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Berean, Bethel, Bible, Christian, Christian Living, Church, common sense, Counseling, False Memory Syndrome, God, Healing, Inner Healing, Pastoral counseling, Prayer, Recovered Memories, revelation, shabar, Soul Healing, SOZO, theophostic prayer, Theophostics
The weird and wacky comes not only from the East, but also from the West. The West Coast, to be specific. In Redding, California, there is a church called Bethel. And at this church called Bethel, there is a ministry called SOZO. And within this ministry called SOZO (Greek for saved, healed, delivered) there is another ministry called Shabar. (A Hebrew word meaning broken-hearted but which can also mean shattered).
There are six ‘tools’ that are used in SOZO:
- Father Ladder
- Four Doors
- Presenting Jesus
- The Wall
- Trigger Mechanisms (Advanced Tool)
- Divine Editing (Advanced Tool)
These are psycho-therapeutic techniques used by the facilitator (counselor) in a 2-3 hour session for determining the point of the client’s “father wound”, an idea straight out of repressed memory therapy and the inner-healing movement.
For those who have sought help, healing or deliverance through SOZO, but were unable to attain (or maintain) their help, healing and deliverance, there are special (advanced) methods within Shabar both for those who are aware and also for those who are unaware that they have been Shabar-ed.
I swear I’m not making this up. But someone is. Two someone’s, in fact: Dawna DeSilva, the founder and leader of SOZO ministry, and Teresa Liebscher. They, along with the Bethel SOZO team, are making their money by taking your money for a method of healing and deliverance that is not only nowhere to be found in scripture, but wasn’t found anywhere at all until they thought it up and marketed it. Which, for those of you who haven’t noticed, is apparently how we do ‘divine’ or special revelation these days. We download it from the recesses of our minds and imaginations, put it into a book or DVD format, stick a PayPal button on our website, and voila – we’re legit. (Well, only if and when people hit that little ‘add to cart’ button).
Bill Johnson, and his wife Beni are the senior pastors at Bethel. (A pastor, also called a shepherd in scripture, is someone who has the responsibility of leading, guiding and protecting the people of his church, especially from wolves-in-sheep’s-clothing; A.K.A false teachers). Bethel, which had its start in 1954 in Redding California, was originally an Assemblies of God church, but in 2006, under the leadership of Johnson, it became non-denominational. It’s a large church, with a large and active healing and deliverance ministry, and an Alabaster Prayer Room where people can go to spend time in prayer, or for an experience called ‘soaking’.
I looked the word soaking up in the concordance to see what the Bible has to say about it, and here is what I found:
Absolutely nothing.
We live in odd times. We live in an age of self-appointed apostles and self-proclaimed prophets, many of whom have everyone on Facebook hungering and thirsting to claim them as their new BFF. It’s time to grow up, people. There’s a lot going on in the world, and too many of us are running house to house and meeting to meeting to find out “what new thing God is doing”. Except that most of it isn’t new; we’re borrowing it from metaphysics and mysticism, which has been around a lot longer than we have. We’re just putting catchy new labels on it, but idolatry by any other name is still idolatry. We’re not making mature disciples, we’re making flaky ones.
If anyone tells you that they have received special revelation freely from God (and this isn’t, it’s been cobbled together partly from the teachings of Randy Clark, who took his show on the road to Bethel in the 90’s, and partly from ‘deliverance’ ministries in Argentina) and they want you to pay them in order to receive this special revelation from them, think twice before giving them access to your bank account. And while we’re on this subject, if anyone requires you to sign a release of liability form before they will pray for you, run as fast as you can in the opposite direction. Find someone else to pray for you, or do your own praying. There should be all kinds of red flags and warning bells going off in your head on this one. Can you see, anywhere in the New Testament, where anyone pulled a bunch of papers and a pen out of their robes before ministering and said “We’re going to set you free, but sign here first”? I don’t think so.
I guess my primary concern with all of this is its propensity to create and encourage the formation of false memories. In the secular world of psychology, methods like these were debunked and discredited long ago (well, according to a recent Harvard newsletter I received, not so long ago) but for some reason, the church – especially our local ones, are still doing the kind of counseling that isn’t so much about growth and maturity as it is about ‘healing your inner child’ and digging for whatever image may pop into your mind that would explain your current dysfunctional behavior. There may well be abuse in your past, and quite a few traumatic memories. But, by and large, people don’t forget trauma, and the dysfunctional behavior more often than not is due to the stress and pain caused by not being able to forget. Any memory that you now have, that you didn’t have before your therapy, or before going for prayer (this includes Theophostic prayer, or the use of any other therapeutic technique that defies the laws of both science and common sense) is suspect and should not be taken as a real and legitimate [accurate] memory. This includes psycho-therapeutic techniques such as writing about your early childhood with your non-dominant hand in order to probe the unconscious, or subconscious mind, to the use of hypnosis, or any other practice that results in an altered state of consciousness. This happens quite easily after 2-3 hours of prayer or mindless singing (and chanting) of the same mantra, verse, or even worship music. You alter your brain waves, which is exactly what happens when you are asleep and dreaming.
Yes, we do need to spend time in prayer alone with God, and there is nothing wrong with listening to worship music, or praying for extended periods of time. Our days would go better if we did. But we also worship God with our lives, and too many of us are wasting our time running all over town, and all over the country, after every new trend and teaching that appeals to our emotional needs and desires, and more importantly to our emotional pain and desperation. The enemy knows this, and when he can’t tempt us into sin, he uses the strategies of deception and distraction, and that is all that these false teachings amount to in the end.
And so, for heaven’s sake – for your own sake – quit soaking, sozo-ing and shabar-ing, and be instead like the Bereans of Acts 17, who sought truth by searching scripture. And keep your money in the bank.
These were more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether these things were so. Acts 17:11
You’ve correctly diagnosed the problem and have even given the correct prescription. But I fear that we do no live in the times of Bereans. Instead, we live in these time…
“The coming of the lawless one is by the activity of Satan with all power and false signs and wonders, and with all wicked deception for those who are perishing, because they refused to love the truth and so be saved. Therefore God sends them a strong delusion, so that they may believe what is false, in order that all may be condemned who did not believe the truth but had pleasure in unrighteousness.” (2 Thessalonians 2:9–12)
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Thank you, Chris. No, we don’t live in the times of the Bereans, but there have always been false teachers in the church. Paul compared the church in Berea to the church in Thessalonica. It’s true that this will be even worse as time goes on, and many people are being fooled by false signs and wonders, but we who are spiritually mature still have the responsibility to study the scriptures diligently, and take every teaching and compare it to the Word of God.
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you speak ***truth***!
bethel redding and their sozo/shabar practices is intimately entwined with a program called mercy multiplied (aka mm :: formerly mercy ministries) in lincoln, california. same style “therapy”. same “therapy” that had a destructive effect on our daughter and ultimately our family after my daughter went through 8 months of this brainwashing which resulted in inconceivable allegations and a severing of relationship. we haven’t seen our daughter since march 2012, thanks to mm. bethel redding “pastors” and other bethel redding supportive pastors routinely speak at mm and once a young woman completes her time at mm, has the option (among) others to go further in therapy or to “”learn the sozo/shabar method.”” spiritually destructive. the enemy has his hand all over these cultish programs.
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Is that the same Mercy Ministries run by Nancy Alcorn? I wasn’t aware that they changed their name, if it is. I am so sorry about your daughter, Sherry. I didn’t ever go through SOZO, and wasn’t even aware it existed until a few months ago. I just saw this week that our church is beginning a class in deliverance, and that they will be using the SOZO DVD’s, which is so discouraging. It’s not fair to the individuals or the families, but this is why we need wisdom and discernment. The enemy preys on our desperation, that’s for sure.
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yes, same mercy ministries = mercy multiplied. same tiger same stripes same twisting of scripture and destruction of families. yup.
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That’s so sad. I have a copies of Echoes of Mercy, Mercy Moves Mountains, and Mission of Mercy, all by Nancy Alcorn. When I first heard of Mercy Ministries, I thought it was wonderful that there was a faith-based alternative to secular programs. It’s been discouraging to realize, however, that there doesn’t seem to be any Christian program anywhere that doesn’t engage in some type of recovered memory therapy.
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i began a group that now consists of 15 parents (and 5 more in the wings) who lost their daughters to the mm and sozo method of counseling.
“they tried to bury us. they didn’t know we were seeds.” {mexican proverb}
we have a voice and we’re in process of speaking out!
when our article comes out i’ll be sure to share the link.
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Thank you; I would be interested in reading it. Unfortunately, if our local churches persist in using these these SOZO materials, we may need a group here for those who are damaged by it.
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Reblogged this on DiscernIt.
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Thank you Kim, both for reading and re-posting! 🙂
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Hi Stacey,
I too help women who have suffered. Most of them contact me because of involvement with hyper-charismatic ministries. Depression, anxiety, and dark oppression is often the result of spirit contact. They were misled like these folks involved in SOZO into thinking these practices brought them into the presence of God or Jesus. Instead they are interacting with spirits masquerading as light.
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Hello Kim,
It is so sad, because they really are sincere, and so often so are the people doing the praying. Most of the people I work with are either going through divorce, or domestic violence, or are in some type of crisis situation. It’s difficult to help people who have already been hurt by the church, because they have such a hard time trusting or believing anything, which is understandable.
Thank you so much for re-blogging my post; I’m hoping it will help, if not stop someone vulnerable from getting ensnared by this, especially the SOZO.
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Blessings to you
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This is the best written blog I have read in some time! I agree and thank you for being so clear and to the point. Well done!
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Thank you so much!
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Reblogged this on My Word Like Fire and commented:
HT: http://kimolsen.net/
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Excellent resource on Sozo! I have many close friends lost to the deceptions of Bethel.
Thanks for a great article
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You’re welcome! 🙂
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My experience with Sozo was different than described here. But of course it was from another church. The six tools mentioned above were not mentioned in the Sozo introductory class we took. Instead it was “open doors” that were mentioned.
I write about my experiance here
http://www.reflectionsfromthewall.net/my-reflections/my-train-ride-through-the-charismatic-church-part-2
I also noticed the similarities of Sozo with the Scientology “Auditing” and its deep emphasis on memory healing. I document that in my video here https://vimeo.com/124256371
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Thank you Sarah. I have heard of ‘auditing’ and Scientology, but haven’t really studied it. I know that the emotional appeal of SOZO (and all of the inner healing ‘ministries’) is so strong because people do, quite often, have very painful memories. No amount of prayer undoes the past (this isn’t to say that there’s no such thing as healing) but the danger is the potential for creating false memories. And nowhere in scripture is it even hinted that a victorious Christian life today is dependent on the probing and searching for memories of past pain. And that’s not to say that talking to someone about things we’ve never spoken of before can’t be incredibly healing; there’s a definite emotional release in that, but that’s an entirely different matter. There is nothing healthy or healing in SOZO, and it will lead people away from God, not to Him. It’s deception.
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Right, I agree. It is deception. I hope my comments above were not implying that it isn’t deception. The links I posted are warnings against it not for it, one of which is my testimony of my time in that movement.
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Not at all, Sarah. Thank you for sharing; I am sorry you went through it. Hopefully more people will be spared the consequences of this kind of false teaching, although it is everywhere, in one form or another. No worries! 🙂
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Sherry
I am so very sorry to hear what happened to your daughter. The same thing happened to my daughter, and this also resulted in ‘inconceivable allegations.’
You mentioned that you have a group of about 15 people. I would be so interested in participating.
I have seen the need for such a group for many years and have been very interested in helping promote something of that nature.
If you can tell me how to contact you or at your request I would leave my email online if necessary or with this blog moderator.
I very much hope to hear back from you.
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Hi, MV, this is Stacey. Thank you for visiting the blog; can I ask where you live? I am so sorry to hear you had a similar experience. I agree that there is a need for more groups, for the family members, and for those who were caught up in it.
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Hello Stacey. Thank you for featuring this subject on your blog.
I live in the San Francisco Bay Area.
I was able to establish communication with Sherry and very encouraged by that. I have studied Sozo and false recovered memories since learning of my daughter’s accusation over 7 years ago. This movement is dangerous, growing, and unaccountable because they are operating under the cloak of ‘separation of church and state.’
All participants are required to sign a release of liability statement prior to any Sozo session. The problem is that no one–including those administering sozo–are aware that it is based on Regressive Memory Therapy.
Malpractice lawsuits forced the global mental health community to reassess and curtail the Regressive Memory Therapy movement years ago. However, sozo no longer refers to its self as therapy but instead ministry making it immune to lawsuits–so far.
I am trying to do what I can to get the word out so this will not happen to anyone else.
Thanks again
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You’re welcome; I am so sorry to hear of your daughter. I have done a lot of study on this also, as I was unwittingly caught up in it for awhile. I agree that it is both dangerous, and growing, but people aren’t aware of it, for the very reasons you stated.
If I can ever be of any help, please let me know. This is a huge problem here in Central New York, too. Sozo is everywhere, along with Theophostics, and a lot of other “inner healing” and “freedom” ministries. It’s pretty frustrating.
I’m glad you were able to get in touch with Sherry; God bless you in your work. Hopefully we can make an impact for good in all of this.
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Absolutely if I need any help I will ask, and thank you so much for the offer. Honestly, it is helpful just to have the opportunity to read your blog and to share on it.
I have felt like the Lone Ranger for many years because I have been unable to connect with other people that have suffered from the false recovered memories aspects of Sozo, Restoring the Foundations, and Theophostic Therapy.
I have engaged in blog debates for years on the subject, and I have learned what rabbit holes to avoid. Probably the most prominent is the, ‘Inner Healing’ debate, and it is a losing one. It comes down to semantic differences, and I have learned not to give it much weight. ‘Inner Healing’ is simply a term that can represent something solidly Biblical, or New Age related spiritualism. The issue is how does any particular program match up with the Word of God.
The debate over the use of the term is a distraction.
The next thing I avoid is discussing the subject on their terms. With Sozo, they start with elaborate definitions of the Greek word, ‘sozo’ as if such a discussion in and of itself somehow supports the methodologies they employee. It is a pseudo Biblical argument that provides a false foundation for the entire program.
Defining the word, ‘sozo’ is not a Biblical argument supporting the program, but they present it as if it is.
I don’t engage in any of their rhetoric such as, ‘The Father Ladder, the Four Doors, etc. These are rabbit holes that lead to other rabbit holes. This is how they fool so many people. They keep them submerged in spiritual sounding definitions and vocabulary, with just enough scripture thrown in to provide a Christian façade.
Most of their discussions aim to bolster up one underlying main theme:
“There is something in your past that is keeping you being made whole and you need us and our program to overcome it.”
Therefore, at its core, Sozo is suggestive. Participants goes into these sessions already having swallowed the, ‘My Past is My Problem’ pill. Then, Sozo teaches that the leaders of the sessions may have a ‘picture’ or a ‘word from the Lord.’ In fact, those going through the leadership classes are taught they will receive supernatural information about the participants.
The participants are already suggestable and are already seeking help. It does not take much to inject a false memory—as we now know from the Regressive Memory Therapy movement. Add to that the idea that God will provide mental pictures or words of knowledge during the session and you’ve got Regressive Memory Therapy on steroids.
Can you imagine being a Sozo facilitator and thinking you are the only one who didn’t receive divine guidance for someone during a session? Remember, these are lay people that have been given a crash course in Regressive Memory Therapy. There is tremendous peer pressure for the facilitators to, ‘perform.’
Another problem with, ‘The Past is My Problem’ philosophy is that its anti-Biblical. There is not a single example of Jesus or the Apostles attempting to heal someone’s past to make them whole.
In fact, contrary to digging up the past in an attempt to find the “lie that is keeping me from God’s best,” Paul said in Philippians 3:13-14:
“Brethren, I do not regard myself as having laid hold of it yet; but one thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and reaching forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.”
Contrary to dredging up past suffering—real or imagined—Paul said he presses on toward the upward call of God.
This is a Biblical concept that is diametrically opposed to the base, underlying, belief system of Sozo.
I try to focus on two primary points:
Sozo has adopted a practice the secular world has rejected, and that is Regressive Memory Therapy.
and,
The Bible is absent of any discussion that suggests that our past hinders us from receiving from or living for God. The idea that God is limited in our lives because of something in our past is a complete departure from the Gospel.
With God, ALL things are possible.
Ok, now that I have all that off my chest I can get ready for my weekend backpacking trip. LOL!
Sorry, I will try to back off the coffee a little bit before commenting next time.
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Please don’t! (back off, lol). I don’t know you, but you have nailed the problem. It is exactly what I have been trying to say, but this part of the country is riddled with rabbit holes.
And you express yourself well, by the way. Thank you for commenting.
No, we are not alone. 🙂
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Thank you so much for those encouraging comments.
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