something seemed amiss.However, I've tried to filter my feelings and thoughts to make sure they are not simply influenced by my biases (which do not include allowing God to work outside a neat framework in which we often try to place God).I noticed the individuals the documentary seemed to feature where not mainstream but fringe people - the disenfranchised, the sub-culture, the young.I wanted to be glad they were being reached but I was unsettled by the attention and attraction Bentley received - but then again, isn't this usually par for the course. This has always been the death of revival regardless what era we examine.I had trouble with bam-bam and the general migration away from the central feature of Scripture and the Proclamation of the Gospel as the event turned into a healing event and eventually entertainment.I received a check when they suddenly decided to take the show on the road. It didn't seem natural and the motivation seemed to be based upon individual decision rather than direction from the Spirit. It appeared as if they were running from something - something happened.The young man who couldn't talk without some jerk and strange sound as he talked. The young lady who kept laying hands on others. It just didn't seem right.I am sure my observations are subjective and I over no Scriptural refutation of what I witnessed, but for someone who has seen the power and manifestation of the Spirit in almost indescribable manner, it just didn't seem right (yes, same thing I wrote above) - it just didn't seem right.I guess I just didn't feel Jesus was honored and God truly exalted. It boiled down to a humanistic display where the feature was man and his needs that could be remedied with a bam-bam and blowing and the frenzy that followed God-HonoringChrist-CenteredBible-BasedSpirit-Led