dimanche 29 avril 2018

“Grave Sucking” – a new neocharismatic drift made in Bethel Church


You have surely heard about Bethel Church, an independent Charismatic movement from Redding, California. In its beginnings in 1952, the group was similar to what might be called a ‘home church.’ But the movement has grown rapidly and has about 9000 members today, which classifies this church as a ‘megachurch.’

This movement was at the heart of several scandals and controversies on which anyone could debate endlessly, which is not the point of this note. What you may not know, however, is that this movement has also set up since 1999 a school for young people, the Bethel School of Supernatural Ministry (a.k.a ‘BSSM’)[1]. This school welcomes about 1000 students per year at a minimum. The classes focus on advanced Bible studies, supernatural formulas and pseudo-biblical gifts or faculties. In a pejorative and humoristic nutshell, we could say that this school is somewhat similar to the school of X-Men Charles Xavier or Hogwarts and the apprentice wizards from the saga Harry Potter.

(c) Lawofficer.com

If one cannot blame the study of the Bible – which is in itself the best of schools provided that students have the ‘spiritual glasses’ on – we can only be skeptical about its use and results on which are based the prodigies realized at BSSM. Among other things, you will learn to walk through the walls, to hold objects in the air and, cherry on the cake, to “suck” the anointing from the dead.

In a recent interview of Banning Liebscher[2], a former senior member of Bethel and founder of the group Jesus Culture, the latter gets back to this drift of "Grave Sucking" and explains why, even though the whole Bethel staff does not condone, nothing will stop these "young zealous Christians, hungry for supernatural sensations."

What is Grave Sucking?


This expression would translate into "aspiration of graves,” which Jerome Prekel translates as "cemetery anointing." The appellation alone is enough to give a glimpse of the kind of practice to which its followers indulge. Concretely, you are animated by the will to obtain more spiritual power and you are persuaded that you will be able to recover it from the deceased people by going to pray on your knees or completely lying on their graves. Of course, we do not talk about any deceased! The ordinary mortal leaves you completely indifferent. The deceased must have an exceptional experience and an exemplary ministry. In the above-mentioned interview, Liebscher cites the example of those men of God worthy of "serious sucking": "the Whitfields and the Wesley, the Luthers and the Booths ... the John G. Lakes and the Kathryn Kullmans." These names can ring a bell if you are aware of the many (unfortunately, not enough) men and women of God and the revivals they have undertaken. In his article, Jerome Prekel reports that Benny Hinn himself often went to the graves of Kathryn Kullman or Aimee McPherson and felt something strong: "I felt an incredible anointing ... I trembled from all my limbs ... under the power of God ... 'Oh! Lord, I feel the anointing ... I believe that the anointing still exists in the body of Aimee.”[3]
Nevertheless, apart from one single occurrence of an incident that would look much like this, nothing in the Bible supports the use of such a practice. This incident, recounted in 2 Kings 13, tells us how a dead man, probably a warrior, was thrown into the sepulcher of Elisha, and how, in contact with the bones of Elisha, he returned to life. The lack of proximity to the Bible is such that Liebscher has trouble finding the name of Elisha, vaguely stammering "Elijah" or "Elisha," showing us the little importance given to the Word of God.

Grave sucking (c) Ben Smith on YouTube

This practice has nothing Biblical and would be just one more pagan idolatry worthy of the times of apostasy into which we are striding. No worship is done to God but to his servants; pointing to the moon, the ignoramus looks at the finger and not the moon ... Prekel makes a very relevant connection with the relics of earlier times that were kept and worshiped, hoping to receive holiness, absolution and special anointing.

Does God bless this stuff? Certainly not. This lugubrious deviance is a false gospel that you should keep away from because 1) it turns away from God – it is God through his Holy Spirit who grants power, not men and even less the dead 2) contact with the dead is nothing Biblical. Only the idolatrous peoples, enemies of Israel, practiced a certain worship of the dead. Some animist cultures are still having practices which imply contact with the dead nowadays. On another note, the Latter-day Saints – a.k.a. the Mormons – have similar rites (cf. the baptism of the dead). 3) it is simply morbid or even offensive for relatives and the family of the deceased to see crackpots come to bask on the grave of their ancestors.

(c) Warner Bros. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban

Liebscher confesses that, although he is not "partisan" of this practice, he does not see why he would denounce it since the intention to approach God by all means is a laudable goal. Moreover, Liebscher says that Bill Johnson[4] himself has nothing against this approach and will never condemn it publicly. On the other hand, according to Liebscher, the disruptive individuals drawing on them the curiosity of the world would be more or less "pulled back into line" individually. But, Liebscher continues, "you cannot control everything." This is the risk when you launch movements of several thousand members.

In plain language, Liebscher and his friends do not condemn the too "grandiose" charismatic excesses on the pretext that it goes with the label "charismatic" whose goal is to live fully the supernatural spiritualism without limit. But if there are no limits, how far will these antichrist, apostate, and foolish practices go? What testimony does this give to unbelievers? To what confusion are we arriving?

As John says in the book of Revelation, 22:15 "Outside are the dogs, those who practice magic arts, the sexually immoral, the murderers, the idolaters and everyone who loves and practices falsehood."

Seeing all this, we have only one thing to say, in prayer: Lord Jesus, come back soon.


[1] See the article of J. Prekel, especially the sction « Questions sur les justifications scripturaires ». https://lesarment.com/2015/07/lonction-des-cimetieres-nouvelle-derive-de-lhyper-charismatisme/
[3] See Double Portion Anointing, Benny Hinn, Part #3 and on TBN April 7, 1991.
[4] Bill Johnson is the current senior leader of Bethel Church; he was appointed in 1996.

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