‘Staying in His Lane’ — Joel Osteen’s Gospel of Affirmation Without Salvation
Joel Osteen
was back on CNN this week, appearing Thursday morning on “Starting Point with
Soledad O’Brien.” Osteen’s new book, I Declare: 31 Promises to Speak Over
Your Life, recently hit the nation’s bookstores.
Osteen’s
positive thinking theology was on full display in the interview, as in the
book. O’Brien asked if he really believes that speaking declarations out loud
can make them come true. Osteen assured her that he does, promising that
speaking positive words can bring positive results and warning that speaking
negativity will bring negative results. “I don’t think there’s anything magic
about it, but those words go out and come right back in and affect your own
self-image.”
In the book
itself, Osteen asserts, “You’ve got to send your words out in the direction you
want your life to go.” The theme of his book is simple: “With our words we can
either bless our futures or we can curse our futures.”
The most
enthusiastic response to Osteen’s message came from Deepak Chopra, the New Age
self-help guru, who was also on the CNN program. He affirmed Osteen’s message
and added, “I’ve believed forever that there’s no mental event that doesn’t
have a brain representation, that every thought actually generates molecules.”
The two
self-help experts then elaborated on their ideas, with Osteen urging
“activating faith,” because “faith is what causes God to work.” Later, he even
spoke of “speaking to the seeds of greatness that God’s placed in all of us.”
The appearance
of Osteen and Chopra together was a priceless demonstration of the fact that
the New Thought positive thinking philosophy that drives them both can be
grafted onto either Christianity or Eastern religion. In the end, it all sounds
the same. Chopra’s New Age spirituality and Osteen’s updated version of the
word-faith movement end up as the same message, only with different trappings.
O’Brien then
shifted the topic to homosexuality, as would be expected. As she said to
Osteen, “Almost every time we have a pastor on, it’s a conversation we have.”
She then said,
“When you say homosexuality is a sin and there’s a bunch of people who clearly
are gay in your church. You’re calling them sinners. I mean, that’s the
opposite of uplifting, I would think.”
She
established the perfect platform for Osteen to respond with the gospel of Jesus
Christ, but he did not. “Well, Soledad, I don’t necessarily focus on that. I
only talk about that in interviews,” he said.
So this pastor
only talks about sin on television interviews, and then only when forced to do
so. He then attempted to broaden the talk of sin to being critical and even
“being negative.”
Osteen tried
to explain that he tries to avoid such issues intentionally. “I think part of
my, if you want to call it success, I’ve stayed in my lane and my lane is
listing people’s spirits and there are issues that good, Bible-believing people
see on both sides of the fence.”
So, “good,
Bible-believing people” are found on both sides of the fence when it comes to
the issue of homosexuality, Osteen said. His intention is clearly to straddle
that fence.
He affirmed
previously that homosexuality is “not God’s best” for humanity. Even then, the
words had to be put into his mouth by others, including a major homosexual
activist also on the program.
Pressed again
by O’Brien, Osteen repeated: “First of all, in my services, I don’t cover all
those issues that we talk about here.” Later, he responded to another question
by stating: “And I don’t understand all those issues and so, you know, I try to
stick to the issues that I do understand. I know this: I am for everybody. I’m
not for pushing people down.”
Viewers of CNN
saw a display of confusion, evasion, and equivocation coming from one presented
as a Christian pastor. What they were really seeing is the total theological
bankruptcy of the word of faith movement and the gospel of positive thinking.
Osteen cannot, or at least will not, speak even the simplest word of biblical
conviction. He states his intention to stay in his “lane” of glib affirmation.
Affirmation is
important, and humans crave it. But affirmation as a sinner is the worst
possible form of pastoral malpractice. Christianity is based on the truth that
sinners need a Savior, not merely a coach or a therapist.
Joel Osteen’s
appearance on CNN Thursday revealed little that is new. It was Osteen as always
— evasive and confused, but constantly smiling. This is now his calculated and
well-practiced approach. He offered no word of the gospel, and no reference to
Jesus Christ, but he was introduced as “one of the most recognizable faces of
Christianity in America today.”
There, for all
to see, was Joel Osteen … staying in his lane.
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