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Peter McAllister Positive Confession is the belief that if a believer speaks
"spiritual" or "faith-filled" words then
he can have what he says. Unfortunately, this influence has invaded
the church and continues to cause much turmoil and confusion.
Many of the teachers of the word-faith movement believe that
words are so powerful that they can influence the physical and
spiritual worlds. For example: When "faith-filled" spiritual words are spoken (as
words of power), they can alter the physical and spiritual world.
Capps says, "You see there is more to it than just saying
it. The words must originate from the inner man where spiritual
power is released through words." What Capps is alluding to in the above statement is his teaching that since God, "by His faith" (using words) spoke this physical world into existence; the believer, using faith, can do the same. That is, the believer can speak things into existence. However, God's word is already "quick and powerful" (Hebrews 4:12), and it is referred to as the "Word of Life" (Phillipians 2:16). It is not necessary to activate it by speaking words of faith as though it were asleep or dead! Rather, it is by hearing the "living" word that one is brought to salvation through faith in Christ. (Romans 10:17) A number of the prosperity teachers believe that the spiritual world controls and continually forms the physical world. So, if one can learn to control the spiritual world, then he can learn to control the physical world as well. This teaching then becomes the foundation for securing individual prosperity. That is why in Releasing the Ability of God, Capps states, "You can have what you say! (because) the powerful force of the spiritual world that creates the circumstances around us is controlled by the words of the mouth. This force comes from inside us; the confession of our mouth will cause you to possess it" (pp. 98-99, parenthesis mine). This is why he teaches, "Discipline your vocabulary," and "today your word is god over your circumstances" (pp. 101-104). Capps also teaches that the power within a Christian, within one's spirit, functions according to unchangeable laws. He says "These principles of faith are based on spiritual laws. They work for whosoever will apply these laws" (The Tongue, p. 103). D. R. McConnell, in his book, A Different Gospel, directly traces the origin the spiritual laws taught in positive confession to the metaphysics of E.W. Kenyon, a man of 50-60 years ago whose theology was that of Pentecostal Christian Science (A Different Gospel, pp. 3-56). McConnell records Kenneth Copeland in The Laws of Prosperity (p. 98, 101) as saying, "You can have what you say! In fact, what you are saying is exactly what you are getting now. If you are living in poverty and lack and want, change what you are saying. It will change what you have. Discipline your vocabulary. God will be obligated to meet your needs because of His word. If you stand firmly on this, your needs will be met" (Ibid., p. 173). McConnell further states, that E.W. Kenyon's New Thought classmate, Ralph Waldo Trine, attributes the confession of prosperity to "Occult power." He says that "Trine believed that thought is a force, and it has Occult power of unknown proportions when rightly used and wisely directed" (Ibid., p. 174). The usage of Occult powers is, of course, a practice that the Word-Faith teachers would publicly reject. Of course, this is not to say that those offering these teachings are Occultists. They are teachers who may never have thought through the implications of the practices they advocate. They may be unaware of the similarities between certain aspects of positive confession and Occulict practices. Nevertheless, the similarities do exist, and these practices are neither Biblical nor Christian. John Ankerberg's issue of News and Views, June 1988, p. 1,
reports that these words are used in religious rituals to influence
both the spirit world and the material world. The report quotes
Occult magician David Conway discussing the power of magical
words to affect these worlds: Occultists, of course, have long claimed the true inner nature of man is powerful, capable of exercising divine ability. This is why New Ager Benjamin Creme says, for example, "One doesn't pray to oneself, one prays to the God within. The thing is to learn to invoke that energy which is the energy of God. Prayer and worship as we know it today will gradually die out and men will be trained to invoke the (inner) power of deity" (The Reappearance of Christ and the Masters of Wisdom, pp. 135-136, parenthesis mine). The reason that positive confessionists can place so much emphasis on the inner man and his divine power is that they think the believer is a god. Kenneth Copeland says, "You don't have a god in you, you are one" (Copeland's sermon tape The Force of Love). And Kenneth Hagin says, "The believer is as much an incarnation of God as Jesus Christ" (Hagin, Word of Faith, p. 14). To the positive confessionist, scripture passages such as Proverbs 18:21, "Death and Life are in the power of the tongue;" and James 3:8-10 are taken as proof of this doctrine, because they believe as "little gods" they have the same power as God through their own words. Is it any wonder that Charles Capps says "The confession of your mouth even after you have prayed correctly will determine whether or not you receive. You can release the ability of God through the words of your mouth" (Releasing the Ability of God, 1978, pp. 93, 96). For Christians words and faith are important, but there is
a limit to what words can do. [Question:] Yes I agree with you that Positive Confession in itself is not a good thing. In fact it has roots in the demonic. However when it came to Britain it had the effect of causing 'victims' to see that the gospel was GOOD NEWS and they did not have to sit under their problems. But please read the second paragraph of the statement I sent you. [Reply:] Yes, I read your other statement but I still can`t understand how you said that Positive Confession coming to Britain it transformed some dead churches and struggling Christians. How can Error transform a church in a good sense? The Positive Confession brought nothing but error and heartache into the church. The Good News of the Gospel is that Christ Died For Our Sins. It is not that we can have what ever we want just by confessing it. I can`t understand how you can say that it done good. That is like saying when the occult came to Britain it made people realise about the Good News. The Positive confession from the start brought people into error nothing else. (December 2001) |