|
| Add to Favorites |
| Printer Friendly |
| Send to a friend |
|
Moriel Ministries > Teachings > Discernment |
|
Steve Chalke's Hypocrisy And Heresy Rise Up To New Heights On
Resurrection Day by Cecil Andrews 'Penal Substitution' - the Father punishing His sinless Son as a substitute for sinners so that they, through faith alone in Christ [crucified] alone might be fully justified by God [released permanently from every penalty andpunishment due to them because of sin] - IT WAS hypocritical of Steve Chalke to be both a presenter of and preacher at a meeting where these words were sung. The opening hymn of the programme was 'How great thou art' and verse 3 of that lovely hymn reads as follows - And when I think that God, His Son not sparing Later in the programme, the hymn 'In Christ alone' was sung and the second half of verse 2 reads as follows - 'Til on that cross as Jesus died Not only was it hypocritical of Steve Chalke to be a willing participant and Moving on from his 'hypocrisy' I want now to focus on his 'heresy'. When you keep in mind Steve Chalke's denial of what actually happened on the cross it sheds a whole new understanding of what he said in his 'sermon'. He began his 'sermon' by mentioning his 'friend Tony Campolo' who according to Steve Chalke is 'a brilliant preacher' and of how he had popularised the saying 'It's Friday but Sunday's coming' [Steve Chalke during his 'sermon' whipped up almost frenzied reaction from the audience by getting them to repeat this phrase many times during the course of his 'sermon']. For most Christians we would understand this saying as meaning that the events of the day of Christ's crucifixion seemed at first to be a disaster. However subsequent events would go on to show the error of such thinking and, as I will explain later, the day of Christ's crucifixion should be a day of great rejoicing for God's people. This aspect of rejoicing has been emphasised by the Lord Himself who commands us to remember His crucifixion and the events of that day as we meet around His table to break bread and drink wine. The following are some extracts from the 'sermon' that Steve Chalke delivered during this programme. 'The truth is this and Easter Sunday is all about this, it doesn't end here [the crucifixion], it does not end here. The message of Jesus is this, the message of Easter Sunday is this, it doesn't end with despair, it doesn't end with humiliation, it doesn't end here, the message of Easter is this, it ends with resurrection, it ends with hope, it ends with forgiveness, it ends with liberty, there is a new beginning, there is a new beginning, the message of Easter. At this point Steve Chalke related an amusing story of a foreigner on the London Underground who, no matter how hard he looked at the map in his diary, couldn't figure out where he was - in other words, according to Steve Chalke this man was 'lost' - and the reason he hadn't been able to figure out where he was was because the map in his diary was actually of the Paris Metro. Steve Chalke then continued - Psalm 24 says "The earth is the Lord's and everything in it". When we live our lives in God's world as though God wasn't there we're going to get lost. When we live our lives as though Easter Sunday doesn't exist, we're going to get lost, we're going to end up in despair, we'll be overcome, overwhelmed by grief, overwhelmed by tragedy and the pain and the suffering of life. We cannot survive, we need Easter Sunday because Easter Sunday says a different word to us - it says that Jesus is risen from the dead, there is hope in the universe, God is on our side [loud applause]. Good Friday, Good Friday was a disaster, a dying God on a cross is no God, a dying Saviour is no Saviour, a dying Saviour is no Saviour. Jesus gasping for air, gasping for breath, gasping for water, gasping for dignity is no Saviour at all. The people are in despair, they've got their heads down, the people that have followed him think it was good, it was a good story, it was a great story, but this is the end of the road, there is no way forward. But the message of Easter Sunday is this is not where it ends - it doesn't end here. Sunday is coming. Sunday is coming. In this portion of his 'sermon' Steve Chalke has painted a picture of the despair that the followers of Jesus might well have conjured up in their minds as they watched the crucifixion unfold - indeed we do know that this was precisely the despair that some of them experienced as I will show shortly. Steve Chalke has painted 'Friday' as being a day of despair but by what he then goes on to say Steve Chalke wants to immediately correct any possible 'dead-end' thinking about Christ having been crucified. In his sermon he has painted a bleak portrait of that event but instead of taking time to explain Christ's crucifixion and to give a biblical explanation of what really and gloriously happened on the cross he instead turns all attention to the resurrection and identifies it as being our real source of 'hope' and he then takes time to explain the nature of that 'hope'. In his 'sermon' Steve Chalke said - 'When Jesus rises from the dead, not just in the hearts of his followers, but in actuality, as fact, he reverses the curse, he reverses the curse of death and despair Comment by Cecil: 1st Corinthians 15: 20-26 tells us "But now is Christ risen from the dead and become the first fruits of them that slept.But everyman in his own order; Christ the first fruits; afterward they that are Christ's at his coming. Then cometh the end.For he must reign till [future] he hath put all enemies under his feet. The last enemy that shall be [future] destroyed is death"and voom there is a way forward. On Friday, on Friday we feel as though there is no way forward but this is not how it ends, this is not how it ends. Sunday is coming! On Friday we can feel that there is no hope for us as individuals but this is not how it ends. On Friday we're in pain, in suffering but this is not where it ends. Sunday is coming!' [Loud cheers]. When the cheering died down Steve Chalke then went on to make some personal applications for the listening audience in relation to what he had been saying - to explain or clarify the 'hope' that he sees coming from Sunday. He said - 'On our Fridays we wonder about our job, redundancy, our marriage failing, our relationships broken, our money issues, our scares over health, coping with life itself. On Friday we can feel lonely, forgotten, depressed, our friends have abandoned us, life just doesn't seem worth living and some of us live at Friday even though it's Easter Sunday. We're still at Friday, we're still struggling but here is the message of Jesus that resounds acrosshistory. Here is the message of Jesus that changes the world. Here is the message of Jesus that changes the universe. We are not on our own. We are not alone. God is with us. We are not abandoned, because it was Friday, but Sunday is coming. There is hope for us all'. Earlier in relation to Steve Chalke's telling of the story of the man on the London Underground I underlined where he stated that the man was 'lost' and then he went on to warn listeners about how they too could end up 'lost'. Here we see that for Steve Chalke being 'lost' is to be ignorant of the message that he claims emanates from the events of 'Sunday' and I have highlighted this 'gospel message' of Steve Chalke in red. As you will see there is no mention or proclamation of people being 'lost' because they are unregenerate, unrepentant, unconverted and still "dead in trespasses and sins" [Ephesians 2:1]. Friends, this is 'another gospel which is not another" [Galatians 1:6-7]. After carefully studying what Steve Chalke said, I wrote the following - 'For Steve Chalke, the resurrection of Christ has apparently rescued the mission of Christ from the disaster and despair of the death of Christ instead of, as the bible teaches, the resurrection of Christ being God's vindication of His acceptance of the sacrificial and atoning death of His Son. Christ's loud cry on the cross "It is finished" at which the veil of the Temple was rent in two was a cry of victory, not a cry of defeat!' Earlier I wrote 'the day of Christ's crucifixion should be a day of great rejoicing for God's people'. There was, at its time, wrong thinking about the crucifixion of Christ as was shown for instance in the story of the 2 downcast disciples on the road to Emmaus [see Luke 24:13-32]. However when Christ Himself joined them and explained to them, by His teaching from the Old Testament scriptures, just what had happened on the cross [penal/substitutionary atonement to save sinners] then they realised that the crucifixion, far from being a disaster, had in fact been a glorious redemptive triumph. It had been the culmination of all that God had promised, in the Old Testament, to accomplish through His Messiah and they rejoiced [their hearts 'burned' within them] when they understood what had truly been accomplished by Christ's crucifixion. When properly understood, genuine Christians join with the Apostle Paul in saying "God forbid that I should glory except in the cross of our Lord JesusChrist" [Galatians 6:14]. But Steve Chalke in his 'sermon' focused on man's perceived 'felt needs' [man's worries about loneliness, finances, health etc] as being the important and over-riding problems that Christ's resurrection can deal with instead of focusing, as Christ did with the 2 on the road to Emmaus, on how His crucifixion had dealt with man's greatest need - his need of having his sins forgiven by God and of being clothed in the very righteousness of God. The reason Steve Chalke focuses on every need other than that caused by man's sin is that he does not accept the biblical truth that Christ's sacrifice on the cross was a "propitiation" of God's just wrath and anger against man's sin - please remember that according to Chalke God is only a God of love and nothing else - and that Christ's sacrifice was also an "expiation" of man's guilt before God because of man's sin. As far as Steve Chalke is concerned, everyone in God's world [and presumably this was his reason for quoting Psalm 24] is now automatically back 'in harmony' with God [God's 'curse' has apparently been reversed because of 'Sunday'] and our problem is that we don't live in the light of this supposed 'lost message of Jesus'. The heresy of Steve Chalke that he was peddling in his so-called 'sermon' is best summed up on pages 98-99 of his book 'The Lost Message of Jesus' when he wrote - 'The lost and revolutionary heart of Jesus' message is simply this. God accepts us as we are, without judgement or condemnation and gradually through his love and acceptance, draws us ever closer to understanding and living out his shalom in our lives. IN OTHER WORDS ACCEPTANCE PRECEDES REPENTANCE - NOT THE OTHER WAY ROUND' [EMPHASIS MINE]. The following verses, just some of many that could be quoted, identify what Steve Chalke has written here as being nothing less than a false 'gospel' that is under the very curse of God [see Galatians 1:6-9]. Steve Chalke wrote 'acceptance precedes repentance' - God's infallible word declares - As Peter preaches in Jerusalem he says in Acts 3:18-19 "But those things which God had before shown by the mouth of all his prophets, that Christ should suffer [Peter is referring to the penal/substitutionary atonenment of Christ that was pictured and foretold in the Old Testament by all of God's prophets] he hath so fulfilled [through Christ's crucifixion on the cross]. REPENT therefore and BE CONVERTED, that your sins may be blotted out". As Paul preached in Athens he boldly proclaimed the truth of the living God, which stood in stark contrast to the 'dead idols' that were worshipped there as 'gods' and in the light of the truth of this living God that he proclaimed he said in Acts 17:30 "And the times of this ignorance God overlooked, but now COMMANDETH ALL MEN everywhere TO REPENT". Earlier I made reference to 'the Lord Himself who commands us to remember His crucifixion and the events of that day as we meet around His table to break bread and drink wine'. |
|