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Posts Tagged ‘poor’

The Gospel of Optimism

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Joel Osteen

Joel Osteen

Joel Osteen, wildly popular and somewhat controversial purveyor of the so-called Prosperity Gospel, granted an interview with Time magazine recently. The magazine assumed that perhaps some of the sheen of Osteen’s message might’ve lost some of its glint, what with the recession clinging tenaciously to most folks’ pocketbooks.

Not so. Attendance at his Lakewood Church in Houston is up 10 percent, and this spring he preached in a sold-out Yankee Stadium. His message sounds as relentlessly optimistic as ever.

These days there are so many things trying to pull us down, with the economy and the swine flu. I really think there’s something [that affects people] on the inside when somebody tells them, like I do, God’s still in control. He’s got good things in store for your life. And when you trust, when you believe, you can see amazing things happen.

I’ve always thought the Prosperity Gospel, as I understand it, was kinda bunk, and suspected that those who pedaled it were too pollyannaish for my taste. A quick trip through the New Testament will tell you, in no uncertain terms, that getting right with God doesn’t guarantee a life on easy street.

But, being the optimist I am, what Osteen says in this piece resonates with me. I believe its the height of folly to assume God will monetarily reward us if we’re good Christians. But I do believe that God cares for us and (all things being equal) likes for us to be happy. And I do believe he does have great plans for us — though the greatness is in the plan, not us. 

But I gotta be honest with you — I’m not overly familiar with the Prosperity Gospel or what Osteen (or others) teach. Are any of you know a little more about this topic than I do? Fill me in, if you would. I’d love to hear from you.

A Matter of Priorities

Monday, June 15th, 2009

I just read a fascinating interview of Richard Stearns, president of World Vision, on the Christianity Today Web site. World Vision, of course, is a child sponsorship organization

A Sudanese refugee camp in Chad. photo by Mark Knobil
A Sudanese refugee camp in Chad. photo by Mark Knobil

 that helps the poorest of the poor in about 100 countries now. So it’s not exactly a shocker to hear Stearns say that Christians need to do a better job of caring for the world’s most impoverished people. Still, he does so with eloquence and obvious passion:

 

“The church has done a great deal of good in the world and continues to do a great deal of good in the world. If all Christian ministries were removed from the world, all the salt from the meat, our world would be a far worse place than it is. If you look at the hospitals and the homeless shelters, the drug rehabilitation programs, the divorce recovery programs, the feeding programs around the world and ask who’s doing that, it’s mostly Christians. … But are we doing that which we are capable of? Are we living up to our ability to change the world as Jesus kind of envisioned? We are getting a C in a course that we ought to be getting an A in.”

 

Stories like this challenge me, I think, to reconsider the blessings God has dropped in my lap. I love my diversions and creature comforts, but reading this makes me wonder whether a new PlayStation 3 is really the best use of my cash. Galli’s piece is definitely worth reading in its entirety, if you have the chance.