Chapter # 6


Honest Criticism of Christianity




The Reality of Pentecostalism








What does Pentecostalism look like in reality?  How do people experience 
Pentecostal religion?


Not exactly a timely book review, but I finally read a 1995 opus by Harvey Cox,

Fire From Heaven, his detailed study of Pentecostal religion. Any number of 
matters

in the book are dated now, but most of the text, as far as I can tell,  remains

as relevant as ever. The publication is an education unto itself.


Rather than discuss the book chapter-by-chapter, comments here explore various 
themes,

sometimes drawing on other studies that shed light on what Cox said. Then there 
is

focus on my personal spiritual journey in life in stark contrast to Pentecostal 
religion.

Yet to say anything at all I have a problem to resolve that is similar to that 
faced by Cox

when he set out to write his chapters in criticism of Pentecostalism.


The book sometimes reads like a tribute to Pentecostalism; clearly Cox was 
impressed

by the many Pentecostal people he met during a period of several years, and he 
was

far more than a passive observer when he did his in-person research. Fire From 
Heaven

contributed much to what has been called "Pentecostal chic," it is that 
favorably disposed.

And if you have any real life experience with Pentecostals there can be times 
when

Cox's attitude is very easy to understand; at least now and then you may have

the same attitude  -even if it doesn't last because of the serious liabilities

that are built into Pentecostalism which have been there from the beginning.


Regardless, Pentecostalism is the "real deal" as far as hard core 'living 
Christianity'

is concerned.  It demands attention.


To make this clear, an anecdote might be helpful. This is from an Atheist 
website.

It seems that a young woman Atheist had decided that it would be a good thing

to attend church  -for several reasons, among them to have a real-life sense of 
knowing

what she was talking about.. But which church?  There are so many to choose 
from.

At which the woman said:


"I picked a Pentecostal church because television told me everyone there speaks 
in tongues

and dances with snakes, and that sounds like a fun night."


Whatever "turns you on," I guess.  And for many people the emotional approach

to religion of the Pentecostals is exactly what inspires them.



Cox's problem was that he liked most of the people he met in the years when he

was researching Pentecostalism, some he admired considerably. But he needed to

spell out his criticisms, some of which could only be devastating to 
Pentecostals,

while at the same time he had no interest in insulting anyone, in 
over-generalizing

when he knew perfectly well that there are many kinds of Pentecostals, in making

unfair statements that failed to take into account Pentecostal strengths, or in

any way that distorted his true feelings.


The book concludes with Harvey Cox visiting a Pentecostal mission in the Grove 
Hall

area in Dorchester, a neighborhood within Boston that is noted for high crime 
rates

and violence in the streets, among other things. That is, there were 
similarities to

the Azusa Street venue where the original Pentecostal movement was born in 1906.


It was to Grove Hall that a group of dedicated young black professionals decided

they should turn  so that they could try and re-start Pentecostalism in its 
original form

and return to its true mission once again.  These young men had forsaken high 
paying

professional careers, maybe just for a few years but certainly for a few years, 
so that

they could best reach the people who needed it the most. Hence the start of

what they called the "Azusa Christian Community."


"Here were people," said Cox, "who had chosen to be actual witnesses to the 
kind of

community their Pentecostal ancestors foresaw."  Clearly Cox was impressed by 
the

sacrifices the young people were making, and impressed at how they helped one 
another.

He also was impressed by their willingness to seek support from people in the 
Boston

squirearchy,  the high tech upper crust mostly, and who recruited others from 
that

elite group to help out, but who never compromised their basic principles in

the process. What more can anyone ask?


We can set aside one especially glaring inconsistency: Pentecostals are not 
reluctant to

ask for help from 'the pagan world,' as did the group in Boston when they asked 
for

support from the high tech community, as much a population of non-Christians as

can be found anywhere in the US, a percentage of whom practice other religions

like Buddhism and various New Age persuasions. But when things are  reversed,

when a non-believer, a non-Pentecostal, asks for help from a Pentecostal, the 
answer,

when there even is an answer, is "no way."  In effect: "You are not a true 
Christian,

and you cannot possibly think I would help a heretic like you." That is, there 
is

world class hypocrisy that is built into Pentecostalism and it cannot be 
overlooked.

But let us gloss over this issue. This leavers us with any number of  positive

qualities among Pentecostals and Cox certainly was not about to forget these 
things,

indeed, he reflected on them repeatedly, and warmly.


But in the last scene in the book, after a lengthy Pentecostal worship service, 
we find

Cox walking away. There is no explanation beyond the excuse that the meeting had

gone on quite long and he needed to be elsewhere, but you can get a very 
different

impression with no trouble at all.  Despite the many good things that can be 
said about

Pentecostals the shortcomings of Pentecostal religion are so great that there

is no possibility of going further with it. In effect, Pentecostalism is

a titanic mistake.


----------



My feelings are very similar.


Of course, in part thanks to the book, I know that in some places Pentecostalism

is the best available alternative for real-life people to turn to. Recent ca. 
2017

statistics tell us that there now are about 225 million Pentecostals in

Sub-Saharan Africa, for instance. That exceeds even the Catholic Church

on the continent with its 200 million members there. In many areas

Pentecostalism is the one viable alternative to Islam.  A choice between

Pentecostalism and Muslim religion,  in my humble opinion, is no choice

at all.  Pentecostal religion is superior up and down the line.  And in some

countries, like Nigeria, Pentecostals have been able to create their own

more-or-less utopian communities where Christian norms of behavior prevail

and where economic success is a real prospect for many.


You can say something similar for Pentecostalism in Latin America or South Asia.

When you look into things it is no wonder that Pentecostal Christianity is 
growing

like crazy throughout the global south. And there are smaller outliers like 
Italy

where a new form of Christianity per se is being created. At least according to 
Cox,

in Sicily the Pentecostals are developing a form of Christian faith which 
regards

the Holy Spirit as female.


This makes sense, of course. From the outset,way back in 1906, in addition to

Pentecostalism being racially integrated, it was wide open to women leadership
in the church. America's first woman religious celebrity, Aimee Semple 
McPherson,

was an early Pentecostal who went on to organize her own denomination,

the Foursquare Gospel Church. Although a good number of Pentecostals

abandoned racial integration,  and some came to regard women as ineligible

for any kind of official post in any of their churches, there still is the

example of the  Azusa Pentecostals to keep in mind and who deserve respect

for what they did, decades ahead of their time.


At any rate, women in religious leadership is not too far removed from 
conceiving

of the divine as female.  This need not happen, but it can.



There also are Pentecostal friends of mine for whom I am am very grateful, like

a lady friend whom I have sometimes referred to as Evangeline. What a wonderful

woman who has lived her life doing everything she could do, to be as faithful to

the teachings and example of Christ as is humanly possible. Maybe I could have

survived on my own anyway, but in the months after my foot surgery in 2016,

then the next two years with various medical appointments, Evangeline was there 
to

offer whatever help she could, to make my life more bearable. How could

I ever forget her kindness and the considerable time she spent to get me

through a number of difficulties?  My gratitude could not be greater.


No-one can possibly tell me that Pentecostalism is some sort of deranged cult

that does nothing but produce misery. Sometimes it is a Godsend.


However, the problems with Pentecostalism are many and some are so severe

that it is difficult in the extreme to see how this religious movement as it 
exists

in America anyway, can possibly survive. There currently are approximately

30 million Pentecostals in the United States and it sometimes seems as if

every one of them is enmeshed in some kind of scandal. The most popular

are sex scandals, followed by money scandals, etc., including, among

Pentecostals who venture into politics, severe cases of head-on-backwards 
disease
wherein candidates for office say outrageous things that reveal to the world

how hopelessly uninformed they really are.


But to stick to the best known scandals, let me refer you to an article 
published

at The Way of Life website for February 11, 2016. David Cloud's essay is 
entitled

"Recent Pentecostal Scandals."


This review of the sordid facts tells us that a good number of Pentecostal 
imbroglios

since the 1990s have garnered headlines around the country. But the article

is not so much salacious gossip mongering; Cloud wrote with pathos since

he is sympathetic to the overall Pentecostal cause. Some quotes:

"The Pentecostal movement, from its inception, has been marred deeply

by moral scandals and deception, and nothing has changed. "

"Scandals can be found in any group of Christians, sadly, but scandals

among Pentecostals and charismatics are significant because they claim

a special anointing of God’s Spirit. They claim double blessings

and triple anointings and super Spirit baptisms..."


"I know from personal experience that not all Pentecostals or charismatics

live scandalous lives. I was led to Christ in 1973 by an old-line Pentecostal

who was a godly man, and I thank the Lord for the compassion he showed..."


"At the same time, from its inception at the turn of the 20th century,

the Pentecostal movement has been absolutely rife with moral and doctrinal

scandals and ridiculous claims among its prominent leaders."

.

Some "for instances" of what is involved, also quotes from this valuable 
article:


"William Branham, the most famous Pentecostal healing evangelist,

proclaimed himself the angel of Revelation 3:14 and 10:7 and the Elijah

of Malachi 4, denied eternal hellfire, and renounced the Trinity. He prophesied

that the end of the world would occur in 1977. After being pronounced healed

by Branham during a Canadian healing crusade in the 1940s, many people died."


"Famous healing evangelist A.A. Allen was arrested for drunk driving during

a healing revival in 1955 and then fled bail and refused to face his crime.

He divorced his longsuffering wife in 1967. Three years later he died alone

in a cheap motel in San Francisco while his team was conducting a healing 
crusade

in West Virginia. He was 59 years old, and he had destroyed his liver

with his drunkenness."


"Kathryn Kuhlman, one of the most famous of the female Pentecostal evangelists,

became romantically involved with Burroughs Waltrip, a married evangelist

who eventually abandoned his wife and two children to wed Kuhlman..."


Others on the list include:

Oral Roberts, famous for his conversation with a 900 foot tall Jesus who 
assured him

that is kosher to use every trick in the book to squeeze money from his 
followers.


Jim Bakker of PTL, Praise the Lord, but dubbed "Pay the Lady" by insiders after 
bribing

his church secretary, Jessica Hahan,  to keep quiet about being seduced by ol' 
Jim. As the

article added, Bakker's wife, the over-the-top 'stylish' Tammy Faye, co-host of

the PTL Club, "divorced Jim while he was in prison and married Roe Messner,

an old family friend..." About Tammy Faye, someone who never had read the

Apostle Paul's Epistle to the Romans nor the 11th chapter of the Gospel of 
Matthew,
she established a ministry of her own which was supportive of sodomites. "She 
appeared

at 'gay pride' events nationwide, including a Tammy Faye look-alike contest in

Washington, DC, [in 2002] where she was surrounded by men in falsies and

pancake makeup."


Jim Swaggart is most remembered today for (1) his pulpit denunciations of 
consorting

with prostitutes and (2) for his insatiable consorting with prostitutes.


Peter Popoff  was the evangelist who could read minds as well as perform 
healing miracles.

The trick was that his wife, who collected the information when interviewing 
participants
off camera, would then broadcast personal information about these people to 
Peter which he

heard by means of a concealed hearing device.  As for the miracles, none were 
ever verified.


Robert Tilton had become a wildly popular Pentecostal preacher with an empire 
worth

about $80 million per year. He lavished most of this money not on the poor and

unfortunate (who only received a pittance), but on himself in the form of a 
private yacht,
a deluxe condo in Florida, and an 11,000 square foot mansion in Texas


Bob Jones of Vineyard Ministries, was once well known for his preachings about

moral values. That was his day job. At other times he was busy telling (willing)

women who saw him in his office that the way to heaven was to take off

all their clothes so he could get a good look.


Earl Paulk was another Pentecostal superstar who, it seems, could not resist

seducing well endowed teen girls. Not that I personally get all that worked up 
about this,

but just sayin'....


And there are many more. The article discusses the peccadilloes of  Jamie 
Buckingham,

Clarence McClendon, Roberts Liardon, Douglas Goodman, Todd Bentley. David

Yonggi Cho of South Korea, etc, and Benny Hinn. About Hinn, although questions

still remain, it seems as if he had an affair with Paula White.  Or at least 
sure
gave the impression of having had an affair with her.


But some scandals were utterly reprehensible


There have been several Pentecostal preachers especially known for their 
criticisms

of homosexuality but who, anon, turned out to have had homosexual relationships.

These include Ted Haggard, Paul Cain, Paul Crouch, Eddie Long, and Richard 
Roberts,

a bisexual who had encounters not only  with underage girls but underage boys 
as well.

Richard, of Bob Jones University, also embezzled millions of dollars

which he used to support his extravagant lifestyle.


A special prize goes  to a husband and wife team, Juanita Bynum and Thomas 
Weeks III,

both of whom had various extramarital affairs, with Juanita also being bisexual

and seducing a number of female Pentecostal evangelists...


Another "power couple," Randy and Paula White, weren't quite as bad, just some
garden variety adultery by each of them, plus maybe skimming from the 
collection plate

to finance upscale homes, he in Malibu, she in San Antonio, but what is most 
notable

is that  Paula also maintained a condo in Trump Tower in New York City.


Never a dull moment with those Pentecostals, it seems....


So, there's that.


It must be said, of course, that Pentecostals weren't too happy about these 
scandals

and as a rule the offenders were permanently disgraced. But one of this 
unsavory number,

Jim Bakker, managed to recover somewhat, and after his release from jail was 
able

to restart his ministerial career. He even has a new TV show of his own and

in December of 2015 went on public record as agreeing with the prediction

of Tom Horn that the Antichrist would appear in 2016. As a guess he was

referring to the forthcoming election, and if that was the case, then you know
the Pentecostals may be on to something....


Actually, the Antichrist was and is William Clinton, Satan's ambassador was and 
is

Barrack Obama, but Trump belongs in this crowd somewhere....




---------------------------------------------


Cox's book isn't the only way to describe Pentecostalism but it has the virtue

of being fairly comprehensive, and he is a skilled writer who explains things

with refreshing clarity.  Some repetition of what has already been said

is unavoidable in order to do justice to Cox's book.


There are relatively few things to remember:


1. "...it is a serious mistake to equate Pentecostals with fundamentalists." 
(p. 15)

As a matter of fact, often enough the fundamentalists, so-called,  are at the 
throats

of the Pentecostals. Why? Because  such believers, most of whom are Baptists

of one kind or another, regard the Bible as sacrosanct, every word in the tome

inspired by God-on-High, based on true doctrine, without error.  Actually what

Baptists and others say is that this is true for the original documents, which
happen to be lost to history, thus the copies made at some later date may or 
may not

be 100% accurate, but it is believed that there are few copyists mistakes or any

other blemishes and that available translations come quite close. Meanwhile the

Pentecostals, while they may revere the Bible, have a"looser" view of the book.

Besides, for them the Holy Spirit is alive and active in the hearts of 
Pentecostals

and, therefore, we get what amount to new revelations which have authority

that can be just about as important as the Bible. The fundamentalists are 
horrified

at this and verbally attack the Pentecostals at every opportunity,



2. Like many Baptists, however, Pentecostals regard theirs as a religion of the 
heart, (p 12)

and, accordingly, make considerable use of what may be called "narrative 
theology" (p 13).

That is, much is made of individual "testimonies," stories about how someone 
found Christ,

how he or she had to -metaphorically- wander in the wilderness for a time to 
learn the truth,

or needed to see things in a new way and obtained the needed fresh perspective 
by enduring

an illness, and so forth.  Hence, when Baptists are not at the throats of 
Pentecostals
they may attend religious revivals along side them, their true brothers and 
sisters in Christ

-at least for the occasion.


3. Pentecostalism is a "physical religion" (p 11) which features all kinds of 
bodily movement

such as  arms in the air to supplicate the Holy Spirit, such as lively dancing, 
especially among

Latino believers or African-descended believers, such as being taken over by 
the Spirit and

falling down, such as crying a lot, or laughing, and, of course, speaking in 
tongues. There is
also an "in your face" style of evangelizing that is omnipresent whenever a 
Pentecostal

talks to a non-Pentecostal about religion. Baptists (except some Latinos and 
African-Americans)

do not do these things, which they regard as excesses.  Except that once in a 
while you may

find a Baptist preacher or evangelist who is in your face as much as any 
Pentecostal ever is.

But not, or hardly ever, members of the American Baptist Church denomination, 
which is,

take your pick, as far to the Right as any mainline denomination can get, or as 
far to the Left

as any fundamentalists ever get.


4. Many Pentecostals, but not all, follow what is called "later rain" theology 
(p 47).

This refers to a passage in the Old Testament book of Joel about how God had 
once

provided a shower of blessings  -interpreted to mean the first pentecost as 
described in

the New Testament Book of Acts-  but  that at the approach of Christ's second 
coming

there would be a torrent of blessings, hence today's millions of  Pentecostals 
speaking

in tongues is taken to mean the latter rain of Joel has begun and the millennium

is just around the corner.  Which is also to say that in its origins in the 
early 20th century

Pentecostalism was strongly millennarian.  Pentecostals may still be 
millennarian

but this is less and less true, at least in the United States, as churches 
adjust to
the need to prepare for the long haul since, it seems increasingly obvious,
Jesus is probably not going to arrive as  soon as everyone would like.


Most millennarian Pentecostals are "pre-mils," as they are known, not 
"post-mils."

You will need to memorize the difference for the mid terms if you ever take

my class in History of Religions in America, so, pay attention:


A pre-mil is someone who thinks that Jesus will return at his discretion and 
there is

absolutely nothing anyone can do to hasten the millennium. Only after Christ's 
return

will the Kingdom of Heaven be established on Earth.


A post-mil is someone who thinks that it is our responsibility as Christians

to do everything possible to try and build the Kingdom in the here-and-now.


Admittedly this does not compel Jesus to return except as he sees fit,

but he expects us to try and to work toward this objective.  "Pre" refers to

Christ preceding the Kingdom, "post" refers to a partly constructed Kingdom

that Jesus will return to, hence, in effect, his return comes after (post)

the foundation of the  Kingdom. If you want to get on my good side in

class just remember that I am a post-mil.  I point this out because

by Master's Thesis was all about the pre-mil  Millerites of the 1840s

who eventually morphed into the Adventists.


The "mil" suffix refers to the millennium as discussed in the Book of Revelation

in the Bible, the 1,000 years the Kingdom will reign over our planet. But for 
all

we know, "thousand years" may actually mean 1,000 centuries or 1,000 epochs.
A really, really long time, in other words.


Its not that hard to keep all of this in mind if you make a sincere effort. :-)


5. Pentecostals emerged from the Holiness movement among Protestants

which reached its apogee sometime toward the end of the 19th century.

That is, it takes the intense devotionalism of the Holiness people one step

further. Hence, like the Holiness churches of yore that were mostly Methodist

in inspiration, Pentecostals are pietists. But take this to mean extreme 
devotionalists

not, as many encyclopedias define the word pietism, a movement among 17th 
century

Lutherans based on lots of prayer and worship, etc, taken to extremes, exactly

what Martin Luther rejected when he set out to eventually become a religious 
reformer.

In any case, the original pietists influenced the Wesleys who, in turn, passed

along the idea to others who created the Holiness movement, who then served

as a major part of the inspiration for Pentecostalism.


Don't be discouraged by all of these facts, they become second nature after

you have studied history of religion for a few decades.


6.  Pentecostals are not all that difficult to categorize when the issue is 
non-Christian religion.

Most are adamantly antagonistic toward the truth claims of non-Christian 
faiths. But there

are some exceptions. On page 91 Cox takes the view that glossolalia is directly 
related

to similar phenomena that are found within other religions, everything from 
Shamanism

to some forms of  Hinduism.  And, given the flexibility that Pentecostals have 
because

their faith is experiential, not doctrinal, at least some individual 
Pentecostals have

concluded that it would be a good idea, albeit guardedly, to learn whatever may 
be

possible from other faiths. After all, this is America and the nation is home to

significant numbers of Buddhists, Hindus, New Age believers of various stripes,

and so forth, including Sufis, Sikhs, Confucians, Baha'is, Taoists, Jains 
Shintoists, etc,,

even a small number of Zoroastrians. And, needless to say, Jews are integral

to American culture. You simply can't ignore all of this.


But most Pentecostals have a different view of other faiths, namely, that they 
are all

wrong, false, misleading, and potentially dangerous.  They especially don't like

witchcraft or anything that can be construed as witchcraft, which they regard 
as diabolical.

This negative attitude toward witchcraft and toward other religions is derived 
from

the Bible verse, "be ye not unequally yoked with unbelievers."


However, almost as much venom may be directed against established 'liberal' 
churches

or Catholics.  And, while Cox did not make the connection, this may have 
something

to do with a delayed reaction to the World Parliament of Religions of 1893 
inasmuch

as from that time forward representatives of many foreign religions began to 
proselytize

for their  -to Americans-  exotic faiths.


This is also different than the fundamentalist view of things. Many Baptists 
were agitated

over Darwinism, the new Biblical scholarship, the  Social Gospel (even though 
its chief'

theologian, Walter Rauschenbusch, was a Baptist), and anything else that was 
radically

"modern."  The early Pentecostals were overwhelmingly poorly educated and simply

had little or no knowledge of such things even if they did have awareness of 
colorful

and highly visible religious imports  -the kind of people that were all too 
easy to see

in the streets of 1906 Los Angeles.


Indeed, although Cox is pretty much silent about it,  some Pentecostals are 
even suspicious

of the Apostle Paul and are involved in the so-called Jesusist movement. This 
is also

called Jesuanism, or Jesuism, sometimes Jesus Christianity. What this is all 
about is intense

focus on Jesus, especially the Sermon on the Mount. For such believers you can 
almost say

that all of the Bible reduces to the Beatitudes and nothing else really matters 
all that much.


Hence you get a 100% "meek and mild" Jesus   -and forget about his physically 
throwing

the money changers out of the Temple, forget about his socializing with sinners

including prostitutes, forget about his condemning sodomites to Hell, forget 
about

his telling the disciples to sell their cloaks to buy swords, forget about the 
secrecy

involved in his parables, hence an esoteric dimension of Christian faith, 
forget about

the levels of meaning that can be extracted from the story of the woman at the 
well,

indeed, forget most of what the Gospels say.


Speaking personally, I find this outlook completely unjustifiable,. It is also, 
by any

kind of Christian orthodox standards, heretical. The crux of the matter is that 
orthodoxy

(lower case) insists that all of the Bible is sacred scripture, not just one 
part of it,

and this includes the Old Testament inasmuch as the Hebrew Bible (the OT, or 
Tanach)

was "the Bible" to Jesus and his first followers.  There was no "New Testament" 
until

some point in the second century AD, and even then there were questions about

the Book of Revelation, which some believers excluded from the canon, and about

texts like the Shepherd of Hermas, which some believers included in the canon.

But, ever since there has been a New Testament, it has been a truism for 
normative
Christians everywhere that true doctrine can only be found when you take into

consideration the entire Bible, all of its books, not just selected writings.


Not that heresy is necessarily a bad thing, Tyndale was judged a heretic for

translating the Bible into English, which we now regard as a very good thing.

Luther was a heretic and he gave us enlightened Protestantism.  Galileo had

the status of a heretic. And so forth. But in this case it is as objectively bad

as anything can get. At least some forms of Pentecostalism, and possibly

most forms, are examples of extreme reductionism, in effect throwing out

large parts of the Bible for reasons of doctrine even when the published book

remains intact on a believer's night stand. But on top of this Pentecostalism 
is,

as many people think,  essentially a neurotic expression of faith, basically 
faith

as an unhealthy obsession, something that is alien to the "whole person"

spirit of the New Testament.


It is pietism on steroids.


Most Pentecostals are not Jesusists but there is something of this tendency 
everywhere

in the movement. And, to understate the case, someone with a Jesusist outlook

who comes on strong to someone who is normal, may well find  the experience 
repulsive.

Not because Jesus is repulsive, the opposite is the case,  but because, so it 
can be perceived,

the person doing the Jesus-ist proselytizing isn't mentally well.  You are 
being asked

to buy into someone else's obsessional neurosis. And who needs that?  This is 
one way

that, while they may not begin to fathom why, Pentecostals alienate others.


7. Pentecostalism has been called the religion of the poor, and there is truth 
to this

characterization. But mostly this refers to the urban poor, not so much the 
rural poor

(who, if they are religious, generally are Baptists of one variety or another), 
and

it should be noted that maybe half of America's 30 million Pentecostals

are now middle class. By one count, 13% are affluent.


This presents some difficulty for Pentecostals because their official theology 
has it that

believers should eschew worldly things, should not live for money, and should 
not be

the least materialistic.


One way out of the dilemma is to flip the concept on its head and claim that 
the whole

purpose of sacrifice is to allow one to become rich.  Hence the so-called 
"Prosperity Gospel,"

which says that God / Jesus / the Holy Spirit wants you to become well off.  
The idea is

that if you pray for riches and you are a sincere believer, your supplications 
will be heard

in Heaven and, in due course, the Almighty will reward you with money and 
goodies.

Hence, as Cox observed, all of the attention to money in many Pentecostal 
sermons.

And there are a few verses in the Bible that say as much.


However, there are more verses that make the opposite point and, to say the 
least, there is

no indication that either Jesus or his disciples were wealthy.  And Paul 
sometimes

complained about his relative poverty even though he had a trade, working with

canvas, and he sometimes had a little  -we would say-  discretionary income.

But again and again we find many early Christians living on little income,

even no income, like the "seventy" who were sent into the world to evangelize

with nothing, so to speak,  but the shirts on their backs and their well worn 
trousers.


This was the outlook of the first generation of American Pentecostals, as Cox 
made

clear on page 120.  The early Pentecostals disdained the "commercial blather of

consumer society."  They were anti-materialist and rejected "the world" and its

blandishments.  Indeed, "accumulation of worldly goods" was seen as a "snare

and a delusion," basically a trap for the soul. The ideal, therefore, should be 
to

find work in a helping profession like nursing or in honest labor like 
construction.

And to this day there are some Pentecostals who take this outlook to heart,

becoming hospital orderlies or janitors or house painters or the like,

enough to live on but guaranteed NOT to make you wealthy.


8. What may be called the "political theology" of Pentecostalism is  -I don't 
know

of a better way to say it-  stupid beyond comprehension. It follows from early

Pentecostal millennarianism even though today's believers do not spend much

time thinking about Christ's return. Yet the foundational political views 
originally

based on an expectation of Jesus' advent became ingrained in the ideology

of the movement and those early views survive pretty much intact.


The gist of things is that the only political hope for mankind is the  
establishment
-by Jesus at his return-  of a Kingdom of Heaven in which people are kind to 
one another,
there is no interest in war, everyone is a pacifist, etc, all of this  perhaps 
best articulated
by Murray Dempster, who at one point, as cited on page 296,  talked about a  
future world
where there is no injustice, generous sharing replaces welfare, enemies are 
reconciled
through faith in Christ, and even strangers "are incorporated into the circle 
of neighbor love."

Which sounds good until you realize the practical implications.

What this is, is a commandment not to make yourself informed about politics.
You are supposed to have such faith as to move mountains and trust that Jesus
will take care of all the messy details of the political realm. Therefore,
study of real world politics is an evil, to be avoided at all costs.
What you get from people who are under the spell of such theology
is one uninformed opinion after another, little or nothing is corrected,


There is an outstanding August 1997 essay by Seth Finkelstein available on the 
Web
under the title:  "Libertarianism Makes You Stupid."  The article says it all
and this is hardly just my opinion, comments to this effect are easy enough
to find.  Libertarianism is based on a matrix of fallacies and simply is
wrong about nearly everything. The point is that there could well be an
article with a title like:  "Pentecostalism Makes You Uninformed."


How is anyone supposed to be able to do politics if he or she is clueless about

what is going on in American politics?  And do not try to tell me that there
are no politically concerned Pentecostals like this; there certainly are.

But in effect they have painted themselves into a corner with no way out.


They are captives to approximately the worst kind of theology imaginable


Moreover, instead of becoming informed about politics, they are told that the

very best thing  to do is make themselves "informed" about demons.


See pages 284- 285 for a synopsis of Pentecostal demonology.  There you

will find discussion of the demonology of a certain C. Peter Wagner, then

at Fuller Seminary. Which is useful to know in one sense, and I suspected it

all along, namely, that San Francisco is ruled by an anti-spirit demon

named the Spirit of Perversion, Oakland is ruled by the Spirit of Murder,

San Jose by the Spirit of Greed, and all of Marin County is under control

of the New Age Spirit.


Sounds about right.


But what in blazes are you supposed to be able to do with the information?

This is fantasy stuff, basically, even when someone evaluates areas

of California accurately enough.  Cox calls Pentecostal demonology

-of which there is much, much more- "religious science fiction."

And he doesn't like it and said that he found it "distressing." Cox was

being too kind;  this kind of stuff is a load of crap. And how in hell

can any educated person believe in such drivel?


This is not to say that the Devil isn't a real being. A lengthy discourse about

all the reasons for believing  that Satan exists isn't necessary; all you have 
to do

is think about the great murderers of the 20th century, Hitler, Stalin, Mao, 
Pol Pot,

Saddam Hussein, Idi Amin, Osama Bin Laden, and so forth. And it really is 
useful,

if you are interested in Mesopotamian history, or the history of ancient Israel,

or, for that matter, Buddhist or Hindu history, or tribal African history,

to know something about archaic demonology. This kind of knowledge explains

a number of things about life in the remote past, including how the Israelites

framed their ideas about good and evil. And even Jesus talked about demons.

But aren't we beyond that kind of consciousness? There are far better ways

to think about the problem of evil. But not for Pentecostals.

9.  An "other-worldly" perspective characterizes Pentecostals. And they are 
convinced
that they have the complete truth as given them by their faith and by the Holy 
Spirit.

Hence, as much as possible, giving up the things of this world so that one can

live in a sort of spiritual bliss, forever thinking about God, ceaselessly 
praying

to Jesus, and turning inner angst into inscrutable contemplation of divine 
things.

But how many people find this approach genuinely satisfying?


Is it as much as  0.0001% ?


Regardless,  many Pentecostals give up watching movies, throw out their

television sets, refuse to listen to Top 40 music, and only allow

their own kind of music.


Their own music can be quite good, incidentally. I have tuned in to some 
Spanish language

Pentecostal services broadcast on local CTV. Very rousing and easy for 
participants to dance to.

And, since ideally a religious service is supposed to be a spontaneous event 
with no pre-set

order of activities, the music portion of worship may continue for considerable 
time.


But what about self-imposed withdrawal from at-large culture?


To be sure, I also have little use for Top 40 hits, and at least 85% of 
Hollywood movies

I have ever seen have been worthless. Also,  probably close to 90% of what is

available on television is garbage. But now and then something comes along and

all the worthless material can be set aside as irrelevant to my life and the 
10% or 15%
can be enjoyed to maximum effect.


For all of its many faults, TV also helps connect you to the wider world. I 
have been

"introduced" to some very smart people via C-Span, for instance, listening to 
lectures

by authors "pitching" their newly published books,  or via world class dramas

telecast on PBS. And there sometimes is useful news.


This is written during the aftermath of the worst show storm in the history of 
the city

of Eugene. Because of television I have been able to learn about road closings, 
expected

changes in temperature, the status of public transportation,  and much else. 
Plus, during

football season, I don't want to miss film clips from the latest gridiron 
battle-to-the-death

between the ducks and the (Stanford) trees, or the beavers and huskies. And if 
I'm lucky

there may be footage of the ASU game.  I mean, this is America, you know.

And what would I do if deprived of my favorite TV drama? I already know what

I did when PBS stopped showing Foyle's War. I had horrible withdrawal symptoms.


As dicey as things may get for sensory-deprived adults, what about children?


Years ago, growing up in Chicago, mother sometimes had visits from a male friend

from her high school days. This was strictly friendship, not the least 
suggestion of

anything else. Lavergne was a Pentecostal, affiliated with the Assemblies of 
God,

and a decent well-intentioned man. He was married and his kids needed to live

through their father's religious obsessions, no TV, no movies, any of that.


You can guess how that worked out. Kids have an innate need for social 
connection.

They want to belong. Their nervous systems evolved to be part of a social peer 
group.

Someone can pray all he wants, but these are objective facts.


Of the half dozen children in the family there weren't any who didn't have
psychological problems; one became an habitual criminal. Clearly there was

no 1: 1 relationship between how the kids turned out and their Pentecostal

upbringing. Life is not that simple. Nor is one family an adequate sample

on which to base conclusions. However, it is pretty hard not to see a 
relationship

between media deprivation and consequent social isolation, followed by 
maladjustment,

when discussing children.


10.  Charismatic Christianity is not the same thing as Pentecostalism except

when it is.  Page 106 discusses the differences.


One way to look at things is to say that Charismatics are people who  have been

deeply influenced by the Pentecostals but have remained in their original 
churches.

Hence there are Catholic Charismatics, there are Charismatics who are part of

Presbyterian congregations,  and Charismatics who are members of a community 
church

that is totally unaffiliated with any Pentecostal organization. Yet some 
Charismatics

are independent, like Vineyard, which has become its own version of a 
denomination,
plus there are  a variety of stand-alone Charismatic churches.


Also distinctive about Charismatics is that the extremes to which Pentecostals 
go

are mostly absent. There still may be arms raised heavenward, but there is no

being "slain in the spirit," viz, falling down to the floor in religious 
rapture.

And there may be little or no speaking in tongues.


Harvey Cox's book on the Pentecostals is valuable but it has distinct 
limitations.

And as you might suspect for a Harvard professor, what it includes and excludes

tells a story all its own.


Cox likes the Pentecostals but he hates their stand against homosexuality.

His solution to the problem was to barely mention Pentecostal opposition

to sodomy, maybe on the assumption that if you ignore the issue

it will go away.


Cox also spent several pages discussing parallels he imagines exist linking
Pentecostalism to liberation theology. This is more than a stretch. This is 
Harvey Cox
doing his best to rival Plastic Man.  C'mon.  There isn't a neo-Marxist bone in 
the body
of any Pentecostal in the world.  Or, at most, to allow for a small number of 
converts
from Marxism, only a precious few.



Still, all told, the book is "must reading" for scholars of American religion.

And for anyone who is curious about  the nature of Pentecostalism

for their own purposes; it is well written and thorough.



It is anything but the last word on the subject, however.



-----------------------------------------------






It would be possible to continue discussion of Pentecostalism for many more 
pages

but it would be best to conclude with some recommended reading and a few 
comments

that express an overall view of this religious movement.


Highly recommended studies include:


Why I am no longer a Pentecostal, by William (Bill) Davis, which is quite 
lengthy but very

informative. Davis was a Pentecostal for 50 years before he finally had enough; 
there is not

much about the religion he leaves out. For Davis, while there were some 
positive memories,

most of that time was wasted, which he deeply regrets.


Real Wrongs of the Charismatic Movement by Robin Schumacher. Also informative 
and detailed

this article is available at The Confident Christian blog, dated March 25, 2016.


Are Pentecostal churches phony?  Nation Online, December 23, 2013. This is an 
article

published in Malawi that criticizes Pentecostal practices in Africa.


Talk: Charismatic movement / Criticism salvage This is a Wikipedia article that 
provides

information about several different kinds of Pentecostal religion around the 
world.



What it all comes down to is what kind of life you want to lead? Do you want to 
be taken

seriously by other people?  Pentecostals usually know the answer: If they tell 
other people

that they are Pentecostals the other people  head for the door or the fire 
escape. Normal people

almost always want nothing to do with Pentecostals.  And educated people 
sometimes regard

Pentecostals are something like clinically insane.


Hence, Pentecostals hide their faith from most people. With good reason they 
fear rejection.


Worse, the truth claims made by Pentecostals simply do not hold up to any kind 
of informed

scrutiny. Those claims are not true, in other words.


Basically Pentecostalism is a road to ostracism by just about all other people, 
including

most Christians, certainly in America.  And, speaking personally, I don't see 
where

it has much at all to do with the life of Christ. You might even say it has

nothing to do with the life of Christ.

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