertive</li>
<li>degrading</li>
<li>flippant</li>
<li>rude</li>
<li>sham</li>
<li>vulgar</li>
<li>indecent</li>
<li>insensitive</li>
<li>stupid</li>
<li>silly</li>
<li>degraded</li>
</ol>
<p style="text-align: justify;">I have in my heart, if God wills and I live, to write a book at some time of which I have<br />
already chosen the title. The title is this: <em>Holiness Is Not Optional</em>. Only God knows whether I<br />
will ever succeed in writing the book, but I want to say, in any case, that the title states the<br />
exact truth. In the Christian life, holiness is not optional. Many Christians seem to think about<br />
holiness as if it is like something added to a car, such as fancy leather upholstery instead of<br />
the normal kind of plastic. But that is not true. Holiness is an essential part of salvation.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">In Hebrews 12:14 the writer says, <em>Pursue peace with all people, and holiness, without which no<br />
man will see the Lord.</em> What salvation do we have that does not bring us to see the Lord?<br />
But without holiness, no one will see the Lord.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">We have in our contemporary Western Christianity a very incomplete picture of salvation. &#8220;If<br />
I get saved and born again, and then I want to go on and be holy. I can do it &#8211; but it is an<br />
option.&#8221; I want to tell you that your salvation depends on your being holy. And holiness<br />
comes only from the Holy Spirit.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">There are many features of purported moves of the Holy Spirit that I could pick out and hold<br />
up as examples of things that are not holy. But I will only deal with one, and that is: animal<br />
behavior in human beings attributed to the Holy Spirit. There are many such examples,<br />
some I have witnessed and some have been reported.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">First of all, there is no passage in Scripture that I know of where the Holy Spirit causes any<br />
human being to behave like an animal. There is the example of Balaam, but that is a strong<br />
contrast. God caused Balaam&#8217;s donkey to speak like a man &#8211; but He never caused Balaam<br />
to bray like a donkey!</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">There was one man whom God caused to behave like an animal: Nebuchadnezzar. He was<br />
driven from men and ate grass like oxen; his body was wet with the dew of heaven till his<br />
hair had grown like eagles&#8217; feathers and his nails like birds&#8217; claws. (Daniel 4:33) But that was<br />
God&#8217;s judgment, not His blessing! Revelation 4:6-8 depicts four living creatures that<br />
surround the throne of God. Three are there as representatives of the &#8220;animal&#8221; kingdom: a<br />
lion, a calf and an eagle. But none of them make noises that express their &#8220;animal&#8221; nature.<br />
All of them alike proclaim the holiness of God in pure and beautiful speech. It is important to<br />
understand that there is an order in God&#8217;s creation.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Man was created in the image and likeness of God to exercise authority over the animal<br />
kingdom (see Genesis 1:26). Man is, in fact, the highest order of the creation described in<br />
the opening chapters of Genesis. This has a bearing on the way the Holy Spirit blesses us.<br />
He uplifts those whom He blesses. He will at times cause an animal to act in some ways like<br />
a human being. But He will never degrade a human being by causing him to act like an<br />
animal.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">I have a certain amount of experience in this area because I have encountered animal spirits<br />
many times in Africa. I recall one particular deliverance service that I held in Zambia with<br />
about 7,000 Africans present. When I had finished the teaching and began to command the<br />
evil spirits to manifest themselves and come out of the people, there were all sorts of animal<br />
spirits that were let loose. By &#8220;animal spirits&#8221; I mean evil, demonic spirits that enter human<br />
beings and cause them to behave like animals. The first thing that happened was that a man<br />
with a &#8220;lion spirit&#8221; tried to charge me. But someone tripped him up and he did not reach me.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">You need to know that the reason these Africans in this part of Africa have so many animal<br />
spirits is because many of them are hunters of animals. They have this superstition that in<br />
order to hunt an animal successfully, you have to get the spirit of the animal in you. So a<br />
man tends to have the spirit of the animal which he seeks to hunt. For instance, the man<br />
who is hunting a lion, will get a lion spirit.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">There are many others. We dealt with spirits of wild boars that caused people to burrow in<br />
the earth with their noses like a wild boar rooting for something. Then there were many<br />
snake spirits. These were mainly in women, and when they were manifested, the women<br />
were flat on their bellies slithering around like snakes. All these I actually witnessed myself.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">There was one other spirit that I did not witness, but heard about from the missionary couple<br />
who organized the meeting. Later I met the lady concerned. She was a very sweet Christian<br />
lady &#8211; a school teacher &#8211; but her husband was an elephant hunter. When she came to the<br />
missionary couple for deliverance, they commanded the elephant spirit to come out.<br />
Immediately she dropped on her hands and knees, crawled out through an open door, put<br />
her forehead up against a small tree, and began to try to push it down. Wasn&#8217;t that<br />
remarkable? Perhaps some well-meaning Western Christian might have said, &#8220;Our sister is<br />
pushing a tree down for Jesus,&#8221; but that was not the explanation. The elephant spirit in her<br />
was causing her to do what elephants regularly do, which is push down trees with their<br />
foreheads.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">As soon as she was delivered from that spirit, she no longer had any urge to<br />
push trees down with her forehead. In the West, we sometimes tend to speak about the<br />
people in Africa as unsophisticated and to consider ourselves more sophisticated. However,<br />
I think in this realm of animal spirits it is we, in the West, who are unsophisticated and the<br />
Africans who are sophisticated. They have lived for generations with such spirits, but until<br />
the gospel came, with the power of the name of Jesus and the Word of God, they had no<br />
way to deal with them. Thank God that many of them now know how to deal with them!</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Another example of which various reports have been given is people behaving like dogs. I<br />
am a dog lover, but I think dogs should be kept in their rightful place. I do not believe that the<br />
Holy Spirit ever causes anybody to bark or to run around like a dog.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Where such manifestations of animal spirits have occurred, there are certain steps that we<br />
need to take. We cannot tolerate or encourage such manifestations. Nor can we merely<br />
sweep all this under the carpet and go on as if nothing had happened.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">In Matthew 12:33, Jesus instructs us: &#8220;<em>Either make the tree good and its fruit good, or else<br />
make the tree bad and its fruit bad; for a tree is known by its fruit</em>.&#8221; Wherever there is bad<br />
fruit, it comes from a bad tree. It is not enough to get rid of the bad fruit. We must also cut<br />
down the bad tree that produced it. If we fail to do this, the bad tree will go on producing<br />
more bad fruit. Undoubtedly, the tree that produces animal behaviour of this kind is some<br />
form of occult or pagan practice. For instance, there are frequent manifestations of animal<br />
behaviour in some parts of Africa and India.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">To cut down the tree requires that the leaders responsible identify the problem, confess it as<br />
sin and repent of it. Nowhere in the Bible is there any ground to suppose that God will<br />
forgive sins that we are not willing to confess. Somebody has said, &#8220;The confession must be<br />
as wide as the transgression.&#8221; If leaders have tolerated these things in the presence of their<br />
people, then in the presence of their people they need to confess it as a sin and cancel it.<br />
Otherwise, if the bad tree is not cut down, it will go on producing bad fruit.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">In closing, I want to give a little &#8220;parable&#8221; of my own construction, which is about my<br />
relationship with my wife. In this parable my wife represents the Holy Spirit and I represent God.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Now please understand, this is a very simple little parable and I am fully aware that the<br />
Holy Spirit is not the wife of God. But with those cautions, let me relate the parable.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">A friend comes to me and says, &#8220;I saw you and your wife together on the platform the other<br />
evening and she looked so beautiful, so fresh, so full of the Holy Spirit.&#8221; So I say, &#8220;Thank<br />
you. That&#8217;s really how she is.&#8221; Then, a little later, the same man comes to me and says, &#8220;You<br />
know, yesterday I saw your wife in a bar with a man drinking.&#8221; And I say, &#8220;That was not my<br />
wife! My wife is a pure and godly woman. She does not go to bars and she does not drink<br />
with strangers. My wife was right here with me all day yesterday. Don&#8217;t speak that way about<br />
my wife!&#8221;</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">But a little later, he comes to me and says, &#8220;You know, I saw your wife yesterday sunbathing<br />
topless on the beach.&#8221; Then I get really angry. I say to him, &#8220;My wife was nowhere near the<br />
beach yesterday, and she would never expose herself like that! If you want to remain my<br />
friend, you&#8217;ve got to come to the place where you don&#8217;t identify that loose, immoral woman<br />
as my wife, because that&#8217;s an insult to her and to me, If you want to remain my friend, you&#8217;ve<br />
got to change the way you speak about my wife.&#8221;</p>
<p>The application, of course, is this: if you want to remain a friend of God, you cannot afford to<br />
identify His Holy Spirit as something that is loose or immoral or ugly or unholy, because that<br />
angers God intensely.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Now we come to one final Scripture, which is in Matthew 12:31-32. Jesus says, &#8220;<em>Therefore</em> <em>I<br />
say to you, every sin and blasphemy will be forgiven men, but the blasphemy against the<br />
Spirit will not be forgiven men. Anyone who speaks a word against the Son of Man, it will be<br />
forgiven him; but whoever speaks against the Holy Spirit it will not be forgiven him, either in<br />
this age or in the age to come</em>.&#8221;</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">That is a very solemn and frightening warning. We are warned by Jesus Himself to be very,<br />
very careful how we speak about the Holy Spirit, how we represent the Holy Spirit.</p>
<p>Jesus uses the word blasphemy, and I decided to look it up in my big Greek lexicon. The<br />
primary meaning of to blaspheme is given in the lexicon as this: to speak lightly or amiss of<br />
sacred things. So when you speak lightly or amiss concerning the Holy Spirit, or<br />
misrepresent the character of the Holy Spirit, by definition you are close to blaspheming.</p>
<p>If you have ever done that, or been prone to do it, or been associated with those who do it, I<br />
want to offer you some sincere advice: You need to repent. You need to settle that matter<br />
once and for all with God and never again be guilty of misrepresenting God&#8217;s Holy Spirit. For<br />
the Holy Spirit is holy and He is God.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">_______________________________________________________</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Originally published July 1996<br />
Revised and expanded November 1996.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><a href="http://issacharministry.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/derek_prince.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-862" title="derek_prince" src="http://issacharministry.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/derek_prince.jpg" alt="" width="150" height="150" /></a></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Derek Prince Ministries &#8211; International<br />
DPMI Web Site- <a href="http://www.derekprince.com/">http://www.derekprince.com/</a></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">
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