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Clouded by Emotion: Studies on the Holy Spirit and Miracles

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How many times have you asked questions about the Holy Spirit and miracles? How often were you given conflicting answers? Maybe it’s because you’ve done what Lance did for a while—he asked friends, preachers, and the internet. Why do these important topics seem so confusing? It’s because the study of the Holy Spirit and miracles has been...

CLOUDED by EMOTION.

Let’s ask the Scriptures.
Lance shares his findings from God’s word in this easy-to-follow book. In Clouded by Emotion, the Bible lifts the clouds and answers questions on the identity of the Holy Spirit, the qualities and purposes of miracles, reports of miracles today, baptism with the Holy Spirit, apostolic succession, the gift of tongues, blasphemy of the Holy Spirit, the leading of the Holy Spirit, and more.
What questions about God’s Spirit do you have?

211 pages, Paperback

Published September 16, 2019

13 people are currently reading
19 people want to read

About the author

Lance Mosher

11 books22 followers
Lance Mosher became a Christian in 2003. For the full story, read his book, Transformed: A Spiritual Journey. Lance earned his bachelor’s degree in Fine Arts in 2009 and his master’s degree in Ministry in 2011. Since 2008, he has worked in ministry in New Zealand and the United States. He manages multiple evangelistic websites and has directed a school of preaching, authored multiple books, and taught for a Christian university. In his free time, Lance enjoys time with his family, woodworking, writing, the outdoors, photography, music, and movies. He and his wife, Kristen, have two sons.

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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
1 review5 followers
September 18, 2019
Lance Mosher has written a thoughtful and well-organized overview of this important subject. The reader will benefit from the lessons and their strong connection to the text of Scripture.
1 review
September 25, 2019
I had opportunity to read this work by Lance Mosher before final revisions and ultimate release. I found it to be an exceptional read. Though I did not necessarily agree with each and every viewpoint, I found with every point that he was very thorough. It was well researched and very thoughtful. Material inevitably led to natural contemplation of the material presented. The writing style was smooth and easy to read.
I highly recommend Clouded by Emotion!
John C. Barnes
Profile Image for Jay Pahetogia.
1 review
October 1, 2019
Lance Mosher does a great work presenting a logical and systematic breakdown of the Bibles teachings on the Holy Spirit and his works. It's very relatable to today's issues, and very easy to read and understand. Highly recommended!
Profile Image for Carl Jenkins.
219 reviews17 followers
January 24, 2020
While this book does some things right, overall I was left less than impressed with the conclusions and use of scripture in dealing with this topic. It feels like the book was written to address one part of a broader Christianity, the highly charismatic group that the author seems to have come from, but marketed towards a much wider audience. One of the major problems stems from the title itself, a concern I've expressed to the author before reading, that was confirmed in my reading. Though the author does express the sentiment that he is not a final authority and can be wrong, the book is scattered with the sentiment suggested in the title, that if you disagree with his conclusions you are simply "clouded by emotions" and relying on your feelings and desires rather than the scriptures. Though likely not intended, the constant reminder that disagreement equals being "clouded by emotion," left an interesting response to the book whenever I questioned Lance's use of various texts.

The first two chapters are a good, general overview of who the Holy Spirit is, and His place within the Godhead. Once you get into more of the particulars, it ended up being the same, in my opinion, shallow and faulty arguments by many in the Churches of Christ (of which I am a part) to try to argue that the Holy Spirit only operates on or affects people through reading and studying scripture. While I do believe that the Holy Spirit does not directly convict a non-believer into repentance and salvation apart from the word, the scripture seems quite clear to me that the indwelling of the Spirit works alongside the scripture to help believers grow, mature in Christ, be moved to repentance, and better understand the scripture. I'll provide some examples of where I believe the book falls flat in explaining scripture.

One instance is in the second chapter where Lance argues that in John 14-16 the promises concerning the Holy Spirit ONLY apply to the apostles because Jesus was speaking to them and said "you" in the scripture. I understand the argument, but there is rarely consistency in applying this to other times where Jesus says "you" and we have no problem applying to others, and later Lance uses Mark 16 and the promise Jesus says is to be given to "those who believe" yet Lance decides to only apply it to a small and select group, so there is certainly a lack of consistency and Lance never really explains why that lack of consistency is there.

In chapter 3, Lance claims that those who are faith healers are mocking Jesus, and asks why they don't go to hospitals and heal all of the patients there, only to turn in the next sentence and admit that Jesus didn't do anything of the sort either. Right or wrong, why hold these men to a different standard than Jesus and condemn them for it, especially if you contradict that standard in the next sentence? On top of that, the faith healers seem to match up with all of the reasons Lance says miracles were done.

He also makes the claim that miracles primary purpose was to "confirm the message," and once the New Testament scripture was "confirmed" (meaning completed) there is no more need for miracles. That seems to be one reason they are sometimes done, but there is a failure to address some things, such as why, if the prophets were pointing people back to the confirmed Law of Moses in their preaching, why they often did miracles? He does point to the end of the book of John where the author says "these things were written so you might believe" but frames it in a much more modern frame. The people originally reading the text wouldn't have had a difficult time believing in miracles, and even today its a bit problematic as it simply insinuates that because the Bible says they happened we should believe them, which isn't going to get very far with many who don't believe miracles could happen. Rather the context seems to be pointing to the fact that these miracles pointed to Jesus as the Messiah, specific types of miracles, not just to "confirm the message." We also have miracles being done in scripture simply because Jesus has compassion on people and cares about them and wants them to be healed. If miracles primary purpose in the ministry of Jesus was just to confirm His message, the abundance of them should be a bit shocking, but one has to limit miracles to this context to reach the end goal the book is trying to achieve. This is seen in chapter 7 concerning apostles as well, claiming that if God's word is available then miracles are not needed, yet to reiterate it begs the question of why many prophets performed miracles with the Law of Moses was confirmed.

Lance tries to establish a case in chapter 9 that because we have the "confirmed word" then desiring miracles or spiritual gifts is a sign of immaturity. He quotes 2 Peter 1:2-4 and concludes that "Peter told the Christians they had access to everything needed for true knowledge and godliness." The problem is that the text doesn't say that. Peter simply says that "His divine power has granted to us everything pertaining to life and godliness, through the true knowledge of Him..." Well of course this was before the scripture of the New Testament was even completed so we run into a few problem's with Lance's argument with that verse. He also turns to 1 Corinthians 13 to build this argument given that it discusses 3 of the spiritual gifts (prophecy, tongues, and knowledge) will pass away. He argues that "the perfect" has to be the completed scripture because the text says that faith, hope, and love will continue, and then only love and that "the perfect" can't be the return of Christ because faith and hope won't continue after that as they will be fulfilled. The problem is that the text never claims that faith, hope, and love will continue after these pass away and the the perfect comes. It simply says that faith, hope, and love abide and the greatest is love. His interpretation adds a lot to the text that isn't there, and one has to wonder why? Paul simply states that faith hope and love are currently abiding, telling the Corinthians to center their lives around faith, hope, and love rather than these spiritual gifts.

There are a few instances of misconstruing statements made by those who believe differently as well, such as dealing with people who pray for the Spirit to "come" into a situation, asking why they need to pray for the Spirit if the Spirit already indwells within them? It seems to be no different than praying for God to do something in a situation as if God is not already aware of what is going on and isn't already at work in some way. Rather we are asking the God who is already at work to work in a certain way towards a certain outcome. It's no different than asking for God to, in the way He chooses, to strengthen us, to give us opportunities to grow, or help us to be more faithful, but for some reason asking that of the Spirit is just indication.

The ultimate conclusion of the book is that the Holy Spirit really only operates on the Christian (he addresses sinners as well, but I believe the conclusion about the Spirit in the lives of Christians is of more difference between us and of concern), through reading and applying the scripture. I believe this is very problematic, primarily because it really only means our growth as Christians is reliant on our own hard work and effort. It's a soft-core version of Deism where God does his work through Jesus, has the Spirit deliver the scripture, and outside of the Spirit praying on our behalf He does nothing else for us because we have scripture. Basically everything is dependent on how hard we work towards getting better. But for Lance's argument there are only two options seemingly available. Either the Spirit does essentially nothing, or the Spirit seemingly takes over our bodies and operates just on good feelings and emotions. This is why I began the review as I did about the intended audience, Lance is highly lacking in nuance about what most people teach or believe about the work of the Spirit in the life of a Christian. There is no room it seems, in his theology, for the Spirit to work in a nuanced way in which, along with our study of scripture, the indwelling Spirit can move us towards repentance, can strengthen us is faithful walking with God, or can help us understand some aspect of scripture or how we should respond to a specific issue in which the scripture might address broadly, but not specifically.

While I share many of the same concerns Lance has for the extremely charismatic Christians and a reliance on feelings over scripture, my bigger concern is that he has moved away from that to the extreme on the other side of the pendulum, and encourages others to join him, in a position that shuts us off from the help that God gives us through the Holy Spirit as we also devote ourselves to scripture. Towards a position that relies more on one's own self and understanding that God's strength and gracious gift.

*I've removed one section concerning the chapter on apostles. A concern I had was in the footnotes which I had missed, and so my concern was answered and accounted for and thus had no place in my review.*
2 reviews
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August 3, 2020
I have read this book just once so far and I have learnt so much from scripture about The Holy Spirit and how it works in our lives. Lance Mosher uses scripture to explain what the Bible teaches about the Holy Spirit and the miracles of the New Testament. This book has inspired me to study deeper for myself and to avoid being 'clouded by emotion' when I learn something new. Realising one has to change a way of thinking , or even believing, is not always easy, however, this book will challenge you.
I am about to reread this book and am keen to share it with others so they can gain the knowledge and understanding that is to be found in God's word.
Thank you Lance Mosher
1 review
July 10, 2020
While the topic of the Holy Spirit and miracles is often a hotly-debated subject, I was impressed with this book in how clear and concise each lesson is. The broad topic is broken down into small, easier-to-digest bites of a very deep subject, but all coming directly from Scripture. Framed with kindness and a desire for the truth, not just a "this is my way" attitude, "Clouded by Emotion" is definitely a study I will recommend to anyone who is interested in this subject!
Profile Image for Justin P Sivley.
27 reviews
March 26, 2020
What a fantastic read! Lance does an excellent job answering questions about the Holy Spirit and miracles in a Scriptural and accessible way. I plan to teach to my congregation as soon as I can.
Profile Image for Daniel.
8 reviews
October 31, 2019
Clouded by a Emotion is a collection of studies on the person of the Holy Spirit, the place of miracles within the work of the Holy Spirit, and the role and function of the Holy Spirit in believers today. The book is presented in a quasi-narrative structure with a linear argument, but will also be useful for referencing back to specific topics as needed.

The scope of the book is mostly centered around the Spirit's role and work regarding miracles and inspiration of Scripture during the Church age as opposed to developing the long story of the Spirit from Genesis 1 through to the final eternal hope. This is reasonable since the goal of the book is to address common questions and topics of disagreement in our current Church culture.

I greatly appreciate Lance's ability to explain topics with reference to Scripture in context and certainly believe this study will put people on a good path towards a Biblical understanding. I particularly appreciated his emphasis on some points that are often neglected in studies on the Holy Spirit such as the importance of recognizing the work of the Spirit today even if a miracle is not in focus.

While Lance and I agree on most everything he addressed in this book, one element that was fundamental to his book that was consistently raised is how he ties Baptism of the Holy Spirit to the miraculous manifestations by the Spirit in Acts 2 and 10. The significance for this point is that since those events were "one-offs" with specific purpose in specific times and places, similar experiences should not be sought or expected in the lives of believers today. My own study has led me to conclude Baptism of the Holy Spirit was promised to all believers (Mark 1:8; 1 Cor 12:13) and occurs at the moment and place of immersion in water and is the occasion for forgiveness, sanctification, and indwelling, but that the miraculous manifestations in Acts occured with the Baptism to confirm new and unique moments in history when such confirmation was needed. Lance also agrees with the Spirit's role at the moment of water baptism and subsequent indwelling but does not label this as Baptism of the Holy Spirit since he has equated Baptism of the Holy Spirit with the miraculous manifestations that confirm it. I greatly appreciate his clear presentation of his understanding of the phrase and agree with his conclusions despite the different terminology.

I highly recommend the book and thank Lance for it!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
1 review
October 27, 2019
I listened to the audiobook version of this book and really enjoyed it! Lance (the author) has a great way of laying out the facts presented in the Bible andI love the way he points you to get truth directly from the Bible. This book is worth reading if you are interested in an easy to understand study on the Holy Spirit and miracles.

Things I got from this book:
1. Better understanding of the Holy Spirit as a person.
2. Better understanding of why miracles were used. Definitely good food for thought on the maturity of the church, and why miracles are not needed in today’s world.
3. Better understanding of the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.
Profile Image for Harley Pope.
7 reviews3 followers
January 15, 2020

This book is filled with valuable insight into the Holy Spirit and best of all is based and backed my scripture rather than feeling or opinions. The Holy Spirit is not the easiest of topics to understand but this book is written so that anyone can follow and understand which is how the Bible is intended when we take the time to study. Lance is an excellent writer and does a great job teaching through this book however he makes a point to say that he isn’t the source here and that God shows us what we need to know within the Bible itself. Definitely read this book!
Profile Image for Mark Lance.
2 reviews2 followers
December 13, 2019
I have read the entire book Clouded By Emotion by Lance Mosher. Lance is very thoughtful in his approach to the subject. It is obvious he has taken the time to prepare properly for the study of the Holy Spirit. It is a Goodread to add to your collection. It will increase your knowledge on the subject. I hope you will take the time to study through this book. You will be glad you did.
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