Why Benny Hinn Became Our Wacky Neighbor
| 05/20/2008If you drive west from Dallas, through the neo-moderne lunarscape of a pod city called Las Colinas, past a massive international airport on a denuded prairie, into the warren of faceless office buildings that make up cosmopolitan Grapevine, you'll never find Benny Hinn.
He wants it that way. The nerve center of his worldwide organization is tucked away in a group of cheap white nondescript buildings that look like the kind of domiciles favored by Mafia fronts on the wharves of New Jersey. Inside, several dozen employees process an estimated $100 million per year in donations from people who believe in Hinn as a sort of Elmer Gantry for the 21st century. (Obviously they didn't read the novel.)
Now go the other way, into the cul-de-sacs and barrios of deep East Dallas. On a dead end street next to a nursing home, in an expansive two-story house once owned by the Dallas mob, the Trinity Foundation works 24/7 trying to find out just how much money passes through Grapevine, where it comes from and where it goes, running undercover operations, infiltrations, spying, surveillance, the cultivation of disgruntled ex-employees, and even going through Benny Hinn's garbage in an effort to . . . well . . . to make him prove he's not a fraud.
"All we want is for Benny Hinn to make good on promises he made to me in 1993," says Ole Anthony, president of the Christian watchdog organization. "He promised he would stop airing fake healings, that he would medically verify all healings, that he would wait six months after the healing before putting it on TV, to make sure it was authentic. He said he would do all these things, and he's done none of them. It would also be nice if he would submit himself to a real theologian for examination. Some of his teachings are off the scale, even bordering on necromancy."
What the heck is Benny Hinn doing in Dallas?
Las Colinas, TX
It's weird. It was weird when he announced he was moving to Dallas in 1999, pretty much abandoning his church congregation in Florida. It was weirder still when he announced that God had ordered him to build a $30 million World Healing Center in Irving, making it sound like a combination theme park and New Age miracle spa. The way he laid it out, it would be a sort of shrine to famous faith healers of the past, complete with "stereophonic statue gardens," as well as a Holy Ghost Mayo Clinic for the halt, the lame and the afflicted. I had visions of wheelchair-bound hordes being lifted off jumbo jets at DFW Airport and convoying their way over to Las Colinas, like pilgrims pouring into a Disneyworld version of Lourdes. Isn't this the kind of thing that belongs in Tulsa?
Fortunately, God changed his mind in the summer of 2002 and told Hinn not to build the healing center after all, even though he had spent two years collecting donations for it. (God was apparently vague about what Hinn should do with the money. The county tax assessor was less vague, telling Hinn it was unlikely that his tax exemption would survive theme-park ownership.) Hinn said it was just a timing matter. God wants the healing center, but he didn't want it right then. (Since the only other building the Almighty is known to have ordered is the Temple at Jerusalem, maybe He's just unimpressed with Irving.) Hinn finally said he would keep his headquarters in Dallas because the central location saves him money.
"Good," says Ole Anthony. "I told him it will save us money, too."
If anything, the move to Texas looked like an attempt to spread his operations over as many geographical jurisdictions as possible. For example, Hinn's TV show, "This Is Your Day!," originates in studios in Orange County, California, and airs in 192 countries, making it one of the most widely disseminated programs in the world. Hinn is so ubiquitous on religious TV, in fact, that you would assume by this point--35 years into his preaching ministry--that he would have become one of those household names, like Billy Graham, who's expected to lead the invocation at the Super Bowl and counsel the President and appear on The Today Show in times of national crisis. But the opposite is true.
Aside from his twice-monthly appearances at his own choreographed "crusades," held in the largest sports arenas on the planet, Hinn is a virtual recluse, surrounded by armies of bodyguards, ensconced in an $12 million oceanfront hacienda in southern California, traveling by private jet for "snorkeling vacations" in the Cayman Islands, staying in $10,800 per night presidential suites in Italy, a $15,000 per night suite in Greece, and claiming a level of financial secrecy and paranoid internal security that's more often associated with drug dealers than men of the cloth.
By surrounding himself with yes-men and stage-managing every detail of his public image--even to the point of stiff-arming the occasional paparazzo who tries to photograph him--he has more in common with Michael Jackson than Jerry Falwell. He may, in fact, be the first Christian rock star. The analogy is not Paul McCartney, though--Benny's career is more like Cher, as he makes it up as he goes along, re-inventing himself whenever necessary.
He has no church. He belongs to no denomination. He's not even affiliated with any particular religion, although his buzz words indicate he tends to dwell on the freaky backwoods fringe of Pentecostalism. As recently as three centuries ago, he probably would have been burned as a heretic. (To give you some idea of his doctrinal strangeness, he once preached that the Trinity is actually nine persons, because each member of the Trinity--Father, Son, Holy Spirit--is also a Trinity. He also says that God and the Holy Spirit have real bodies, with eyes, hands, mouth, etc. Various theologians have trashed him, of course, for preaching "new revelations" directly from God that turn out to be, when examined, variations of thousand-year-old heresies.) He thinks of himself as a prophet (even when his prophecies don't come true) and, in one burst of grandeur, "a new messiah walking on the earth." He believes that the Biblical Adam flew into outer space, that when God parted the Red Sea he made it into a wall of ice, that God talks to him more frequently than he talked to, say, Moses, that a man has risen from the dead in his presence, that a man turned into a snake before his eyes, that angels come to his bedroom and talk to him, and that the only reason we're not all in perfect health, living forever, is that there are demons in the world, attacking us. He's expressed opinions normally heard only on schizophrenia wards, and he's done it in front of millions of people--and still they come. They come in such numbers that thousands have to be turned away, and even the ones turned away gladly give him their money.
What's going on here?
Benny Hinn says that what's going on here is that he was "anointed." It happened either at the age of 11, when Jesus first appeared to either him or his mother while he was living in Jaffa, Israel, or maybe 18, when he had a conversion experience at a high school in Toronto, or maybe shortly after that, when he took a bus trip to Pittsburgh to see the faith healer Kathryn Kuhlman. It's difficult to say exactly when it happened, or what form it took, because Hinn parcels out little bits and pieces of his background as it suits him, then embellishes the stories so that isolating any one event in his life is like puzzling through a 30-year-old KGB file. What we do know--because he returns to it time and again--is that a transforming moment in his life occurred when, as a teenager, he was assigned to take care of a crippled arthritic woman on a pilgrimage to see one of Kuhlman's healing services, and he saw the woman apparently lose all pain in her legs and "untwist," as he put it. Depending on how cynical you are, he had either found his holy calling, or discovered one of the oldest American carnie games. Ever since then he's been praised as a true miracle worker--Oral Roberts himself is his biggest fan--and debunked by various investigative reporters around the world, including 60 Minutes Australia, which concluded, "Benny Hinn is a fake. A dangerous fake. What he does is prey on the sick, the desperate and the gullible." (Trinity Foundation does most of the legwork for all the various networks and newspapers who have investigated Hinn. Of the Australian report, Anthony says, "Apparently in Australia you can just go ahead and say the truth out loud.")
Hinn is a peculiar sort even by the standards of the ongoing circus called American televangelism. If you look at the superstars of the past 25 years--Bakker, Swaggart, Tilton-- they're all of a type: WASPY extroverts with good looks in a sort of dime-store gigolo way. (Even Jim Bakker had that lost-puppy look that's so attractive to lonely widows. Older women living alone are the number one demographic group when it comes to sending money to television ministries.) Hinn, on the other hand, is short, slight, semitic, round-faced, and often sports a haircut that looks like a scoop of Rocky Road ice cream that's been knocked off the top of the cone. He reminds you of a discount Persian rug merchant, not a spiritual leader. He's a Palestinian with a Greek father and Armenian Turk mother, raised in a Catholic school along with eight brothers and sisters who were stuffed into a tiny two-bedroom apartment in the Tel Aviv suburb of Jaffa. In Hinn's books he claims that his father was the mayor of Jaffa. As it turns out, Jaffa had no mayor after the year 1948, four years before Hinn was born. Like many factoids in the Hinn legend, this one seems to be a fib.

Toufik Benedictus Hinn, known to his family as "Tutu," didn't much like living in Palestine with an Arabic first name, so early in life he became Benny. He was not particularly noted by his classmates at College de Frere elementary school in Jaffa or, after the family emigrated when Benny was 14, at Georges Vanier Secondary School in Toronto. In his sermons and books, Hinn has portrayed his childhood as that of a social outcast, handicapped by a severe stutter, who was nonetheless a stellar student. But when G. Richard Fisher and M. Kurt Goedelman, two journalists who write for Christian publications, looked into Hinn's youth, they found that both claims were untrue: nobody remembered Hinn stuttering, and he had dropped out of high school after the 11th grade. The reason I use these particular examples--"white lies" that by themselves don't really mean that much--is to indicate how twisted Hinn's mythmaking can be. He invents things that reflect badly on him just as easily as he invents things that reflect well on him. Psychologically he can't stand the unadorned truth.
Occasionally, though, the enhancements expand into the land of the whopper. For example, Hinn claims to have preached at an all-girls Catholic school in Jerusalem in 1976 and "every single girl in that school got saved, including all the nuns." Since there's only one Catholic girls school in Jerusalem, Schmidt's Girls College, it was a fairly easy matter to question all the nuns who were there in 1976, as well as Father Dusind, who has overseen all religious instruction since 1955. The result? "This is nonsense, real nonsense," Dusind told Fisher and Goedelman. "It never happened and could not happen because a Charismatic healer or Protestant preacher would never ever be let in to talk to the girls."
Or how about the time Hinn went into a Catholic hospital in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, and healed everyone there? The way Hinn tells it is that he, three other Pentecostal preachers, and seven Catholic priests held a service together in the hospital chapel, where everyone went to work with "anointing bottles" and patients were healed instantly. They were then asked to lay hands on all the patients in the hospital's rooms, so Hinn and his "Miracle Invasion" team went down the hall healing people, knocking them down with God's power, until "the hospital looked like it had been hit by an earthquake."
The reality--easily confirmed by speaking to officials at Sault Ste. Marie General Hospital and the Gray Sisters of the Immaculate Conception who work there--is that no patients were released the day Hinn held a small service in the chapel and that, furthermore, "Mr. Hinn's claims are outlandish and unwarranted."

Okay, so what? Benny Hinn isn't the first flamboyant white-suited evangelist to play fast and loose with "miracles," and I'm sure he won't be the last. What makes Hinn different is that, after moving to Orlando in 1979 and founding the Orlando Christian Center in 1983, he became the most famous--some would add, "and richest"--evangelist in the world. When he preaches in the Philippines or Africa, for example, it's not uncommon to have 500,000 people at the service. And they all come for the same reason: supernatural events, miracles, ecstatic emotional experiences. He refined his technique in the eighties at the Orlando church, which was the scene of loud frenzied charismatic services almost from the moment he opened his doors. Hinn would frequently speak in tongues--something he no longer does now that his services are televised--and issue wild prophecies and reveal divine messages given only to him, as he essentially incorporated into his own services all the techniques he learned from watching Kathryn Kuhlman. Soon the Orlando church became a mecca for the suffering, and by the time Hinn started doing organized crusades in the late eighties, he was poised to fill the void left by the spectacular crashes of the Bakkers, Swaggarts and Tiltons.

In many ways Hinn is a throwback to the tent-revival meetings of the 19th century. Short on scripture, long on enthusiasm, these were originally ways to carry the gospel to backwoods people who weren't served by churches, and the tradition was to collect a little money for the minister's traveling expenses at the end of the service. As time went on, the tent revival fell prey to shysters and carnie men, who discovered they could make a sizeable haul by stoking the emotions of the illiterate and making them feel like they were in the presence of miraculous events. It was a short jump from there to Aimee Semple Macpherson, the now discredited healer of the 1920s who, oddly enough, Hinn reveres as one of his spiritual predecessors. Macpherson was the first to take the tent revival nationwide.
This is not to say that everyone who held a healing service was a fraud--but the ones who made an entire career of it tended to be. There even developed a body of sleight-of-hand that survived well into the nineties, notably practiced by Dallas's own W.V. Grant, who can make a leg look like it's grown longer or shorter simply by manipulating the shoe with a deft magician's move. The healing service, almost from the beginning, was a strange mixture of showmanship, ecstatic worship, and magic.

Hinn's services, for example, follow a strict pattern that's calculated for maximum emotional impact and, not so coincidentally, maximum offering collection. From the time the crowd enters the arena, they're massaged with mood lighting, repetitive music, responsive chanting, group gestures, group singing, various forms of choral and instrumental entertainment, all leading up to the moment Hinn makes his entrance. The song sung for the entrance is "How Great Thou Art," making convenient use of an ambiguous personal pronoun.
"There's power here, people!" Hinn will typically say. "Lift your hands and receive it."
All dutifully lift their hands.
"You will be healed tonight!"
They sob and shout hallelujah.
"All things are possible to him that believeth!"

Hinn repeats this same sentence three times, getting a bigger emotional reaction each time he says it.
Chant, song, gesture, salute--all the classic techniques used to submerge the individual into a group. It works for dictators and it works for Hinn. But now that he's joined them together in hope, he adds a dose of fear.
He speaks of huge disasters coming to the world. He tells them of the strange times we live in, a sinful world that will be cleansed by fire and earthquake. And there's only one slim hope to escape: "Only those who have been giving to God's work will be spared."
As a violin plays, money is collected in big white plastic buckets. And as the ushers do their work, Hinn's voice turns soothing. "Nothing will touch you. No one will touch your children. Nothing will touch your home."
Although he never says, "Donate money or you'll die," he comes close. There is a constant theme in his preaching of the connection between "giving" and "healing," making a "faith vow" and "having your needs met." He comes within a hair's breadth of saying, "If you give me money, you will be healed." And the collection always occurs between his promise of healing and the actual healing session--the same way street performers save their biggest trick until after the hat has been passed.

Along about 10 p.m., when all the checks and dead presidents have been collected, Hinn announces that God is speaking to him. Sometimes he sees angels in the room. Sometimes he sees ugly demon monsters that are fleeing from the building. ("You ugly spirit of sickness, go out of this place! Let God's people go!") Sometimes he just feels the presence of spirits, or angels. Once he saw the whole arena bathed in golden dust. And then, as though his body has been taken over by a force he can't control, he starts running around knocking people over. Sometimes he knocks them over with his coat, sometimes by blowing on them, sometimes by pushing their forehead with his hand--but when he touches them, they fall over. As he does this, he calls out the healings--a brain tumor, a cancer, a crippled left leg--as though he's watching something occurring that the rest of us can't see. And then, one by one, various people are brought up onto the stage, and an announcer describes their affliction so that Hinn can lay hands on them and pronounce the disease vanquished. On an average night he'll heal about 80 people, in addition to the ones he shouts out in a sort of "wherever you are, you're healed" way.
No wonder Hinn needs bodyguards. Very few, if any, of these people are actually healed. And when they die, or their disease becomes worse, their relatives tend to become angry. For the past 15 years this has been demonstrated over and over again by various investigative reports conducted with the resources of the Trinity Foundation, beginning with an Inside Edition show in 1993 hosted by Bill O'Reilly and reported by Steve Wilson.
Just a few examples:
He claims to have cured three people of AIDS, even though the Centers for Disease Control have never seen the HIV virus leave a body once it's infected.
He healed a case of brain cancer on stage, even though Inside Edition followed up with tests that showed the tumor was still present.
He pronounced a woman cured of heart disease, and she was so convinced that she threw away her heart medicine. Questioned about it, Hinn said, "It's not my job to call their doctor."
The "cure" of a deaf woman turned out to be a woman who, according to her doctor, was not deaf in the first place.
The cure of three deaf boys turned out to be bogus.
A Houston woman who thought she was cured of lung cancer ("It will never come back!" Hinn told her) rejected her doctors' advice and care--and died two months later.
The heavyweight boxer Evander Holyfield, banned from boxing because of a heart condition, went to a Benny Hinn crusade in Philadelphia, had Hinn lay hands on him, and gave Hinn a check for $265,000 after he was told he was healed. In fact, he passed his next examination by the boxing commission, but later his doctors said he never had a heart condition in the first place--he had been misdiagnosed.
Hinn claimed that God ripped the pacemaker out of a woman's body because she didn't need it anymore.
Hinn claims that a man in Ghana was raised from the dead on the platform. "We have it on video!" he says--although he's never produced the video.
I could go on, but you get the idea. Even sadder than the people who think they're healed are the ones so sick that Hinn's employees never allow them to be seen on stage. People suffering from paralysis, brain damage, dementia and the like--people who couldn't possibly make any "demonstration" on stage--are rejected at a screening session held backstage.
In two cases journalists have tried to verify all the healings at a particular crusade. For an HBO documentary called A Question of Miracles, researchers attended a Portland, Oregon, crusade at which 76 miracles were claimed. Even though Hinn had agreed to provide medical verification of each one, he stonewalled requests for the data, then eventually responded 13 weeks later--with only five names. HBO followed up the five cases and determined that a woman "cured" of lung cancer had died nine months later, an old woman's broken vertebra wasn't healed after all, a man with a logging injury deteriorated as he refused medication and a needed operation, a woman claiming to be healed of deafness had never been deaf (according to her husband), and a woman complaining of "breathlessness" had stopped going to the doctor on instructions of her mother.
Then in December 2002 NBC's Dateline tried to duplicate the HBO study. At a crusade in Las Vegas they counted 56 miracles. Of those, Hinn eventually provided data "proving" five of them. Four of those people refused to share their medical records with NBC. The remaining one, a woman supposedly cured of Lou Gehrig's Disease, had been misdiagnosed, according to her doctor.
There have been so many documentaries and investigations on Hinn--almost all of them orchestrated by Trinity Foundation--that they even have a common structure:
Here's what he looks like in action.
Here's what he claims to do.
Here's what his critics say.
Is he a fraud or is he a healer?
Let's find out.
Not much healing going on.
Okay, here's what Hinn says in his defense.
And one thing Hinn says in his defense--when confronted with evidence that someone claimed to be healed and then died--is that "The reason people lose their healing is because they begin questioning if God really did it."
This may be his cruelest teaching of all. If you're not healed--or, worse yet, if your sick child is not healed--it's your fault, for not having enough faith. It's at this point that Hinn's ministry almost passes over into the realm of primitive magic--i.e., if you want it bad enough, and you say the right things and feel the right things, it will come true.
As it turns out, though, the media investigations are the best thing that ever happened to Hinn. They made him more famous, and more recognizable, than religious TV ever could have. And since most of his audience is made up of the truly desperate--the chronically sick, the dying, people living with pain--Benny Hinn became one more "treatment" for them to take a shot at.
When the first investigation broke, in March 1993, Hinn must have thought his empire was about to fall apart. There was a nasty shoving incident at the Philadelphia airport with Steve Wilson of Inside Edition, followed by a damage-control campaign in which Hinn went on many radio and TV shows, and met privately with several of his critics, to admit that he'd made mistakes and vow that he would never again air "miracles" on TV unless they had been medically verified. "God has taken me by the neck," he said to his congregation. "I think I'm gonna stop preaching healing and start preaching Jesus." At the request of Inside Edition, Ole Anthony traveled to Orlando to meet with Hinn. At the only face-to-face meeting the two men have had, Hinn said he was reformed and that he intended to start medically verifying all miracles and holding them back from television for six months, so that they could be proven authentic. He even said at one point that worldly wealth was sinful--something you'll rarely hear fall out of the mouth of a TV evangelist.
If you study this particular year in his life–1993--he's remarkably consistent in his statements, very self-aware of exactly what errors he's made, very humble, very apologetic, very interested in getting "back to the gospel." He even says at one point that he'll stop doing healing services entirely. And most everyone believed him--including Inside Edition, in a followup report, and including Anthony. "I was disappointed," says Anthony today, "that a year later he was back to his old tricks."
By 1994, it was as though the soul-searching of the previous year had never existed. He geared up to be bigger than ever. He added crusades, he became more flamboyant, more theatrical, and the procession of "miracles" flitting across the TV screen every day continued unabated.

Apparently what he'd discovered is that scandal was good for business. Or at least this particular type of scandal was good for business. Bakker and Swaggart--he must have thought of them at some point--had been brought down by sex, which is difficult for the Christian world to forgive. Greed, on the other hand, can be overcome. Tilton had been brought down by money issues, but after a few years of lying low, he was back in action. This was a whole new type of media attention. The reporters simply said "Is he a healer, or is he a fake?" And because it was presented as an open-ended question, the crowds got even larger.
Fifteen years later, Hinn has become something of a media master. Whenever he's investigated now, he simply admits his "mistakes." He's especially fond of going on The Larry King Show at any time of crisis. He's also refined his view of what he does. He doesn't heal anyone, he always reminds the interviewer. He just creates an atmosphere so that God can heal people. By the time people get to the stage, they've already been healed by God, he says. If the healing turns out to be bogus, then the person was self-deluded. Besides, hope is a great thing.
He also says he has a doctor backstage now to counsel the miracle cases and encourage them to continue with their medication until the healing has been verified. This seems to satisfy the media, even though it amounts to an admission of his own inability to know whether someone is healed.
The image he presents to the faithful is the opposite, of course. To them he's a man possessed of special wisdom. He sees things no one else can see. He has conversations with Jesus that no one else has had. He witnesses the presence of God when no one else would be aware of it. And he constantly says his teaching is "new." ("You didn't come here to hear the same preaching you've been hearing for 50 years, did you?") Of course, to orthodox Christians, this alone makes him heretical. Far from being "new," they would say, the gospel is unchanged over 2,000 years.
But there's an even darker side to Hinn and his organization. In 1998 two members of his inner circle died of heroin overdoses. In 1999, after one of his many vows of reform, he fired several board members and hired an ex-cop named Mario C. Licciardello to do an internal investigation of his ministry. Licciardello was the brother of Carman, who is sort of the Engelbert Humperdinck of Christian singers, so many think Hinn considered him "safe." But Licciardello did such a good job--taking hundreds of depositions and getting to the bottom of the heroin use--that Hinn then sued him. While Licciardello was still his head of security, Hinn’s organization filed a lawsuit demanding that all his files be turned over and sealed, because their public release could result in the end of the ministry. Licciardello was a police investigator with 25 years of experience, and he felt like his whole career was being smeared, so he fought back with his own lawyers. His counsel continually tried to take Hinn's deposition, but Hinn fought him at every step. The judge, however, ruled against him and said that, if Hinn intended to enjoin Licciardello, he would have to make himself available for questioning.
On the very day that Hinn was supposed to give his deposition in the case, Licciardello had a mysterious heart attack and died. The Hinn organization made an out-of-court settlement with Licciardello's widow, which included sealing the court papers.
The U.S. Attorney in Orlando had seated a secret Grand Jury to investigate Hinn; but Licciardello was the chief witness. After his death, Hinn was no-billed.

Hinn runs the largest evangelistic organization in the world that is not a member of the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability. That means his finances are private, his salary is secret, and his income is anybody's guess. Royalties from his books alone are estimated at $500,000 per year, but he essentially has carte blanche to take anything out of the till he wants. "He lives the lifestyle of a billionaire," says Ole Anthony, "all on the backs of false promises and selling false hope."
As Hinn put it himself, in a moment of rare revelatory candor, "I don't need gold in heaven, I gotta have it now."
During 1993, his one year of "reform," he talked about being stung by being portrayed as a millionaire and how he wanted to be "more Christ-like." His solution: "The Lord said sell the Benz and the watch."
He got rid of his Rolex and his Mercedes. Notice he didn't give them away. He sold them--and then replaced the Mercedes with a $65,000 BMW. This is what God told him to do. And who better to know what God wants, because Hinn, after all, is only the third person in the history of the universe to have actually seen God and lived to tell about it. God, he says, is 6-2 or 6-3, with long hair of a light brown color, and eyes that can look right through you.
So what is Benny Hinn really doing in Dallas? He's having conversations with a God who thinks about Rolexes and luxury cars a whole heck of a lot. God really did pick the right city, didn't he?

JE SUIS TRES CONTAN DE VOIRE COMMENT DIEU A UTILISER CETTE HOMME POUR SA GLOIRE. DIEU VOUS BENNIE BENNY HINN AMEN
êtes-vous sérieux ?
I was jonezen for an outlet. My jubilation has never been higher.
The TBN praise a thon has been going on for a week now, It is an EXTRAVAGANZA. All of the most annointed teachers in the world are there pleading to the Lord on our behalf. They all wanted seeds,
its been years since I've had any seeds and stems, I havn't smoked in years,and when I did there were no seeds in the stuff from Mendocino, Ca. A dilema what could I do ? Then the lord revealed to me that I have wild bird seed we feed the cardinals, quail, finches etc. Then as my faith increased I sent a box of bird seed to each of them. Immediately I noticed changes, I spent money hand over fist on myself. All of a sudden pot plants started growing in my neighbors back yard. My skin has a new sheen. Best of all my restless leg syndrome has almost been cured. I then got two highliters, a gold one that I highlite all of the prosperity verses, and a black marker that I use to black out everything else in the bible. Since then I have never been happier. Oh Oh my dandruff is comming back, I better send some more seeds. Later.
May the Lord have mercy on your soul and may He save us from those who have deemed themselves the judge of others. There is only one Judge, and He will be the Judge of Benny Hinn. Jesus sent out the Apostles to preach the Gospel, not to go through the personal effects of the Scribes and Pharisees, and when nailed to the Cross asked the Heavenly Father to forgive those who crucified Him. Inspired by the Holy Ghost, our Savior did not condemn the sinner, but saved us all from condemnation. God IS Love (1John 4:16) and so it is only walking in Love that we walk with God. If we were all to truly do as our Lord and Savior asks we would judge ourselves first, for when we look in the mirror there is none who can claim salvation other than through Jesus Christ.
Read the book of Jude, on second thought, read the whole new testament. The american TV church is the classic wolf in sheeps clothing...for the most part. Example.. Robert Schuller Sr. just removed his son from preaching at the Crystal Cathedral because he was getting too scriptural. He was actually preaching sin and repentance sometimes. We can't have that. What about the damage that does to our self esteem? Then there are the money changers
who don't sell pigeons or livestock, but rather shallow promises of wealth, and health for feeding their often overtly luxurious lifestyles with your seed money. "We are to judge those within the body of Christ", who claim to be saved but are living contrary to the truth. Question , If your pastor preached the Gospel but was living a pagan life style while faining piety would you have the cajones to comfront him?
Schuller Sr. is nothing but a humanist! He has learned well from his heretical "father in the faith" Norman Vincent Peale! Yes the money changers are plentiful out there. Copeland,Hinn,Murdock,Crouch,Cerullo,on and on goes the list of these hucksters! BTW when is the Door going to put something new on their website?
there's also this little book in the OT called Judges. it's where G-d appointed people to judge His people in place of kings and rulers before the whining got really out of hand and then corrupt rulers took over. yeah, there were some good ones too.
you are so right.
Very true what you said about judgement.It is not our place to judge someone who is called by God to preach the
Gospel.Your judgement will be harder on you when you stand before Christ on YOUR judgement day.Be careful
what you say of others,it will come back on you. Peace to you
*** You are wasting you time critizing men and women of God that is not your job. God will judge us all one day.
Benny Hinn is doing the will of God and preaching the Gospel. ***
While Hinn is a false prophet, the Door Magazine promotes ungodly speech and a sense of carnality which is comparable to plain worldliness. Both Hinn and Ole Anthony need to repent.. one for stealing money and one for puffing on a pipe and speaking carnally at every turn.
Ole anthony needs to stop smoking a pipe?? Charles Spurgeon smoked
cigars, sometimes while he preached. How politically correct of an observation. There is none righteous, no not one. That means me and that means you. I will however not lower the gospel to a mere means of income. I recommend you check your prayer cloth, it sounds like the annointing is wearing off. Maybe time to send for a new one.
Dan -
Does your "flowing robe" hide the fact that you
have a small penis?
WTF, Dan?
How much power does a pipe and a colorful word have over you ..apparently enough to cripple you mentally.
The irony here, Danny Boy - is that by deeming others irredeemable based on there shitty(according to you) lifestyle (pause to take a long drag from my cigar) - has you playing God instead of serving God.
.. rather foolish seein' that you're just a guy trying to hide the size of his penis with a flowing robe ..wouldn't you agree, sir?
post edit:
"Their" -- damn that word ..the improper use of it will lead to our demise;)
Lets see, effortlessly generated tax free money based on lies, sounds like this guy has perfected the American dream.
There has been a lot of talk about how we Amercican Christians need to remember that God always provides for those believers thru out history on the airwaves lately. Elijah met the widow with her son who fixed food for the prophet first and her mazola oil and pilsbury flour never ran out. Lesson.. send money to Copeland, Hinn, Dollar, and recieve a prayer cloth that will ensure your funds will never run out, especially in rough times like now.
I don't think it will be too long and we will see a group of prosperity and word faith teachers as well as the "possibility
thinking" teachers, band together go to washington and grovel for a bailout of oh say $ 25 billion dollars to ensure the stability of their ministries. I don't think they will get too far though, because the beast hates the harlot.
Update from the desk of Paul Crouch:
TBN is requesting a $350 B bailout (!) or face having to close some televison stations causing thousand of employees lose their jobs, maybe the closing of some churches ...
A1
You know I'm kidding, right?
A result of yesterday's food coma ...
Sigh,if only that were true A1. Funny thing TBN is more than then likely in great financial shape. They have hundreds of millions of dollars sitting in the bank. In their case heresy pays! Don't worry someday God's judgement will fall.
Wittenburg Door! Live again! By the power of Christ I command you!
Did that work? Nuts. Should never have skipped the Satiric Website session of my seminary Reincarnation class.
Judging from the toxic flavor of these comments on the article, most of Hinn's detractors are suffering from some form of burned-by-religion syndrome. This saddens me, for i have seen and been healed in meetings where God does show up. He can and does heal people even when a minister has fallen into sin. Religion is not the same as spirituality. How many smear merchants are effectively supporting the poor, or a pastor who is doing good works?
This sounds more like it should be in Cornerstone alongside their Mike Warnke expose.
And if Benny's just a fraud, his wife Suzanne is genuinely crazy. She even has her own YouTube video where she preaches about "God's Holy Ghost Enema".
Search YouTube for "Holy Ghost Enema" and she comes right up. "Crazy Preacher Lady" gives too many hits(including "The Exorcist" here), but "Holy Ghost Enema" returns with her at the top. (What a thing to be known for...)
Looks like "The Man with the Holy Ghost Machine Gun" has a pretty big library on YouTube himself. Here's a few highlights:
Death threats and curses on all who doubt or oppose The Hinn:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2becyRCK6LU
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7wAQ5ftiEqE
Use The Force, Benny! (These guys he's knocking down are wimps. Tatted Todd of Lakeland had to kick his victims in the nuts before they'd go down...)
Same as the above, with a different soundtrack. (This one sounds more appropriate...)
And for you boxing fans, Rocky 6 7/8: Benny Hinn's best knockouts!
Any chance that the Door could get a gov't bailout? I really miss the magazine and wouldn't mind getting the tax bill to keep this gem up and running!
I just read this article from Sault Ste marie Ontario, and it brings back memories. I remember when Benni Hinn haunted our fair city and hospitals. It was around 1975, or so, and yes he did go into the hospital run at that time by the grey nuns.
I had a young priest friend about that time who was newly ordained and he told me this story- " I was walking by a room in the hospital when Benny Hinn, called me in. He wanted me to lay hands with him on a sick person, so i did."
He told me he didn't follow anything up at that time, but did go to watch Hinn perform somewhere in the city. I think at that time he had my young priest friend fooled and believing a little that he was for real.
Here in Canada a TV program called the "FIFTH ESTATE' exposed Hinn as a fraud over a year ago.
However, as they say, there is a new sucker born every day... Gord
There are two thoughts to consider here. It's not just some ill-purposed ministers that the lambs follow........how often I've seen the media skew a story to fit their pre-disposed purpose! And the gullible public blindly accepts their misquotes, bias, inaccuracies, half-truths, and often outright lies.......so time will prove this story, and the opinions and criticism, to be correct, or horribly incorrect. May God grant you mercy if it is the latter, and justice if you are correct.
1/1/09
I’ve Got No More Reason to Lie
By Robert Winkler Burke
Of inthatdayteachings.com
Copyright 1/1/09
I’ve got no more reason to lie,
I’m going tomorrow,
To where I was before this life,
Parlayed such sorrow.
I bought and made lies,
Most of my life,
Accusing mostly others,
For cause of strife.
I stuck to my proud guns,
So did my gunfight brothers,
That our bullets were lies,
Gave us virtually no bother.
Worst of all I was a preacher,
Broadcasting popular truths,
That were lead-bullet lies spinning,
Some downrange ruse.
That give-to-get giving,
Isn’t self-service greedy,
That rapture fear-mongering,
Isn’t self-service seedy.
That faith without works,
Isn’t dead,
That hypocrite preachers aren’t,
Full of dread.
That all the hurting world needs,
Hard, blunt truth,
Except broadcast ministry where,
Truth we forsooth.
We forsooth telling the bitchy wife,
Lay off your man,
We forsooth laymen correcting pastors,
Whenever we can.
We forsooth telling the rich donor,
To keep his filthy lucre,
We take all quid pro quo monies,
Like a cheap, ugly hooker.
We forsooth saying: There are no rules,
Only guidelines,
We’d rather rule-trap our sheepfolds,
At tithe times.
You want tough talking truth?
Look elsewhere,
Than we broadcasting preachers,
Serving cheap fare.
For truth listen to talk radio,
Or read an internet blog,
But we religiously correct demigods,
Make dense, self-service fog.
But since soon to my Maker I go,
I repent of fog making,
And swapping hell’s for heaven’s doxies,
And gang mind-raping.
Now that I’m a goner of this world,
I will talk tough,
Can the world ever forgive me for,
Avoiding truths rough?
Only little sweet truths,
I ever ingested,
Now my immortal soul,
Is ever conflicted.
And my sheep! My sheep! Oh God!
My poor sheep!
They hate and avoid all hard truths,
And I weep!
Oh God, I preached hundreds, no,
Thousands of hours,
Sweet sermons self-serving, so,
Lacking God’s powers.
God’s powers of great truth,
Ameliorate all things bad,
On earth I slayed truth and,
All truth-sayers God had.
And even worse yet still,
I ignored God’s precious indwelling,
Those Jesus happily in-filled,
I gave my back while busy book selling.
I had a chance to explain,
God’s true indwelt future,
Honoring God bearers,
Of Christ-minded nature,
But I couldn’t honor God,
Come quickly in others,
My pride made me better,
I authored best sellers.
Now the pages of the books,
I sold that were wrong,
I fear will heat my hell nook,
For long times too long.
I judge myself now,
I deserve hell,
Its kingdom I expanded,
I built on well.
I’ve got no more reason to lie,
I’m going tomorrow,
To where I was before this life,
Parlayed such sorrow.
so is THE DOOR dead or what? no new posts in over 6 months?
az sam balgarin i tozi 4ovek na ime Benny Hinn e pro4ut 4ovek taka4e sprete da se budalkate sas na gospoda slugata!!! I sa6to taka bih poiskal da e tuka v BULGARIA mnogo mnogo iskam dago pregarna na gospoda slugata toi e edin le4itel, toi se ma4e da na vkara vav pravilniya pat. Taka4e neka gospod vi prosti grehovete,ivi pokaje pravilniya pat amin. tova e ot men
Sigh.
I keep hoping that one day I'll return, and life will have sprung anew into the land of the Door. Yet it lies inert, as motionless as a stone, as comments wear upon it's unchanging visage.
I keep checking also, but nothing new. Along with the demise of The Christian Alliance for Progress web site two of my favorite religious sites are silent.
At the very least, can't someone please give an explanation for what has happened here. Also, is there somewhere else to get my humor for the day at the expense of those "Christians" with that certain mindset?
If I am not mistaken I think it was in 1993 or so when jack hayford spoke from the pulpit about Benny Hinn. While at one time he renounced him as heretical in his teachings, I beleive that was the yaea where he said the Hinn had repented. Tha he met with him personally and that Mr. Himm was making himself accountable to Jack Hayford. It was about a year later that I started hearing him spout his heresies again. I heard through the grapevine that Hinn was no longer in such a relation whip wit Hayford. Do yoyu know anything of this?
Yes, the Door is no more. Apparently, Mr. Ole made some bad investments, blah, blah, blah. Only two volunteers man the website part time. It's a sad thing. Maybe more so that the folks felt no obligation or responsibility to address their subscribers. Alas.
Your would think that feeling just a little obligation to subscribers (and fans) would be the "Christian" thing to do.
PLEASE
Thankfully, Jesus Christ is nothing like any of the money hungry frauds calling themselves men of God. I encourage all to follow Jesus Christ, and him alone. Check everything against what He taught.
I read through your article and believe that GOD does work miracles...even when we least expect it.. so I know I saw people being touched by the Holy Spirit at one of Benny Hinn's crusades, and THEY were not in touch with the Ministry or the officials prior to the event... SO I believe the faith of the people all trusting in the LORD Jesus Christ, whom Benny Hinn gave the glory to... did the work that saw people struck down by the power of the Holy Sipirit... YES struck down ... AND I was witness to this..(COs I had relatives in the group that was struck down.. who confirmed that something touched them and weakened them so they all swooned ..)
So if he's a fake... as you claim... Who are YOU to judge... do YOU not fear the commandment that we should "JUDGE NOT LEST WE BE JUDGED"...
Could YOU possibly be the fake yourself...?? I'm wondering cause I know the LORD does work miracles through people we least expect. And YES maybe he now works REAL miracles through GOD's GRACE and MERCY...
May God bless you all... lest you should fall...Amen
Im just wondering if they can charge him on falsely administering a medical practice? Since some have died at his hand,literally,within weeks to months of his preachings! Cant he be convicted of mediacal fraud? Or even more if your really think about this.He is killing people and no one is doing anything about this?
Do me a favor, will ya dickhead? you've freakin got the time to sit down and analyse whether benny hinn is a cheat or not and "substantiate" your arguments.... if you're sooooooooooo bothered about the truth and showing the world the truth about god,, u would have freakin used that time to pray with or witness to somebody. you had better do somethin like tha t and stop blaming other ministers who are up and about doing the right stuff.
Are we Christians or are we witches? I don't know about Hinn, but I do know the Bible asks us to bless others and not curse them. I didn't read all of the above comments, I stopped when they got to full on bickering. Hinn might be wrong and to interject personal opinion I think he is, but in the end my name is not Holy Spirit so it's not up to me (or you) to decide. What I found most heartbreaking in that article were the countless stories of people who believed God had healed them and died soon after. Because what this really taints is people's perception of God, not Hinn. I don't think it really matters what we think about Hinn, but if we let this man taint our view of who he represents, then we have our answer. Let's just pray for Hinn, if he's in the wrong he'll have to deal with it. And let's pray for all the people who look on and their hearts are hardened to the true Physician.
Hi,
I would like to share something. First of all, I don't think it's fair for any christian to judge another christian. You call benny an anti-christ. I'm sure if people knew more about you who are judging, then they may think the same of you. So who is worse: A) a bank robber or B) A murderer and adulterer?
I think most of you are going to say B). And yet king David was B, benny hinn we can say is A (though I don't agree that benny is A...but lets say he is). Well King David is B...and yet God says about King David "He's a man after God's own heart". Point is, DON'T JUDGE if your a christian. Let the non-christians judge. To think believers agreeing with unbelievers (and you think nothing is wrong with this?)
Now Todd Bentley, I would argue is a different story. A man preaching an "angel" rather than "Jesus". Did Todd last ....obviously not...because he was not of God.
I'd also like to point out the fact, that benny's been serving God for over 35 years. I don't know of many christians who would be able to carry on for that long in a ministry (I certainly think it would take a toll on me). Everyone that is not from God....can they stand???? ...of course not! So how does benny stand....pretty obvious to me...he is a brother in Christ.
Sad thing is...let's just say Benny Hinn is taking your money. What do you care???? If benny is doing this...I'd hate to be benny. But does that give you a right to blaspheme God, accusing a brother to be the anti-christ. Even worse yet, i would guess that most of you who conmplain don't even give 10% of your income, as God requires of us. How do I know, because the people who judge, always have something to hide. The people who whine about money, always look for an excuse not to give. I don't need to boast, because freely God has provided for me and blessed me with more than I could ever ask for. Any yet, I would venture a guess that I give more than all of you who whine. And I don't whine and complain. Because as a steward of God's blessings, I can understand the toll, hard labour places on an individual. And no I'm not a factory worker, I'm an actuary.
I say blah to James statement "hard earned money of the faithful"...are you kidding me? Any believer, who claims to have earned anything is IGNORANT. God provides and blesses in all things. That's a fact!!!
You're an actuary who doesn't know his Bible. God does not require 10% of our money - He requires it all. But if for some reason you want to play the OT game of tithing then you need to be giving all tithes - 23%+. And since you want to play that game, I assume you are Jewish because only they were allowed to give to the Levitical priests.
As Christians, we are certainly allowed to call out other Christians' bad theology. We are not to judge non-Christians. So I can certainly question/judge Benny (or maybe I shouldn't because I seriously doubt he's a Christian) - he's a snake oil salesman and I've seen a good friend destroyed after getting involved with this fool.
How do you expect Hinn to preach the Gospel to regions around the world if we don't support him? You must think beyond what the cost is to do all the travelling and time spent doing what Hinn is called to do to preach the Gospel through out the world.Try to think of all the work that is put in place just to set up the area for the people to see him. Hinn does not do the healing he even says so in his prayer for the person, he always says "give the glory to God , praise Him and give His thanks" he never takes credit for himself. .so please try to be witnesses to you faith and stop judging him or others . Peace to you all, Bless your enemies,Pray for one another.Peace
Wow. I'm just recovering from cancer treatments, and I think of all the vulnerable people I've seen who've been searching for answers. I think that part makes me want to wretch more than the chemo....
Madeoff! Madeoff! Give us Madeoff! Keep your Jeebus! Give us Madeoff! And Louisville Sluggers! LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOTTSSS of Sluggers!
I attended a small Bible Pentecostal Bible college in the early 80s and Benny Hinn came for a one evening rally in the fall of 1982. His hair was jet black then and he was thinner, but he displayed many of the same antics recounted in this article. Those antics have been a source of intriguing conversation for almost three decades by those of us who watched them and tried to figure out their meaning. Some of us--including me--have never been able to reconcile what we saw and heard with the central message of the Gospel.
The most telling example, perhaps, relates to one of our Native American students who had a small baby and who wanted to be in the service. Hinn had warned sternly that there were to be no babies in the sanctuary, because (as he explained it), the devil makes them cry and this breaks the anointing of the Holy Spirit just when the miracles are beginning to occur. Well, this particular student snuck her baby in during the healing service, and the baby did cry aloud, causing a shriek of extreme irritation from Hinn. I pretty much concluded then and there that Hinn's methods had more to do with hypnotism than with the Holy Spirit. I haven't seen much to contradict that since.
One of our Bible teachers, an older and relatively wiser gentleman whom we called Brother Davidson, believed that Hinn did have a special gift from God, but was majoring in theatrics. This professor was a stern man, and when the then young Hinn met with our college faculty, he (the professor) warned him in no uncertain terms to STAY AWAY FROM THE GOLD! Judging by his current lifestyle, Hinn didn't stick by this advice. Christian celebrityship is a damnable thing, in my opinion. I'd much sooner look to Ole Anthony for spiritual wisdom than to Hinn.
As I read the article I kept thinking that Hinn must have read about L. Ron Hubbard and decided to do the same thing to get rich -- start his own church (although in Hinn's case one that is vaguely Christian).
As I see it it, the man's a fraud and criminal.
It is illegal for anyone but you to reveal your medical records including your doctor.
On the other hand; let's find out what is happening with Susan, Benny's wife... RUMOR IS: she moved out of the mansion and was fired by a young man Benny recently hired and gave her job to...
???? the mystery continues... maybe we should hear from her....
Hinn sounds as if he's threatening people with sickness or personal peril of violence from unnamed enemies if they don't believe in him and his new doctrines and sens him more money.
That's not typical faith-healing and no one in the mainstream of faith-healing condones it. Most faith-healers ask for no money and are never widely known, because they don't seek fame. Additionally, most miraculous healings take place in private, when an individual prays and is healed quietly. No "professional", no "celebrity", is there or has anything to do with it.
I've had many diagnosed illnesses that doctors couldn't do anything about, which vanished the day I finally prayed over them. No one was there to gain anything from it but me and God. It wasn't autosuggestion. If autosuggestion could cure some of these illnesses, hypnotherapists would be the most sought-after specialists in the world and books on autosuggestive healing would outsell all other categories put together; it would be a matter of obvious supply and demand. There would be almost no other medical work going on anywhere. After all, autosuggestion is under the patient's total personal control. Limits to healing would vanish completely and long-term sickness would be all but unknown. This is clearly not the world we live in. Instead, sometimes a healing occurs that beats the odds, and the overwhelming majority of such healings occur right after a prayer for that particular healing. That is real faith-healing. No mansions, no strobe lights, no million-dollar vacations. Just a prayer in a living room or at a bus stop or in a laundry or store, and a successful recovery, contrary to prognosis.
Hinn may have failed to produce the real thing because of his false doctrines. If God doesn't choose to support Hinn's teaching, He won't support it.
Don't miss out on the real thing. A good way to make sure you never get taken in by a false healer is never to pay for it or go on TV for it. That way no one has anything to gain by faking it. if you do end up on TV getting a healing form a televangelist star, got o the doctor and have it verified. You can avoid prejudicing the doctor's diagnsis by not mentioning the healing show. If you just say you're feeling better and want it rechecked, perhaps the doctor will run a new test and see whether you're still afflicted with the condition. If so, then, keep doing what the doctor says. If not, then, praise the Lord.
PLEASE READ THIS POST
To begin with this Article isn't inspired by the Lord! John you have brought such judgement on your life for slandering Benny Hinn, he's a man of God I'd recommend you all read a book called God's Generals by Roberts Liardon! Many of the early Pentecostal Pioneers were slandered called fakes and maligned! It makes perfect sense that Benny's ministry is suffering the same abuses by people, you'll find that people who write such Pride full remarks on this site aren't walking with the Lord (probably never have and have never understood what dying to self is!) Do any of you have a ministry and then if you do is are sign's and wonders fallowing your ministry?? I really respect Benny for his ministry around the world bringing people to Faith in Jesus Christ and healing the sick and setting the captives free! As to Benny's lifestyle thats between him and the Lord. God Bless (especially to those who have been helped by this comment) please read the positive reports of Pentecostalism and then do your own research and you will find that God is with people like Benny Hinn. Again God Bless and Keep you in his Love. Danny
GREAT ARTICLE!!
Benny Hinn is such a scumbag that from the first time I saw him, I wanted to throw-up. I can't say anything more to add to this article, except I'm glad I found it. Someday, he may be roasting in Hell for all of his deceptive behavior.
i think you guys were all decieved. benny hinn is not out to get your money... it's about sowing a seed. in order to get something, give a little and then you reap your harvest. and to let you know, benny had to cut his salry back a lot because he felt bad that people thought he was getting paid too much. his crusades are truly real, i have been, and my mom was completely healed. it wasnt benny, but god through benny, and he wants people to know that he is not fake! but any honest christian knows the power of god when they encounter it. and benny lives in it because he had completely surrendered his life to the lord. so stop talking about him like he is dirt. that goes to show how mature you are. really.
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