Matt Chandler as a Charismatic prophet

What offering strange fire leads to


In October 2013, as part of the Truth Matters series, John MacArthur and a host of men such as Steve Lawson, Tom Pennington, RC Sproul, Justin Peters, and others participated in the Strange Fire conference. It was named Strange Fire from the verse in Leviticus 10:1.
The first tabernacle had been erected, and Aaron was doing a lot of sacrificing per God’s instructions (Leviticus 8—9). One day, two of Aaron’s sons, Nadab and Abihu, came along and offered incense with 'strange fire'. The Hebrew word translated "strange" means "unauthorized, foreign, or profane." God not only rejected their sacrifice; He found it so offensive that He consumed the two men with fire. (Source)
It's obvious from the verse that God abhors unauthorized worship. The issue in 2013 was that the Pentecostal and Charismatic tendency in worship of the Triune God included some aberrant behaviors. So, the Strange Fire conference was announced with a goal of evaluating the doctrines, claims, and practices of the modern charismatic movement, and affirming the true Person and ministry of the Holy Spirit. Some of the sessions and sermons included topics such as-

A Word from the Lord? Evaluating the Modern Gift of Prophecy

Charismatic Counterfeits: Do the Modern Gifts Meet the Biblical Standard?

A Case for Cessationism

What are the Spiritual Gifts? What are the Sign Gifts?

Matt Chandler, Photo from
The Village Church
The Holy Spirit gives gifts to the people in the Body of Christ. Some of these gifts are known as sign gifts. These gifts are tongues, interpretation of tongues, miracles and prophecy. Sign gifts were given by the spirit for a sign to authenticate the Apostles' message as truly from Jesus. Also, the gift of tongues was intended as a message to Israelites that because of their unbelief and that they had come under judgment. Its purpose at Pentecost and shortly beyond was a fulfillment of the Old Testament prophecy of God's judgment to unbelieving Jews. (1 Corinthians 14:21, Isaiah 28:11-12).

The sign gifts of tongues, interpretation of tongues, miracles and prophecy have ceased. They are no longer needed for a sign. No new prophecies are needed because the canon is concluded and closed. The remaining gifts are still and always in force. Folks who take this stance are known as cessationists (I am cessationist).

The problem was and is that the Charismatic movement with its insistence on the continuation of these gifts had widened to include not just Pentecostals and Charismatics, but encroached into the more conservative segments of the faith such as Reformed churches. The movement had also become extreme with behaviors not only not from the Spirit but were outright demonic, such as holy barking, holy laughter, and false signs and wonders. It was Charismatic Chaos.

Reformed and Charismatic?

Several self-identified Reformed pastors declared themselves continuationists. Reformed believing men such as John Piper, Tim Keller, David Platt, and Matt Chandler stand on the side of the sign gifts' continuation, leaving that door open instead of firmly shut as it should be. Their stance led and still lends credibility to the errant continuationist position.



The other men such as Keller and Platt (see left or click) and Piper (see this or this or this)
also state they believe the sign gifts continue, however carefully they say so and cautiously and primly.

Many continuationists such as the below statement from The Village Church teach that cessationism means that ALL gifts have ceased. This is not the view of cessationists. Only the sign gifts as listed above have ceased, because their purpose for existing has ceased.

Matt Chandler's Village Church believes that cessationism is non-biblical. They state that to believe the sign gifts have caused a restriction of the gifts. He, and his church, teach that,
"The position that best avoids these dangers is continuationism as it teaches that the gifts continue. This is the view held by The Village Church."
Chandler had preached in 2017 that he identifies as both Reformed AND Charismatic. The Reformers' Westminster Confession of Faith holds that the sign gifts have ceased. So, to be Reformed and contuationist would seem to me to be a denial of one or the other.

Uh-oh, a new prophecy

Matt Chandler said he is a Charismatic, and in true Charismatic form, he prophesied Friday night. I saw his statement come up on Twitter:


There were no other tweets that day, this tweet was not part of a longer thread explaining anything or offering any other context or scripture or even joyful examples. It stood alone. It was a pronouncement of what the Spirit is doing, based on some vague observations, and an exhortation to not just his own flock but to the global body, based on his personal experience.

It's sad to see the amount of likes and replies. Out of 70 comments, only 4 were negative and 65 were positive, most searching scripture for "sails" and "wind" verses to match Chandler's pronouncement and eisegete back into his prophecy. Here are several of the sadly few naysaying response tweets.



This was my reply-


So...Chandler prophesied, no doubt about it, and it's a modern one, too, with none of the specificity. It follows the Charismatic template exactly: be convinced and convincing, offer no detail, no scripture, and be as vague as possible so that it can't be confirmed or it can easily be confirmed.

But was it really a prophecy?

"But, but, but," you say, "Chandler was just making a personal observation! It's just saying what he noticed!" No. It's a prophecy that points to himself and not to Christ, because it's all about what Chandler saw and what Chandler noticed and what Chandler pronounced from his own observation (and not the word of God). Here is what a statement like that should say if it was an observation:

"I've been traveling for two weeks teaching, and in Such and Such church I saw many people convicted over sin. In another church I saw many people come to Christ in repentance."

"In another location I saw acts of charity and kindness done in Jesus' name such as... I praise the Lord for these works as the Bible says here and here".

How would you test prophecy such as Mr Chandler issued, that 'the Spirit is stirring something significant?' (1 John 4:1). And as the tweeter replied and as I did also, the Spirit in only now doing something significant, but not before?

What can one see that would convince one the Holy Spirit had been there? A revival like after Jonathan Edwards' sermon Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God? Even then, Edwards was suspicious of false repentance based on a heightened emotionalism.

Would an observation of something false like fake raising from the dead or glitter gold dust falling or holy laughter? That would be a problem. But Chandler never says what. Only the vague, "The Holy Spirit is doing something significant and he is stirring, be ready..." No, most of the work the Spirit does is internal and not immediately observable.

Continuationism v. Cessationism isn't that important, is it? It's not like it's a primary doctrine...

Does being a continuationist or a cessationist matter? Yes. In 2013 a month after Strange Fire concluded, Lyndon Unger at The Cripplegate added up the number of followers of these mainline or famous 'theologically cautious' continuationists, several of them who identified as Reformed, with a hefty social media following. The sum total of followers of these people, who in Unger's list included Piper, Chandler, Platt, and also Beth Moore and Prisiclla Shirer among others, is -
So, if we total all the "theologically cautious" charismatics with 100k+ followers we get 5.438 million followers.
For the record, that number is 2.092 million followers when it’s composed of only the people I’ve ever heard to be cited as charismatic defenders (John Piper, Mark Driscoll, Beth Moore, Matt Chandler, David Platt, Desiring God, Priscilla Shirer.)
And that was five years ago. So yes, it matters. Error propagates, grows, and infects.

It is very sad to watch. But my hope and glory is in Jesus, who always does right and who always does good. He is building His church and the good that I can't see when people stray from edifying doctrine doesn't mean it won't be there eventually in His plan. Please be "cautious" about following people who are continuationists. I'm sorry, I have not seen that believing that the sign gifts continue leads to anything good.

Further Reading

John MacArthur 4-min video defending cessationism 

Why I Left the Village Church

Do You Recommend these Teachers? (Lauren Chandler not recommended)


Comments

  1. Hi Elizabeth. I really have no idea that Christianity in America is blotted with teachers that are not doctrinally sound, and worst case is some are promoting or speaking alongside red-flag teachers. I recently got a book One Thousand Gifts by Ann Voskamp. She was mentioned by your recommended blog. I only read the beginning 4 to 5 pages, but I discontinued. I read somewhere that her writing is like romanticism with God, which is dangerous.

    Thank you for the information about Pilgrim's Progress. I got to read it this year because of your blog. I enjoyed it so much.

    By the way, I live in the Philippines. Thanks again for your blog that stands up for truth and points me to Christ everyday.

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    1. Hi Jerome,

      I had no idea that there was so much false teaching around when I first got saved as well. Unfortunately, it is not just America but anywhere the church exists. One main reason Strange Fire was begun was its rampant heretical teachings throughout much of Africa. Wherever is the truth, satan will seek to pollute it.

      I wasn't sure what you meant by the Ann Voskamp issue? I am thrilled you have discernment enough to stop reading it so quckly! No, she is not a good teacher to follow. Did you mean one of the blogs on the recommended side had promoted her book? Or mentioned it somehow? Please let me know the specifics so I can fix it.

      Thank you for your radership and encouragement!

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  2. I mean that she was mentioned as part of teachers that are not good to follow. I read it on Michelle Leslie's blog.

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    1. Oh! I understand now. Michelle is a great resource. Thanks!

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  3. As always ~ great post, Elizabeth.
    I do hope that you and other godly discernment ministries continue to enlighten and encourage fellow Christians to stay alert to false teachers. Sadly, in the church we have attended the last four years, we have heard only one name mentioned of a false teacher. The NT is full of warnings against false teachers...thus, one would conclude that our Shepherds should be helping to warn us of the wolves. In a fallen world, this does not always happen - so all that said, some of us rural folks greatly appreciate a "heads-up" from discerning believers like you, Elizabeth. Thank-you.
    May we all continue to grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ!

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  4. Personally, my husband and I do not follow or listen to most (almost all) of the well-known evangelical leaders. Hence, we have no idea what these men are teaching doctrinally.

    HOWEVER, I do try to keep abreast at least of the names and issues that come up, gleaned from blogs such as yours, as it gives us an understanding of how our pastor may be affected by what he listens to and reads. So thank you for providing this information.

    -Carolyn

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  5. I noticed that in your tweet responding to Chandler, you avoided the sarcastic tone some others employed and stuck to Scripture. I would like you commend you for that. Even in correcting or exhorting, our words reveal our heart and whether we are reflecting the Lord's gentleness (in as much as the occasion calls for). I would encourage you to point out to Chandler ways (that you gave in this post) that he could be.more specific about evidence of the Holy Spirit's work.

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    1. Hi Anonymous,

      Thank you knnidly. I fail sometimes and the sarcasm creeps in. I try not to. Thanks for suggesting to tweet Mr Chandler and encourage him to be more specific. I'll try that

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