TGC

The Gospel Coalition


9 Things You Should Know About the Bethel Church Movement
September 29, 2018  | Joe Carter 
<https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/profile/joe-carter/>


TGC Australia recently published an 
article<https://au.thegospelcoalition.org/article/price-awakening-examining-theology-practice-bethel-movement/>
 examining the theology and practice of the Bethel movement. The Awakening 
Australia<https://www.awakeningaustralia.org/#top> event—and its main speaker, 
Bill Johnson—are increasing the awareness of the controversial church 
throughout the continent. Here are nine things you should know about the 
Johnsons and the Bethel movement.


1. Bethel Church<http://bethelredding.com/> is a charismatic megachurch in 
Redding, California, that is primarily known for their popular music label 
(Bethel Music), worship music, and the teachings of the controversial senior 
pastors, Bill and Beni Johnson. The Johnsons became pastors of Bethel Church in 
1996. In 2005, the congregation withdrew from the Assemblies of God and became 
a nondenominational church. Since then the church has increased to 
approximately 9,000 members.


2. Bethel Music<https://bethelmusic.com> is a ministry of Bethel Church that 
includes a record label, music publishing, and an artist collective that 
frequently holds tours and events around the world. The president and 
co-founder of Bethel Music is Brian Johnson, the son of Bill and Beni. One of 
the most famous musicians to come out of Bethel Music is Jeremy 
Riddle<https://bethelmusic.com/artists/jeremy-riddle/>. A song written by 
Riddle, Phil Wickham, and Josh Farro titled “This Is Amazing Grace” was listed 
No. 1 on Billboard’s Christian Airplay Songs chart for 2014. Other Bethel 
worship songs are also popular in churches throughout the United States and 
Australia.


3. The Johnsons are frequently criticized for their teachings, which often 
veers from the suspect to the outright heretical. A prime example is Bill 
Johnson’s “Jesus Christ is perfect theology,” which claims that it is always 
God’s will to heal 
someone<http://bjm.org/qa/is-it-always-gods-will-to-heal-someone/>:

How can God choose not to heal someone when He already purchased their healing? 
Was His blood enough for all sin, or just certain sins? Were the stripes He 
bore only for certain illnesses, or certain seasons of time? When He bore 
stripes in His body He made a payment for our miracle. He already decided to 
heal. You can’t decide not to buy something after you’ve already bought it.

There are no deficiencies on His end—neither the covenant is deficient, nor His 
compassion or promises. All lack is on our end of the equation. The only time 
someone wasn’t healed in the Bible (gospels) is when the disciples prayed for 
them. For example, Mark 9<https://www.esv.org/Mark%209/> when they prayed for 
the tormented child. They did not have breakthrough. But then, Jesus came and 
brought healing and deliverance to the child.


Jesus Christ is perfect theology—He is the will of God. We can’t lower the 
standard of scripture to our level of experience . . . or in most cases, 
inexperience. It’s a very uncomfortable realization—not everyone can handle it. 
Most create doctrine that you can’t find in the person of Jesus. He is the will 
of God.


4. Beni Johnson also teaches some peculiarly unorthodox views of angelology, 
such as that there are “different kinds of angels: messenger angels, healing 
angels, fiery angels” who have “fallen asleep.” In a blog 
post<http://www.benij.org/blog.php?id=1,> she wrote, “I think that they have 
been bored for a long time and are ready to be put to work.” She relates a 
story about one of her students at the Bethel Supernatural School of Ministry 
who claims God told her to go to the chapel and yell “WAKEY WAKEY!” As Johnson 
says,

Nothing happened for about five minutes, so [the student] turned around to 
cross the road to go over to a shop. As she turned around, she felt the ground 
begin to shake and heard this huge yawn. She looked back at the chapel, and a 
huge angel stepped out. All she could see were his feet because he was that 
large. She asked him who he was, and he turned to her and said, “I am the angel 
from the 1904 revival and you just woke me up.” She asked him, “Why have you 
been asleep?” The angel answered and said, “Because no one has been calling out 
for revival anymore.”


5. Some members of Bethel—including senior pastor Beni Johnson—have allegedly 
engaged in the practice of “grave sucking” or “grave soaking”—lying on a 
person’s grave to “soak up” the deceased’s 
“anointing.”<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LrHPTs8cLls> In an interview, Bill 
Johnson has said<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Af1hswGOjZg> that neither he 
nor Bethel encourages the practice of grave sucking. However, in his book The 
Physics of Heaven<http://heavensphysics.com/chapter4/>, Johnson says:

There are anointings, mantles, revelations and mysteries that have lain 
unclaimed, literally where they were left, because the generation that walked 
in them never passed them on. I believe it’s possible for us to recover realms 
of anointing, realms of insight, realms of God that have been untended for 
decades simply by choosing to reclaim them and perpetuate them for future 
generations.


6. Bethel Church claims to frequently encounter unexplained phenomena both 
during their services and also in their everyday lives, such as falling gold 
dust and “angel” feathers. (“The feathers, gold dust, etc. are not things we 
do,” Johnson says. “They happen.”) They also claim to see a “glory cloud,” the 
appearance of dust/smoke in their services that they say is a supernatural sign 
of God’s presence, similar to the pillar of cloud that traveled with Moses and 
the Israelites (Ex. 13:20–22<https://www.esv.org/Ex.%2013%3A20%E2%80%9322/>).


7. Bethel churches frequently promote and teach and preach from The Passion 
Translation<https://www.thepassiontranslation.com/>, which Johnson describes 
as, “One of the greatest things to happen with Bible translation in my 
lifetime.” As the sole translator, Brian Simmons, 
says<https://www.thepassiontranslation.com/faqs/>, “The Passion Translation is 
distinct from other modern English Bible versions in that it is an essential 
equivalence translation.” But in a review for 
Themelios<http://themelios.thegospelcoalition.org/article/burning-scripture-with-passion-a-review-of-the-psalms-passion-translation>,
 Andrew G. Shead concludes that Simmons abandons “all interest in textual 
accuracy, playing fast and loose with the original languages, and inserting so 
much new material into the text that it is at least 50% longer than the 
original. The result is a strongly sectarian translation that no longer counts 
as Scripture; by masquerading as a Bible it threatens to bind entire churches 
in thrall to a false god.”


8. Bethel runs a ministry training center called the Bethel School of 
Supernatural Ministry (BSSM)<http://bssm.net/>. The school says that what makes 
the academic instruction at BSSM unique is that it “is taught by apostles, 
prophets, evangelists, pastors and teachers.” The school says, “Students will 
learn how to read, understand, and ‘do’ the Bible, how to practice His 
presence, to witness, heal the sick, prophesy, preach, pray, cast out demons 
and much more.”


9. Bethel has a program similar to a church-planting network that “equips and 
empowers leaders who desire to transform lives and communities through schools 
of supernatural ministry (SSMs).” Part of the role of such schools is to 
“pastor people with unique spiritual giftings.” As an article on the school 
planting 
website<http://bssm.net/schoolplanting/2018/03/13/pastoring-people-with-unique-spiritual-giftings/>
 explains,


I knew a man who would know people’s secret sins the moment he laid eyes on 
them. From what I know this was not a gifting he wanted or sought after, it was 
just something he experienced. It was a testament to the character of this man 
that he was also one of the best lovers of people that I’ve ever known. I know 
quite a few people who, from a young age, saw into the spiritual realm like you 
and I see into the physical realm. They see angels and demons constantly, 
without actively looking for them.

I don’t know about you, but until a couple of years ago this was different to 
how I experienced the supernatural. I’ve never seen someone’s secret sin 
written across their forehead. Until a couple of years ago, I had never seen 
demons and angels flitting about, going about their business. I’ve never fallen 
into a trance, and I’ve yet to be supernaturally transported anywhere. 
Spiritual gifts manifest differently for different people, and there are those 
out there who have very unique manifestations of spiritual gifts, and very 
unique relationships with God as a result.


People label them as mystics or seers. Personally, I believe this is what 
should be normal for Christians, and is actually accessible to all of us.

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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