Posted
by
J. Lee Grady of Charisma in December 2008
Looking back at what happened in Lakeland, I wonder if we
can agree on what went wrong.
It has been four months since Canadian evangelist Todd Bentley fled
the scene of Florida's Lakeland Revival amid rumors of a moral failure.
When Bentley vanished in August, the crowds thinned, God TV stopped
broadcasting services, the meetings eventually shut down and Bentley's
worship leader took the popular music of the revival on the road.
Meanwhile, many people were left scratching their heads. Some were
angry with Bentley for leaving his wife. Some were confused because
their faith had been energized during the six-month-long experience.
Many charismatic ministry leaders defended the revival, saying that
it was never supposed to focus on a man. Others blamed Bentley's
critics for the revival's demise.
"Ministers
of the gospel need both godly character and powerful anointing.
Why did we ever settle for the idea that
we should have
one without the other."
Late
last week the board of directors of Fresh Fire Ministries which
Bentley resigned from in August released a lengthy
statement
to update its supporters on Bentley's condition. The letter confirmed
that (1) Bentley is "resolute in his intentions" to divorce
his wife, Shonnah and that "he admits to being 100% responsible
for the divorce"; (2) his relationship with his former intern
is ongoing; (3) the evangelist drank inappropriately during the revival;
and (4) he has yet to enter into a clear system of accountability
with Christian leaders who have offered to help him.
The six-page statement, which defended the impact
of the Lakeland Revival, did not excuse Bentley's behavior. "We believe there
are currently no biblical grounds for Todd to leave his wife and
children," the board members said. They added: "The nature
of the present relationship between Todd and his former staff member
is that of adultery."
Lakeland was a painful chapter in the history of our movement, not
just because such a highly visible preacher made such embarrassing
moral choices but also because Christian leaders never agreed on
what went wrong or how it could have been avoided. Now that the accident
scene is in our rearview mirror, I wonder if we can agree on at least
some points. Here are some lessons I hope we have learned by now:
Lesson #1: Accountability. Accountability. Accountability.
I wish just saying the word over and over could impress the concept
in our minds. Leaders must live according to biblical standards.
Period. Bentley's board admitted in their statement that after the
Lakeland meetings went into full swing, Bentley developed troubling
behavior patterns. That would have been the right time for someone
with apostolic courage to demand that Bentley step down for a season
until he got his spiritual life in order. If we really want New Testament
miracles and New Testament impact, maybe we should embrace New Testament
discipline.
Lesson #2: The one-man show is over.
New Testament ministry is about teams, not hotshots. Paul shared
the workload with Barnabas, Phoebe, Clement, Priscilla, Aquilla and
many others. And he protested when people tried to make him out to
be a god. When will we learn that the superstar syndrome actually
thwarts genuine revival because it causes audiences to focus on man
instead of Jesus?
I know there are those who insist that Bentley didn't want people
to notice him. But if that's true, why did he cover himself with
tattoos a few years ago, when he was in the ministry? I'm not a stickler
about tattoos, but in Bentley's case they definitely should have
been a red flag. Anyone who craves that much attention needs counseling
before they get on a stage.
Lesson #3: Chill out.
The Fresh Fire board, in last week's statement, admitted that one
of their biggest mistakes was allowing Bentley's meetings to go on
week after week without a break. Bentley tried to preach continually
without rest, and as a result he burned out. Most likely his staff
burned out too. No Sabbath, no time for family, no time to unwind.
No human being can keep such a schedule without imploding.
Isn't
this also true for the American church scene? Our rule has become, "The
show must go on." We are driven
to keep the seats full and the money coming in. The more we work,
the more we
grow so we have to work harder to maintain the growth and pay the
bills. The pace becomes more and more frantic until the engines fail
and the wheels fall off. Building God's way requires patience, pacing,
regular maintenance and plenty of downtime to receive His ongoing
guidance and grace.
Lesson #4: Character is more important than anointing.
Some revival groupies disagree with me on this. They're so desperate
for a display of miracles that they'll take a zap from someone who
has questionable morals or shoddy values. They don't mind who lays
hands on them as long as they are thrown to the floor while the crowd
cheers.
I love
revival too, and I've spent time on the floor soaking in God's
presence. I love the anointing. But please: Can you show me
in the Word of God that character is not required of leaders. The
Bible says imposters who work miracles will spend eternity in hell.
Working miracles does not win anyone brownie points with God. Ministers
of the gospel need both godly character and powerful anointing. Why
did we ever settle for the idea that we should have one without the
other?
Lesson #5: Lay hands on no man quickly.
Many of us are still grieving over the fact that a large number
of charismatic leaders stood on a stage in Lakeland in June and publicly
commissioned Bentley. Some praised him for his integrity and humility
while others prophesied about the nations he will evangelize and
the increased spiritual influence he will wield. Today those proclamations
(readily available on YouTube) seem hollow and embarrassing.
Some
who stood on that stage insist that God told them to do a public
commissioning service. One recently hinted to me that it was a mistake.
I'll let them sort that out. Personally, it saddens me that our movement
has been tarnished by what appears to be a serious lack of discernment.
In the crazy world of independent ministries which already lack proper
accountability, leaders should take the time to investigate a preacher
before commending him on international television.
Lesson #6: You can't have revival without repentance.
The word "revival" is thrown around loosely
these days. If a few people fall on the floor, get goose bumps
or see gold dust,
we are ready to christen it a revival and put it on television as
soon as possible. After all, if large crowds gather, it must be God!
I'm tired of imitations. History shows that genuine revival is more
than a bunch of blessed bodies in a pile. We need more than angel
feathers, emotional euphoria and limp pep talks about getting high
on Jesus. We need the strong Word of God that convicts hearts, demands
repentance, slays sin and has the power to produce converts who will
withstand temptation.
With Lakeland behind us, let's celebrate the testimonies that came
out of it, enjoy the songs we sang during it and pray for the restoration
of the man God used to start it. Then, let's learn from our mistakes
and press on to better things.
J. Lee Grady is editor of Charisma.