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Healing
News
by Francis MacNutt
taken from the Mar/Apr 2002 issue
   
The months of December and January were
extraordinary for us at CHM in many ways – not so much because
of what we planned but because of the people that God sent here
to bless us and give us direction.
For example, on just one day we had lunch with a couple
in the leadership of “Focus on the Family” (from Colorado),
and then had a two-hour meeting with the administrator of a
large Catholic hospital here in Jacksonville that is
brainstorming on building a spiritual center for staff and
patients as part of their expansion plans.
What seems clearest is that God is pushing
us to work with an amazing variety of Christian groups.
For example, in January (7-10), I was part of the annual
meeting of the Charismatic Concerns Committee (CCC).
This group of about 40 has been quietly meeting since
1971 when Dennis Bennett invited a group of diverse leaders
(including myself) from the newly begun charismatic renewal to
help these national leaders get to know each other.
Among those leaders (for those of you who remember back
that far) were David duPlessis, the “Fort Lauderdale Five”
(such as Derek Prince, Don Basham, Bob Mumford, and Charles
Simpson). The group
was small enough that we really got to know and esteem each
other. Also, the
talks were not recorded, so everyone could be really honest
about the difficulties we aired about one another’s
ministries. The
meeting was also meant to sort out the disagreements between
these strong leaders who came from differing religious
backgrounds.
For example, we held a discussion on
baptism: were people who had only undergone infant
baptism by sprinkling (rather than by immersion) really saved?
Some controversies actually resulted in modifications in
how various ministries were exercised; for instance, Lutherans,
Episcopalians and Catholics had major problems with independent
Pentecostals who took everybody who had only been baptized as an
infant down to the hotel swimming pool to re-baptize them.
Many of these difficulties were worked out and the
relationships that were built up in those days lasted.
More important, we learned from each other.
For example, I learned a great amount about the
deliverance ministry from the experiences of Don Basham and
Derek Prince.
Out of this group developed another larger
group, NARSC (North American Renewal Service Committee)
representing all the major denominations that had charismatic
renewal growing in their churches.
In turn, NARSC sponsored the famous gathering of 40,000
in Arrowhead Football Stadium in Kansas City in 1977 – which
was the high-water mark in charismatic renewal in the U.S.
That Kansas City conference was followed by half-a-dozen
other large conferences, the last one being in St. Louis in June
2001.
Well, at this year’s annual CCC meeting,
January 7-10, I was elected chairman, with Rev. Scott Kelso, a
United Methodist pastor from Columbus, Ohio, being elected
administrator.
The significance of this for CHM is simply
that I was elected largely because we at CHM have been involved
with such a wide variety of Christian groups involved in
renewal. The ministry of CHM is more than just a ministry of physical
and inner healing; increasingly, we – with many others – are
being used to heal the divisions among the various churches and
denominations – a ministry of reconciliation and
healing the broken body of Christ.
Then, out of this January meeting of the
CCC came an invitation to attend the first meeting of
“Together 2002,” gathering a group of prominent Pentecostal
leaders, to be held April 29-May 2, 2002, in Washington, D. C.
This meeting will be much like the CCC meeting, except
that it will be for “Classical Pentecostal” leaders who
typically have been separate from the so-called “Charismatics.”
These are all people that “charismatics” seldom have
a chance to meet.
For those of you who don’t know much
about the history of Pentecostalism, the “Pentecostals” are
those who belong to churches founded in the early 1900’s, like
the Assemblies of God and the black Pentecostal church, the
Church of God in Christ. These churches all emphasize the Baptism of the Spirit and
originated in revivals, such as Cane Ridge, Kentucky, and Azusa
Street. Typically,
they were forced to leave their Protestant churches and felt
that Protestant churches were filled with lost people; their
prejudice against the Catholic Church, the “Whore of
Babylon,” was stronger yet.
Then, when members of the mainline churches
experienced the Baptism of the Spirit, the so-called classical
Pentecostals didn’t trust this second wave, the “Charismatic
Renewal.” These
charismatics featured leaders in all the main churches, such as
Dennis Bennett (Episcopalian), Tommy Tyson (Methodist), Brick
Bradford and Bob Whiteacre (Presbyterian), and Kevin Ranaghan,
Ralph Martin and Steve Clark (Roman Catholic).
The Pentecostals, by and large, stayed away from us and
those who crossed the line, such as David DuPlessis, were
ostracized.
So the CCC is composed mainly of “Charismatics,”
who have been meeting for 30 years, while this new group,
“Together 2002,” are mainly Pentecostal, which includes
people like Rev. Jack Hayford (Foursquare Gospel Church), Ken
and Gloria Copeland, and Rev. Tom Trask (head of the Assemblies
of God).
I give you this brief explanation because
it is one of the many important and emotional Christian
divisions that most people don’t know about, but the effects
touch millions of lives.
The good news to share with you is that God
seems to be breaking down this major division among Christians
and we rejoice to be a small part of it all.
The convenor of “Together 2002,” Dr.
Robert Fisher, in his invitation writes that these leaders
“believe this time together could well be a moment of
unity-building for the Pentecostal/charismatic movement.
A problem with relationships is that most leaders know
one another by name, position and gifting, but not on a personal
basis. … Without doubt this will be a historic gathering.
It will be the first time that such a diverse group of
the highest-level leaders have come together on an intentional
basis with no other agenda than to spend time getting to know
one another better. …”
Judith and I feel honored to be invited to this small
inaugural meeting. Putting
this invitation together with the CCC, plus our invitation to
take part in the November meeting in Rome convoked by the
Vatican, we see a new quickening, in which the Holy Spirit seems
to be bringing Christians together in a very real way –
bringing those together who have been separated for decades
(“Pentecostals” and “charismatics”) and for centuries
(Catholics and Protestants).
We are excited to be a small part in all of this!
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