(By John  MacArthur) TBN is by far the leading perpetrator  of that lie worldwide. Virtually all the network's main celebrities  tell listeners that God will give them healing, wealth, and other material  blessings in return for their money. On program after program people are urged  to "plant a seed" by sending "the largest bill you have or the biggest check you  can write" with the promise that God will miraculously make them rich in return.  That same message dominates all of TBN's major fundraising drives. It's known as  the "seed faith" plan,  so-called by Oral Roberts, who set the pattern for most of the charismatic  televangelists who have followed the trail he blazed. Paul Crouch, founder,  chairman, and commander-in-chief of TBN, is one of the doctrine's staunchest  defenders. And yet evangelical church leaders  typically show a kind of benign tolerance toward the whole enterprise.  Most would never endorse it, of course. They may joke about the  gaudiness of the big hair and tawdry set decorations on TBN. Ask them, and they  will most likely acknowledge that the prosperity gospel is no gospel at all.  Press the issue, and you will probably get them to admit that it is a dangerous  form of false doctrine, totally unbiblical, and essentially  anti-Christian. Those who remain silent in the face of such  grotesque lies may in fact be partly responsible for turning people away from  the truth. Consider the  testimony of William Lobdell, religion reporter for the Los Angeles  Times, who once considered himself a devout evangelical Christian, but after  doing a series of investigative reports on the moral and doctrinal cesspool at  TBN; then "finding that his investigative stories about faith healer Benny Hinn  and televangelists Jan and Paul Crouch appear to make no difference on the reach  of these ministries or the lives of their followers, he [gave] up on the beat  and on religion generally."
I don't watch much  television, and when I do I generally avoid the Trinity Broadcasting Network  (TBN). For many years TBN has been dominated by faith-healers, full-time  fund-raisers, and self-proclaimed prophets spewing heresy. I wrote about the  false gospel they proclaim and the phony miracles they pretend to do almost two  decades ago in Charismatic  Chaos (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1992. See especially chapter  12). I had my fill of charismatic televangelism while researching that book,  and I can hardly bear to watch it any more.
Recently, however, while  recovering from knee-replacement surgery, I decided to sample some of the  current fare on TBN. From a therapeutic point of view it seemed a good choice:  something more excruciating than the pain in my leg might distract me from the  physical suffering of post-surgical trauma. And I suppose on that basis the  strategy was effective.
But it left me outraged and frustratedand eager  to challenge the misperceptions in the minds of millions of unbelievers who see  these false teachers masquerading as ministers of Christ on TBN.
I'm  outraged at the brazen way so many false teachers twist the message of  Scripture in Jesus' name. And I'm frustrated because I'm certain that if  these charlatans were not receiving a large proportion of their financial  support from sincere believers (and silent acquiescence from Christian leaders  who surely know better), they would have no platform for their shenanigans. They  would soon lose their core constituency and fade from the scene.
Instead,  religious quacks are actually multiplying at a frightening pace. One thing I  discovered to my immense displeasure is that TBN is by no means the only  religious network broadcasting poisonous false doctrine around the clock. The  channel lineup I receive includes at least seven other channels whose schedules  are filled with false teachers and charlatans. There's The Church Channel,  Daystar, GodTV, World Harvest Television (LeSEA), Total Christian Television,  and several others. Some of them feature blocs of family television programing  and a few fairly sound teachers who provide moments of escape from the  prosperity preachers. But all of them give prominence to enormous amounts of  heresy and religious claptrapenough to make them positively dangerous. And TBN  is singularly responsible for kicking that door open so wide.
The  continued growth and influence of TBN is baffling for a number of reasons, not  the least of which is the thick aura of lust, greed, and other kinds of moral  impropriety that surrounds the whole enterprise. A long string of scandals  involving notable charismatic televangelists between 1988 and 1992 should have  been sufficient reason for even the most credulous viewers to scrutinize the  entire industry with skepticism. First came the international spectacle of Jim and Tammy Faye  Bakker's moral, marital, and financial collapse. That was followed closely  by the revelation of Jimmy  Swaggart's repeated dalliances with prostitutes. Shortly afterward, an  episode of ABC's Primetime Live exposed clear examples of deliberate  fraud on the part of three more leading charismatic televangelists. Those  incidents were punctuated by a  score of lesser scandals over several years' time. It is clear (or should  be)based on empirical evidence alonethat preachers promising miracles in  exchange for money are not to be trusted. And for anyone who simply bothers to  compare Jesus' teaching with the health-and-wealth message, it is clear that the  message that currently dominates religious television is "a different gospel;  which is really not another" (Galatians 1:6-7), but a damnable lie.
The only people who actually get rich by this scheme, of  course, are the televangelists. Their people who send money get little in return  but phony promisesand as a result, many of them turn  away from the truth completely.
If the scheme seems reminiscent of  Tetzel, that's because it is precisely the same doctrine. (Tetzel was a medieval  monk whose high-pressure selling of indulgencesphony promises of  forgivenessoutraged Martin Luther and touched off the Protestant  Reformation.)
Like Tetzel, TBN preys on the poor and plies them with  false promises. Yet what is happening daily on TBN is many times worse  than the abuses that Luther decried because it is more widespread and more  flagrant. The medium is more high-tech and the amounts bilked out of viewers'  pockets are astronomically higher. (By most estimates, TBN is worth more than a  billion dollars and rakes in $200 million annually. Those are direct  contributions to the network, not counting millions more in donations sent  directly to TBN broadcasters.) Like Tetzel on steroids, the Crouches and  virtually all the key broadcasters on TBN live in garish opulence, while  constantly begging their needy viewers for more money. Elderly, poor, and  working-class viewers constitute TBN's primary demographic. And TBN's  fundraisers all know that. The most desperate  people"unemployed," "even though I'm in between jobs," "trying to make it;  trying to survive," "broke"are baited with false promises to give what they do  not even have. Jan Crouch addresses viewers as "you little people," and suggests that they send their  grocery money to TBN "to assure God's blessing."
Thus TBN devours the  poor while making the charlatans rich. God cursed false prophets in the Old  Testament for that very thing (Jeremiah 6:13-15). It's also one of the main  reasons the Pharisees incurred Jesus' condemnation (Luke 20:46-47). It's hard to  think of any sin more evil. It not only hurts people materially; it deludes them  with groundless hope, deceives them with a false gospel, and thereby places  their souls in eternal peril. And yet those who do it pretend they are doing the  work of God.
That's not all. Almost no false prophecy, erroneous  doctrine, rank superstition, or silly claim is too outlandish to receive airtime  on TBN. Jan Crouch tearfully gives a fanciful account of how her pet chicken was  miraculously raised from the dead. Benny Hinn trumps that claim with a bizarre prophecy that if  TBN viewers will put their dead loved ones' caskets in front of television set  and touch the dead person's hand to the screen, people will "be raised from the  dead . . . by the thousands."
Ironically, one doesn't even need to  be an orthodox Trinitarian in order to broadcast on the Trinity network. Bishop  T. D. Jakes, well known for his rejection of the Nicene creed in favor of  oneness Pentecostalism, is  a staple on TBN. Benny Hinn has  repeatedly attempted to revise the doctrine of the Trinity in novel ways,  notoriously teaching at one point that there are nine persons in the  godhead.
Why, then, is there no large-scale effort among  Bible-believing evangelicals to expose, denounce, refute, and silence these  false teachers? After all, that is what Scripture commands church leaders to do  when we encounter purveyors of soul-destroying substitutes for the true  gospel:   
 
All those who truly love Christ and care  about the truth have a solemn duty to defend the truth by exposing and opposing  these lies that masquerade as truth. If we fail in that duty because of  indifference, apathy, or a craving for the approval of men, we are no less  guilty than those who actively spread the lies.
The Second Sunday in Advent.
The Collect.
You are, very, very right. It's Charismania, not Christianity.
ReplyDeletePat Robertson’s disservice to the Christian Faith
ReplyDeleteI believe in God and in the Judeo-Christian code of ethics but I struggle to embrace religion. I agree with Christianity on its essence but I disagree with some less important peripheral beliefs.
I would like to have more faith in my heart and embrace religion. I assume there are many people out there like me who want God in their hearts but can’t put up with the ignorance, bigotry and hypocrisy that permeates religious groups. Pat Robertson is who he is today because he has an audience of supporters. I beg God for forgiveness if by any unfortunate chance the path of salvation requires associating myself with a herd of idiots that has Pat Robertson as a shepherd.
You are not wrong to question those television evangelists who are preaching false doctrine, making false promises, and doing false miracles. The truth is real Christianity is down to earth, not some fantasy world where all your dreams come true.
ReplyDeleteGod loves his people no matter how rich or poor they are. Maybe he's calling you to become a true son of God? (John 1:12-13).
Charlie