Showing posts with label prosperity gospel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prosperity gospel. Show all posts

Sunday, November 03, 2019

Prosperity Gospel Televangelist Paula White, Trump Top Spiritual Adviser, Joining the Administration


Prosperity Gospel Televangelist Paula White, Trump Top Spiritual Adviser, Joining the Administration

By Julio Severo
President Donald Trump’s top spiritual adviser, prosperity gospel televangelist Paula White, has been chosen by Trump as head of the White House’s Faith and Opportunity Initiative.
Trump and Paula White
White has known the president for 20 years and once led a Bible study for Trump, his family and staff at the Trump Organization.
The prosperity gospel televangelist also served on Trump’s evangelical advisory board during his 2016 campaign.
White was one of the pastors to pray during Trump’s inauguration in January 2017 and has coordinated several visits by evangelical leaders to the White House since.
Trump first contacted White by telephone in 2001 after seeing her on Christian television.
He told her she had the “it” factor, she recalled.
“Sir, we call that the ‘anointing,’” White responded.
“And he began to almost verbatim repeat to me three of my sermons on value of vision.”
“And so he begins telling me his life,” she continued. “About being confirmed Presbyterian. Raised in Norman Vincent Peale’s church. He went into deep sermons. His faith walk. His mother who was a very Godly woman — a woman of prayer.”
The televangelist said that she prays for Trump every day.
“This is a man and a president who loves prayer and loves God and I think people are shocked and amazed by that,” White said.
Even though prosperity gospel preachers are heavily criticized by Presbyterians, Trump has found in White’s faith and anointing a living spirituality that he has never found in his original Presbyterian church.
While most Presbyterians and other traditional Protestants embrace liberal stances and politicians, White and other charismatic leaders embrace Trump.
So people should not judge the imperfect ways God is using to touch Trump, but pray that Trump may be blessed by Him through these imperfect channels, including the prosperity gospel and a female minister.
With information from WorldNetDaily.
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Monday, September 09, 2019

Televangelist Benny Hinn, who became a millionaire by making worshipers donate to him, said that his prosperity gospel “It’s an offense to the Lord,” and vows he will never ask for money again


Televangelist Benny Hinn, who became a millionaire by making worshipers donate to him, said that his prosperity gospel “It’s an offense to the Lord,” and vows he will never ask for money again

By Julio Severo
Televangelist Benny Hinn, who became a millionaire by preaching the prosperity gospel, has now made a stunning rejecting of the practice and declared that “it’s an offense to the Lord.”
His form of the prosperity gospel got him rich by challenging people to give large sums of money if they wanted a big blessing.
Hinn, who has an estimated fortune of $60 million, now says the “Holy Ghost is just fed up” with the prosperity gospel and vowed never again to ask for money.
“I’m sorry to say that prosperity has gone a little crazy and I’m correcting my own theology and you need to all know it. Because when I read the Bible now, I don’t see the Bible in the same eyes I saw 20 years ago,” Hinn said.
“I think it’s an offense to the Lord, it’s an offense to say give $1,000. I think it’s an offense to the Holy Spirit to place a price on the Gospel. I’m done with it. I will never again ask you to give $1,000 or whatever amount because I think the Holy Ghost is just fed up with it. I think it hurts the Gospel, so I’m making this statement for the first time in my life and frankly, I don't care what people think about me anymore. When you look at the word of God… if I hear one more time, break the back of debt with $1,000, I’m gonna rebuke them,” he said.
“I think that’s buying the Gospel. That’s buying the blessing. That’s grieving the Holy Spirit… If you are not giving because you love Jesus, don’t bother giving. I think giving has become such a gimmick… it’s making me sick to my stomach,” he added.
Daily Mail reported that Hinn’s ministry collected roughly $100 million in annual donations.
Hinn is known for his faith healing summits that are often held in huge stadiums across the country.
The faith healing services often show believers being knocked over by the Holy Spirit. They also claim to have been cured of illnesses through Hinn's services.
Hinn, who was born in Israel and grew up in Canada, became a devout evangelical as a child. He moved to Florida in his 20s and married his wife — the daughter of a preacher. It was then that he also became a preacher. He started his TV show in the early 1990s and it quickly started airing worldwide.
Hinn had his Texas offices raided by the IRS back in 2017 and he was one of six television evangelists investigated by the Senate Finance Committee in 2007.
The prosperity gospel is the teaching and belief among Pentecostals and charismatics that Christians can obtain wealth and health by exercising their faith.
There are varying degrees in teaching and practice of the prosperity gospel. Some prosperity gospel televangelists insist that you can receive blessings only by giving money in the church. This was Hinn’s case.
Other prosperity gospel televangelists insist that miracles happen only by faith, regardless donations. This was the case of the late televangelist Rex Humbard.
The prosperity gospel, which was born in the United States, the most capitalist and Protestant nation in the world, is a distinctly capitalist form of the U.S. evangelicalism that was exported to several nations around the world. In Brazil, prosperity gospel televangelists have been in the forefront of the cultural war and, interestingly, Brazilian socialists have said that the number 1 enemy of socialism in Brazil is the prosperity gospel.
The prosperity gospel threatens socialism in Brazil because while socialists teach the poor to support socialist politicians to get health, education and a better life, prosperity gospel televangelists teach the poor to seek intensely God for health, education and a better life.
Socialism entered Latin America enticing the poor that they could get better lives by taking from others and helping Marxists into power.
The prosperity gospel, in its several forms, came directly from America and entered Latin America by encouraging and motivating the poor to work hard and pursue a professional objective by seeking God intensely. The prosperity gospel teaches its adherents in Latin America to hate abortion, homosexuality and similar ideologies. So it is no wonder that the left hates it. The only surprise is why Calvinists are so united with Marxists, socialists, progressives and even sorcerers who fight this capitalist theology.
I welcome Hinn’s decision to leave his radical form of the prosperity gospel that made people donate millions to him. But other forms of the prosperity gospel should be encouraged, not only because they produce a capitalist spirit in poor Christians, but also because they threaten socialism.
The biggest enemies of the prosperity gospel in Brazil are socialists, including secular, Catholic and Protestant socialists. This speaks volumes.
The degrees of difference in the prosperity gospel are vast. For example, the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God (UCKG) is a neo-Pentecostal denomination that owns TV Record, the second largest TV channel in Brazil. UCKG preaches the prosperity gospel and uses Hinn’s radical form of teaching that people can be blessed only by giving more and more money to the church, but UCKG is very hostile to all the other prosperity gospel churches in Brazil. UCKG is the only neo-Pentecostal church in Brazil defending abortion, a stance that is compatible with the Presbyterian Church USA, the largest Calvinist denomination in the U.S. And UCKG defends cessationism, teaching that prophecy, revelation and other gifts of the Holy Spirit today are demonic. UCKG teaches that only the Bible is necessary and that the supernatural gifts of the Holy Spirit ceased 2,000 years ago, a stance that is compatible with cessationist Calvinists.
Cessationist Calvinists are celebrating Hinn’s decision. Many of them have a socialist background or are friendly to Calvinist socialists. Even though they are not hesitant to call any form of the prosperity gospel heresy, they are very hesitant to call any form of socialism among Calvinists heresy.
The prosperity gospel in its several forms is not present among Calvinists. But socialism in its several forms, including the old Social Gospel and the gay theology, is present among Calvinists. So it would be very wise for Calvinists to focus on their massive domestic socialist problem, not on the prosperity gospel, which has been the most effective form of evangelical capitalism to fight socialism.
Often cessationist Calvinists attack the prosperity gospel, making no distinction in its several degrees, because they oppose everything Pentecostal and charismatic, especially spiritual gifts of the Holy Spirit. They believe that these gifts ceased 2,000 years ago and that Christians who say today that they have such gifts are heretical or under heretic and demonic delusion.
This is the case of Calvinist theologian John MacArthur. In his book “Strange Fire: The Danger of Offending the Holy Spirit with Counterfeit Worship,” he mentions negatively Benny Hinn 199 times, even though Hinn was not invited to preach in Calvinist churches. “Strange Fire,” which makes no negative mention of PCUSA and the homosexualist Calvinism of the Gospel Coalition, uses the prosperity gospel to attack all charismatics, Pentecostals and neo-Pentecostals.
In “Strange Fire,” MacArthur said,
“By elevating the authority of experience over the authority of Scripture, the Charismatic Movement has destroyed the church’s immune system—uncritically granting free access to every imaginable form of heretical teaching and practice. Put bluntly, charismatic theology has made no contribution to true biblical theology or interpretation; rather, it represents a deviant mutation of the truth. Like a deadly virus, it gains access into the church by maintaining a superficial connection to certain characteristics of biblical Christianity, but in the end it always corrupts and distorts sound teaching. The resulting degradation, like a doctrinal version of Frankenstein’s monster, is a hideous hybrid of heresy, ecstasy, and blasphemy awkwardly dressed in the tattered remnants of evangelical language.”
MacArthur repeatedly calls the Pentecostal, neo-Pentecostal, and charismatic movement “heretical.” One of the many excuses he uses to apply this extremist label to Pentecostals is in his book, which says: “Pentecostals and charismatics elevate religious experience over biblical truth. Though many of them pay lip service to the authority of God’s Word, in practice they deny it.”
The opposite is true. I give an example of MacArthur’s own Calvinist backyard. The Gospel Coalition, a group formed exclusively by Calvinists, has been advocating the idea that an evangelical can be homosexual and minister as long as he limits his homosexuality to thoughts and desires without practicing them. In fact, the Gospel Coalition has several members who are supposedly non-practicing homosexual ministers.
MacArthur is also a member of the Gospel Coalition. This is the perfect case of putting the personal experience of sin, whether in thoughts, desires, or actions, of homosexual Calvinist ministers above God’s Word. In fact, it is not the Pentecostal churches that are leading the apostasy of ordaining homosexual ministers. It is Calvinist churches. Pharisaism reigns in cessationist Calvinism.
Benny Hinn has done the right thing by renouncing an extremist prosperity theology that demands money in exchange for blessings. But the other less radical capitalist forms of the prosperity theology that confront socialism and encourage and motivate poor Christians to seek health, employment, and a better life in God, not in socialism, should be strengthened.
As for John MacArthur, who demonizes Pentecostals, Charismatics, and neo-Pentecostals, and all capitalist forms of the prosperity theology, he should focus on the Gospel Coalition that accepts homosexual Calvinist ministers who place their homosexual experience and feelings above the Word of God.
Another harmful feeling is envy. MacArthur and other envious Calvinists should not use the hardcore form of the prosperity gospel formerly preached by Hinn as an excuse to attack all forms of this gospel and, worst of all, attack all charismatic, Pentecostal and neo-Pentecostal movements, which is exactly what he does. Such feeling is a hardcore envy, especially because the prosperity gospel, with its distinct American capitalist evangelicalism, has had a prominent benevolent role to encourage and motivate the Third World poor and threaten socialism. MacArthur and other Calvinists should praise God, not dedicate their lives to a hardcore envy against charismatics, Pentecostals and neo-Pentecostals.
If all forms of the prosperity gospel are destroyed, as cessationist Calvinists want, who will be left to encourage and motivate the poor to pursue a better life through a biblical capitalism? Who will be left to fight socialism so prevalent among Catholics and even Calvinists in Latin America?
With information from DailyMail.
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Thursday, June 20, 2019

Prosperity gospel televangelist, who is a Trump spiritual adviser, officially opens Trump’s reelection campaign launch with prayer spiritually destroying the demonic network against the president and saying his 2020 victory assured in the name of Jesus Christ


Prosperity gospel televangelist, who is a Trump spiritual adviser, officially opens Trump’s reelection campaign launch with prayer spiritually destroying the demonic network against the president and saying his 2020 victory assured in the name of Jesus Christ

By Julio Severo
Paula White, one of the most prominent prosperity gospel televangelists in the U.S. and President Donald Trump’s evangelical spiritual adviser, took stage to deliver a powerful prayer at the start of the president’s 2020 reelection campaign launch on June 18, 2019.
Paula White
As the televangelist asked the thousands of Trump supporters gathered in Orlando, Florida to join hands with their neighbors, she attacked the spiritual forces opposing Trump as a “demonic network.”
“I pray for the Spirit of the Lord to rest upon our president, and let Your favor cause his horn, his power to be exalted according to Psalm Chapter 89 verse 17,” White prayed before the packed-out rally. “Father You have raised President Trump up for such a time as this.”
“Now, I need you to really go with me here,” she said to the crowd. “Let every evil veil of deception of the enemy be removed from people’s eyes.”
She also said to Trump’s crowd in Orlando, “I’m gonna deal with some principalities now,” and then she went on to pray from Ephesians 6:12 (NKJV), which says: “For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this age, against spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places.”
She continued her powerful prayer saying, “Let every demonic network that has aligned itself against the purpose, against the calling of President Trump, let it be broken, let it be torn down in the name of Jesus. Let the council of the wicked be spoiled right now.”
The charismatic televangelist has used this language in the past in reference to Trump. While speaking at the White House for the National Day of Prayer last month, she demanded “every demonic network to be scattered right now.”
“I declare that President Trump will overcome every strategy from hell and every strategy of the enemy – every strategy – and he will fulfill his calling and his destiny,” White prayed.
During her almost five-minute impassioned prayer, White prophesied no weapon would be able to be formed against Trump. She also prophesied that it was the will of Jesus that Trump was president and it was His will that he would win again in 2020.
“I deploy the hand of God to work for him,” White prophesied. “In the name of Jesus, I secure his calling, I secure his purpose, I secure his family, and we secure victory in the name which is above every name — the name of Jesus Christ.”
Paula White praying at Trump's inauguration
The prosperity gospel televangelist does not hold any official post in Trump administration, but does lead a White House evangelical advisory council and said the prayer at Trump’s inauguration.
Trump has a lot of support from U.S. conservative evangelicals, but White’s theology is controversial, even among evangelicals, who also disagree with her because they believe that the Bible does not authorize women to lead churches.
Even though Trump was born a Presbyterian and seldom attends a Presbyterian church, he does not understand spiritual issues. Even so, he has been generously open to evangelicals. And he feels in the prayers of White a spiritual power he was not used to see in the Presbyterian church.
Trump and Paula White
Before beginning the prayer, White said that she has known Trump and his family for 18 years. Their friendship began after Trump called her to praise her televised sermons.
Paula White mentions in a commentary for CBN, “the President’s extraordinary commitment to religious liberty has been obvious since the very beginning of his presidency — just two weeks after his inauguration, Donald Trump attended the National Prayer Breakfast where he stressed the importance of preserving and cherishing religious values.”
In May, White stepped down as pastor at City of Destiny megachurch in Apopka, Florida. She said she wants to focus on opening a Christian university and 3,000 churches in the United States.
For some reason, Trump chose White to make the opening prayer of his reelection campaign. It was a very important opportunity, which White did not waste. Her prayer was extraordinarily impacting.
It seems that Trump’s evangelical supporters — including charismatic televangelists, Presbyterians, Baptists and others — are afraid to lose their chance to be heard by Trump if they mention his left-wing stances on the gay issues.
Paula White’s prayer was interesting and powerful. And her prayer, and the prayers of other U.S. evangelical leaders, could be much more interesting by breaking, in the name of Jesus, every demonic network influencing Trump to support the same demonic homosexual cause Obama supported for 8 years.
White could have added to her powerful prayer: “Let every evil veil of deception of the enemy be removed from Trump’s eyes regarding celebration of LGBT ‘Pride’ Month and a global campaign to make sodomy legal around the world.”
Even if you totally disagree with White and how she lives the Bible, there is no way to deny that her prayer was powerful.
God has already given a big victory to Trump for the sake of his evangelical spiritual advisers: He delivered Trump from Steve Bannon, an occult adviser who was trying to use Trump to advance his esoteric fascist movement.
With the powerful prayers of White and others, God can do much more to deliver him from the demonic network of homosexualist forces.
With information from DailyMail, CBN News and Charisma.
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Sunday, December 16, 2018

Megachurch pastor buys wife $200G Lamborghini. How cannot you criticize such waste?


Megachurch pastor buys wife $200G Lamborghini. How cannot you criticize such waste?

By Julio Severo
A South Carolina pastor is trying to defend himself after buying his wife a $200,000 Lamborghini Urus as a wedding anniversary present.
Pastor John Gray, the leader of Relentless Church in Greenville, S.C., came under fire for presenting his wife, Aventer, with the expensive vehicle. A video that went viral, which has since been deleted, showed the pastor surprising his wife with the keys to the luxury vehicle last week, the Charlotte Observer reported.
The pastor was criticized by social media users questioning how he could afford such expensive car. In a Facebook Live video Thursday, Gray defended the purchase while tearing up at times.
“Did this man use any money from the church to do this?” Gray asked. “And the answer is no. Absolutely not. And God, take my life on this live feed if I did.”
The pastor explained that the car was bought with money he saved from his second book deal and the fourth season of his reality show “The Book of John Gray” which airs on the OWN Channel.
So while churchgoers are encouraged to sacrifice their money for missions and other Christian causes, do Christian ministers save millions to buy a luxury car? Cannot ministers also make their own sacrifices for the sake of the Kingdom of God?
The Apostles of Jesus gave everything — including their lives — to proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ. How can people today use the New Testament written by the Apostles to justify high expenses in their selfish lifestyles, not in missions, while billions of people are perishing without knowing Jesus died for their sins?
I have read of Christian businessmen giving a significant part of their profits to Christian causes. Should ministers do less?
God gives us prosperity to bless people in their needs, not to indulge people in their selfish desires and greed.
The Apostles of Jesus expressed sacrifices through their preaching and personal lives. Are Christian ministers today unable to follow their good example?
There are Christians having visions and dreams of ministers going to Hell. I believe in supernatural visions and dreams. But do you need them to discern that a selfish life contrary to the unselfish lives of the Apostles is headed to Hell?
With information from FoxNews.
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Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Brazilian Presidential Election: Fernando Haddad Acknowledges that the Biggest Responsible for His Defeat at the Polls Was “Evangelical Phenomenon”


Brazilian Presidential Election: Fernando Haddad Acknowledges that the Biggest Responsible for His Defeat at the Polls Was “Evangelical Phenomenon”

By Julio Severo
In an interview with the prominent Brazilian newspaper Folha de S. Paulo this week, former presidential candidate Fernando Haddad, from the socialist Workers’ Party, which ruled Brazil from 2003 to 2016, has acknowledged that the biggest responsible for his defeat at the polls was the “evangelical phenomenon.”
Fernando Haddad and evangelicals
He said, “There are studies showing that if I had in the evangelical world the same percentage of votes I had in the non-evangelical world, I would have won the election,” adding, “There is an evangelical phenomenon we have to deal with.”
He blamed especially neo-Pentecostalism, or charismatics, for his defeat.
“Brazil, structurally, is a hybrid between castes and meritocracy. It is admitted that the individual may go up, but alone, as long as the distance between classes remains. Neo-Pentecostalism and the Prosperity Gospel are compatible with that,” Haddad said.
While historic Protestant churches overwhelmingly affected by the Theology of Integral Mission (the Protestant version of Liberation Theology, very similar to the Social Gospel) blame the Prosperity Gospel for all the problems in the Evangelical Church in Brazil, Haddad has directly blamed neo-Pentecostalism and the Prosperity Gospel for his defeat!
He hit the spot. When the initiative of the ruling Workers’ Party for imposing homosexual indoctrination on schoolchildren began to move forward in 2011 during Haddad’s term as minister of education, the largest opposition came not from Catholic bishops nor from historic Protestant churches like the Brazilian Presbyterian Church. It came from neo-Pentecostal leaders, who eventually pressured the Evangelical Parliamentary Caucus in the Brazilian Congress, which in turn pressured leftist President Dilma Rousseff to veto it.
Haddad is not the first leftist leader to identify neo-Pentecostalism as an obstacle to leftism. In 2016 Brazilian Marxist philosopher Marilena Chaui said that the main threat to Brazilian leftism is the Prosperity Gospel from neo-Pentecostal churches.
This theological modality, which was born in the United States and is spreading as a wildfire in Brazil, has great affinity with American capitalism and aversion to the socialist system. The growth of neo-Pentecostalism creates natural friction with socialism. The more neo-Pentecostalism, the less socialism. Venezuela, which is being ravaged by socialism, is an example. There are very few neo-Pentecostal churches in Venezuela, whose population is 96 percent Catholic.
Although Haddad attributed his defeat to neo-Pentecostalism and although the U.S. and Israeli media reported that Brazilian President-elect Jair Bolsonaro’s greatest conservative force were evangelicals, Bolsonaro has so far given priority to cabinet appointments to suggestions coming from Olavo de Carvalho, whose adherents believe that without he Bolsonaro would not be president.
Although the name of Rev. Silas Malafaia appeared several times in the big U.S. media as a prominent influence that led evangelicals to vote for Bolsonaro, the new president, when receiving the name of Guilherme Schelb coming from Malafaia for minister of Education, preferred to welcome the indication of anti-Trump Ricardo Vélez, coming from Carvalho, although the name of Carvalho was not mentioned once in the big U.S. media as having had any influence in the election of Bolsonaro.
Bolsonaro also appointed as Foreign Minister Ernesto Araújo, the name indicated by Carvalho. Araújo has an article in a diplomatic magazine by Itamaraty, the Brazilian Foreign Ministry, extolling the Islamic occultist René Guénon, who for many years has been propagandized by Carvalho in Brazil.
While Haddad has expressed explicit acknowledgment that his defeat was due to evangelicals, specifically to neo-Pentecostals, from Bolsonaro has not yet come any acknowledgement that his victory was due to them. On the day of his victory, Bolsonaro thanked Brazilians in general and Olavo de Carvalho in particular.
However, from Carvalho, who has been abundantly recommended by Bolsonaro and his sons in highly flattering Twitter and Facebook messages, came a bizarre acknowledgement suggesting that evangelical churches should be fought more than socialism has been fought. Carvalho said: “Evangelical churches have done more harm to Brazil than the entire left did.”
Therefore, both Haddad and Carvalho see evangelical churches as major obstacles, threats and evils.
But who has been an influence, with his advices, in Bolsonaro’s politics is not Haddad. It is Carvalho himself, who became a Rasputin in his life.
With information from GospelPrime.
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