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by Bill Randles, Believers In
Grace Ministries
Tommy Tenney is a third generation United Pentecostal minister
who bills himself and his growing following as a "God Chaser."
He is the author of a best-selling book entitled THE GODCHASERS.
He has also served as a pastor for ten years and has spent another
17 years as a "revivalist." According to the blurb
on the back cover of his recent book, he has been used to both
"Spark and fuel the fires of revival." It also states
that although, "He has experienced the miraculous...more
importantly he knows the value of intimacy with and humility
before God."
The book, THE GODCHASERS, is a call to those who consider
themselves to be hungry for the manifested presence of God. It
begins with a narrative which should strike a chord with those
who have been radicalized by experience based religion, a la
Toronto and Pensacola. In the chapter entitled "The Day
I Almost Caught Him," (Him referring to God) Tenney describes
a service he held in Houston Texas, in which upon the reading
of II Chronicles 7:14, and an exhortation by the host pastor
to "seek God's face rather than just His hand," a loud
thunderclap sounded and split the pulpit into two pieces!!!
From there, the usual "river" manifestations exploded
across the sanctuary, slayings in the Spirit, profuse cryings,
and even the bodies of businessmen stacked up like cordwood!!
"Businessmen tore their ties off, and they were literally
stacked on top of one another, in the most horribly harmonious
sound of repentance you ever heard."
By his own confession, Tenney had been up to that point merely
a professional revivalist,
"We've talked, preached and taught about revival until
the church is sick of hearing about it. That's what I did for
a living, I preached revivals, or so I thought. Then God broke
out of His box and ruined everything when He showed up."
Tenney echoes an earlier prophecy of the late John Wimber by
saying, "God is coming back to repossess His church."
But his premise is that the only thing that hinders God from
"repossessing His church," is the lack of spiritual
hunger, which Tenney and others seem to interpret as a hunger
for the "manifested presence" of God. Thus the book
THE GOD CHASERS, is aimed at those who are,
"...[T]ired of trying to pass out tracts, knock on doors,
and make things happen... we've been trying to make things happen
for a long time. Now he wants to make it happen!" (Page
12)
Part of the problem according to Tenney, comes down to the
predictable assertion that too many of us have been "Camped
out on some dusty truth known to everyone."
There's the problem, "Dusty Truth!" But, of course
Tenney would lead us and guide us into his alternative to "Dusty
Truth," what he calls REVELATION,
"The difference between the Truth of God and revelation
is very simple. Truth is where God has been. Revelation is where
God is. Truth is God's tracks. It is His trail, His path, but
it leads to what? It leads to Him. Perhaps the masses of people
are happy to know where God's been, but true God Chasers are
not content to study God's trail, His truths, they want to know
Him. They want to know where He is and what He is doing right
now.....There is a vast difference between present Truth and
Past Truth. I am afraid that most of what the church has studied
is past Truth, and very little of what we know is present Truth."
(From the introduction)
Tenney's call for an abandonment of "past Truth"
in favor of his more relevant "Present truth" is far
from original. He is only the latest in a long line of teachers
who have tapped into the discontentment that many have in this
entertainment age, subtly denigrating the sound teaching of the
Word of God, in order to promote the latest expression of experienced
based religion. As the children of Israel tired of manna, in
their day, the modern children of God "Will not endure sound
doctrine" either. Tenney, like many others these days, is
adept at ridiculing teaching and Bible study, as though they
were as irrelevant as a game of "Trivial Pursuit."
"It is simply not enough to know about God. We have churches
filled with people who can win Bible trivia contests but who
don't know Him." (Page 3)
So much for those Christians, off into "Dusty Truth,"
enamored by God's tracks, but what about the New Agers and occultists?
Tenney is sure that they have the purest of motives,
"You can't tell me they're not hungry for God when they
wear crystals around their necks, lay down hundreds of dollars
a day to listen to Guru's, and call psychics to the tune of billions
of dollars a year." (Page 2)
Of course these pure hearted seekers are only hindered by one
obstacle, in their search for God, the church! (I always thought
that it was the fact that "there is none that seeks after
God," that rather than seeking God, witches and occultists
and those who seek fortune tellers were in rebellion to God).
"They're hungry to hear from something that's beyond themselves,
something they are not hearing in the church of today. The bottom
line is that people are sick of the church because the church
has been somewhat less than the book has advertised." (Page
3)
"Naomi and her family have something in common with the
people who leave or totally avoid churches today--they left "that"
place and went somewhere else to find bread. I can tell you why
people are flocking to the bars, the clubs, and the psychics
by the millions. They are just trying to get by, they are just
trying to survive because the church has failed them. They looked,
or their parents and friends looked and reported, and the spiritual
cupboard was bare." (Pages 19-20)
The church is the one forcing people who are earnestly searching
for God out into the bars and clubs? What ever happened to, "They
knew God but would not glorify Him as God, neither were they
thankful...therefore they are without excuse?" Not so according
to Tenney, these goodhearted witches and occultists actually
came to church but found nothing, therefore they have had no
choice but to go into the occult! This kind of accusation will
always find a ready audience in our modern "seeker sensitive"
world, discontented and casting about for any scapegoat for their
sense of restlessness. The church is at fault!!!!!
Between the various personal experiences recounted by Tenney
and his attempts at whetting the spiritual appetites which the
book calls for, glimpses of the author's theology can be seen.
As we have already seen, Tenney holds to a curious view of the
Word of God as being "God's Tracks," "where God's
been," and "Past Truth." Interesting, but not
enough for the GOD Chasers. Tenney further denigrates the Word
of God and those who would insist on measuring all things by
it, in a very unusual and creative way, He calls the scripture
"Old Love Letters," at the same time, paying some homage
to them, yet at the same time rendering their present application
irrelevant.
"I'm afraid we have satiated our hunger for Him by reading
old love letters from him to the churches in the epistles of
the New Testament. These are good, holy and necessary, but we
never have intimacy with Him." (Page 15)
Tenney generously concedes that the scriptures are "good,
holy and necessary," but...(and there is a world of meaning
in that "but") by designating scripture to the status
of "Old Love Letters," he renders them inadequate for
present intimacy with God! Picture Paul relegating scripture
to the status of "Old Love Letters!!" Jesus never contrasted
"intimacy and power" with God as opposed to scripture,
He equated them! "Do ye not err? Not knowing the scripture
or the power of God?" Knowing and loving scripture is the
only way to begin to have intimacy with God, not the obstacle
to it! Of course there could be a problem of people being "hearers
of the Word and doers of it," but the answer is not to compare
scripture to "Old Love Letters" or worse yet, to relegate
scriptural knowledge to "being able to win a Bible Trivia
game." What is Tenney promoting? Perhaps the answer to this
can be found in the oft cited nugget of Charismatic wisdom,
"A man with experience is never at the mercy of a man
with only an argument...If we can lead people into the manifest
presence of God, all false theological houses of cards will tumble
down." (Page 20)
This saying, or some variation of it, is basically the underlying
assumption of the entire "River" revival, that experience
supersedes "doctrine," and that the Word alone is insufficient
for relationship with God.
Did the apostles believe this way? Did they ever "split
pulpits?" Did they constantly contrast Truth and intimacy?
Peter had the ultimate sensual religious encounter, He saw the
transfigured Jesus!!! But rather than contrast his experience
on the Holy mountain with those who are still "stuck in
some dusty truth," Peter commended us to the "more
sure Word of Prophecy, which you would do well to take heed unto."
Peter never held a laughing revival, nor did Paul ever refer
to himself as God's bartender. James never saw the need to put
loaves of bread on the altar so that it could soak up the anointing.
Nor did the apostles ever conduct the kind of spiritual warfare
Tenney and others proclaim in the name of "Taking their
cities for God,"
"I am after cities...Once while preaching at a conference...in
Portland, Oregon, I heard him [Frank Dimazio] mention something
that caught my attention. He said that a number of pastors in
the Portland area had united together to drive some stakes in
the ground at strategic places around the perimeter of their
region and the city and at every major intersection. The process
took them hours because they also prayed over those stakes, as
they were physical symbols marking a spiritual declaration and
demarcation line. I felt the stirring of the Holy Spirit so I
said, "Frank, if you'll provide the stakes, then I'll go
to the cities I feel called to and help the pastors stake out
that territory for God." (Page 102-103)
Is this another Toronto or Pensacola? I think Tenney and I
would probably disagree. I would say that this "intimacy"
that is being sought is of the same nature as that "presence"
that pilgrimages to Toronto and Pensacola has sought encounters
with. Tenney seems to allude to these earlier revivals on page
21, as being somewhat less than what he is promoting,
"People don't sense God's presence at our gatherings because
it is just not there sufficiently to register on our gauges...when
people get just a little touch of God mixed with a lot of something
that is not God, it inoculates them against the real thing. Once
they've been inoculated by a crumb of God's presence, then when
they say "God is really here," they say, "No,
I've been there, done that. I bought the T-shirt, and I didn't
find Him, it really didn't work for me". The problem was
that God was there all right, but not enough of Him. There was
no experience of meeting Him at the Damascus road. There was
no undeniable, overwhelming sense of His manifested presence."
(Page 21)
Tenney may well have made a point without realizing it. He
acknowledges that the experienced based revivals of our day,
in which sensual encounters with "the presence," tends
eventually towards a "been there done that" attitude,
as repeated mystical experiences lead into a kind of spiritual
"Law of Diminishing Returns." But the answer, according
to Tenney, is more of "IT." Toronto and Pensacola were
only crumbs, there's more of it in a purer form. Rodney Howard
Browne held forth to those who were weary of "dead religion"
a fresh touch of God, a drink on the "new wine."
Toronto came along and offered those same people an opportunity
to "soak in" the manifested anointing of God. Pensacola,
which in spite of denials to the contrary, is directly descended
from the Toronto Blessing, (Steve Hill, bringing "IT"
back with him from Holy Trinity Brompton Church, the Toronto
Church of England)offered a purer touch revival than Toronto,
giving more emphasis on repentance. But to Tenney, these were
just crumbs, what does he offer? More of God? These are all the
same claims, the same clichés, the same criticisms of
doctrine, and even in many cases the same denigrations of the
Word. I predict that as in the other "waves," this
also will leave many emptier even than they were before. Unfortunately
this will only open them up to the next excursion into mystical
experienced based religion.
Orthodox Christianity has held that true Hunger for God is
valid and can be validly met through seeking Him, fasting, prayer,
a renewal of obedience to Him a going back to wherever it was
that we left Him. Signs and wonders are not God nor do they satisfy.
Even fantastic signs such as splitting pulpits, slaying whole
crowds in the spirit, businessmen laying around like cordwood,
none of this necessarily has anything to do with truly hungering
for God.
Finally, is the GODCHASERS really about the kind of hunger
for God that perhaps Tozer wrote of, or Spurgeon, Wesley, Nee
and the other giants of the Faith of days gone by? You be the
judge. But lest there be any doubt that some other kind of hunger
is at work here, consider that the last page of this Destiny
Image book is an advertising page featuring the full line of
GODCHASERS products, The GODCHASER hat is available for a mere
$17.99 and the God chaser shirt is available in four sizes for
a mere $16.99, and for those who truly want to attest to this
new hunger, the GODCHASERS license plate is available for a mere
$6.99!!!!! |