Thursday, September 28, 2006

less of driscoll on spiritual gifts

Ok - I've just about run out of gas on Mark Driscoll's teaching on Spiritual Gifts. I expected him to be cool and to bust open Scripture with amazing insight. He delivered on the former and missed on the latter. He spends about 60% hammering the abuses in the charismatic camp, 35% talking about gifts as though they are personality traits, and about 5% saying something informative but not revelatory about them.

The warnings against abuse is appropriate but excessive. He talks about the abuses as if they are very common - this doesn't match my experience. Additionally, the warnings aren't solid, Scripture based warnings. For example, his counter to the prosperity message was that Jesus was homeless and was murdered. While I don't support the prosperity message, I would have liked for him to (1) hit on some of the good points that have come out of that movement to counter the gloom and doom doctrine that is out there and then to (2) address the excesses/error based on some clear Scripture.

And only once did I catch a warning about an abuse in the anti-charismatic side. Net - too much warning time for my taste and seemed to pander to aniti-charismatics.

I've already discussed the gifts v. personality point in a separate post. I don't agree.

And finally there's the 5% but that's not so much about the gifts at all - it's about Jesus. I love that but it's not enough. If he wasn't going to do better on the Spiritual Gifts teaching, he could have stuck with teaching Jesus. I'm good with that.

To quote Driscoll, "we don't chase miracles, we chase Jesus and let the miracles chase us."

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2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Rick,
You remarked that your experience was that abuses of the charismatic gifts are not common. That may be true in your experience. However, if a person's only exposure to the Charismatics is on TBN, that person would likely come to a completely different conclusion.
Randy B.

ricki said...

You could be right - I don't watch TBN - I cannot get past the style differences.

So even though I would suspect you are correct, do we really know of much TBN abuse of do we just not like the way they look, act, sound, etc.?

My snapshot of them is like my snapshot of many pockets of Christendom. That is, I really do not know the theology behind what they say, the intent of what I'm watching isn't to be an exhaustive theological teaching, and therefore I could quickly make judgement (and often do) without sufficient information.

reftagger