Inner healing beliefs and techniques continue to deceive many
Christians. A central belief is that we are the way we are because of past hurts that need
to be healed through reliving the past and bringing Jesus into past events. This is a
deceptive combination of Freudian psychology and occult visualization. The inner healer is
convinced that present problems are expressions of past wounds that must be healed before
the person can overcome problems of living and get on with life.
The inner healer, through various techniques, encourages the person to
remember past events and to connect them with present problems or pain. He may use
hypnosis or he may simply make suggestions about what might have happened. Such
suggestions often act in the same way as hypnosis for people who are susceptible to
suggestion and who have strong imaginations. The healer may guide the person back through
past events, which may or may not have happened, through visualizing these events.
The healer helps the person not only to relive the actual or created
past, but also to feel the pain and agony. This highly emotional part of inner healing is
similar to Freuds abreaction. Either prior to or at this point of emotional
intensity, a Jesus figure is brought into the scene to bring healing. Some inner healers
do this through guided imagery, others make suggestions about what Jesus may be doing or
saying, and still others let the person who has already been led to this point of
intensity to wait expectantly for Jesus to speak or act. This is all highly suggestive
and, because of the use of occult-type visualization, the Jesus being visualized, having
been created by the healer or the client, cannot be the Jesus of the Bible.
While different inner healers may have their own combination of
techniques and therefore claim that what they do is quite different from the above brief
description, they all attempt to change present problems by changing some aspect of the
past through bringing the client back to a painful event (either actually remembered or
created under suggestion) and by helping the person to reexperience the pain of the past.
There are far more inner healers than one can know about, but some of the prominent names
are Agnes Sanford, Ruth Carter Stapleton, John and Paula Sandford, Leanne Payne, David
Seamands, Dennis and Rita Bennett, and Ed Smith, even though he claims that his
"TheoPhostic Counseling" is different from inner healing.
Jesus works miraculously in our innermost being through the Word of God
and the work of the Holy Spirit and therefore brings about what some may call "inner
healing." But thats where the similarity ends regarding what Jesus does and
what the inner healers do. The similarity is only in the use of the words "inner
healing," but thats why it is so deceptive. People assume that, because Jesus
works on the inside, all inner healing must be from Him. Nevertheless, while the inner
healing movement claims to be Christian and uses a great deal of Scripture and brings a
visualized Jesus onto the scene, the inner healing movement comes from the world, the
flesh, and the devil. It relies on psychological ideas and techniques gleaned or absorbed
from the world. It appeals to the flesh because the flesh would rather be
"healed" than reproved of sin. And, it often uses Satanic methods of suggestion
and occult visualization.
Dr. Jane Gumprechts book Abusing Memory reveals the
history of the movement and its founder, Agnes Sanford; describes what goes on in inner
healing; reveals its occult rather than Christian roots; and warns Christians to stay
away. We recently received a letter from Dr. Gumprecht in which she says that she receives
calls and letters about her book because of John and Paula Sandfords continuing
worldwide influence in spreading inner healing throughout various churches and
denominations. Dr. Gumprechts book includes quotes from the Sandfords books,
which clearly indicate they are devoted followers and promoters of Agnes Sanfords
deceptive inner healing practices. Abusing Memory is an important book for anyone
who needs information about inner healing.
Other materials offered by PsychoHeresy Awareness Ministries having to
do with the dangers of inner healing, in addition to Abusing Memory, are:
"Damaged Emotions: Healing or Holiness?" in which Debbie
Dewart critiques David Seamands book Healing for Damaged Emotions;
"Healing the Homosexual Pain? A Critique of The Broken Image and Crisis
in Masculinity by Leanne Payne," in which Dewart critiques Paynes inner
healing teachings; and our book TheoPhostic Counseling Divine Revelation? or
PsychoHeresy? in which we critique Ed Smiths combination of psychotherapy and
inner healing.