
|

Letter to Penny Quostal continued:
(This is ultimately going to be a disquisition
on the nature of sacraments and in particular, the relationship between the
diaconate and priesthood. Why then, you may well ask, has he veered off into
religious strangeness? Simply because about one out of ten Christians alive
today has had some experience with Pentecostalism, Catholic, Protestant and
everything in between. This is particularly true in Africa, Latin America
and Asia where lies the future of the church and the world. American
Christianity is now the victim of the convenient theologies of the mega
church which largely cater to popular feeling and are often a kind of
“Pentecostalism lite.” This stuff is everywhere. The question with which I
am dealing can be paraphrased: “How come when Pentecostal preachers pray
over somebody, something happens? When Catholic bishops do, nothing appears
to happen.” Fair question. I will continue now...)
So then, in order to answer the original question, I have to explain what it
means to be “slain in the spirit?” It sounds a little frightening. Catholic
Charismatics try to make it a bit more palatable by calling it “resting in
the spirit.” A rose by any other name would still have thorns. In the church
of Santa Maria della Vittoria in Rome, there is a statue called “St. Teresa
(of Avila) in Ecstasy” by Gian Lorenzo Bernini. Her heart is being pierced
by an arrow of love and she is falling back, not unconscious, but absolutely
aware only of the arrow of God’s love held by an angel.
We have examples of something similar in the Bible:
- . In the Apocalypse, we read about St. John’s
vision: “When I saw him, I fell at his feet as though dead. Then he
placed his right hand on me and said: “Do not be afraid. I am the First
and the Last. I am the Living One.”(Rev. 1:17,18)
- In the first book of Samuel, the nineteenth
chapter, we find the story of Saul who, on his way to kill David, meets
a group of prophets and is seized by the Holy Spirit and he rips off his
clothes and falls to the ground where he lay naked, prophesying all
night and all day.
- When the temple guard came to arrest Jesus in the
garden of Gethsemane we read something similar. “Jesus asked, ‘Whom do
you seek?’ They answered Him, ‘Jesus the Nazarene.’ He said to them, ‘I
am He’... They drew back and fell to the ground.” (John chapter 18)
- Then we have the story of the conversion of St.
Paul. In the ninth chapter of the Acts of the Apostles we read, “He
(Paul) fell to the ground and heard a voice say to him, "Saul, Saul, why
do you persecute me?”
Interestingly the experience seems to happen to bad
people, more often than not. Saul, Paul and the Temple guards
were all on their way to commit murder. They were stopped in their tracks by
an experience of the power of God to which they responded by falling to the
ground. One may presume St. Teresa of Avila to be a different case.
I have witnessed and experienced the phenomenon.
I remember one Pentecostal faith healer who would just touch a
person, often on the arm and start talking about the glory of God and over
they would go. I’ve seen whole rows of people collapse like
puppets with their strings cut. This particular faith healer
even used this odd gift for the purpose of crowd control, not unlike the
Lord when he stopped Saul, Paul and the temple guards.
The questioner mentioned that when a charismatic preacher
prays over someone, that person “fall(s) unconscious for some time.”
This is not quite accurate. The sensation is not one of
unconsciousness, but rather one of complete peace. It’s as if the person
says to himself “I’m standing, but there is no particular reason to do so
because I feel so absolutely peaceful!” and down they go! It’s a real thing.
I have no idea whether it is natural or supernatural. I suspect it is a bit
of both, but it does happen. It is not illegal and when it is a spontaneous
response to the sense of the nearness of God, I don’t think it is immoral.
Now, on to the abuses of the phenomenon which, quite
frankly are immoral. I have attended countless prayer meetings
and revival meetings during which there is prayer for the healing of the
sick. People routinely fall over, and if they don’t fall over the faith
“healer” will pray with great intensity until they do. Sometimes when the
“healee” is not cooperative, the “healer” will give them a little shove when
they have wasted enough time with that particular supplicant. I have had
disconsolate people come up to me saying, “Father, God didn’t bless me! When
they prayed over me, I didn’t fall over!” This makes me want
to turn out the lights and send everybody home. It’s absolutely nuts! The
phenomenon is real and when it’s real it’s full of joy and peace. Often it
is faked and contrived and even dangerous. I have known people who injured
themselves when shoved by a faith healer. I have never known anyone who was
injured when the experience was spontaneous and genuine.
You may think from all this that I disapprove of
Pentecostalism. On the contrary! I miss Pentecostalism. There isn’t much of
it around any more either in its Catholic or Protestant form.
There are a lot of showy non-denominational churches that are all about
making people feel good. There are a lot of Catholic prayer group leaders
who try to get people excited like in times past. The means by which they
harangue the crowd into a kind of hysteria is the microphone. I remember one
prayer group that had fallen on hard times. They really believed that if
they felt it, it must be true, and if it was louder they would feel it.
Needless to say a lot of the leadership had fallen into terrible sin
and the group which had numbered in the hundreds was down to 15 or 20
members. They insisted on having the meetings in the large empty church and
on using five microphones. If only they could make things louder, everyone
would come back and the glory days would return. It never occurred that if
they got quieter, that might actually happen. A really good prayer meeting
is where everybody is going nuts and there’s no amplification. If the Holy
Spirit doesn’t show up at the meeting, well, there’s always electrical
noise.
When most people think of Pentecostalism, they think of
noise. Pentecostalism is really about quiet. Profound and expectant quiet.
Pentecost was one afternoon of supernatural ministry that changed the world.
It was preceded by nine days of expectant waiting. The heart
of the Pentecostal movement when it still had anything to do with Pentecost
was the “tarry” service. The old King James’ version of the Bible in Luke
24:49 reads “And, behold, I send the promise of my Father upon you: but
tarry ye in the city of Jerusalem, until ye be endued with power from on
high.”
Tarry is an old word meaning “wait” the Pentecostal tarry
service was the very heart of the movement. People would lock themselves
into a church or wherever they happened to meet on a Saturday night and just
wait on the Lord. Sometimes they would wait for days. They weren’t going to
do anything until the Holy Spirit arrived. There were no hymn books, no
prayer leaders, no sermons, no “order of service.” They just waited.
I remember with fondness the Puerto Rican grandmothers
who would lock themselves into a church on the west side of Chicago with a
coffee pot, a few blankets and pillows and just prepare to wait out God, and
as they put it, they would “pray through.” There is none of that now. There
are music ministries and preachers and healing Masses. There
are mega-churches with theater seats and membership drives. There are
programs and seminars and what began in the Spirit is sadly ending in the
flesh. (Galatians 3:3)
Next week: More interesting Pentecostal weirdness. Also,
the finest defense of classical Pentecostalism out there is the movie “The
Apostle” by Robert Duvall.
|