Thursday, April 21, 2011

Taking on the prosperity gospel

A review of: David W. Jones and Russell S. Woodbridge, Health, Wealth & Happiness: Has the Prosperity Gospel Overshadowed the Gospel of Christ? (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications, 2011)

By Allan Roy Andrews

          Let’s get a few things clearly in the open.
            The church of Jesus Christ is not in the profit-making business.
            The gospel of Jesus Christ is not proclaimed to make anyone financially wealthy.
            The gospels of the New Testament have more to say about poverty and helping the poor than about gathering riches and becoming wealthy.
            Happiness, in biblical terms, is not something humans pursue or earn (sorry to disillusion fans of the truths proclaimed as “self-evident” by Thomas Jefferson, et al.); it is a gift from a loving God, who asks nothing for his grace and love.
            God doesn’t keep books or hire accountants or collect taxes and fees.
            Nowhere in God’s kingdom is there a place for an emphasis on acquisition of “things” and “monies.”
            The only legal tender in the gospel of Jesus Christ is love.
            Furthermore, the Acts of the Apostles, an extension of the Gospel attributed to Luke, makes clear that the early church was a community of sharing where those who had provided for those who did not have.  (OK, let’s get down to the nitty-gritty that marks a large segment of American conservative Christianity: think welfare and social justice!) That’s right, the gospel that’s recorded in the church of the second chapter of Acts is a church driven by the Holy Spirit to minister to, provide for, and to protect those who, in the language of the New Testament, are lost.

Social Justice as Evil
            Just to get us into the crux of the critique that Jones and Woodbridge are outlining in this good but truncated book, if you listen close enough to the message proclaimed and the innuendos that percolate in the messages of the prosperity gospel preachers (most of whom, not ironically, minister on television), you’ll discover that welfare and social justice come across as evils and anathemas.
            Unfortunately, Jones and Woodbridge shy away from detailed discussion of this phenomenon. They are content to argue that “Jesus gave no systematic, detailed economic plan” (140), and their only confrontation with evangelical thinking that might challenge this point is in a footnote where they describe any “preferential option for the poor” as a “theologically moderate” position (181, fn10).
            Let’s face it, anyone who reads the gospels with honesty and openness cannot help but see that the Gospel of Jesus Christ is revolutionary and counter-cultural; although, Jones and Woodbridge favor a spiritualizing escape from this emphasis:  For them, Jesus “teachings on wealth and poverty are wide-ranging and their spiritual impact is what is usually emphasized” (141).

Prosperity Gospel
            The so-called “prosperity gospel,” with its promoting of health, wealth and happiness, is not only “overshadowing the gospel of Christ,” as the subtitle of this new book declares, it is waging all-out war with the gospel of Christ and making a sham of the authentic love, compassion, and peace that Jesus demonstrated and that the apostle Paul listed among “the greatest” of all gifts from God.
            With that lengthy introduction, let’s commend Jones and Woodbridge for introducing and competently condemning the prosperity gospel as it is proclaimed by several leading TV evangelists, past and present, among them: Oral Roberts, Kenneth E. Hagin, Creflo Dollar, Benny Hinn, Kenneth Copeland, and a trio that Jones and Woodbridge describe as “soft” prosperity advocates, T. D. Jakes, Joyce Meyer, and Joel Osteen (several others are mentioned historically).
            Jones and Woodbridge, both members of the theological faculty at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, a Southern Baptist school  located in Wake Forest, N.C., on what once was the campus of Wake Forest University before the latter relocated to Winston-Salem, are astutely attuned to the theology of the prosperity gospel.
            They single out the errors of doctrine they detect as: 1) a distorted view of God; 2) the elevation of the mind over matter; 3) an exalted view of humankind; 4) a focus on health and wealth; and 5) an unorthodox view of salvation.
            Once establishing these erroneous teachings, the authors devote several chapters to their “corrections.” They begin by demonstrating that “suffering is a normative part of the Christian life” in contrast with the extreme opposition to suffering that the prosperity gospel proponents advocate.
            The second corrective emphasis of Jones and Woodbridge is on the biblical teachings regarding poverty and wealth, which may well be the section of the book that separates the authors and their Southern Baptist orthodoxy from many other evangelicals who share their concern with the errors of the prosperity gospel preachers.
            Next, Jones and Woodbridge demonstrate how the promoters of the prosperity gospel contradict the scriptural call for Christians to be generous givers, what may be called the erroneous practical theology of the prosperity gospel.
            This is not the place to take deep issue with the authors’ evangelicalism; they are worthy allies in a spiritual battle with the hucksters, con-men, and greed-mongers who dominate the prosperity gospel’s televised preying on susceptible victims.

Root Problem: Consumerism
            However, I fear the authors’ personal positions on social and economic policies, which they appear to mask as irrelevant to the discussion of the prosperity gospel, only hide a root problem; that is, that almost to a person, the evangelists of the prosperity gospel are steeped in consumerism and a capitalistic profit ethic that drives their ministries.
            Jones and Woodbridge, in their theological battle with the prosperity gospel, have given little attention that addresses what A. W. Tozer incisively recognized as the particular distortions of the gospel in a society that runs through marketing and sales profits.
            Theologian Lyle W. Dorset helps us see this.  He wrote of Tozer:

Tozer wrote and spoke against a growing trend of churches being run by business models rather than biblical principles, and he criticized the way Christ Jesus was being marketed and sold rather than lifted up to convict men of sin, righteousness, and judgment. In short, he railed against cheap grace that was producing an ugly and impotent church.* 

            This book, as good as it is, simply ignores that the television celebrities who pose  as prophets of the prosperity gospel are steeped in the culture of a profit-driven, spiritually impoverished society, and that their message is more crass advertising and marketing than it is gospel, more mammon loving than God worshipping.


            * Lyle W. Dorset. “Profiles in Faith: Aiden Wilson Tozer,” in Knowing and Doing: A Teaching Quarterly for Discipleship of Heart and Mind, Springfield, Va.: C.S. Lewis Institute, summer, 2008), accessed April 20, 2011, at http://www.cslewisinstitute.org/files/webfm/knowing_doing/ProfileTozer.pdf

                To appreciate a more focused and, I believe, a stronger case against the consumerism and materialism that dominates the writing and preaching of prosperity-gospel advocates, examine the comments of several so-called "Red-Letter Christians."