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Be Still and Know ... that you are being deceived
by Brian Flynn
This article first appeared on the Lighthouse
Trails website and is reproduced here with permission.
There is nothing more devious than a lie told with subtlety. Last week,
I purchased the Be Still and Know That I am God DVD produced
by 20th Century Fox. The cover boasts of such contemplatives as Richard
Foster, Dallas Willard, Calvin Miller and Priscilla Shirer, along with
some names that may surprise you? Max Lucado, Beth Moore. An acknowledgement
list at the end includes Brennan Manning and Dr. Charles Stanley.
The advertisement for the video states:
"Eight hundred people gathered at Mariner's
church in Newport Beach, California for this amazing event that was
broadcast live to over 2000 churches nationwide. Richard Foster and
Dallas Willard kicked off the evening with an introduction and dialogue
on the history of Contemplative Prayer. Priscilla Shirer shared passionately
about the vital need to spend time listening to God and Dr. Henry Cloud
challenged everyone with practical steps to help incorporate this type
of prayer into busy, everyday life. Kendall Payne's soulful 'Be Thou
My Vision' set apart the close of the evening with Richard Foster leading
the group in a time of silent, listening prayer based on a scripture
reading from Luke. As one woman shared afterward, 'I loved learning
about this new kind of prayer that is actually so old from so many different
views. There really was something for everyone...'"
I tried to watch this DVD as if I were a person that knew little about
contemplative prayer but had a fair knowledge of Scripture. By the advertisement,
I am told that I'm going to be introduced to a new and different way
to pray. The video begins by telling me that we all live in a frenzied
chaotic world and that Christians are not immune to it. It suggests
that we need to spend more time in prayer. Gosh! What a revelation!
I spent $15.98 to be told that?
Richard Foster, author of Celebration of Discipline, begins by
describing contemplative prayer this way:
"Contemplative prayer is 'listening prayer.'
It is attentiveness ... It is being all ears to what the Father has
to say to us."
The DVD shows people reading their Bibles, while similar descriptions
progress. Okay, so I am to listen to God while reading the Bible? I
do that already. God informs me through His word. What's new about that?
As I am watching this, I am wondering, "Did Fox put all this money into
this project just to tell people to read their Bibles and think about
what they have read?"
The narrator suggests finding some quiet time to be alone. Certainly
all of us need that, but I already have my morning devotional. Perhaps
many Christians don't do this and this DVD is a reminder.
The film describes contemplative prayer in many ways. Spending time
in God's word and contemplating its meaning. I already do that. Get
away from the world and all the noise and distractions by finding a
quiet place to pray. That's nothing new. Meditating on a phrase from
the Bible that has meaning to me. I do that often. However, they are
suggesting a unique specific prayer. They could have called it the spend-time-contemplating-in-a-quiet-place-prayer.
Perhaps they decided that name was too long and called it contemplative
prayer.
Priscilla Shirer, author of He Speaks to Me, Preparing to Hear the
Voice of God, shares her views. She states:
"Most of my prayer time is filled up with what
I am saying to Him as opposed to just being quiet, actually giving Him
an opportunity to speak to me. It never occurred to me that I needed
to consciously go into His presence with my mouth closed giving him
an opportunity to get a word in edgewise."
Does she mean that God starts talking in my mind during the time of
prayer? Now this is confusing to me. The premise of the Be Still
DVD is suggesting that we need to spend more time alone in solitude
to read the Bible, but then the meaning is switched to now mean silencing,
or stilling, one's thoughts. Which silent solitude do they mean? Finding
quiet time or finding quiet time to quiet and still the mind?
I was curious as to why Beth Moore had been a part of this production.
Although I am not greatly familiar with her work, I have been told by
many that she is well thought of within the Christian community, and
she has created reputable Bible study programs. When she was questioned
as to her participation in Be Still, that promotes a mystical
prayer movement, she released a statement distancing herself from the
project. What has really sparked my curiosity is what is she distancing
herself from? After all, she seems to be the most quoted person in the
film. If this practice is a biblical one, why has she denounced this
project? Does she too see a problem with contemplative prayer?
The phrase contemplative prayer sounds like a suggestion that we are
to contemplate God's word or contemplate its meaning by thinking. However,
that is not its real meaning or how it is practiced.
Those on the DVD who promote the silence teach that this state of mind
is reached through a repetitive practice (i.e., a mantra). Listed in
the acknowledgements of Be Still is Brennan Manning. He describes
the method in his book Signature of Jesus, this way:
"[T]he first step in faith is to stop thinking
about God at the time of prayer. The second step, without moving your
lips, repeat the sacred word [or phrase] inwardly, slowly, and often.
"
The third step concerns what to do when inevitable distractions come.
The answer is to simply return to listening to your sacred word. Gently
return your mind to your sacred word.
This is the only way that one can truly silence the mind. It is like
putting the mind in neutral. Without repetition your own thoughts simply
get in the way. We are beings that simply cannot shut off our thoughts,
but you can through repetition, by going into an altered state. Hindus
have practiced this type of meditation for centuries.
During this practice, contemplatives believe that you can hear God speaking
in your mind. This is not a biblical practice. God has spoken to many
individuals throughout the Bible but never by a meditative practice
initiated by man. It is a dangerous practice and the results are detrimental.
Richard Foster admits to this danger in his book Prayer: Finding
the Heart's True Home:
"I also want to give a word of precaution. In
the silent contemplation of God we are entering deeply into the spiritual
realm, and there is such a thing as a supernatural guidance? While the
Bible does not give us a lot of information on that, there are various
orders of spiritual beings, and some of them are definitely not in cooperation
with God and his way! But for now I want to encourage you to learn and
practice prayers of protection."
Foster also states:
"At the outset I need to give a word of warning,
a little like the warning labels on medicine bottles. Contemplative prayer
is not for the novice. I do not say this about any other form of prayer?"Sadly,
this warning label is not listed on the DVD."
Foster describes the method of contemplative prayer quite differently
in the Be Still film. It is a rather watered-down version of
Lectio Divina. He instructs the listener to read a page of scripture
several times looking for the important passages. He then reads it again
focusing on one passage that he feels is relevant to him at that moment
in his life. If that was all there was to contemplative prayer, I would
not have written a book condemning it. I propose to you that Mr. Foster
is not being upfront and honest in the DVD.
Max Lucado, also in the film, states there are two ways to read the
Bible - for inspiration and for information. Certainly the Bible inspires
me but it is by its information. Throughout this film, there is an underlying
theme that the Bible is to be used, not just as a resource for knowledge,
but rather as a mystical device. So in essence, the Bible is being recommended
as a tool to practice our meditation techniques!
In later sections of the DVD under Cloud of Witnesses, Foster
praises the early mystics such as Madame Guyon, but how does she describe
reading the Bible? From Foster's book Devotional Classics, Madame Guyon
states:
"[M]ake use of scripture to quiet your mind.
First read a passage of scripture. Once you sense the Lord's presence,
the content of what you read is no longer important. The scripture has
served its purpose; it has quieted your mind; it has brought you to
him. You should always remember that you are not there to gain an understanding
of what you have read; rather you are reading to turn your mind from
the outward things to the deep parts of your being. You are not there
to learn or to read, but you are there to experience the presence of
your Lord!"
The Lord is already present! He is sitting at the right hand of the
Father. I already have the assurance through his word without "practicing
the presence."
"This hope we have as an anchor of the
soul, a hope both sure and steadfast and one which enters within the
veil, where Jesus has entered as a forerunner for us, having become
a high priest forever according to the order of Melchizedek." (Hebrews
6:19-21)
In truth, those supporting the practice of contemplative prayer are
demonstrating a tragic failure of faith. Is Christ's finished work on
the Cross not enough for them, and are they not now sharing their doubt
with all of us?
Although there are demonstrations of honest love for God from some of
the individuals in this DVD, there is too much misleading information
that will take listeners from knowing the word of God to an inward journey
of deception waiting for God to speak to them in their minds. In fact,
their use of the title Be Still and Know That I Am God, demonstrates
their lack of biblical knowledge.
There are two commands in this verse:
1. BE STILL (don't worry or panic) and
2. KNOW THAT I AM GOD (a recognition of God's sovereignty).
The Achilles heal of contemplative prayer has always been its lack of
biblical support . The choice is clear, we either come to God on his
terms or any way man sees fit. Coming to God through a practice taught
by mystics during the Dark Ages which they borrowed from eastern religions
is not coming to God on His terms.
I left the New Age to escape practices like these, because I knew they lead
to deception. I am not going to stand by and watch while my brothers and
sisters in Christ fall into the same trap. The participants in this DVD
are in scriptural error and must be confronted. No matter how much these
modern day mystics try to attain the silence they will never receive silence
from me. |