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The Bankruptcy Of The Prosperity Gospel: An Exercise In Biblical And Theological / The Vaticans Colossal Wealth - They Started The Prosperity Gospel / Pastor John Hagee - Cornerstone Church Ministry, Heresy, Divorce & Dirty Deeds (2) (3) (4)

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The Prosperity Gospel: A New Heresy by nora544: 5:52pm On Oct 08, 2014
While Chrapitalism is a product illicit union of the Christianity with capitalism, the prosperity gospel is the result of the unbiblical marriage of Christian theology with capitalism. The prosperity gospel is a heresy because it is a distortion of the gospel. It uses bad theology and a faulty interpretation of the Bible.

The prosperity gospel is known under a variety of names: Word of Faith, Health and Wealth, Name It and Claim It, Prosperity Theology. It emphasizes that believers do not have to wait until they get to heaven, but that God's promised generosity is already available in this life, and they can claim it for themselves. The core teaching is simply that "God wants all Christians to be very rich in this life, stay healthy, and the key is giving through tithes and offerings."

Although the prosperity gospel uses many biblical texts to support its theology, its signature text is probably John 10: 10: "I have come that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly." There are many more texts, such as Malachi 3:10, Matthew 25: 14-30, Philippians 4: 9, and 3 John 2 that are used -- or more accurately misused -- by the prosperity gospel.

In a poll sponsored by TIME magazine, 17% of Christians said they consider themselves part of such a movement, while 61% believe that God wants people to be prosperous. And 31% agree that if you give your money to God, God will bless you with more money.

The prosperity gospel movement is centered on faith, which is conceived of as an "activator," a power given to believers that binds and looses spiritual forces and turns the spoken word into reality.

It depicts faith as visibly demonstrated in wealth and health. This can be measured both in the wallet -- one's personal wealth -- and in the body -- one's personal health -- and makes material reality the measure of the success of immaterial faith. It expects that faith is marked by victory which no political, social, or economic circumstance can stop.

The origins of prosperity gospel can be found in the Pentecostal deliverance and healing ministries in the 40s and 50s. The power of positive thinking of Norman Vincent Peale also played a role. It reached maturity by the late 70s as a robust pan-denominational movement that has since then spread to many parts of the world.

Three evangelists are commonly viewed as founders of the prosperity gospel movement: Kenneth Hagin, Kenneth Copeland and Frederick K.C. Price. One of the oldest and best-known proponents of prosperity theology was Oral Roberts. Other names associated with the movement include Benny Hinn, Frederick Price, T.D. Jakes, Robert Tilton, and the appropriately named Creflo Dollar. Joel Osteen is often included, although he dissociates himself from it somewhat.

In the 60s, prosperity gospel teachers turned to televangelism and came to dominate religious programming in the US. Trinity Broadcasting Network later became very prominent. Schools, such as Hagin's RHEMA Bible Training Center, also helped to spread the message, as did many books, such as Bruce Wilkersons' The Prayer of Jabez.

Nigeria became a breeding ground that helped to spread this unbiblical teaching, based on money, greed, lust, deception and materialism, all over Africa. This false gospel targets especially the poorest, weakest, most hopeless, helpless and desperate members of African society. The primary beneficiaries are the prosperity teachers who have become super-rich, while millions of their followers and givers live in abject poverty and lack the basic necessities of life.

In Nigeria, the prosperity gospel is preached not only in Pentecostal and Charismatic churches but can be heard today in many mainline churches as well, including the Anglican Church. I guess that these mainline pastors figured it was better to jump on the prosperity bandwagon than lose all their flock to other churches. It doesn't help that, even in the mainline churches, Nigerian pastors tend to be poorly educated.

The prosperity gospel is built upon a number of erroneous theological arguments, of which I can provide only a summary (adapted from "The Bankruptcy of the Prosperity Gospel" by David Jones):

A faulty understanding of the covenant with Abraham. Christians share in this covenant, but for the prosperity gospel this includes not just spiritual blessings, but also includes material ones. Moreover, these blessings are unconditional.

A faulty understanding of the atonement based on a misinterpretation of 2 Cor. 8:9, where Paul in no way teaches that Christ died on the cross for the purpose of increasing anyone’s net material worth.

A faulty understanding of the biblical teachings on giving. This is built upon faulty motives. One ought give in order to get a great return. Edward Pousson observes those who espouse this message are held captive by the American dream.

A faulty understanding of the biblical teachings on faith. Faith is not simply trust in God, but a spiritual force that is directed at God so that he will bless people.

A faulty view of the relationship between God and man. If the prosperity gospel is correct, grace becomes obsolete. Then God becomes irrelevant, since man is the measure of all things.

All of this is the result of a faulty hermeneutic. Biblical texts are repeatedly misinterpreted. 3 John 2 is an example. This text is a greeting, and should not be used to derive doctrines. Also, the Greek word here, which is used only four times in Scripture, does not mean to prosper in the sense of “gaining material possessions,” as the prosperity gospel teaches, but rather means “to grant a prosperous expedition and expeditious journey,” or “to lead by a direct and easy way.”

For me, the issue is not just an idiosyncratic misreading of the Bible, with the faulty theology that results, but something more serious. TIME magazine describes the prosperity gospel as the latest lurch in Protestantism's ongoing descent into full-blown American materialism. After the eclipse of Calvinist Puritanism, whose respect for money was counterbalanced by a horror of worldliness, much of Protestantism quietly adopted the idea that "you don't have to give up the American Dream. You just see it as a sign of God's blessing,"

The prosperity gospel is a baptized form of capitalism. Capitalism has been brought into the church and given a position of honor. Unfortunately, God has been shunted aside. Instead Mammom is being worshiped as if he were the true God. This is idolatry. It is a perversion of the gospel.

Jesus was born poor and he died poor. If a person's faith could merit material blessings, then he would been the richest man in the world. Instead, at his incarnation, "he made himself nothing, by taking the very nature of a servant" (Philippians 2:7). Only later did God exalt him and restore him to his former glory. This is the true gospel of Jesus, not the materialistic version the prosperity gospel presents.

Jesus died on a cross, not in a huge mansion. The prosperity gospel is also not the gospel that the twelve apostles preached. Nearly every last one of them was martyred for his faith. Contrast the life of Jesus and the apostles with the lifestyle of those who espouse the prosperity gospel.

This is why the prosperity gospel is a heresy. People are being led astray -- not only believers, who are taught a perverted form of the gospel but also unbelievers who get a very distorted picture of the Christian faith and of the Jesus whom these preachers represent.

While I commend them for their zeal for evangelism, all too often this is motivated by an even greater zeal for wealth on their part as well as that of the people they are preaching to. Greed seems to be the primary motivation behind the prosperity gospel movement. For that reason it must be condemned.

Blaise Pascal famously said that God can even use the lesser motives of men. God can use these prosperity preachers, and he does. Thus we should be careful how we judge them. Our judgment is not of them but of their theology. We must leave any further judgment to God.

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Re: The Prosperity Gospel: A New Heresy by JPpresh406(m): 11:10am On Oct 09, 2014
so are u saying that prosperity is evil?..are u also saying that money is evil?...
why are we killing over this pastors?..Nora(op)answer my questions oh
Re: The Prosperity Gospel: A New Heresy by mployer(m): 12:33pm On Oct 09, 2014
What exactly do the op want?

Everyone that walked with God in the Bible prospered in their various ways. What's wrong in letting people know about it?

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Re: The Prosperity Gospel: A New Heresy by asalimpo(m): 5:29pm On Oct 09, 2014
Op, na wa for u o!
Wudnt u like to at least drive a new car in ur life time?
Buy it. Open d door, sit where no one has sat. Tear the rubber from d seats.
Smell, the scent of new! That scent alone is worth 90% of d ride.
For dat smell,which lingers only for a short while,som ppl swore off used cars.
Wudnt u like to take ur family on vacation - to d bahamas,u.s,u.k?
I mean see God's byutiful world.
Dyu like nice gadgets?
Or u wanna live ur phone-life using nokia torch?
Watabout health? Dyu wanna b fit and strong ,with ur teeth complete as u age? That's prosperity.

Look at how rabbits breed, in litters. Look at trees fruit, in abundance. Look @ how greenery grows ,in surplus.
Prosperity,is d natural order of nature not scarcity, just enuff, or scraping by.
Anybody tht will open blind eyes to these truth is doing the right thing and preachg d gospel.

Sure,som people are preachg for their pockets but that doesnt negate d real thing. Chillout guy.
Re: The Prosperity Gospel: A New Heresy by Nobody: 5:48pm On Oct 09, 2014
most of there pastors are motivated by greed.

1 Like

Re: The Prosperity Gospel: A New Heresy by Ralphmann: 5:56pm On Oct 09, 2014
Him that bath ear let him hear

1 Like

Re: The Prosperity Gospel: A New Heresy by Nobody: 9:25pm On Oct 09, 2014
@OP A very good post. The prosperity gospel in conjunction with Islamic militancy are the twin evils of the modern era, one kills the body, the other the soul. Prosperity gospel in Nigeria in particular is merely a reflection of the national consumptive insatiable greed, the creed of "something for nothing" show me a man who ever got rich by just prayers and I will show you a liar. Modern day pastorpreneurs, secure in their knowledge that they will never run out of willing contributors do not need a second invitation to ram home their messages.

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Re: The Prosperity Gospel: A New Heresy by TheShopKeeper(m): 11:38pm On Oct 09, 2014
Sarassin:
@OP A very good post. The prosperity gospel in conjunction with Islamic militancy are the twin evils of the modern era, one kills the body, the other the soul. Prosperity gospel in Nigeria in particular is merely a reflection of the national consumptive insatiable greed, the creed of "something for nothing" show me a man who ever got rich by just prayers and I will show you a liar. Modern day pastorpreneurs, secure in their knowledge that they will never run out of willing contributors do not need a second invitation to ram home their messages.

Well said. So sad that Christianity is not what it used to be.

2 Likes

Re: The Prosperity Gospel: A New Heresy by nora544: 12:00am On Oct 10, 2014
Sarassin:
@OP A very good post. The prosperity gospel in conjunction with Islamic militancy are the twin evils of the modern era, one kills the body, the other the soul. Prosperity gospel in Nigeria in particular is merely a reflection of the national consumptive insatiable greed, the creed of "something for nothing" show me a man who ever got rich by just prayers and I will show you a liar. Modern day pastorpreneurs, secure in their knowledge that they will never run out of willing contributors do not need a second invitation to ram home their messages.

You are very right because I know what you write is the bitter tuth in nigeria.

When there where only the old christian churches it would be much better and perhaps also no boko haram.

4 Likes

Re: The Prosperity Gospel: A New Heresy by AreaFada2: 10:49pm On Dec 11, 2014
OP, this is not what people want to hear.

This is like a lone voice wailing in the wilderness.

Greed is here to stay.

1 Like

Re: The Prosperity Gospel: A New Heresy by KoloOyinbo(m): 3:07am On Mar 20, 2015
nora544:
While Chrapitalism is a product illicit union of the Christianity with capitalism, the prosperity gospel is the result of the unbiblical marriage of Christian theology with capitalism. The prosperity gospel is a heresy because it is a distortion of the gospel. It uses bad theology and a faulty interpretation of the Bible.

The prosperity gospel is known under a variety of names: Word of Faith, Health and Wealth, Name It and Claim It, Prosperity Theology. It emphasizes that believers do not have to wait until they get to heaven, but that God's promised generosity is already available in this life, and they can claim it for themselves. The core teaching is simply that "God wants all Christians to be very rich in this life, stay healthy, and the key is giving through tithes and offerings."

Although the prosperity gospel uses many biblical texts to support its theology, its signature text is probably John 10: 10: "I have come that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly." There are many more texts, such as Malachi 3:10, Matthew 25: 14-30, Philippians 4: 9, and 3 John 2 that are used -- or more accurately misused -- by the prosperity gospel.

In a poll sponsored by TIME magazine, 17% of Christians said they consider themselves part of such a movement, while 61% believe that God wants people to be prosperous. And 31% agree that if you give your money to God, God will bless you with more money.

The prosperity gospel movement is centered on faith, which is conceived of as an "activator," a power given to believers that binds and looses spiritual forces and turns the spoken word into reality.

It depicts faith as visibly demonstrated in wealth and health. This can be measured both in the wallet -- one's personal wealth -- and in the body -- one's personal health -- and makes material reality the measure of the success of immaterial faith. It expects that faith is marked by victory which no political, social, or economic circumstance can stop.

The origins of prosperity gospel can be found in the Pentecostal deliverance and healing ministries in the 40s and 50s. The power of positive thinking of Norman Vincent Peale also played a role. It reached maturity by the late 70s as a robust pan-denominational movement that has since then spread to many parts of the world.

Three evangelists are commonly viewed as founders of the prosperity gospel movement: Kenneth Hagin, Kenneth Copeland and Frederick K.C. Price. One of the oldest and best-known proponents of prosperity theology was Oral Roberts. Other names associated with the movement include Benny Hinn, Frederick Price, T.D. Jakes, Robert Tilton, and the appropriately named Creflo Dollar. Joel Osteen is often included, although he dissociates himself from it somewhat.

In the 60s, prosperity gospel teachers turned to televangelism and came to dominate religious programming in the US. Trinity Broadcasting Network later became very prominent. Schools, such as Hagin's RHEMA Bible Training Center, also helped to spread the message, as did many books, such as Bruce Wilkersons' The Prayer of Jabez.

Nigeria became a breeding ground that helped to spread this unbiblical teaching, based on money, greed, lust, deception and materialism, all over Africa. This false gospel targets especially the poorest, weakest, most hopeless, helpless and desperate members of African society. The primary beneficiaries are the prosperity teachers who have become super-rich, while millions of their followers and givers live in abject poverty and lack the basic necessities of life.

In Nigeria, the prosperity gospel is preached not only in Pentecostal and Charismatic churches but can be heard today in many mainline churches as well, including the Anglican Church. I guess that these mainline pastors figured it was better to jump on the prosperity bandwagon than lose all their flock to other churches. It doesn't help that, even in the mainline churches, Nigerian pastors tend to be poorly educated.

The prosperity gospel is built upon a number of erroneous theological arguments, of which I can provide only a summary (adapted from "The Bankruptcy of the Prosperity Gospel" by David Jones):

A faulty understanding of the covenant with Abraham. Christians share in this covenant, but for the prosperity gospel this includes not just spiritual blessings, but also includes material ones. Moreover, these blessings are unconditional.

A faulty understanding of the atonement based on a misinterpretation of 2 Cor. 8:9, where Paul in no way teaches that Christ died on the cross for the purpose of increasing anyone’s net material worth.

A faulty understanding of the biblical teachings on giving. This is built upon faulty motives. One ought give in order to get a great return. Edward Pousson observes those who espouse this message are held captive by the American dream.

A faulty understanding of the biblical teachings on faith. Faith is not simply trust in God, but a spiritual force that is directed at God so that he will bless people.

A faulty view of the relationship between God and man. If the prosperity gospel is correct, grace becomes obsolete. Then God becomes irrelevant, since man is the measure of all things.

All of this is the result of a faulty hermeneutic. Biblical texts are repeatedly misinterpreted. 3 John 2 is an example. This text is a greeting, and should not be used to derive doctrines. Also, the Greek word here, which is used only four times in Scripture, does not mean to prosper in the sense of “gaining material possessions,” as the prosperity gospel teaches, but rather means “to grant a prosperous expedition and expeditious journey,” or “to lead by a direct and easy way.”

For me, the issue is not just an idiosyncratic misreading of the Bible, with the faulty theology that results, but something more serious. TIME magazine describes the prosperity gospel as the latest lurch in Protestantism's ongoing descent into full-blown American materialism. After the eclipse of Calvinist Puritanism, whose respect for money was counterbalanced by a horror of worldliness, much of Protestantism quietly adopted the idea that "you don't have to give up the American Dream. You just see it as a sign of God's blessing,"

The prosperity gospel is a baptized form of capitalism. Capitalism has been brought into the church and given a position of honor. Unfortunately, God has been shunted aside. Instead Mammom is being worshiped as if he were the true God. This is idolatry. It is a perversion of the gospel.

Jesus was born poor and he died poor. If a person's faith could merit material blessings, then he would been the richest man in the world. Instead, at his incarnation, "he made himself nothing, by taking the very nature of a servant" (Philippians 2:7). Only later did God exalt him and restore him to his former glory. This is the true gospel of Jesus, not the materialistic version the prosperity gospel presents.

Jesus died on a cross, not in a huge mansion. The prosperity gospel is also not the gospel that the twelve apostles preached. Nearly every last one of them was martyred for his faith. Contrast the life of Jesus and the apostles with the lifestyle of those who espouse the prosperity gospel.

This is why the prosperity gospel is a heresy. People are being led astray -- not only believers, who are taught a perverted form of the gospel but also unbelievers who get a very distorted picture of the Christian faith and of the Jesus whom these preachers represent.

While I commend them for their zeal for evangelism, all too often this is motivated by an even greater zeal for wealth on their part as well as that of the people they are preaching to. Greed seems to be the primary motivation behind the prosperity gospel movement. For that reason it must be condemned.

Blaise Pascal famously said that God can even use the lesser motives of men. God can use these prosperity preachers, and he does. Thus we should be careful how we judge them. Our judgment is not of them but of their theology. We must leave any further judgment to God.

I agree totally. I visit Naija regularly and am a non denominational Christian. A while ago I visited a very large an well know Church in VI. Half the preaching was how with God we would all be rich within a very short period of time. I thought at first they were referring to Spiritual riches and was OK with this. But it became apparent that it was pure material wealth! And God would just give it to us!

God gave me health and a brain to work for my wealth so he has ALREADY done his bit. It is now up to me to do mine!

It got worse and eventually they said "Hands up if you believe you will be a millionaire by Xmas" (it was then August). I did NOT put up my hand and was later asked if I did not want to be a millionaire. (Maybe they meant Naira millionaire rather than dollar, euro or pound). I wanted to be but did not believe that I would be.

I found the entire thing left a very bad taste in my mouth and did not enjoy seeing the poor and needy given false hope like this. Also the focus was so materialistic there was little spiritual substance to the entire event.

Needless to say the Pastors of this large and wealthy Church live up to their message personally with their own private wealth milked of those believing their false promises!

Prosperity Christianity (Prosperity Gospel) is thankfully NOT the norm. Certainly in the rest of the world and even in Naija but when we do see it I become both sad and angry at the same time.

The introductory comments of the above post are very relevant and apt! I wish more people would expose these charlatans!

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Re: The Prosperity Gospel: A New Heresy by Davoj: 3:57pm On Nov 13, 2016
The prosperity gospel message is from Satan

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