I thank you for your kind attitude. Your other "moderator" was not so gentle
As i have stated i have learned from many teachers from the so-called Church fathers to some i hold in regard today. For sake of being polite, i would most generally associate myself with two modern teachers, Andrew Wommack, Joseph Prince. As i look at my books in the shelves, chairs, floors, tables, etc..
I will make you a list. Billy Graham, Charles Finney, A.W. Tozer, T.A. Sparks,D.L. Moody, Smith Wigglesworth, E.W. Kenyon, K. Haggin Sr., John Wesley,C.Spurgeon, and some others. I find it kinda odd that the largest and fastest growing part of the Christian faith would have so little to share on this forum? If i had to guess? maybe they have been made to feel unwelcome?
I assure you i find much to disagree with in many of these writers, and much i have learned from them. I am sure you and i agree on much? and would disagree on much? But the Heart of one who belongs to Christ will always find a place of peace with his brothers who love him.
Now as far as seeing the power of God in my own life? I will let you guess at that. I will declare the Word of God has Power for those who believe!
Quite a mix of teachers there. Some I admire a great deal. Graham, Spurgeon are two. They would strongly disagree with Prince, Hagin, and Wigglesworth. John Wesley was a mixed bag of Arminius and Luther teachings, but for the most part a strong Protestant.
I agree the word of God holds power, as to what type of power I'd like you to comment on, as you see fit. That way we can cut through the "stuff" and "fluff" and get to brass tacks.
We get quite a few WOF folks in here, and still have many. The WOF movement is often the face of Christianity today for the world. I think that's a shame, but some are quite good at presentation; like Prince and Olsteen. I give them credit for interesting and enticing some in the world to an aspect of Christianity, even though I feel they teach pure garbage when it comes to the gospel, redemption and salvation.
Here is an example of some of their teachings. In the opening chapter, titled "Jesus Appears to Me," Hagin claims that while he "was in the Spirit" -- just like the apostle John on the Isle of Patmos -- a white cloud enveloped him and he began to speak in tongues. "Then the Lord Jesus Himself appeared to me," says Hagin. "He stood within three feet of me." After what sounded like a casual conversation about such things as finances, ministry, and even current affairs, Jesus told Hagin to get a pencil and a piece of paper. He then instructed him to "Write down: 1,2,3,4." Jesus then allegedly told Hagin "if anybody, anywhere, will take these four steps or put these four principles into operation, he will always receive whatever he wants from Me or from God the Father." That includes whatever you want financially. The formula is simply: "Say it, Do it, Receive it, and Tell it."
1) Step number one is "Say it." "Positive or negative, it is up to the individual. According to what the individual says, that shall he receive."
2) Step number two is "Do it." "Your action defeats you or puts you over. According to your action, you receive or you are kept from receiving."
3) Step number three is "Receive it." We are to plug into the "powerhouse of heaven." "Faith is the plug, praise God! Just plug in."
4). Step number four is "Tell it so others may believe." This final step might be considered the Faith movement's outreach program.
Kenneth Copeland states the faith formula this way: "All it takes is 1) Seeing or visualizing whatever you need, whether physical or financial; 2) Staking your claim on Scripture; and 3) Speaking it into existence" (Christianity in Crisis, p. 80).
Faith teachers like to teach, based upon serious mishandling of passages such as John 10:31-39 and II Peter 1:4, that Christians are "little gods." Copeland says, "Now Peter said by exceeding great and precious promises you become partakers of the divine nature. All right, are we gods? We are a class of gods!" (Christianity in Crisis, p. 116). Benny Hinn declares, "God came from heaven, became a man, made man into little gods, went back to heaven as a man" (Christianity in Crisis, p. 382 n. 43). Earl Paulk wrote, "Until we comprehend that we are little gods and we begin to act like little gods, we cannot manifest the kingdom of God" (Satan Unmasked, p. 97).
While man is glorified, God is humiliated in the Faith system. Copeland claims that God is a being who stands about 6'2"-6'3", weighing somewhere in the neighborhood of a couple of hundred pounds, and has a hand span of 9" across (Christianity in Crisis, p. 121). Copeland also declares "Adam was the copy, looked just like (God). If you stood Adam beside God, they looked just exactly alike. If you stood Jesus and Adam side-by-side, they would look and sound exactly alike" (Christianity in Crisis, p. 137).
There is very little teaching, if any, in the WOF about redemption or salvation. In fact they don't really need to teach it because of
Four atonement-related errors on the part of the Faith teachers that can be documented:
1) Christ was re-created on the cross from divine to demonic. To put it in Faith vernacular, Jesus took on the very nature of Satan himself.
2) Your redemption was not secured on the cross, but in hell. In fact, many Faith teachers claim that Christ's torture by all the demons of hell was a "ransom" God paid to Satan so that He could get back into a universe from which He had been banished.
3) Jesus was reborn (or born again) in the very pit of hell.
4) Christ was reincarnated through His rebirth in hell and that those who (like Christ) are born again can become "incarnated" as well.
Thus, Faith teachers take Christ, the spotless Lamb, and pervert Him into an unholy sacrifice on the cross (Christianity In Crisis, p.153).
But, perhaps the faith moments bread and butter rest with it's "prosperity teachings". This is what attracts many people. Nothing will create more euphoria in the average person than the promise to make them wealthy, and this the Word-Faith leadership knows very well. The Word-Faith teacher's lifestyle is clearly identified by opulence, luxury, riches, and the assurance that all of this can be his followers as well -- if only they apply certain principles.
Robert Tilton is normative. On a Trinity Broadcasting Network program in 1990 he said: "Being poor is a sin, when God promises prosperity. New house? New car? That's chicken feed. That's nothing compared to what God wants to do for you" (Charismatic Chaos, p. 285).
Fred Price on a similar broadcast explains how it works: "If you've got one dollar faith and you ask for a ten-thousand dollar item, it ain't going to work. It won't work. Jesus said, 'According to your [faith],' not according to God's will for you, in His own good time, if it's according to His will, if He can work it into his busy schedule. He said, 'According to your faith, be it unto you'" (Charismatic Chaos, p. 286).
Of course, the road to prosperity somehow always leads to the offering plate of the Word-Faith Movement. Gloria Copeland (Kenneth's wife) pulls no punches in her book God's Will Is Prosperity: "Give $10 and receive $1000; Give $1000 and receive $100,000 … give one house and receive one hundred houses or a house worth one hundred times as much. Give one airplane and receive one hundred times the value of the airplane. … In short, Mark 10:30 is a very good deal" (p. 54).
Does any of this fit with your WOF back ground?