Click to join the conversation with over 500,000 Pentecostal believers and scholars
Click to get our FREE MOBILE APP and stay connected
| PentecostalTheology.com227
William
DeArteaga, Quenching
the
Spirit: Examining Opposition
to the
Moving of
the
Holy Spirit (Lake Creation House,
1992).
300
pp. $14.99,
hardback.
Centuries Mary,
of FL:
Reviewed
by Henry
H.
Knight
III
There have been a number of excellent historical and
theological
works written
by
charismatics from within the Roman
Catholic,
Lutheran,
and Reformed traditions. William
DeArteaga’s Quenching
the
Spirit
is the first substantive work written from an
independent
or
“new” charismatic
perspective.
As
such,
it warrants careful
reading
and
a serious
response.
It makes both historical and constructive
theological
arguments.
The historical
argument,
which is the central theme of the
book,
concerns
the
recurring phenomenon
of “Pharisaism.”
DeArteaga
defines the Pharisee as “a
deeply religious person who, among
other things, staunchly
asserts and defends the status
quo
with
regard
to tradition,
order and consensus
orthodoxy” (16).
“Consensus orthodoxy”
refers to the
commonly
held
theological interpretations
of religious people
in a particular age.
Pharisaism
exaggerates
the truths of consensus
orthodoxy
in order to oppose any
new work of the
Holy Spirit.
Like the
opposite extreme, Gnosticism,
the Pharisee is
biblically
defined as a
heretic;
but
contrary to our usual
way
of
thinking,
Pharisaism is “heretical in
spite
of its theological
correctness”
(17).
The fundamental error of Pharisaism is their
intellectualizing
of faith. Instead of
understanding
faith as “trust in God and
expectancy
in His provision,”
the Pharisees in Jesus’
day
“evaluated
religious questions and
spiritual phenomenon
on the basis of authoritative
opinion
rather than
spiritual
discernment”
(19). Thus, they
would
question
the authority by
which Jesus or the
Apostles
acted rather than
examining ‘
the fruit of their
activity. DeArteaga
calls this
“judging by origins.”
In
contrast,
both Jesus and Paul insisted that these matters be evaluated not
by their origins
but
by their
fruit. This evaluative standard was the
only
means identified to test and discern whether a
particular phenomenon
is
truly
of God.
However, DeArteaga notes,
“the fruit criterion should
only
be used to test those
things
within the
possibility of
scriptural validity. Things plainly contrary
to
Scripture
cannot be tested
by their fruits” (22).
DeArteaga’s argument
thus far is persuasive. But it should be noted that the use of
scriptural validity
to
negate
the “fruit criterion” is precisely
the
point
for Pharisaism: The fruit is irrelevant because the persons
or movements violate the “consensus
orthodoxy”
and its interpretation
of
Scripture.
As a
result,
no new movement of the
Spirit can defend itself
by appealing
to fruit
alone; exegetical
and
theological
1
228
resources are
necessary
to
challenge
“consensus”
interpretations
of Scripture. DeArteaga
himself offers such a defense of the
independent charismatics in the latter
portion
of the book.
Having
described
Pharisaism, DeArteaga
offers three historical case studies which show how it has functioned to
“quench
the
Spirit.”
The first in the Great
Awakening
in
eighteenth-century
North
America, which is described as a
“messy”
revival: it is a
genuine
work of
God, but it is marked
by
extremism. While the fruit of the
Awakening
was apparent
in changed lives and the
evangelization
of tens of thousands of unchurched Americans, the revival was
accompanied
with self-righteousness,
divisiveness and a lack of wisdom. A Pharisaic reaction,
led
by Charles Chauncy,
saw the
Awakening
as an enthusiastic deviation from sound doctrine and
good order, eventually putting
an end to the revival
by turning
the
clergy against
it.
DeArteaga
sees obvious
parallels
between the Great
Awakening
and the
contemporary Charismatic Movement.
One
advantage
the Great
Awakening
had over
today’s
charismatics was Jonathan Edwards as its most
distinguished
advocate.
Defending the revival
against
rationalist critics such as
Chauncy,
Edwards at the same time
distinguished
the
genuine
work of God in the
Awakening against
the extremists. Edwards insisted the true test of revival was not emotionalistic behaviors but “the ultimate
spiritual
fruit”
(43).
In taking this
approach,
I would
add,
Edwards
parallels
John
Wesley’s
defense of the
Evangelical Awakening
in England.
With the Great
Awakening
as his
paradigm, DeArteaga
offers two other historical studies. The first shows the
development
of the doctrine of
cessationism,
which excessive and
superstitious
claims for the miraculous on the
part
of Roman Catholicism led to Protestant denials that miracles and
gifts
of the
Spirit
are for
today.
The
teaching
of Calvin in this
regard
becomes hardened in Protestant
scholasticism, Scottish commonsense
realism,
and most
radically
in John Nelson Darby’s dispensationalism (all
of which are essential elements iri twentieth-century fundamentalism).
This
tracing
of the historical
origin of cessationism is a major contribution of the book.
The second describes the
evangelical
faith-cure movement of the nineteenth
century, focusing
on Charles Cullis and A. J. Gordon.
Again, the movement was a
“messy” revival,
marred
by
extremists such as John Alexander
Dowie;
a Pharisaic reaction
by
Methodist James Buckley
insured the
healing
movement would be considered heretical and banished from mainline churches.
In his historical
argument, DeArteaga
makes the
provocative
claim that the defenders of rational
orthodoxy
tend to fall into the
heresy
of Pharisaism when faced with a genuine work of God. Put
differently,
he is
describing
the
perennial
conflict between
pietism
and
scholasticism, in which each side sees the other’s excesses as
typical
and
dangerous,
2
229
while
remaining
blind to excesses of their own.
The value of an
once,
Edwards or a
Wesley
is their
ability
to see excesses on
both sides at
while at the same time
integrating
traditional
orthodoxy
with the new
awakening.
The constructive
argument
is even more
provocative. DeArteaga understands the
philosophical underpinnings
of Protestant consensus
to be materialist
realism, against
which he advocates a moderate Christian idealism:
orthodoxy
By Christian idealism we mean a viewpoint that understands that and words influence the natural world to some
thoughts
degree. At the same time it is understood that the universe and the material order are God-created and
stable. (131)
universe; observer).
nature
At the same
time,
of the mind
(the
makes the best
miracles, explanation:
He defends this
position by appealing
to both natural and
special revelation. Modern science
depicts
an idealist rather than a realist
does not
operate independent
an idealist hermeneutic
sense of the
testimony
of
Scripture.
In
contrast,
realist materialism is unable to
provide
a satisfactory explanation of reality.
This lack of
explanatory power
is
especially
true with
regard
to
which realism disallows. In
contrast, DeArteaga
offers this
(fallen)
Miracles are works of God which change the natural course of our
universe. In some
present
way God’s will and power cooperate with man’s mind through the biblically named “faculty” of faith. Some miracles, as in the original creation, are purely the sovereign word of God. (138)
structure
ultimate However,
our own
faith,
philosophical
DeArteaga
in the universe”
(140).
observation,
not
is
essentially
New
Thought
this erroneous
“Quantum physics,”
he notes,
“suggests
that observation finalizes the
of matter”
(142).
In a move reminiscent of
Edwards,
DeArteaga
then
argues
that God is the
prime
observer or
mind,
“the
source of
stability
and
continuity
which he calls
“anticipated
only
finalizes but
changes
the course of events”
(142). Here, then,
is a
and
theological
foundation for faith
theology.
denies that faith
theology
heresy
in Christian
disguise.
D. R. McConnell makes
judgment
because he
employs
the
“origins argument:”
E. W.
Kenyon
used New
Thought ideas,
thus his faith
theology
is
–
heresy. Instead,
McConnell should examine the fruit of faith
theology.
New
Thought
prompted Kenyon
to rediscover a biblical moderate idealism in contrast
to the radical idealism of the
metaphysical
cults and the materialist
consensus
orthodoxy.
In contrast to
McConnell,
Charles Farah is admired
by DeArteaga
for
offering
a Jonathan
Edwards-style
constructive
reproof
and affirmatior
of the
healing movement.
On the other
hand,
Dave Hunt
represents
realism of Protestant
3
230
extreme Pharisaism in his failure to understand faith
theology
and in his zealous condemnation which distorts and
inaccurately
cites their
of
DeArteaga’s
prosperity
again
differently. Wesley prosperity, provoking
Methodists
against echoing
Given the
materialistic,
“enough,”
constructive
argument precludes
a
writings.
The
complexity
detailed
response
here. I will
simply
offer three areas in which further discussion would be fruitful. The first concerns his
understanding
of
as
spirituality. DeArteaga charges
the desert fathers with the abandonment of the biblical
teaching
on
prosperity, culminating
in a monastic “cult of poverty” that established a Christian ideal inaccessible to the
laity (167). Although
the Protestant work
ethic, emphasized by the
Puritans,
is a
partial recovery
of the biblical
teaching,
it is once
lost in the nineteenth
century.
There New
Thought
rediscovers it and more
adequately
states it in terms of spiritual laws.
A
Wesleyan perspective
reads both
Scripture
and church
history
understands the central
teaching
of
Scripture
to be
the desert fathers to recover holiness
through spiritual discipline.
Just as
DeArteaga distinguishes
between extreme and
“Bible-affirming” wings
of New
Thought, Wesley
was aware of radical and more moderate strands of monasticism. In
warning
the
the
danger
of
riches, Wesley
believed he was
the
overwhelming teaching
of the
prophets,
Jesus and Paul.
consumption-oriented society
in which North Americans
live,
I believe
Wesley
and the desert fathers have much to teach us.
Perhaps
we need neither a cult of poverty or
prosperity
but of
placing
all else in the service of God. We need to let Scripture
rather than societal norms determine how much is enough.
A second issue concerns
spiritual
laws.
DeArteaga
defines them as “those biblical
principles
that
govern
the interaction between man’s ethical acts and their
consequences, especially this-worldly
To his
credit, DeArteaga rejects oversimplified views of
spiritual law; Scripture presents
universe as lawful but “modified
by mercy, grace
and other factors such as the role of
hardship
in holiness formation”
(180).
He cites Gerhard Von Rad’s observation that much of
which
DeArteaga
consequences” (176).
act-consequence ( 179).
relationship,
the moral order of the
Scripture posits
an
calls a “tit-for-tat”
of God. Divine
promise
was
physics. wisdom,
most
My
concern is with the
sovereignty
often construed
by
both New
Thought
and the holiness movement as spiritual laws, parallel
in some
ways
to Newtonian While Scripture may
indeed offer some
“act-consequence”
centrally
it
portrays
a God who is both faithful and free. God indeed keeps promises,
but in God’s own
timing
and manner. Thus in terms of God,
our actions do not
trigger
an automatic
consequence.
While these
the
complexity
and nuance of
comments
do not do
justice
to
4
231
DeArteaga’s arguments, hopefully they
at least raise some issues for further consideration.
The final area of concern has to do with the
categories
of “idealism” and “realism.”
DeArteaga
uses them in a distinctive and
carefully defined manner. But he does
not,
for
example, engage
Kantian idealism,
which
argues
that
reality-in-itself
is unknowable and what we call
reality
is a construct of our mind as it is
impacted by
the phenomena
of
experience.
While some
evangelicals
have
sought
to make use of Kantian
insights through
“worldview”
analysis,
others have found a middle
ground
between idealism and naive realism in a “critical realism.” T. F. Torrance would
argue
that critical realism is more reflective of modern science than idealism; neo-charismatics like Charles Kraft would build their account of miracles on a combination of worldview
analysis
and critical realism.
My point
here is that there is an entire area of discussion which needs to hear and be heard
by DeArteaga.
It would be
especially helpful
to see the continuities and discontinuities between his moderate idealism and a critical realism, and the value of each for the
interpretation
of
Scripture
and the
explaining of God’s
activity
in the world.
I look forward to further discussion of these and other
issues with William
DeArteaga.
His
thoughtful presentation
is a
significant contribution to our
understanding
of charismatic
theology
and
puts
us all in his debt.
Henry
H.
Knight
III is Assistant Professor of
Evangelism
at Saint Paul School of Theology in Kansas
City,
Missouri.
5
Anonymous
I read that book in the early 90s.
Anonymous
Steve Losee yes you should read it again there is a NEW expanded edition
Anonymous
Troy Day It was good until he included the “blab-it-&-grab-it” group. I’ve re-evaluated a lot of things I once embraced according to Scripture. If I read it now, I’d probably want to respond LOL.
Anonymous
Steve Losee are you saying William DeArteaga included “blab-it-&-grab-it” group? What is this about?
Anonymous
Troy Day Toward the end of the book, yes. I’d hardly include them with the historic revivals rejected by traditionalists
Anonymous
While saving faith is a sovereign gift of God to His sheep, we must daily choose obedience, to walk by the spirit. As Paul wrote in Romans 7, it is a challenge as the flesh struggles with the spirit. We can stray, grieving and even quenching the spirit. We may find ourselves sidelined and ineffective. But God is at work in us with discipline to bring correction.
Thankfully, though we may stray, true saints of the living God can never be lost.
Nothing can separate the redeemed from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus.
“Therefore there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” Romans 8
“Therefore if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old things passed away; behold, new things have come.” II Cor. 5
Anonymous
YES
Anonymous
they need to be examined Brett Dobbs James Pinkerton