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The Truth About The Word of Faith Movement

Article by Tom Killingsworth from here [See also http://endtimespropheticwords.wordpress.com/2008/12/01/shepherding-discipleship-spiritual-fathering-mentoring-pastoral-covering/ ]

“I used to wonder why Shepherding reappeared in the Charismatic churches considering that the founders pretty much shut it down around 1990, and publicly repented. It didn’t make sense why it not only lingered, but began thriving again. I have lately found out why it reappeared. It snuck in through the teachings of the Word of Faith, one of the most influential movements since the Azusa Street Revival of 1906. The Word of Faith may be influential, but it is also an apostasy, and carries Shepherding clinging to it like a leech.

I was a follower of the Word of Faith doctrine from 1990 until 2005. Even when I began to break with the Word of Faith over the extremes of the Prosperity Gospel, I still maintained connections with them. I was a licensed minister through a Word of Faith church from 2004 through 2007, and my wife worked for Kenneth Copeland Ministries from 2003 until late 2007. During that time, I noticed more and more spiritual abuse, things that reminded me of Shepherding. I began to wonder, “Is the Word of Faith in general, and Kenneth Copeland Ministries in particular, Shepherdist, or merely spiritually abusive, or am I nuts?”

Early this year (2008), I found out that I am not nuts!

In his book A Different Gospel,  D.R. McConnell points out the origins of the Word of Faith. This is not a rant by a Fundamentalist preacher. This book began as McConnell’s master’s thesis when he was a student at Oral Roberts University. He is a Charismatic pastor, so this is an insider’s look at something he finds disturbing.

McConnell says that today’s Word of Faith preachers (Kenneth Copeland, John Avanzini, Creflo Dollar, etc.) base their doctrine on the works and teachings of Kenneth Hagin. We knew that.

McConnell then says that Hagin based (some say plagiarized) his doctrines on the works of E.W. Kenyon. We knew that, too.

But then McConnell drops a 2,000 megaton bombshell, ripping through my views of the Word of Faith like a lawnmower through Bermuda grass. He states that Kenyon based his teachings and beliefs on what he was taught in college, at the hands of teachers who were Gnostic and Christian Scientist.

Whoa! That makes the whole doctrine pretty much suspect from the beginning!

Kenyon attended the Emerson School of Oratory in 1892. There, he was under the influence of Charles Emerson, a Christian Scientist; R.W. Trine, a Gnostic who wrote one of the major books on New Thought; and M.J. Savage, a Unitarian whose church Kenyon attended.

Let’s look at those beliefs and see how the Word of Faith dovetails into them.

Gnosticism is a complex system of beliefs hammered together from earlier ones. It has existed as far back as before the time of Christ and was a real problem to the Church as early as the time of John and Peter. To summarize Gnosticism, it believes that salvation is through knowledge of mysteries (gained through intuition), that all matter is evil and that only spirit is good (a belief called Dualism), that Jesus could not have been purely good because He was in a human body, that Jesus was a mere man, that God created lesser gods, and that only Gnostics, “people who knew,” were guaranteed salvation. They also believe that God could only be reached through gnosis, through the divine revelation of mysterious knowledge. Gnostics also believe that God is a hermaphrodite; half male, half female. Gnostics believed in a divine formula, that once understood, would destroy the power of evil.

Gnosticism’s more modern offshoot, New Thought, states that Spirit is the ultimate reality, the true human self is divine, divinely attuned thought is a positive force for good, most disease is mental in origin, and that right thinking has a healing effect. While that may sound Biblical, it is actually a form of early Humanism, and was founded on pantheism, occultism, spiritualism, and the basics of Gnosticism.

Christian Science is founded on the teachings of Mary Baker Eddy. … Some of the things that they believe [aren't biblical] … include “mind over matter,” the idea that all things are spiritual and the material world is an illusion, and the denial of physical ailments. Please note that Christian Science is not Scientology.

Hmmm … I see parallels already. Let’s review some of them.

The Word of Faith believes:

  • Divine Revelation: well, I believe in it, too, but all divine revelation has to mesh perfectly with the Bible. Word of Faith preachers teach that they are the dispensers of this revelation, and imply that only they are capable of giving it. They will rely more on what “God told them” than on what was written in the Bible, despite their insistence that we, the congregation, must find three scripture verses to support what we want to do. This is not unlike the Gnostic belief in mysterious knowledge.
  • They put God in a box: Word of Faith preachers deny God’s sovereignty and actually mock the concept. They make God a slave to “spiritual laws” that even He can’t break. They teach that we can twist God’s arm to get what we want, enabling us to write our own ticket with Him (Kenneth Hagin’s term), or turn God into a vending machine (Richard Roberts’ term). The concept of spiritual laws and the idea that God is at our beck and call is definitely Gnostic.
  • Jesus died spiritually: while the idea that Jesus went to Hell is as old as the Church, the Nicene and Apostles’ Creeds do NOT say that Jesus died spiritually and had to be born again. If Jesus did die spiritually, then Jesus was a mere man, and not God incarnate. Again, this is a Gnostic belief — that Jesus was a mere man.
  • Spiritual laws: Word of Faith is founded on the concept that there are spiritual laws in the Bible, that even God is bound to obey. These spiritual laws include things like reciprocity, sowing and reaping, the law of sin and death, the law of the tongue, etc. Once these laws are understood and worked with, then Satan has no more power over the Christian. That may be true, and I’m not saying that it is, but it sounds an awful lot like the Gnostic belief in divine formulas.
  • God is as much female as He is male: I don’t know where they get this from Biblically, but more than one Word of Faith has said this. They also teach that Adam was both male and female at the same time, and God removed Adam’s female half, not just a rib. If this were true, then the pronoun for God in the Bible would be either “it” or “s/he,” not “he.” A hermaphroditic view of God is pure Gnosticism.
  • Man is equal with Jesus and God: the idea that we are made in God’s image is Biblical, but the Word of Faith teaching that we are little gods, or that we are made in God’s class is not. Being equal with God is Gnostic at best, Lucifer’s rant at worst.
  • Our words can change time, space and matter: this is known as “Name It and Claim It.” Sure, our words can change attitudes and maybe our bodies, but not to the extent that we are the “prophets of our own lives.” This is Christian Scientist “mind over matter,” retooled for modern times.
  • Emphasis on Dominion over the Earth instead of forgiveness of sins and the need to love others: Most Word of Faith theology is rooted in having dominion over the Earth, and that Adam was the god of this planet. Do I have to go into that? Gnostics believed that they were gods.
  • The reality of sickness and sin is denied: The Word of Faith says that they do not deny sickness and sin, but deny sickness and sin’s place in their bodies. It’s the same thing. Christian Science denies sickness, often to the point of dying instead of taking medicine. Word of Faith preachers do the same thing, often mocking doctors and medicine, despite having them on their daily television shows.
  • Prayer is replaced by confession: Prayer connects us with God. Confession connects us with us. In other words, confession, whether it is what we desire or a Bible verse, is a Gnostic practice of mumbling chants and spells, replacing God with our own minds, because we have the knowledge it takes to save ourselves.
  • God can only be pleased by faith: This is based on a verse in Hebrews. The implication is that if we are not standing on three scriptures from the Bible, believing we receive, and holding God to the spiritual laws, then God is not pleased with us. This is very similar to the Gnostic concept that the only way to God is through gnosis (in this case, the only way to God is through the strict definition of faith that the preacher uses). This totally rules out the concept that the way to God is through Jesus Christ.
  • Dualism: The Word of Faith stresses that everything is spiritual, and that the physical is not important. They mock education and creatitivy and the five human senses. They hate sex (Kenneth Copeland said that we were supposed to speak our children into existence, Gloria Copeland said that sex was a product of the fall of Adam, and Benny Hinn said that women were originally supposed to give birth from their armpits). Despite their obsession with healing, they hate the human body, calling it an “earth suit.” Dualism is a Gnostic belief. Sure, you find the same teaching in the works of St. Augustine, but remember, he was a Gnostic before becoming a Christian.

I should have seen all this from the beginning, but I didn’t. I fell for the teaching that I could get rich quick and that I didn’t have to be sick a day in my life. There is a sucker born every minute! The reason the Word of Faith fooled me, and millions of other Christians, is that there is a lot of Biblical truth in it. Much of what Word of Faith preachers teach is sound. But what they teach that is sound is nothing more than the truths found in the Pentecostal movement of 1906 and the Charismatic Renewal of 1967. It’s the rest that’s poisoned; the part that orginated with Kenyon, was modified by Hagin and has been perpetuated by Copeland.

Another reason the Word of Faith fooled me, and millions of others, is that the preachers are genuinely sincere Christians who love Jesus! {Endtimes note: I do not agree with this bit – some may be sincere and genuine but many are NOT] Kenyon, Hagin, Copeland, Dollar and others have helped millions of people know Christ better. They really believe that what they preach is totally Biblical. Unfortunately, it isn’t. Kenyon fought against the metaphysical religions of Christian Science and New Thought, denying their more obvious unbiblical teachings. Yet, he ended up embracing enough of these unbiblical teachings to turn the Word of Faith from what should have been a new branch of the Pentecostal/Charismatic movement into a genuine cult.

I know, I know … there are Word of Faith apologetics that refute every one of these observations. The thing for me is this — I was an insider and saw this firsthand. I saw the abuses, and the apostasies, and people running around chanting their mantras, and I had enough. McConnell’s claims make sense to me. They explain what I saw. You have to decide for yourself.

This does not make the Word of Faith a heresy. Heresy is a rebellion against the doctrines of an established church. The Word of Faith is its own denomination, so it has nothing to rebel against. It is instead, an apostasy! An apostasy is nothing less than a rebellion against God Himself.

It gets worse.

There is a direct link between the Word of Faith and Shepherding.

Tricia Tillin, in her online testimony, shows this direct link. She lives in Great Britain, and was involved with KCM and the Word of Faith during the latter part of the 20th Century. In her blog, she writes that in 1985, she visited the UK headquarters for KCM and had a conversation with the worker there. During this conversation, Mrs. Tillin brought up how she was relieved that Kenneth Copeland was so opposed to Shepherding. Mrs. Tillin expected the worker to agree with her. Instead, Mrs. Tillin writes “She was evasive, would not condemn Shepherding doctrines, and then said that there had been a change of heart and the Copeland ministry would now be working more closely with the Shepherding leadership, and we should be praying for unity between them. This was devastating! Formerly they agreed Shepherding was in error, but now they’d changed their minds, and were going to work alongside each other!”

Then there is Stephen Parson’s book Ungodly Fear. Parson writes that in 1985 (the same year that Mrs. Tillin visited the KCM headquarters in Great Britain), at a convention of the Network of Christian Ministries, Kenneth Copeland said the Word of Faith and the Shepherding doctrines ought to be merged.

So, two different sources identify that the Word of Faith and Shepherding married each other. This does, at least to me, explains what I saw during my tenure with KCM and the Word of Faith. If the Word of Faith was so far from the truth to begin with, then it’s easy to understand how it could so easily embrace another apostasy like Shepherding.

And it also explains how Shepherding has made so many inroads into the Charismatic churches and ministries. Kenneth Copeland is a highly respected and influential teacher among many Charismatics. They are simply doing what they see his ministry and church do.”

See also http://endtimespropheticwords.wordpress.com/2008/11/21/some-of-the-real-rotten-roots-of-modern-word-of-faith-theology/

and http://endtimespropheticwords.wordpress.com/2008/11/19/positive-negative-confession-word-faith-logos-rhema/

December 1, 2008 - Posted by endtimespropheticwords | Benny Hinn, Christian Science, Creflo Dollar, Dominionism, False Prophets and Teachers, Gloria Copeland, John Avanzini, Kenneth Copeland, Kenneth Hagin, Mary Baker Eddy, New Thought, Oral Roberts, Positive Confession, Prophecy, Prosperity Gospel/Seed Faith, Richard & Lindsay Roberts (ORU), Richard Roberts, Word of Faith, signs and wonders | , , , , , | 9 Comments

9 Comments »

  1. Growing up at a Word of Faith Church founded by one of Hagin’s “Star Pupils” allowed me to see the reality of WOF movement long term. I could write a dissertation on it myself. LOL. All the heresies and doctrines. I spent my youth and adulthood in WOF.

    The one thing my “Pastor” taught me was this: Never take the word of a Preacher. However, after 7 years of “doing it right” he gave in to the seductive side of the WOF movement, and allowed a LOT of the seducing spirits attached slip into his doctrinal teachings.

    It was a shame to. His heart (at the start) was so right. 12 years ago, God sent me away from this “movement.” He allowed me to return after a 7 year hiatus so my eyes would be opened.

    I can recall the many “church” services I would sit in the auditorium (now a 5,000 seater) crying and praying for the people. I joined this church when it was 6 months old and 100 members srong. Now here I was 24 years later (22,000 members strong) lamenting the change. I didn’t attribute it to “WOF” doctrine because of what my pastor taught me. It lined up with the Bible (in most respects) He was a BIBLE teacher. But as I watched and looked over, I realized his errors.

    He had allowed the seeds of destruction to fester and never cast them out. I would watch in amazement as he would teach things that were blatantly false. The very things he spoke against in 1980,1981 were now the things flying out of his mouth as “WORD”

    He never taught “Money as a seed” till 1994 when that lying demon from Darrow, LA was allowed to infiltrate the church. He was never about money till he ALLOWED anotherlying demon to raise up $1,000 offerings in 1993.

    WOW. How long had he festered this belief.

    As long as he had been a “faith teacher”

    His own personal story (while I have no personal issue with it) laid the foundation for his perversion.

    When he was a bible school attendee, God had him “Give Money to meet his need” and he received manifold blessings because of this “Sowing of seed.”

    I’ll be honest, the only time I ever received a monetary blessing was when I acted as a “Good steward.” and blessed those in need. never when I GAVE money to ANY religous organization.

    If I gave to a Non-Profit, it was because they were helping the needy, not building buildings.

    If I were to collect my donation statements for the YEARS I attended church, they would show I DID not believe in tithing. LOL.

    Now I am glad to be a part of the true church, and rave against “the machine” as oft as I do it. :)

    If the church is doing what they did recorded in the book of The Acts, I am totally down. If not, move on.

    In this time of economic upheaval, with well run churches having multi-million dollar balance sheets, where is the OUTPOURING of compassion for the saints and the lost????

    Collecting $3M dollar offerings on Sundays and whining about $22K light bills pressuring the people to “give more.”

    Living in the inner city of blight I ave seen so many things the CHURCHES could have done to improve the neighborhoods. But they don’t. They blithely collect tithes offerings and sacrificial offerings for themselves (to consume it upon their own lusts) to buy 16,000 dogs, Rolls Royce’s and Bentley’s but what about the people.

    Men shall become Lovers of themselves.

    I guess that lesson, “Never take the word of a preacher, if you cant find it in the bible throw it out like dirty bathwater,” he taught before he “went bad”, stuck with me. And I am proud to be called a lunatic fundamentalist.

    Funny how, in my years of training and study, I never truly understood a person who stuck to biblical truth and belief in the inerrant word of god was a fundamentalist. I was taught they were dry dead bones. LOL. Seems those bones had real life in them after-all.

    Comment by Husband of a Prophet | December 1, 2008

  2. The only argument I have with this is Copeland, Terri Pearsons, and Kellie whatever her name is now are not the least bit Christian in my view, from my experiences with that bunch. Liars and coverups, for just a start.

    Just try to contact them, no matter how bad the abuse from the “Associate Pastors” (at their orders), and see what happens.

    Comment by Gary | December 1, 2008

  3. “Divine Revelation: well, I believe in it, too, but all divine revelation has to mesh perfectly with the Bible.”

    Yes today’s revelation is that from Satan himself. I mean these modern day preachers have the “new revealed WORD” that did not originate out of God’s word. Revealation today is more of a Revel-ation. God’s revelation does not orginate or authenticate outside His Word! I believe that Paul said it best…in I Timothy 3:16:”16And without controversy great is the mystery of godliness: God was manifest in the flesh, justified in the Spirit, seen of angels, preached unto the Gentiles, believed on in the world, received up into glory.” See this revelation was not new. It originated or has origins in Isaiah 9:6 ” 6For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace.” God’s word is established by two or more witnesses. So I will say the same about “Revealation.”

    Is this accurate Miriam?

    Comment by Broken but Healing | December 1, 2008

  4. My eye opener was not so profound as Tom’s, it was simple:

    1. The Victory Magazine covers depicted the Copelands as ageless. That youthful coloured hair and air brushed dewrinkled look. Oh! yes! and the very expensive clothes. Of course Oral Roberts was a great believer in hair dye. A disguise. All those longivity confessions have to manifest hook or by crook.

    Comment by Canadanorth | December 2, 2008

  5. First, God is neither male nor female. He is the creator of gender and is above it. Humanity is the copy, the facsimile of God, created in His image. The way God created mankind shows He has both “male” and “female” attributes that He infused into the human race. Genesis states: “God created man in His own image, in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them.” God is neither man nor woman, but does have masculine/male and femanine/female qualities. Please try to understand the difference between “man” and “male” and “female” and “woman.” Human beings are men and women, male and female are qualites or attributes. God’s attributes are both male and female.

    Second, Adam was originally a single being, a single unit. Eve was not created from Adam’s “rib.” The rendering of the Hebrew word is “side.” Eve was taken from Adam’s “side.” I’ll spell this one out for you. God removed or seperated one “side” of Adam to create Eve. God removed the “female” side of Adam, who before then was a single unit of male and female, to create Eve. When Adam woke up and first saw even he did not need to guess who she was. He immediatly recognized her as himself. He immediatly saw himself and said “flesh of my flesh, bone of my bone.” It was him he was looking at. This is not gnosticism, it’s classic Jewish thought on Genesis. Look it up.

    Comment by Nickauess | January 11, 2009

  6. Nickauess,

    The same classic Jewish thought that came from the same vein that led them to refuse to believe that Jesus is the Son of God?

    Comment by Ray | October 9, 2009

  7. In this entire article I did not see any scripture quoted at all.What we have here is a bunch of secular articles. Paul in 2 Timothy 4:2 says “Preach the word” or support your case with the scripture “in season and out of season”
    Also the apostle Paul says again in Philippians 1:15-18
    “15 Some indeed preach Christ even of envy and strife; and some also of good will:
    16The one preach Christ of contention, not sincerely, supposing to add affliction to my bonds:
    17But the other of love, knowing that I am set for the defence of the gospel.
    18What then? notwithstanding, every way, whether in pretence, or in truth, Christ is preached; and I therein do rejoice, yea, and will rejoice.

    We need to learn a vital lesson from the above scripture. Whether Christ is preached out of love or out of pretence, only God has the capacity to judge. Paul says rejoice that Christ is preached.
    Finally Ephesians 1:11 says ” God…worketh all things after the counsel of his own will:” Whether the WOF message is wrong or right,if we are go by the scripture, only God who knows the heart of all men can judge such matters.

    Comment by Leon | October 9, 2009

  8. Many WOF preachers/teachers believe that “Jesus died spiritually” (JDS), was “born again” (BAJ), that “Satan became his master” that He “took on Satan’s nature” and so on.

    Direct quotes.

    While this belief isn’t taught now openly on television, it is still taught, but often behind closed doors, in special seminars and so on. Why are they so embarrased of this teaching now and have to hide it when it is taught?

    .

    Same reason Mormons are embarrased when anything new comes out that exposes what happens in their secret temple ceremonies.

    The Nicene Creed says basically that Jesus and His Father are both eternally unchanging in nature and are of the same substance.

    If Jesus took on “Satan’s nature,” was “born again” or “died spiritually,” then His nature changed. Period. There is no way around that.

    ANY person who adheres to the WOF belief that Jesus was “born again,” “died spiritually” or “took on Satan’s nature” are denying the Nicene Creed and are heretics of the highest order.

    The Gnostics hated the Nicene Creed.

    Comment by Ray | October 10, 2009

  9. Leon,

    Whether WOF are right or wrong in such matters…

    The scriptures plainly declare that we are to warn the body of Christ about false teachers/preachers (WOF) and their false doctrines and even name names.

    The scripture that support doing this have beeen posted here at this site ad nausseum by myself and others. The scriptures that show that WOFism and NARism are false and heretical have been shown.

    The WOFite and NARite apologists that post here just dismiss those scriptures and launch into ad hominem attacks saying that we are going about warning people in the wrong manner, aren’t doing it in love, are putting God in a box, are being hateful, have a religious spirit and on and on it goes.

    Comment by Ray | October 10, 2009


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