I'm making this distinction because there is a distinction. Don't worry too much about the exact words used. We use words to communicate so the words might not be correct but the principles are.
I've always been inquisitive since I was a little kid: guessing and speculating aren't enough for me; I have to know for certain. And from childhood I was always interested in making distinctions, even very fine distinctions, between similar words and similar things. I remember when I was about seven years old, for instance, mulling over the distinctions of the three very similar words recognize, realize, notice. I don't like learning just to have information on the brain but to have facts and truths that can enhance my and others' lives. I like to help people recognize whatever it is they are dealing with, struggling with, or encountering so they can proceed with [some better] understanding.
So, does it help to know the difference between the religious spirit and the Pharisee spirit? Yes, if you are sincerely wanting to spiritually mature; if you genuinely are working on your relationship with God. If you are a passive christian, you don't need to 'know' anything except that you're going to Heaven (which you might not be) and you're set. But if you're serious about growing in Christ and walking with God, then having discernment is absolutely mandatory for you, almost like the oxygen you breathe (but maybe more like the food you eat with the 'fear of the Lord' being air and 'wisdom' being water).
Many of you have probably heard of 'the religious spirit'. The charismatics accuse the Baptists of having it; the evangelicals accuse the pentecostals of having it. Everyone is pointing fingers, but what is the religious spirit. Here's a quick synopsis of both:
1. Religious Spirit. While evil spirits will attach to anything that is dirty, sinful, etc., the religious spirit isn't a literal spirit. (Again, there are plenty of spirits who will attach to the lives of people with a religious spirit.) The religious spirit is, if we can call it this, a mindset. When a person approaches God not according to how He wants to approach but how they or their church or their society or traditions say to approach God, that person is 'operating in a 'religious spirit'. God requires that people approach Him a certain way (yes, even through Christ); when people approach another way, this way is 'strange' and what we call 'operating in a religious spirit'. This passage might be the most concise example of "true religion before God the Father" vs. 'the religious spirit':
"Nadab and Abihu, the sons of Aaron, each took his censer and put fire in it, put incense on it, and offered strange fire before the Lord which He had not commanded them. So fire went out from the Lord and devoured them, and they died before the Lord. And Moses said to Aaron, 'This is what the Lord spoke, saying: "By those who come near Me I must be regarded as holy; and before all the people I must be glorified."'" (Leviticus 10:1-3.)
True religion approaches God with reverence (regards Him as holy and acts accordingly); believers who approach God this way are the only ones who can glorify Him. Why? Because kings and important people don't presence just anywhere. Sanctifying yourself (living holy) and then approaching God in reverence prepares the way for Him to 'come near': that's the red carpet, the limos, the expensive hotel, the five-star treatment as we do it here. Nadab and Abihu were priests; they were allowed to offer fire from the incense. So why was God angry and what is strange fire? God was angry because they offered the incense at a time He hadn't told them to do so: they were doing religion (ie. approaching God) their own way. This is the way many christians live without knowing it because people only know what they're taught and usually do what everyone around them is doing. The religious spirit doesn't make people bad (though ugly attitudes like self-righteousness, false goodness, and pride-- and negative things like confusion, error, and spiritual darkness-- are usually attached to it). Religious people are basically always harmless as in overtly. On the other hand...
2. Pharisee Spirit: This is an advanced form of the religious spirit. The difference here is this one either has position/power or thinks it has or should have position/power. This is the one that killed Jesus. The common man of Jesus's time followed the religious leaders since they were the leaders. (Jesus even told the people, "You must be careful to do everything [the religious leaders] tell you. But do not do what they do, for they do not practice what they preach" -- Matt. 23:3). This spirit is also the one that chased and persecuted the apostles, killed Stephen, persecuted the early Church, etc. When thinking of the Pharisee spirit, the picture that comes to mind is the Sanhedrin-- the council of Jewish ruling religious leaders of Jesus's time. (But when thinking about the religious spirit, all that comes to mind is 'error' or 'unwitting error' or 'ignorance'.) People who simply 'have a religious spirit' don't care much if others disagree with their views; they might argue it a little but aren't invested in it. On the other hand, people with a Pharisee spirit believe they are authorities of some type, tip their hand (ie. unwittingly expose their arrogance), and will question [the gall of/challenge] people who disagree with them. They will insist that a person they dislike must submit to them in some way, whether by responding to their demands or questions or in some other way. It was this spirit that in Jesus's times demanded things like, "By what authority do You do these [miracles], and who gave You the authority to do these things" (to Jesus, Mark 11:28) and "By what power or by what name have you done this" (to the apostles, Acts 4:7). This 'spirit' (definitely a meaner cadre of evil spirits attached to this one) makes a person believe they are or should be the authority and look down on anyone who doesn't agree with or think like them. The 'Pharisee spirit' (Jewish religious leaders) killed Jesus, because it is truly wicked and absolutely hates God, while the 'religious spirit' (the regular Jews) agreed out of confusion (as usual).
Most people live under the religious spirit, so that one is harder to see unless you grab the Bible and start comparing the way the early Church met and gathered to the way you and the christians and churches you know gather (then it slowly starts to unfold, fascinating but not new). But the Pharisee spirit is easier to detect. It's combative-- even if subtly-- with the attitude that someone else should be subordinate to it. I hope that helps some people, especially if you're dealing with the Pharisee spirit. God pardons the religious spirit (christians who live their lives under it) all the time; but He never pardons the Pharisee spirit (christians who live under it, unless they specifically repent and 'come out from under it').
I've always been inquisitive since I was a little kid: guessing and speculating aren't enough for me; I have to know for certain. And from childhood I was always interested in making distinctions, even very fine distinctions, between similar words and similar things. I remember when I was about seven years old, for instance, mulling over the distinctions of the three very similar words recognize, realize, notice. I don't like learning just to have information on the brain but to have facts and truths that can enhance my and others' lives. I like to help people recognize whatever it is they are dealing with, struggling with, or encountering so they can proceed with [some better] understanding.
So, does it help to know the difference between the religious spirit and the Pharisee spirit? Yes, if you are sincerely wanting to spiritually mature; if you genuinely are working on your relationship with God. If you are a passive christian, you don't need to 'know' anything except that you're going to Heaven (which you might not be) and you're set. But if you're serious about growing in Christ and walking with God, then having discernment is absolutely mandatory for you, almost like the oxygen you breathe (but maybe more like the food you eat with the 'fear of the Lord' being air and 'wisdom' being water).
Many of you have probably heard of 'the religious spirit'. The charismatics accuse the Baptists of having it; the evangelicals accuse the pentecostals of having it. Everyone is pointing fingers, but what is the religious spirit. Here's a quick synopsis of both:
1. Religious Spirit. While evil spirits will attach to anything that is dirty, sinful, etc., the religious spirit isn't a literal spirit. (Again, there are plenty of spirits who will attach to the lives of people with a religious spirit.) The religious spirit is, if we can call it this, a mindset. When a person approaches God not according to how He wants to approach but how they or their church or their society or traditions say to approach God, that person is 'operating in a 'religious spirit'. God requires that people approach Him a certain way (yes, even through Christ); when people approach another way, this way is 'strange' and what we call 'operating in a religious spirit'. This passage might be the most concise example of "true religion before God the Father" vs. 'the religious spirit':
"Nadab and Abihu, the sons of Aaron, each took his censer and put fire in it, put incense on it, and offered strange fire before the Lord which He had not commanded them. So fire went out from the Lord and devoured them, and they died before the Lord. And Moses said to Aaron, 'This is what the Lord spoke, saying: "By those who come near Me I must be regarded as holy; and before all the people I must be glorified."'" (Leviticus 10:1-3.)
True religion approaches God with reverence (regards Him as holy and acts accordingly); believers who approach God this way are the only ones who can glorify Him. Why? Because kings and important people don't presence just anywhere. Sanctifying yourself (living holy) and then approaching God in reverence prepares the way for Him to 'come near': that's the red carpet, the limos, the expensive hotel, the five-star treatment as we do it here. Nadab and Abihu were priests; they were allowed to offer fire from the incense. So why was God angry and what is strange fire? God was angry because they offered the incense at a time He hadn't told them to do so: they were doing religion (ie. approaching God) their own way. This is the way many christians live without knowing it because people only know what they're taught and usually do what everyone around them is doing. The religious spirit doesn't make people bad (though ugly attitudes like self-righteousness, false goodness, and pride-- and negative things like confusion, error, and spiritual darkness-- are usually attached to it). Religious people are basically always harmless as in overtly. On the other hand...
2. Pharisee Spirit: This is an advanced form of the religious spirit. The difference here is this one either has position/power or thinks it has or should have position/power. This is the one that killed Jesus. The common man of Jesus's time followed the religious leaders since they were the leaders. (Jesus even told the people, "You must be careful to do everything [the religious leaders] tell you. But do not do what they do, for they do not practice what they preach" -- Matt. 23:3). This spirit is also the one that chased and persecuted the apostles, killed Stephen, persecuted the early Church, etc. When thinking of the Pharisee spirit, the picture that comes to mind is the Sanhedrin-- the council of Jewish ruling religious leaders of Jesus's time. (But when thinking about the religious spirit, all that comes to mind is 'error' or 'unwitting error' or 'ignorance'.) People who simply 'have a religious spirit' don't care much if others disagree with their views; they might argue it a little but aren't invested in it. On the other hand, people with a Pharisee spirit believe they are authorities of some type, tip their hand (ie. unwittingly expose their arrogance), and will question [the gall of/challenge] people who disagree with them. They will insist that a person they dislike must submit to them in some way, whether by responding to their demands or questions or in some other way. It was this spirit that in Jesus's times demanded things like, "By what authority do You do these [miracles], and who gave You the authority to do these things" (to Jesus, Mark 11:28) and "By what power or by what name have you done this" (to the apostles, Acts 4:7). This 'spirit' (definitely a meaner cadre of evil spirits attached to this one) makes a person believe they are or should be the authority and look down on anyone who doesn't agree with or think like them. The 'Pharisee spirit' (Jewish religious leaders) killed Jesus, because it is truly wicked and absolutely hates God, while the 'religious spirit' (the regular Jews) agreed out of confusion (as usual).
Most people live under the religious spirit, so that one is harder to see unless you grab the Bible and start comparing the way the early Church met and gathered to the way you and the christians and churches you know gather (then it slowly starts to unfold, fascinating but not new). But the Pharisee spirit is easier to detect. It's combative-- even if subtly-- with the attitude that someone else should be subordinate to it. I hope that helps some people, especially if you're dealing with the Pharisee spirit. God pardons the religious spirit (christians who live their lives under it) all the time; but He never pardons the Pharisee spirit (christians who live under it, unless they specifically repent and 'come out from under it').
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