Dear Joel and Victoria,
I hope and pray that you will read this
letter and that you take to heart the things I'm sharing. I write as a
friend wanting to help, not an enemy wanting to hurt, and everything I
write, I write out of love for God, love for you, and love for the
church and the world.
I have said many times that I'm glad to see
your smiling faces on TV as you speak about Jesus rather than some
stern-faced, joyless, angry Christian leader. And I believe you
genuinely do care about people and want them to find wholeness in the
Lord.
Joel, I appreciate the fact that you end every service by
asking people to get right with God, having them pray a prayer where
they say to Jesus, "I repent of my sins, come into my heart, I make you
Lord and Savior."
The big problem is that you haven't told them
what their sins are, and you haven't told them what real repentance is.
And since you are speaking to people around the world, you can't
possibly assume that all of them understand the meaning of sin and
redemption and repentance. (Most American Christians don't even
understand these things today.)
In short, you have not shared with
them the whole counsel of God, and by telling them only part of the
story, you have done what the false prophets of ancient Israel did: "You
superficially treat the fracture of My people saying to them, 'All is
well, all is well,' when nothing is well" (Jer. 6:14, my translation).
A
true physician tells his patients what they need to hear, not what they
want to hear. As one preacher of old, Jean Daille, once said,
"Ministers are not cooks, but physicians and therefore should not study
to delight the palate, but to recover the patient."
Have you been
more of a junk-food cook than a physician? Have you been afraid to tell
people their true condition? Have you been so concerned with making them
feel good about themselves and giving them a sense of hope that you
failed to diagnose their terminal sin disease?
Paul said to the
elders of Ephesus, "I testify to you this day that I am innocent of the
blood of all, for I did not shrink from declaring to you the whole
counsel of God" (Acts 20:26-27).
Do you really believe in your heart of hearts that you have declared the whole counsel of God to your listening audience?
God
has given you one of the largest platforms for the gospel in human
history. Can you say before Him that you are "innocent of the blood of
all"?
Have you ever taught extensively on the words of Jesus from
the Sermon on the Mount? Have you ever worked your way through one of
the letters of Paul? If not, why not?
Proverbs tells us that,
"Whoever rebukes a man will afterward find more favor than he who
flatters with his tongue" (28:23). Do you believe God's Word, or do you
feel you have found a better way to do His work?
I appreciate the
fact that you hold up your Bible before you preach, as your father did,
and you have people make a confession about God's Word, as you also
learned to do from your father. But do you really preach that holy Word?
Shortly
before Paul was martyred for his faith, he reminded Timothy that, "All
Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for
reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness" (2 Tim.
3:16).
He also gave him this solemn commission: "I charge you in the
presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the
dead, and by his appearing and his kingdom: Preach the word; be ready in
season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, and exhort, with complete
patience and teaching" (2 Tim. 4:1-2).
Is this your pattern of preaching and ministry? Do you rebuke in love (Prov. 27:5) as well as exhort and encourage?
Perhaps
it's time to ask yourself honestly where you fit in this warning from
Paul: "For the time is coming when people will not endure sound
teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves
teachers to suit their own passions, and will turn away from listening
to the truth and wander off into myths" (2 Tim. 4:1-4).
Wouldn't
it be utterly heartbreaking if, on the day you stand before God, you
discovered that you were one of these teachers? Wouldn't it be tragic if
your efforts were found to be wood, hay and stubble on that great and
glorious Day (1 Cor. 3:11-15)? And may I ask you candidly if you even
talk about that holy day of accounting?
Some Christians have referred to you and Victoria as outright heretics, others have said that you are fighting against the Holy Spirit (since the Spirit convicts the world of sin but your preaching does not), others have said that you are a pagan religionist, while others have said that your superficial message of material prosperity cannot bear the weight of the gospel.
These
are very serious charges, but rather than just saying, "Hey, I'm just
going to love everybody and stay in my lane," perhaps you should ask if
these leaders might be saying something you need to hear. Is there any
truth at all in their words? Could it be that God's lane for you is
different than the lane you're in?
It would be far better for you
to see your TV ratings fall and your crowds dwindle than to displease
the Lord. (Perhaps if you preached the whole counsel of God, your
audience would end up even bigger.)
By all means, you should be an
ambassador of hope and joy—that's all part of the gospel—but if you
don't speak about sin plainly and without compromise and if you don't
tell people that there will be suffering and hardship in this world as
we follow Jesus, then the hope that you offer will only go skin deep.
Have
you ever wondered about how your message plays out among Christians who
are going through hell on Earth because of their faith in Jesus? Have
you ever thought about what your message sounds like to persecuted
believers today who just had to leave their homes and possessions behind
to flee for their lives?
And Victoria, if I may speak with you
for just a moment, your recent comments that have gone viral have drawn a
stream of well-deserved criticism, even if some of it came in an ugly
and wrong spirit.
The reality is that our lives are supposed to
revolve around God; He doesn't revolve around us. And even though
worship and praise are good for us too, since they focus our attention
on who God is and bring us into His presence, we do not worship or serve
Him for ourselves but for Him. As Paul wrote, Jesus died for all so
"that those who live might no longer live for themselves but for him who
for their sake died and was raised" (2 Cor. 5:15).
This is Gospel
101, as basic as it gets, yet you turned things upside down during that
one regrettable moment on TV, a moment that reflected a wrong, off-base
theology that starts with us and that says God is here to please us
rather than starting with God and recognizing that we are here to please
Him.
Joel and Victoria, I know these words have been strong, but
they are written with love and concern. And since I have no connection
to anyone on your team and I don't know of any way to reach you
directly, after prayer and reflection, I felt that this was the best way
to go, addressing public statements publicly, jealous for the Name of
Jesus, jealous for your massive listening audience, and jealous for both
of you.
Without a doubt, there are many people you have helped;
you have also hurt far more than you realize. I pray you will take this
to heart.
Michael Brown is author of Can You Be Gay and Christian? Responding With Love and Truth to Questions About Homosexuality and host of the nationally syndicated talk radio show The Line of Fire on
the Salem Radio Network. He is also president of FIRE School of
Ministry and director of the Coalition of Conscience. Follow him at AskDrBrown on Facebook or at @drmichaellbrown on Twitter.
https://theblacksphere.net/2021/12/an-open-letter-to-joel-osteen/
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