Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Statement of Faith Reviews: Kenneth Copeland

Kenneth Copeland Ministries



  • We believe in one God-Father, Son and Holy Spirit, Creator of all things. (good)


  • We believe that the Lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son of God, was conceived of the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary, was crucified, died, was buried, was resurrected, ascended into heaven, and is now seated at the right hand of God the Father and is true God and true man. (good)


  • We believe the Bible in its entirety to be the inspired Word of God and the infallible rule of faith and conduct. (good) (even though Kenneth Copeland believes in New Revelation, are you just trying to seem orthodox?)


  • We believe in the resurrection of the dead, the eternal happiness of the saved, and the eternal punishment of the lost. (Ok)


  • We believe in personal salvation of believers through the shed blood of Jesus Christ.(Good)


  • We believe in sanctification through the Word of God and by the Holy Spirit, and we believe in personal holiness, purity of heart and life. (ok, you seem ok so far Ken)


  • We believe in divine healing, through faith in the Name of Jesus Christ, and that healing is included in the Redemption. (WRONG!) Healing is not included in the redemption. The Redemption was to reconcile sinners back to God, aka Save Sinners. Not Save them and another perk!


  • We believe in water baptism, in the Baptism in the Holy Spirit as distinct from the New Birth, in speaking with tongues as the Spirit of God gives utterance (Acts 2:4), in the gifts of the Spirit, and the evidence of the fruit of the Spirit. We believe that all of these are available to believers. Nope, Speaking in tongues is not evidence that someone is saved. (1 john 3:9-10) Evidence that someone is saved is, that they no longer live a lifestyle of sin, and love their brother.


  • We believe in the Christian's hope-the soon-coming, personal return of the Lord Jesus Christ. (Good one)


  • Over all Kenneth Copeland Ministries has some orthodox Christian Beliefs. but they alse have some off beliefs. One thing i can say, is that they could have gotten more detailed such as, Their Ecclisiology, Christology, Doctrine of God, Doctrine of the holy spirit...... hmmm. or maybe if they post anything orthodox people who follow them might see the difference in their teachings and would be exposed!? 

    Oral Roberts Passed Away At Age 91



    TULSA, Okla. – Oral Roberts, a pioneer in televangelism who founded a multimillion-dollar ministry and a university that bears his name, died Tuesday. He was 91. Roberts died of complications from pneumonia in Newport Beach, Calif., according to his spokesman, A. Larry Ross. The evangelist was hospitalized after a fall on Saturday. He had survived two heart attacks in the 1990s and a broken hip in 2006.
    Roberts was a pioneer who broadcast his spirit-filled revivals on television, a new frontier for religion when he started in the 1950s. He was also a forerunner of the controversial "prosperity gospel" that has come to dominate televangelism. The evangelist's "Seed-Faith" theology held that those who give to God will get things in return.
    "If God had not, in His sovereign will, raised up the ministry of Oral Roberts, the entire charismatic movement might not have occurred," said Jack Hayford, president of the International Church of the Foursquare Gospel, in a statement.
    Roberts overcame tuberculosis at age 17, when his brother carried him to a revival meeting where a healing evangelist was praying for the sick. Roberts said he was healed of the illness and of his youthful stuttering. He said that it was then that he heard God tell him he should build a university based on the Lord's authority and the Holy Spirit.
    Roberts rose from humble tent revivals to become one of the country's most famous preachers.
    He gave up a local pastorate in Enid in 1947 to enter an evangelistic ministry in Tulsa to pray for the healing of the whole person — the body, mind and spirit. The philosophy led many to call him a "faith healer," a label he rejected with the comment: "God heals — I don't."
    By the 1960s and '70s, he was reaching millions around the world through radio, television, publications and personal appearances. He remained on TV into the new century, co-hosting the program, "Miracles Now," with son Richard. He published dozens of books and conducted hundreds of crusades. A famous photograph showed him working at a desk with a sign on it reading, "Make no little plans here."
    He credited his oratorical skills to his faith, saying, "I become anointed with God's word, and the spirit of the Lord builds up in me like a coiled spring. By the time I'm ready to go on, my mind is razor-sharp. I know exactly what I'm going to say and I'm feeling like a lion."
    Unity of body, mind and spirit became the theme of Oral Roberts University. The campus is a Tulsa landmark, with its space-age buildings laden with gold paint, including a 200-foot prayer tower and a 60-foot bronze statue of praying hands.
    His ministry hit upon rocky times in the 1980s. There was controversy over his City of Faith medical center, a $250 million investment that eventually folded, and Roberts' widely ridiculed proclamation that God would "call me home" if he failed to meet a fundraising goal of $8 million. A law school he founded also was shuttered.
    Semiretired in recent years and living in California, he returned to Tulsa, Okla., in October 2007 as scandal roiled Oral Roberts University. His son, Richard Roberts, who succeeded him as ORU president, faced allegations of spending university money on shopping sprees and other luxuries at a time the institution was more than $50 million in debt.
    Richard Roberts resigned as president in November 2007, marking the first time since Oral Roberts University was chartered in 1963 that a member of the Roberts family would not be at its helm. The rocky period for the evangelical school was eased when billionaire Oklahoma City businessman Mart Green donated $70 million and helped run the school in the interim, pledging to restore the public's trust. By the fall of 2009, things were looking up, with officials saying tens of millions of dollars worth of debt had been paid off and enrollment was up slightly.
    That September, a frail-looking Oral Roberts attended the ceremony when the school's new president, Mark Rutland, was formally inaugurated.
    "He was not only my earthly father; he was my spiritual father and mentor," said son, Richard Roberts, in a statement.
    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091215/ap_on_re_us/us_obit_oral_roberts
    (Source)

    Wednesday, December 2, 2009

    Paul Crouch And Benny Hinn Got The Trinity All Wrong!




    Paul Crouch States That ESSENTIAL ISSUES ARE UP FOR DEBATE? Paul, Theology is very Important! If you dont have your Theology right especially in ESSENTIAL issues then you dont have the right God!
    Listen to this clip, denying Benny Hinn Said There are 9 beings in the Godhead, and then i have another clip about the same issue, but the problem is..... Benny Blantanly has the Trinity and The Godhead wrong! Clip 1
    In This Clip Benny Hinn Denies that he makes false statements about the God head. The Correct View would be 1 God in 3 distinct Persons(Father Son and Holy Spirit) Oh and Benny Also decided to add that each of them possesses their own spirit body! (ohh boy, heresy Alert)

    Heres Clip Two about Benny Hinn's Twisted View Of The Trinity.

    God is not a triune being by himself apart from the son and holy spirit. Neither is the Son and Holy Spirit triune beings on their own either! This is a false view of The Godhead. The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are 1.  God is 1 being in 3 distinct persons. This view of God is completely ludacris!




                     

    Popular Word Of Faith Preachers Teaching That Christians Evolve Into Little gods, And God The Father Is A Man (False Teaching)

     People caught up in the deceptive Heresy's of the Word Of Faith Movement are decieved. The Bible is very Clear that Christians are not little gods, and that God the father is a man.(this contradicts sound doctrine) this heretical teaching goes against sound Christian Doctrine, about the doctrine of man. It also contradicts the doctrine of God as well.

    (Doctrine of God) (According to sound Christian Theology) www.carm.org

    God
    The supreme being of the universe. He is the creator of all things (Isaiah 44:24). He alone is God (Isaiah 45:21,22; 46:9; 47:8). There have never been any Gods before Him nor will there be any after Him (Isaiah 43:10). God is God from all eternity (Psalm 90:2). In Exodus 3:14, God revealed His name to His people. The name commonly known in English is Jehovah. This comes from the four Hebrew consonants that spell the name of God. (See Tetragrammaton.)
    God is a Trinity, knows all things (1 John 3:20), can do all things (Jer. 32:17,27 - except those things against His nature like lie, break His word, cheat, steal, etc.), and is everywhere all the time (Psalm 119:7-12).

    Popular Word of faith teachers contradicting sound doctrine (teaching little gods)

    Benny Hinn Teaching That Christians Are Little gods

    Kenneth Copeland Teaching That Christians Are Little gods

    Paul Crouch saying He is a Little god!

    John Avinzini and Morris Cerullo "hearing the spirit of God saying, that God is duplicating himself in the earth!)

    Benny Hinn Saying Christians are little messiah's walking on the earth.

    Benny Hinn Telling Christians That they are a little god on earth running around


    Kenneth Copeland Says That God The Father Is A MAN!



    If you are involved with The Word Of Faith Movement Please know that i am only showing you these false teachings out of love, because i was once in the word of faith movement, and had no idea what i was listening to. I was totally clueless! Please weigh these teachings according to the Bible. I will supply scriptures to help you Judge for yourself. 

    Matthew 7:15
    Beware of false prophets which come to you in sheep's clothing but inwardly they are ravening wolves. .

    2 Timothy 3:1-7
    This know also, that in the last days perilous times shall come. For men shall be lovers of their own selves, covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy, Without natural affection, trucebreakers, false accusers, incontinent, fierce, despisers of those that are good, Traitors, heady, highminded, lovers of pleasures more than lovers of GodHaving a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof: from such turn away. For of this sort are they which creep into houses, and lead captive silly women laden with sins, led away with divers lusts, Ever learning, and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth.


    2 Timothy 4:2-5
    "Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all longsuffering and doctrine.  For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching ears;  And they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto fables.  But watch thou in all things, endure afflictions, do the work of an evangelist, make full proof of thy ministry."

    I will be using more of these same scriptures on other posts about different false teachings, some of these scriptures will be more relevant to you as we dive into other subjects dealing with the false teachings of the word of faith movement. 




    Audio Clips Of Benny Hinn's False Teachings

    What is The Word Of Faith Movement? Also Some Absurd things that have been said

    Word-Faith is a movement or false doctrine that blends eastern mystical and New Age elements with Christian teaching. Two prominent publications are Kenneth Copeland's "Believer's Voice of Victory" and Kenneth Hagin's "The Word of Faith" magazines. There are uncounted books, newsletters, and pamphlets by various authors Hagin, Kenyon, Copeland, Capps, Price, etc.
    Word-Faith has no acknowledged leader or headquarters. The teachers of this damnable heresy all have their own churches and followers.
    Some Terms used: The God-kind of faith; the force of faith; the Anointing; spirit-man; spiritual death of Christ; born-again Jesus; authority of the believer.
    Other Names: Word-of-Faith, Positive Confession, Faith-formula, Health & Wealth Gospel.

    Word-Faith History
    Born in 1860, E. W. Kenyon is usually recognized as the founding father of the modern Word-Faith Movement. He began as a Methodist, but associated with Baptists. Some of his work even resulted in the founding of a few Primitive Baptist Churches. Late in life, Kenyon changed to Pentecostalism. He then combined elements of the metaphysical cults, such as Christian Science, New Thought theology, and Unity School of Christianity. The doctrines of correct thinking and believing accompanied by positive confession, with the result of calling a sickness a symptom (which is really a denial of reality) are not found in Christian writings until after the New Thought and its offspring had begun to develop. Word-Faith doctrine originated and developed in these cults, and was later absorbed by Christians in their quest to develop a healing ministry. Though he was not the movement's originator, some have also called Kenneth Hagin the "grand-daddy of the faith teachers" (Sherry Andrews, "Kenneth Hagin - Keeping the Faith," Charisma, October 1981, p. 24). In a survey of readers of a major Charismatic magazine, concerning those ministers that influence them the most, Kenneth Hagin was 3rd, ranked only behind TV evangelist Pat Robertson, and the heir apparent to the Word-Faith movement throne, Kenneth Copeland.

    Word-Faith Doctrine (definitely not all of key doctrines either!)
    GOD . . . Word-Faith teachers claim that God operates by spiritual law and is obliged to obey the faith-filled commands and desires of believers. He not only reveals prosperity teaching supernaturally to the Word-Faith teachers, but personally and verbally confirms their unique interpretations of Scripture (Copeland, Laws of Prosperity, pp. 60-62).
    They say the Abrahamic Covenant is the basis for commanding God to do His part in the covenant. Robert Tilton says, "we make our own promises to do our part, then we can tell God, on the authority of His word, what we would like Him to do. That's right, you can actually tell God what you would like His part in the Covenant to be" (God's Miracle Plan for Man, p. 36). What absolute STUPIDITY!
    Kenneth Copeland says, "as a believer, you have a right to make commands in the name of Jesus. Each time you stand on the Word, you are commanding God to a certain extent, because it is His Word" (Our Covenant with God, p. 32). Copeland goes so far as to say that "God was the lesser party and Abraham was the greater" in the covenant between them (Copeland, Legal and Vital Aspects of Redemption, 1985, Audio Tape #01-0403).
    The Word-Faith teachers also make God into a big man. Copeland says, "God is...a being that stands somewhere around 6'-2," 6'-3," that weighs somewhere in the neighborhood of a couple of hundred pounds, little better, and has a hand span of nine inches across" (Spirit, Soul, and Body, 1985, Tape #01-0601). RIDICULOUS!
    Morris Cerillo, in an alleged out-of-body experience, describes God: "Suddenly, in front of this tremendous multitude of people, the glory of God appeared. The form that I saw was about the height of a man 6 feet tall, maybe taller, and twice as broad as a human body, with no distinguishing features such as eyes, nose, or mouth" (The Miracle Book, pp. x-xi). May God have mercy on these fools!
    MAN . . . Word-Faith teachers say that not only is God a big man, but man is a little god. Kenneth Hagin has asserted, "man...was created on terms of equality with God, and he could stand in God's presence without any consciousness of inferiority.... He made us the same class of being that He is Himself.... He lived on terms equal with God.... The believer is called Christ, that's who we are; we're Christ" (Zoe: The God Kind of Life, pp. 35-36, 41). What happened to HUMILITY?
    "God's reason for creating Adam was His desire to reproduce Himself...He was not a little like God. He was not almost like God. He was not subordinate to God even" (Copeland, Following the Faith of Abraham, 1989, Tape #01-3001). He also proclaims, "You don't have a God in you ‹ you are one!" (Copeland, The Force of Love, 1987, Tape #02-0028). This sounds like the Mormons!
    Morris Cerillo says "the whole purpose of God was to reproduce Himself. ...you're not looking at Morris Cerillo, you're looking at God, you're looking at Jesus" (The End Time Manifestation of the Sons of God, Audio Tape 1, Sides 1 &;2). What will he say when he stands before the Great White Throne?
    CHRIST . . . The deity of Christ Jesus, our Saviour and Lord is compromised. Kenneth Copeland, in relating what Christ supposedly told him, says, "don't be disturbed when people accuse you of thinking you are God...the more you get to be like Me, the more they are going to think that way of you. They crucified Me for claiming that I was God. But I didn't claim I was God. I just claimed I walked with Him and that He was with Me" (Copeland, "Take Time to Pray," Believer's Voice of Victory, #15, 2 February 1987, p. 9). "Jesus was on the earth just a man, not the son of God" (Frederick K.C. Price, Tape #RP 19, May 1993). And Kenneth Hagin says, "You are as much the incarnation of God as Jesus Christ was" (The Word of Faith, December 1980, p. 14).