No Laughing Matter Larry Thomas October 10, 1994 Audiotape Transcript .....We're going to get into the little discussion tonight of this new revival. How many of you have ever heard a little something, either through television or magazines, books, or something, about the revival that's supposedly going on? Let me see your hands. Okay. And most of you are familiar that two of the most common manifestations during this current "revival," and I put that word in quotation marks, is Holy Laughter, well, laughter, and being slain in the Spirit? We'll take a look at this revival historically, and from a biblical perspective tonight, and see if these things are what their proponents are saying they are. Is this really revival? When things like this happened before in church history, and rarely has anything happened like this, except in the last 100-150 years. There's no evidence of anything like this happening at Pentecost, in the first century, the fourth century, the ninth century, the fifteenth century. The first evidence of anything like this occurred about 150 years ago, in the revivals in Europe in 1850 and then around Azusa Street, and things began to happen there. Most of the time, when this manifestation of laughing or barking or growling, it's usually been considered by the orthodox, Christian community to be demonic. Now, this is historically. How many of you read Jessie Penn Louis's book, War On The Saints? It's a good book. I wouldn't say it's the best book I ever read on warfare and Pentecostal absurdities and obsessions, but it's a pretty good book. I want to read a little quote here. This is referring to the same kind of things we're hearing about today that took place that took place in 1904, and what she has to say in her book. "A strange element comes in, possibly only recognizable to some with keen spiritual vision, or else plainly obvious to all. Perhaps the speaker begins to pray quietly and calmly, with a pure spirit, but suddenly the voice is raised. It sounds hollow. It has a metallic tone. The tension of the meeting increases and overwhelming, overmastering power falls upon it, and no one thinks of resisting what appears to be such a manifestation of God. The majority of those present may have no idea of the mixture which has crept in. Some fall on the ground, unable to bear the strained emotion or effect upon their minds, some are thrown down by some supernatural power, others cry out in ecstasy. The speaker leaves the platform, passes by a young man who becomes unconscious or becomes conscious of a feeling of intoxication which does not leave his senses for some time. Others laugh with the exuberance of intoxicating joy. Some have had real spiritual help and blessing through the Word of God being expounded err before this climax came and during the pure outflow of the Holy Spirit. Consequently, they accept these strange outworkings as from God, because in the first stage of the meeting their needs have been truly met of Him and they cannot discern between the two separate manifestations coming through the same channel." What's being said is sometimes the service may start out good. The Word of God is being preached, the truth, and people are being blessed by it. Their needs are being met. God, by His Spirit, is ministering to people. But there is those occasions, whether an opening is given to demonic influences, or just manipulation by the speaker, or whatever, the Spirit of the Lord kind of leaves the service because He's not going to battle with the spirit of man, and men begin to manipulate the service and people accept whatever manifestations they see and feel and hear and observe around the altar based on what they perceived and knew to be truth at the beginning. You see, that's where spiritual discernment comes in, is knowing that the manifestations of God's Spirit, just like the teaching and preaching of the Word have to be from the Bible and fit with biblical orthodoxy, the manifestations of the Spirit have to do likewise. There has to be some connection between the two. And what's happening today, and a personal one with me, in this revival that's going on, very little proof is being preached. But if there was some truth being preached, and people were really having their needs met, really coming under conviction of the Holy Spirit, that is soon swept out, so the manifestations and the excitement can take place, because, you see, people don't come to be convicted. People don't come to hear the Word of God, and have their souls and their hearts set free, they come for the experiences. They come for the altar service, where all these things happen. Let me read from an article in Charisma Magazine this past month. Richard Lovell, who is a professor and an evangelical historian at Gordon Cromwell Seminary, talks about similar manifestations that took place in the last couple of centuries. He says, Jonathan Edwards said that the involuntary stuff is not evidence of grace and really does you no good. But the involuntary stuff doesn't necessarily invalidate the work of the Spirit, either. Some critics said the jerks, the barking and all the slain in the Spirit phenomena was just mass hysteria. The consensus in opinion when this happened in Kentucky and the Cain Ridge Revival in the 1850s was that this was demonic manifestations. Now, those who were involved in the revival, those organizers and proponents, said this is the latest move of God. But those who went and observed and those who knew the Word of God, saw this as being demonic manifestations. Historically, these kind of things have been demonic in nature. When Jimmy Swaggart took his crusade to South America in 198_, was it 1986, Kevin? Late '86 or early '87, huge stadium in Argentina, 80,000 people filling the stadium every night, and during the worship service, during the preaching, there were literally hundreds of people in this congregation who would begin to laugh hysterically and throw themselves down on the ground. They would howl like dogs, they would bark like dogs, they would roar like lions, they would make all kinds of wild sounds, and when these things began to happen, the ushers went and physically restrained them, took them out of the coliseum to a tent outside, and they cast the devil out of them. But now, when you do that, it's evidence that the Holy Ghost is doing something great in your life. Now, which is true? Well, the best way to do it is, do you recall anywhere in the Scriptures reading that, let's say the night of Jesus' resurrection, when He came through the walls, the disciples hiding in an upper room for fear of the Jews, and He breathed on them and said "Receive ye the Holy Spirit." Did you remember reading where any of them were slain in the Spirit? Did any of them begin to get on all fours and bark like dogs? Did they laugh hysterically? What about at Pentecost, when the Spirit was poured out for the first time? Do we see anything in there about them laughing or barking or roaring like a lion? Do you find any place in the epistles, any place in the book of Acts where people who were come upon by the Holy Spirit, baptized by the Holy Ghost, manifested these kind of things? No. The only spiritual reference they are giving today for this manifestation is the upper room experience. They'd say when they came down from the upper room, some of the people in town turned to Peter and said "Peter, what's the matter with your friends? It's only nine o'clock in the morning and they're drunk." Because of that the leaders of this new revival are saying the reason they thought they were drunk was because they were staggering around and laughing hysterically. I don't remember laughter being one of the signs of the outpouring of the Spirit. There were cloven tongues of fire, they spoke in other tongues and other dialects, they were imbued with power, they had "Boldness Peter," who denied the Lord three times, now could stand publicly, knowing that his life was still in danger from the Romans and the Jews, and he could stand boldly and preach the Word of God to thousands of people. There's evidences of what happened when the Spirit was poured out, but nowhere is there evidence that they acted drunk. I think what the Scripture meant -- I mean, drunk like staggering around and hilariously laughing -- I believe what the Scripture means when it says they thought they were drunk is because they couldn't understand their speech. You know, if you go, it's like when us Yankees moved down here 8 or 9 years ago and began to listen to some of you folks talk, I thought you was all drunk. Couldn't understand a word you were saying, until I developed an ear. That's what's happening there. They heard these people speaking in unfamiliar words and unfamiliar languages, and they thought at first, you know -- how many of you have ever tried to talk to a drunk? Man, it's hard, 'cause they only have half-thoughts, half-sentences, and they slur the words. You can't understand them. You have to ask them to repeat it all the time and listen close, and I think this is why they thought they were drunk. They couldn't understand the words and the phrases that were coming out of these people. It wasn't because they were drunk in the Spirit, or drunk, acting silly, laughing hilariously. But that's the only bit of Scripture they have to suggest that this is, in fact, biblical. There's a similar thing going on outside the church, in the world. Norman Cousins, who's a world-renown globalist, New Ager, probably the guru of the Human Potential movement. One of his basic therapies for getting people out of their depression and everything else is laughter therapy. He gets them to laughing hysterically. Now it may be just human, you know, there's a certain amount of release, you know. How many of you like to laugh? I love it. It's my favourite activity, next to eating. Laughter's good, and it makes you feel good. There's an emotional release. There's nothing wrong with laughter. But to say that it's a manifestation of the Holy Ghost, to say it's an evidence of the infilling of the Holy Spirit in your life, to say that if you're not laughing, as some have said, you're not saved, is stupid. But that's what's being said. Did I mention last time what Straiter said? I don't remember. Carl Straiter, Lakeland Church, I heard him say this on television. That if you're not experiencing the power of God like this, rolling around laughing and barking, you're not saved! He didn't say you're missing out on something good. He said you're not saved! Anytime we take any manifestation and add it to being born again by the blood of the Lamb, we've done a terrible injustice to the Scripture. When we say you must speak in tongues to get into heaven, we've broken God's commandment about adding to the Scriptures. When we say you have to roll around and laugh to get into heaven, or to be a part of what God's doing, to be a part of the church, that's a lie. You see, these men are not only deceivers, they're liars! You can't believe how fast this thing is spreading. It's engulfed most of what we call the civilized world, you know, the old countries and Europe and Central and South America and the United States. It's spread faster than any other phenomenon ever. I want to look at this, at how rapidly it's spread. I think I mentioned this the other night. It's not a sovereign move of God like we saw at Azusa Street, for God was moving on people in California, He was also moving on people in south Alabama. He was also moving on people in England. He was doing things in the far east. And there was no communications. This revival is not like that. It's being spread by audiotapes, and videotapes, and messages. And there are pastors literally -- it's hard to get an airline ticket into Toronto nowadays, 'cause the pastors are going there to experience what is called the "Toronto Blessing," and I'll share with you why they are calling it the "Toronto Blessing" in a few minutes. They want to go, they see it, experience it, and then they run back and try to introduce it to their church. It's not being spread silently. It's not the winds of God's Spirit blowing across the land. It's men going and learning a gimmick, a technique, a new marketing ploy, and taking it back and introducing it to their people and telling them, manipulating, intimidating their people, "if you're not willing to get in this latest move of God, there's the door. That's how serious it's getting. I want to compare this, look at the difference between this and previous revivals. Previous revivals. The Welsh Revival, Azusa Revival, was primarily unsaved people coming to know Christ. I agree that the church has to be revived before there's really going to be a lot of outward evangelism. But unsaved people, towns were changed. In the past revivals, slavery was abolished, child labour was outlawed, there were changes, not only within the church, but within the community. But most of all, the best sign of revival down through the ages has been a great multitude of people have come to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ. Now today they're saying "well, people are being saved in these meetings." If ten thousand people are coming to the altars to laugh and to do their other things, one out of ten thousand may truly be getting saved, and that's what we said earlier; they were responding to enough of the truth that got through them and their hunger for God that they got saved in spite of what happened. But today this revival, and there's not that much emphasis on soul- winning. Souls are changed, lives are changed, people come to know Christ once they come under conviction. I've listened to many, many tapes of this Rodney Howard- Browne, and others who have followed him, and the preaching that he does prior to the altar services which go on anywhere from three to six hours. There's no conviction being, there's very little Word of God being preached. But none that would bring sinners under conviction. It's just enough of the Word, a brief little message to prepare the people for the move of the Spirit. Someone did tell him that, you know, the Spirit comes in response, after the Word is preached, but if the Word is not preached sincerely and honestly and truthfully, whatever spirit comes and manifests itself cannot be the Holy Spirit. If the truth isn't preached, I guarantee you the manifestations will not be the Holy Spirit of God. I was in Canada one time and we just about, I thought we'd talk Benny Hinn into the ground outside the church, every bit of his false doctrine with everybody, and one gentleman got up after an hour of this and he said, "well, you may disagree with his teaching, but you got to admit that the Spirit of God really works in his service." And I wanted to say, "didn't you listen to what I just said?" If the man gets up and preaches that he's messiah of the earth today, which he does, that God's plan is for everybody to be skinny, good-looking and rich, that Jesus was a demoniac, He became demon-possessed on the cross and had to go into hell and be born again of the Spirit Himself, He was just a man and not God, when he preaches lies and heresies like that, do you believe for a moment that the Spirit of God comes into the service and blesses people and blows people over, and ministers to people. If that's the Spirit of God, we have no chance. If the Spirit of God honours lies as well as truth, how will we ever know what's true? But the Holy Spirit is the Spirit of Truth Who will lead us into all truth and He will not for one instant condone the preaching of such heresy. But the same thing's happening today. Just a little bit of the Word, you know. All heresy has to have a little bit of truth mixed in. If you're going to poison rats in your barn, you don't just set out a box of rat poison. You've got to mix it in something the rats will eat. But it does its work just the same way. There's a little bit of truth coming out, but a whole lot of heresy, a whole lot of poison. The things that we're seeing today in this so-called revival, these manifestations of laugher and barking and all these other things, being slain in the Spirit; even when these things cropped up in the past, they were the exception rather than the rule. It didn't happen to everybody. They talk about, and Rodney Howard- Browne likes to point out -- it's interesting to me, he likes to point out historical things when they serve his purpose, but when someone says "but wait a minute, most people thought that revival was of the devil," and he says "well, you can't rely on history. If it works for him, take it, but if it doesn't -- and he points out, and I read in this article again, Howard-Browne cites the famous 1801 Cain Ridge Revival in Bourbon County, Kentucky as a foreshadowing of what is being seen today. It says "anywhere from 10,000 to 25,000 ruffian frontier folk were said to have gathered along a log meeting house for the unusual outpouring. Accounts about the Cain Ridge declared participants laughed during dance, even barked." Now, a little closer examination found out there were two people out of that 25,000 who experienced something like this. That laughed or barked or whatever. In fact, Sidney Alstrom in his Religious History of the American People described it this way. He said, about the laughter, he said "it was a loud, hearty laughter. The subject," not subjects, the subject, the one he saw, the one that was reported about. Out of 25,000 they were talking about one person, "appeared rapturously solemn, and his laughter excited solemnity and saints and sinners alike." It was indescribable. But you see, that was the exception, rather than the rule. Now the exception is, if you're not rolling around, hysterically laughing or barking like a dog. Now, it's incredible. When we first began to follow this thing, about three years ago, a lady friend of ours on our mailing list wrote and said this Rodney Howard-Browne had come to First Assembly of God in Fargo, North Dakota and said "what do you know about him?" I said "nothing" at the time. She explained that he came, he shared a couple of Scriptures about joy, he took 45 minutes worth of offering, in fact he took $40,000 out of that church in two weeks, -- good money, if you can get it. We began to watch him. And the only thing that was happening then was the laughter. .....I don't claim to be a prophet, but I told my wife, I said "you watch. The next thing, he'll have us all down on our hands and knees barking like a dog." I was being facetious! Now I've seen it on videotape, they're down on their hands and knees barking like a dog. Where do they get that from the Scriptures? Well, do you remember when the woman came to Jesus, and she was a Gentile and she wanted Jesus to heal her daughter? And He said "but I've come to the house of Israel first." She said, "yes, but even the dogs get to eat the crumbs that fall from the master's table," and of course the Jews considered the Gentiles dogs. And so, you know, that's what we're supposed to be doing; crawling around God's table, eating the crumbs, and how do you get the Master's attention? [barking sounds] Sounds like John's dog -- treed another bobcat, or skunk or something. I mean, it's almost ridiculous! What the sad thing is, is literally millions of people are falling for this! And they're telling their husbands and their wives who see through this, "you're not saved." Families are split, churches are split, towns are split, denominations are splitting. Now a lot of it has to do -- not only does Rodney Howard-Browne. He's just kind of the straw that's broke the camel's back -- but a lot of these other false manifestations and false teachings -- I gotta move on, or we'll never get out of here. There's no, or very little evidence, of repentance in this so- called revival. Churches are said to be growing. One man who, an Episcopalian priest went to one of, he was very sceptical and went to two or three nights of the services at ...home church in Florida. And then all of a sudden, one night this power hit him and he laughed hysterically and he went back and he began to share this new experience with his church, and his membership increased radically. In fact, they almost doubled his church in just less than a year. Which brings us to another problem in the church. People will go where the excitement is. Take a little baby. A crawler. You put a half a dozen things on the floor, something dangerous, a couple of toys, some good food, baby crackers, whatever. Put some of those toys with horns and whistles and make all kinds of noise and flash. Which one's the baby going to go for? The one that makes the most noise. The one that has the bright lights. You see, baby Christians are looking around all the churches. Which one has the fireworks? Which one has the horns and the whistles? And that's where they go. And they they're told, "this is the only church that's got it. This is the only church that has the truth." If you've [ever] picked up the ABCs of extremist groups and cults, that's the first thing they tell you. "Nobody's has the truth we've got. Well, they've got part of it, but they don't have as much as we've got." And they put these young Christians into bondage. I know a group like this. They're not into laughter yet, but they're into that kind of spiritual bondage, this little cult group in Pennsylvania, and they're afraid. They've been told, if you leave this group, you lose your salvation. If you walk out that door, you can never be saved. And I know some dear people in that group. They didn't start off that way. We used to preach there until he got out of control. But they're in bondage to that man and his teaching. It won't surprise me some day if we don't read that in New Castle, Pennsylvania, we had another Waco, Texas. You see, that's what happens. This is dangerous stuff. People aren't coming to Christ because of conviction of sins. They're not repenting of their sins, they're coming for an experience. These churches are growing through recruitment, not through repentance. You enlist them, get them to sign up. Don't preach the gospel. Just get them to sign up and come to your church and enjoy the laughter and enjoy the fun. Have the party. Pour out some more of the new, Holy Ghost wine. That's what Mr. Browne calls himself: the Holy Ghost bartender. There's no repentance today. No preaching of repentance. So far this revival has only affected Christians, and I have to use that term rather loosely when I say that. It's only having any kind of effect, positive or negative, on Christian people. Revivals of the past reached out to the community, reached out to the lost and touched them. This one's not doing it. There's got to be something wrong. We know that when God starts a revival, He reaches out to the unsaved. He convicts them and then He converts them. God's Holy Spirit, when He comes in power, calls sinners to repentance, not saints to come and take another drink. But this is what's missing in this revival. It's spreading person to person, and not by a sovereign move of God like we mentioned earlier. These manifestations; it's an interesting thing to me. If this is the Spirit of God that's causing all these things to happen, why is it that when you command these manifestations to stop, in the name of Jesus, they stop instantly? Can the Holy Spirit contradict Himself? If He's doing this, can we, by the power of the Spirit, and in the name of Jesus, command these manifestations to stop? It's happening! When things are breaking out -- my wife and I were in North Carolina recently, and the man I was with, he's always been a little bit on the edge, then he finally slipped over. And we were sitting there in the worship service the first night of the revival, and a couple of the ladies began to laugh hysterically. And I thought maybe, they were pretty close together, I thought maybe something funny had happened, you know. But it just kept going on! It kept going on, and of course we've been aware of this stuff spreading, and I turned to my wife and said, "Oh, Lord! There's going to be a showdown here." 'Cause when they turn the pulpit to me, these ladies are going to stop their cackling or we're going to stop the revival! And so we just quietly joined hands and asked God if this wasn't of Him, and we were pretty sure it wasn't, from our study of the Scriptures, we asked God to stop it. And it stopped immediately. And the only laugh we heard the rest of that week was when I cracked a wise once in a while. There was no holy laughter broke out. There was no silly manifestations. Why is it, when you pray to God to stop the foolishness so the Word can be preached, it stops? If it's the Spirit of God, I'd be praying against the will of God. But we prayed, and it stopped! I've had -- and I want to touch a little bit on slaying in the Spirit as an example here -- we've had people in our services and this is, I know it's a hot issue, I know many of you have probably experienced it, and I'm not saying anything about your walk with the Lord, but I don't believe it's biblical. I believe it's real, I just don't believe it's biblical. And we'll get into that in a minute. And another church here in the area just personal non grata, forever, the letter said, and, someone asked me about it. They've said "have people ever fallen out when you prayed for them?" I said yes. And they said, "well, how do you explain that?" I said because I knew when they came down the aisle they were fallers. You can spot them. It's interesting. My wife stands behind people when we pray. She just kind of rests a hand on them, and I hold her hands, so if they're going to fall they're going to take two other people with them. And you know, they never fall? And I've felt the power of God in the services. People's lives have been changed, great miracles have happened in the services, but nobody ever fell down as long as we hold on to them. Now if you let them go and go pray for this person, then they fall into some good- looking guy's arms. It's always amazing how they'll start falling and look to see "who's the best looking catcher back here" and they'll fall this way or that way. They say, "what happens when it happens in your service?" I say I just go back over to them and kneel down and say "would you please get up? You're embarrassing me." Right up they come. If it's the power of God, He ought to keep them down, I think. If it's the power of God, He would have taken me down too! He's a big God. How many of you know that? Isn't it amazing how such power can surge through one mortal man and knock a whole congregation over, and yet that man's not affected by it? Give me a break! You can stop these things. You can go into a church that's known for having these kind of manifestations, whether it's laughter or being slain in the Spirit, and just mention that you think it's foolish, and it never happens. But when you go to a church and you get ready to give the altar call and you say "would you move these chairs back just a little bit?" Oh! The power of God's going to fall. I'm going to fall. We're going to have church, halleluia! I just hate it when I go into a church for revival and I see a little stack of cloths up at the front, 'cause, you know, 'cause the ladies are on the floor. You've got to cover their half- nakedness.... Can you believe that people actually believe that God would just knock 'em down and leave 'em there? It never happens then. Isn't it amazing that God can move so sovereignly in these services, and yet just one stupid little preacher from Missouri can make one comment and just quenches the Spirit completely? Who's more powerful, me or God? That's just what I'm saying. These manifestations are more human spirit, they're more peer-pressure, they're more auto- suggestion, maybe even mass hypnosis. I don't know all the explanations. I know one of the explanations, it could be demonic. I'm not ready to run the risk of saying that yet, but I've had people come up to me who have been to both the laughing revivals and Benny Hinn's slaying in the Spirit, everybody falling over themselves in revivals, and they've come, and they've come out of deep occultism and finally got truly saved and filled with the Holy Ghost and gone to these services -- and one of these ladies went to Benny Hinn in Southern California, got to the altar and finally got his attention, and she said "Mr. Hinn, don't you know that the spirit you're operating in is not the Spirit of God?" She said "I know that spirit. I served him for twenty years." Benny turned ashen white and walked away. I'm not ready to say it's demons. I think it's more human manipulation. I think people go expecting it to happen. And when he goes like this, they all fall down. I saw on videotape one time, everybody in the place was laying on their backside. He finally turned around and realized that the choir hadn't been blessed yet. And so he said "you all up in the cheap seats need some of this," and he went like that and they all fell down, except one old man with a hearing aid. And he looked around at everybody, and when he looked this way, you could see on the camera the hearing aid, and you knew why he didn't fall down, he didn't hear the command. And he looked around and then he [falls down]. Aw, c'mon! Do you believe the Holy Ghost is something you can roll up in a ball and throw it across the room and knock people down? What blasphemy! Do you think that the Holy Ghost wants us to imitate animals? I don't know what we've got to laugh about. The world's going to hell in a handbasket. Our loved ones, our families, our kids, our neighbours, are on their way to an eternity in hell and the church is sitting around laughing. This is no laughing matter. These manifestations. There's usually a mocking of the true preaching of the Word of God. I've been working on a message. I can't wait for the Lord to say "okay, you can preach it in this church." It'll be a one-night revival, I can guarantee you! It's about Ishmael and Isaac and some of the contrasts, and one of the things that Ishmaels do. You know there are three kinds of people in the world; there are unbelievers, believers, and make-believers. Ishmaels are make-believers. They've got all the language. They even understand the theology and everything else, and they can play church better than anybody. But when God begins to move sovereignly in His church, Ishmaels head for the back door. That's when revival begins, when the Ishmaels leave. One of the traits that Ishmael did, he always marked Isaac. He always made fun of him, he always laughed at him. That's what's happening today. The preaching of the Word of God. Systematic theology is being thrown out. Let me read what Rodney says. Rodney is now the authority on all this stuff. This is from Charisma of last August: He disparages or criticizes those who would try to apply a theological test to his methods. The pastor read "Paul said check it out with the word. See if what I am telling you is true." He said "Don't check it out with the Word, you kids" he goes on to say "you can't understand what God is doing in these meetings with the analytical mind. The only way you're going to understand what God is doing is with your heart." He said, check your mind at the door, don't use any discernment, don't know the Word of God, just get in and go with the flow. In fact, you hear him on videotapes, he lays hands on people, and if they don't fall down or laugh immediately, he says you just got to let go, quit thinking, clear your mind. You see, when we clear our minds of all thoughts, that's when we open ourselves up to demonic activity. That's when we allow ourselves to be manipulated by another person. And what's one of the classic definitions of witchcraft, brother John? Controlling the actions and ideas of another person by manipulation. This is witchcraft, folks. Again, I'm not going to go so far as to say the man's demon possessed, or demons are doing the work for him, but he is practicing witchcraft when he begins to manipulate people by threats and intimidation and manipulation. And that's exactly what's happening. He said you can't apply a theological test to what God's doing. That scares me! Mocking the Word of God. I mentioned last night, some of my critics call me Word-bound. You know, get away from the Word, just let the Holy Ghost show you what's going on. John, I appreciate what he said last night. I believe in the supernatural manifestation of the Holy Ghost. I believe in divine healing. I thank God for the gifts that still operate in the church today, just like they did two thousand years ago. I'm Pentecostal from the soles of my feet to the just as bald top of my head. I believe in these things. But I also believe that the parameters of the Spirit's operation in the church were set in this Book. He's not doing something new today. He's not blessing this generation with a new manifestation that He didn't bless every subsequent generation with, every previous generation. He's the same yesterday, today and forever. How come this never happened until the 1800s? It says God's no respecter of persons. Apparently He was! He didn't pour out this blessing to the first eighteen centuries in the church! He saved it for this last couple of centuries. That ought to tell us something! Enjoy the presence, and when you get those Holy Ghost goose bumps. Enjoy those mountain-top experiences. But life is more than mountaintops. Transcribed by Bob Hunter Internet Address: hunter44@io.org