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9 Bad Charismatic Habits We Need To Break

The document identifies 9 bad charismatic habits that need to be broken, including physically pushing people to make them fall during prayer (body slam), repetitively singing worship songs for long periods, having overly long offering segments in services, and pressuring people to speak in tongues through prompting phrases. The author acknowledges having participated in some of these behaviors when younger but believes Christians should allow the Holy Spirit to guide them into spiritual maturity instead of relying on gimmicks or manipulation.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
71 views2 pages

9 Bad Charismatic Habits We Need To Break

The document identifies 9 bad charismatic habits that need to be broken, including physically pushing people to make them fall during prayer (body slam), repetitively singing worship songs for long periods, having overly long offering segments in services, and pressuring people to speak in tongues through prompting phrases. The author acknowledges having participated in some of these behaviors when younger but believes Christians should allow the Holy Spirit to guide them into spiritual maturity instead of relying on gimmicks or manipulation.

Uploaded by

Felipe Sabino
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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15/2/2014 9 Bad Charismatic Habits We Need to Break

9 Bad Charismatic Habits We Need to Break


9:00AM EDT 4/24/2013 J. LEE GRADY
I
love
the
Holy

Spirit’s gifts. But some of our “Spirit-filled” practices are questionable.


Anybody who has read this column before knows I’m unapologetically charismatic in my theology. I love
the Holy Spirit, and I believe the New Testament calls us to make room for manifestations of the Spirit.
The apostle Paul gave guidelines for the gift of prophecy; he saw dramatic healings; he experienced
supernatural visions; and he told church leaders not to forbid speaking in tongues (see 1 Cor. 14:39).
Paul was the epitome of charismatic spirituality.
But not everything we do today in the name of the Holy Spirit is a valid expression of His power. Over
the past four decades, we charismatics have invented some lame practices that not only make us look
silly but actually turn people off to our message. I figure we started these behaviors because of
immaturity—and I can laugh about them because I’ve done some of them myself. But it’s 2013, and I
think God expects more of us.
I realize this can be sensitive if you have one or more of these bad habits. But please pray over this list
before you blast me for being critical.
1. The body slam. There are times when people feel woozy or weak-kneed when the Holy Spirit
touches them. I leave room for that. But can we please stop pushing people to the floor? Any minister
who hits, shoves or slaps people at a church altar is being extremely rude. He is also relying on his own
swagger to demonstrate he has the power to “slay” people in the Spirit. If you pushed someone to the
floor, God had nothing to do with it.
2. The courtesy drop. We’ve all done it. Many people fall while receiving prayer because they figure
it’s the spiritual thing to do. But there is nothing in Scripture that says you have to fall to receive healing
or an anointing. You receive by faith. It’s perfectly fine to stay standing. And you may actually protect
yourself from getting stepped on!
3. The song that never ends. I used to love the chorus “Let It Rain” until some churches drove this
tune into the ground by playing it 159 times in a row. After the first 30 go-rounds, I want to scream,
“Change the channel!” God doesn’t listen to us more intently if we are repetitive, as if we were doing a
rain dance to make Him hear us. It’s OK to end the song and start a new one!
4. The amateur flag corp. Banners and flags became a hot worship trend in the 1980s, and pageantry
can still be effective when practiced and performed for an audience. But where did we get the idea that
waving flags, sticks or other sharp objects within two feet of people’s faces was a smart idea?
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15/2/2014 9 Bad Charismatic Habits We Need to Break

5. The wannabe telethon offering. I have been in meetings where the preacher gave a 25-minute
offering sermon (before the main message) and then asked everyone in the audience to parade to the
front for the next 15 minutes. Yes, giving money to God is worship. But when the offering takes longer
than any other part of the service, I start to wonder if we are being taken for a ride.
6. The sermon with seven endings. Speaking of money, I wish I had a dollar for every time a
preacher has said, “I’m starting to close.” I don’t mind a long sermon, and I’ve been guilty of going over
my time limit. But you are flat-out lying if you tell an audience you’re finishing when you actually still have
half an hour to go.
7. The praise-a-go-go dancers. I love to dance in church—and it’s normal in many of the ethnic
congregations I visit. But I fear we unleashed a monster when we encouraged amateur dance teams to
hop around on stage in unitards—in front of visitors! It’s not unspiritual to ask: “Will this look goofy?”
8. The ear-shattering amp. When the early church prayed, the buildings shook. Today we shake our
buildings by turning up the volume of our sound systems. You know they are too loud when church
members pop in earplugs during worship. “Charismatic” does not mean “loud,” and our spirituality is
not measured in decibels.
9. The "jump-start" glossalalia. I will never apologize for the gift of tongues, and I believe it is a
wonderful gift every Christian can have. But someone got the idea they could “prime the pump” by
asking people to repeat certain phrases in order to uncork a prayer language. Asking someone to say, “I
tie my bow tie, I tie my bow tie,” is not going to prompt a miracle. Quit manipulating the Holy Spirit.
The apostle Paul, in laying down guidelines for charismatic gifts, told the Corinthians, “When I became
a man, I put away childish things” (1 Cor. 13:11). As we embrace the Spirit’s work, let’s allow Him to
guide us into maturity so we don’t foolishly squander His power.
J. Lee Grady is the former editor of Charisma and the director of The Mordecai Project
(themordecaiproject.org). You can follow him on Twitter at @leegrady. He is the author of 10 Lies the
Church Tells Women, 10 Lies Men Believe, The Holy Spirit Is Not for Sale, Fearless Daughters of the
Bible and other books.
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