The Prosperity Gospel

Ξ February 28th, 2007 | → 11 Comments | ∇ Life |

The following story was presented on a local Dallas TV news program. Here is an example of the problem with the “Christian” prosperity gospel….

Jet flight records spur Copeland ministry questions

10:50 PM CST on Wednesday, February 28, 2007

By BRETT SHIPP / WFAA-TV

One way some may say might be good for televangelists to measure their success is by spreading the gospel in their own corporate jet. For the past several months, Kenneth and Gloria Copeland of Fort Worth have been traveling the globe in a new $20 million jet. It is a jet they pledged would be used for the purpose of serving their ministry. So, are the Copeland’s practicing what they preach?

The Copelands are regarded by many as the most successful televangelists in the world, and they certainly look the part these days jetting about in their new Cessna Citation, operated, they say, in exact accordance with federal tax law and used solely for ministry purposes.

But flight records News 8 obtained raise questions.

Kenneth and Gloria Copeland’s Believer’s Voice of Victory ministry is broadcast around the world. The couple preaches not only the gospel of prosperity, but the promise of healing through faith.

It was the prospect of wellness that for years lured Bonnie Parker of Winnsboro, Louisiana to the Copeland’s broadcast every Sunday morning, said Parker’s family.

Believer after believer, much like Parker, lined up to be healed by the Copelands. For many, they believed all it took was faith. And according to Parker’s husband Alvin and their daughter, it also took something else – money.

“We know it was a lot, a whole lot,” said Kristy Beach, Parker’s daughter, of the amount of money Parker donated.

In fact, she said it was an amount around the tens of thousands, and possibly even hundreds of thousands.

Money was also spent by Parker on the lottery. Handwritten notes reflected her desire to remit her winnings to the Copelands, whom she said she believed could stop the cancer ravaging her body.

“I can’t see how they can sell something that doesn’t even belong to them to begin with, but that’s what they are doing,” Beach said. “They’re selling something that you can’t sell.”

While buying up lotto tickets, Parker’s family said she was also paying and praying for healing.

Meanwhile, the Copelands needed $20 million in their aim to buy a new jet that Kenneth Copeland said would be used only to spread the gospel.

“It will never, ever be used as long as it is in our care, for anything other than what is becoming to you Lord Jesus,” he said.

But what “is becoming” is becoming less clear.

According to flight records obtained by News Eight, the Copeland jet, on its way to an evangelical seminar in Australia last October, made a two day layover in Maui. Then it was on to the Fiji Islands for another stop.

After seven days in Australia, the Copelands headed to Honolulu for another three days of what they called “eating and rest.”

Last December, amid other evangelical stops, there was a jet ride to the Yampa Valley, Colorado airport. Just a few miles away from the airport sits the Steamboat Springs Ski Resort.

That same day, the jet flew back to the Copeland’s private airport north of Fort Worth.

Five days later, the jet flew back to the Yampa Valley Airport near Steamboat and returned to Texas.

One week later, there was another trip. This trip went the other direction to southwest Texas to a place called the LaFonda Ranch, which is a favorite stop over the years for Kenneth Copeland and his son John.

The La Fonda Ranch is described as a working cattle and hunting ranch located in the arid brush country.

A picture take of Copeland and his son John show them proudly posing with a pair of Axis Deer indigenous to India and Sri Lanka.

So, is a jet trip to a South Texas wild game ranch a proper use?

“You can’t take the assets that are supposed to be used for a religious or charitable purpose and use them for your own purposes without some tax consequences,” said Wayne Shaw, a former IRS agent and current Southern Methodist University business professor.

Concerns about Kenneth Copeland’s jet travels came as no surprise to Pete Evans of the Trinity Foundation in Dallas.

The Foundation has tracked the Copeland’s airplanes and more than $20 million in property assets for years.

“It tells everybody that Christianity is about getting stuff and not about giving your life for the people around you,” said Peter Evans, Trinity Foundation.

Meanwhile, Mr. Parker said his wife died believing she hadn’t given enough money to Kenneth and Gloria Copeland.

Mr. Parker and Beach said they asked the Copelands for an accounting of Bonnie’s contributions.

“I can’t believe, I can’t comprehend them going on vacation in a jet that my mom paid for with her life,” Beach said. “I can’t imagine that.”

The Copeland Ministry declined requests for an interview and pointed to an accounting firm’s declaration that all of the jet travel complies with federal tax laws.

A request to see their annual tax filings and list of Board of Directors was also denied.

The reason they cited for their denial is that they are a church and are not required to disclose that information.

 

 

Dogma

Ξ February 25th, 2007 | → 3 Comments | ∇ Life |

Dogmas – religious, political, scientific – arise out of the erroneous belief that thoughts can encapsulate reality or truth. Dogmas are collective conceptual prisons. And the strange thing is that people love their prison cells because they give them a sense of security and a false sense of "I know". Nothing has inflicted more suffering on humanity that its dogmas. It is true that every dogma crumbles sooner or later, because reality will eventually disclose its falseness; however, unless the basic delusion of it is seen for what it is, it will be replaced by others.         Stillness Speaks  

 

Humor….

Ξ February 23rd, 2007 | → 3 Comments | ∇ Life |

After the christening of his baby brother in church,

Jason sobbed all the way home in the back seat of the car.

His father asked him three times what was wrong.

Finally, the boy replied,

“That preacher said he wanted us brought up in a Christian home,

and I wanted to stay with you guys.”

 

 

Divine Matrix Follow Up….

Ξ February 23rd, 2007 | → 2 Comments | ∇ Life |

If you would like some thought-provoking reading and some elementary quantum physics (if there is such a thing!), you’ll like this book. Gregg Braden presents some very interesting propositions, backed up by, believe it or not,  scientific experiments. In most cases, the experiments were not intended to produce results having to do with his thesis, but were totally independent and for an entirely different purpose. Many of these experiments have been successfully repeated numerous times, and are absolutely fascinating! You won’t believe what you’re reading. Braden’s thesis is the interconnectedness of all in the universe through what he calls the Divine Matrix. His proof, as I said comes from science, and from the texts of ancient cultures in North America and Asia, as well as interviews with representatives of these cultures. This book is a great read…..  

 

Wisdom for the World

Ξ February 20th, 2007 | → 2 Comments | ∇ Life |

Those who have the most power and wealth treat the planet as a thing to be possessed, to be used and abused according to their own dictates. But the planet is a living organism, a Great Spiritual Integrity.

 To violate this Integrity is certain to call forth disaster since each and every one of us is an inherent part of this very organism. All attempts to control the world can only lead to its decimation and our own demise since we are an inseparable part of what we are senselessly trying to coerce. Any attempt to possess the world can only lead to its loss and to our own dissolution since we are an intrinsic part of what we are foolishly trying to possess.

The world’s pulse is our pulse. The world’s rhythms are our rhythms. To treat our planet with care, moderation and love is to be in synchrony with ourselves and to live in the Great Integrity. Lao Tzu (6th century B.C.)  

 

Time

Ξ February 20th, 2007 | → 1 Comments | ∇ Life |

"Time is: Too slow for those who wait, too swift for those who fear, too long for those who grieve, too short for those who rejoice.  But for those who love, time is NOT" Henry Van Dyke  

 

The Divine Matrix

Ξ February 14th, 2007 | → 2 Comments | ∇ Life |

I am reading "The Divine Matrix", by Gregg Braden. This is truly an amazing read. It’s hard to put down! I can’t think of any of you who wouldn’t throughly enjoy this book. More on "The Divine Matrix" when I complete it…… *Update: I put it down. Seems the publisher made an error. At page 118, he repeated pp. 71-118 again, then skipped 119-166….They’re sending me another one. Sooo, may be a while before I can give a further opinion on this one. So far, so good……  

*To read my review of the book, follow this link

 

Truth Revisited

Ξ February 13th, 2007 | → 2 Comments | ∇ Life |

The Truth  is far more encompassing than the mind could ever comprehend. No thought can encapsulate the Truth. At best, it can point to it.

                                                                                Stillness Speaks…

 

 

Modern-day Slavery

Ξ February 13th, 2007 | → 0 Comments | ∇ Life |

Here’s what you can do to stop Modern-day slavery.

http://theamazingchange.com/index.html

Thanks to Kevin over at “Transmillenial”

 

 

Thoughts on the Gospel of Thomas

Ξ February 13th, 2007 | → 14 Comments | ∇ Life |

Recently, as I have pondered the wonderful gospel of grace, I began to think about the Gospel of Thomas. I don’t know how many of you have read this gospel. I suspect that most of you have. If you’re like me, it was something that you felt compelled to read, but because of prior ingrained thinking or "brainwashing", if you will, may have spent sometime making the decision to actually read it, or you still have not read it. For those of you who are familiar with the Gospel of Thomas, bear with me a moment. The Gospel of Thomas is a manuscript discovered, along with many others, in 1945 in Upper Egypt near the village of Nag Hammadi. All of the manuscripts came from the beginning of the  Christian period. These manuscripts revealed a great diversity within the Christian movement that had been suppressed by the "official" versions of Christian history supplied by the institutional church. The Gospel of Thomas differs from the other "traditional" gospels in several ways. First, it is a collection of sayings of Jesus. It is not a chronological story of Jesus on earth. It does  not tell about miracles or the crucifixion, and resurrection of Jesus. It merely relates what Jesus said and what Thomas, or whomever the writer was, wrote down that Jesus said. The fact is that many of the scholars who read the Gospel of Thomas were impressed by the similiarities with the Gospel of John, and, the dissimiliarities between Matthew, Mark, and Luke, and, the Gospel of Thomas. Others found many of the sayings to be very similiar to those found in the synoptics. I read the Gospel of Thomas quite early in my journey searching for truth and hadn’t thought much about it until recently. I had just finished reading all of Eckhart Tolle’s work and it was then that I had an "epiphany". I wondered if I might find more depth to the Gospel of Thomas now that I had been exposed to other "heretical" ideas through my unexplained voracious reading habit (I am a terrible reader,always have been). So I opened, once again, my several copies of the Gospel of Thomas. Here are some things which I simply toss out for your consumption and comments:  Jesus’ disciples ask him when the resurrection of the dead will come, and He answers, "What you look forward to has already come, but you do not recognize it" *GoT, saying  51 Again the disciples ask when the kingdom will come. He answers, "It will not come by waiting for it. It will not be a matter of saying, ‘Here it is’ or ‘There it is’. Rather the kingdom of the Father is spread out upon the earth, and people do not see it."GoT, saying 113. Sounds a lot like Luke 17:20-21. Many of the sayings are found in the other synoptic gospels in some shape or form. Thomas’ Jesus, like the Gospel of John, likes to point to the "beginning" rather than discuss the "End Time". "Have you found the beginning, then, that you look to the end? For whoever takes his place in the beginning will know the end, and will not taste death." GoT, saying 16. The GoT, like John, identifies Jesus with the light that existed before the dawn of creation. in the GoT, Jesus says, "I am the light which is before all things. It is I who am all things. From me all things came forth, and to me all things extend. Split a piece of wood , and I am there; lift up a stone, and you will find me." saying 77. After dismissing those who expect the future coming of the kingdom of God, Thomas’ Jesus declares, "the kingdom is inside you, and outside you. When you come to know yourselves, then you will be known, and you will see that it is you who are the children of the living Father. But, if you will not know yourselves, you will dwell in poverty, and it is you who are that poverty". Saying 3. This cryptic saying raises a further question: How can we know ourselves? In the GoT, Jesus declares, "we must first find out where we came from, and go back and take our place in the beginning." Then He says something even more cryptic, "Blessed is the one who came into being before he came into being." Sayings 18 &19. Very Tollean! Thomas’ Jesus tells his disciples that not only he comes forth from divine light but so do we all. "If they say to you , ‘Where do you come from?’, say to them, ‘We came from the light, the place where the light came into being by itself, and was revealed through their image". Saying 50. There are so many more fascinating sayings as well as possibilities for comparison to the synoptics. I recommend the Gospel of Thomas to you if you have not read it. If you have, and like me, it’s been a while, go back and read it again. You may find some things you missed the first time. As I have said before, if you want to find those signposts pointing to the truth, you must be willing to search everywhere. You must be prepared to let go of long-held beliefs. You must be willing to do so. You very well may not have to do this, but you must be willing to.  The G of T has given me greater insights into the love of God and a more complete picture of Jesus. Take the Gospel of Thomas for what it is worth to you, treasure or trash, but don’t be afraid to search.  

 

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