
I found this intriguing article at Salon.com about the famous megachurch leader, Joel Osteen, a proponent of the peculiarly American “prosperity gospel,” a belief that God will reward you with material wealth if you are a True Believer. The article is a bit old, but is still relevant and I never saw it before, so, well, it gets added to the Museum of Narcissism.
If Mr. Osteen makes people feel better about themselves, fine, but Mr. Osteen is like a heroin addict getting his fix of narcissistic supply from his many followers, who worship him as if he were God himself. Frighteningly, Big Religion is full of such people who really only care about their own glorification.
What would God think?
Here is the article (written by Chris Lehmann at Salon.com):
If history is told by the winners, then Joel Osteen β the relentlessly upbeat spiritual caretaker of the national attitude β is historyβs designated chaplain. In a marathon Sunday faith rally in the heart of the nationβs capital, Osteen, who presides over Americaβs largest megachurch congregation, the nondenominational Lakewood Church in Houston, exhorted the tens of thousands of believers amassed in Nationals Stadium to βlive in victory,β to seize their βdestiny moments,β and to fulfill Godβs plan for their personal, financial and emotional success.
The Washington rally β billed as βAmericaβs Night of Hopeβ β had gone a bit afoul of its own victory plan, however. It had originally been scheduled the night before, but as a persistent afternoon drizzle gave way to some spirited cloudbursts, the eventβs organizers rescheduled it for the following afternoon. As I approached the centerfield box office outside Nationals Park on Saturday, the marquee overhead bore what had to be the glummest rainout announcement of the young 2012 baseball season: βNight of Hope postponed until 4 p.m. Sunday.β And since the Osteen message involves a lot of merchandising, the imposing tables hawking T-shirts and other commemorative swag seemed suddenly off-kilter. One prominent Night of Hope T-shirt was emblazoned with the inspirational divine message βI can do all thingsβ β all things, that is, but summon the faithful to stand out in the rain.
But the Osteens were not about to let the intervention of the elements become any sort of setback. As the megachurch pastor β turned out in a blue suit and a beatific grin, looking for all the world like a fitter Tim Allen, fresh out of rehab β took his spot at the second-base perimeter of the infield, before the bank of TV cameras set up on the pitchers mound, he called out, βIsnβt it great to be here? Itβs another great day the Lord has made!β He paused to note that, yes, βwe had some rain last night,β but that the eventβs reshuffled schedule could well mean that some people who couldnβt have made the evening version of the prayer gathering might well have turned up serendipitously today. In any event, Osteen declared his certitude that βGod put the right people here right now.β
That confident assertion of β and indeed, identification with β the divine will is one of the calling cards of the Osteen faith. Amid all the spirited self-affirmations and folksy homilies that stud an Osteen sermon, itβs easy to miss the oddly deterministic invocations of divine prerogative summoned up by the preacher, who belongs to the βWord Faithβ tradition of Pentecostal belief. Osteenβs serene depictions of Godβs eternally uptending designs for the fates of individual believers are a sort of inverted Calvinism. Where the Puritan forebears of todayβs Protestant scene beheld a terrible, impersonal Creator whose rigid system of eternal reward and punishment dispatched many an infant and solemn believer to the pit of damnation, Osteenβs God is an intensely personal presence, guiding believers out of pitfalls into inevitable glory and joy β not so much a raging Patriarch as a genial cruise director. βGodβs dream for our own life is so much bigger than our own,β went one frequent refrain at the D.C. rally. βLetβs not put any limits on God.β Osteen characterized the Deity as a βrunning-overβ and βabundantβ God. βHave you ever been to a fast-food restaurant, and they ask you if you want to supersize this? Well, God is a supersizing God,β who is determined, Osteen assured the crowd, to βsupersize your joy.β
It stands to reason, in this arrangement of cosmic fate, that the stubborn human weakness for anxious introspection and downbeat self-doubt is something of an affront to the author of being. βWhen you are criticizing yourself,β Osteen announced, βyou are criticizing Godβs creation. The next time you think something negative, turn that around, and say, βI am Godβs masterpiece.ββ
The talismanic faith in positive utterance is another key article of belief in the Word Faith tradition. Some Word Faith devotees are devout believers in faith-healing, and one of the key episodes Osteen cites in his own account of his faith journey is the miraculous recovery of his mother from an apparently terminal case of liver cancer in 1981. Faced with the prospect of losing his mother, the young Osteen β then a communications student at Oral Roberts University with no ministerial ambitions β turned to prayer, saying to God, as he now recounts, βI know you can do what doctors canβt do, what medical science canβt do.β Sure enough, Osteenβs mother, Dodie, went on to be cancer-free, and took to the podium on Sunday after her sonβs testimonial. She reprised the story of how she fought off the specter of death by seeking out the βmost healingβ passages of scripture, which she assembled into a digest she still consults regularly: βLike American Express, I donβt leave home without it,β she said. Then she issued a disclaimer for her listeners contending with severe illness: βI donβt advise you not to seek treatment β get treatment any way you can.β Such cautions sounded a bit rushed and legalistic next to her own account of her recovery: When she and her preacher-husband both sensed the end was near, she recalled, βWe lay on our faces β¦ He said, βI need you, the church needs you, the children need you β¦ And now, almost 31 years later, I won the battle and so will you!β God, after all, βdelights in answering the prayers of his children,β and βloves everybody the same, but he can do for you what he did for me.β
The Word Faith image of the wonder-working, healing God is discomfiting to ponder, and not just because he might tempt desperately sick believers to go rogue beyond the dictates of medical science. The constant recitation of Godβs transcendent goodness and the deference paid to his ironclad ability to lift believers magically out of suffering and woe both subtly downgrade the divine presence into a glorified lifestyle concierge. This God has no real way of accounting for the age-old paradoxes of theology, such as the tolerance of personal and historic evil, or the deeper ironies and unintended consequences of the believing life. Even less does the Osteen familyβs success gospel encompass a sustained social ethic β even though the D.C. event featured an appeal on behalf of the World Vision ministries to adopt a needy child in the developing world. The believerβs chief task is to ratify the preexisting divine script of success in his or her individual life β and then to bear testimony to that joyous transformation in a community of like-minded success believers.
Itβs a curiously childlike vision of faith β a point driven home in a homily offered up by Joelβs wife, Victoria, who serves as a kind of co-pastor of the separate domestic sphere at the coupleβs revival meetings. When she finds herself assailed by cares, anxieties and negative thoughts, Victoria reported, βI visualize a bouquet of helium balloons in my hands, and I literally hold those balloons out and release them to the heavens β¦ And as I release those balloons to Him, I say, βI may not have the power to change my circumstances, but God has that power to change our circumstances.ββ In a later homily on the properties of unconditional love and forgiveness, Victoria delivered an extended gloss on what was apparently one of the few remotely traumatic moments in her suburban Texas upbringing β a time when, as a freshly licensed driver, she had taken out her dadβs car and negligently instructed a friend to roll down a passenger-side window that was malfunctioning, thereby breaking it once and for all. When she finally summoned the nerve to fess up to her dad, she found him to be disappointed but gloriously forgiving; he βdidnβt judge my future from that one mistakeβ β and neither will the indulgent dad of the Osteen heavens. βYou may not have been shown unconditional love in your life,β Victoria announced, βbut God loves you unconditionally.β The problem, of course, is that even those of us who did survive unhappy childhoods are no longer 16 β and as a result, we need a God who can meet the challenges of the new responsibilities weβve taken on as weβve matured, not a figure of undifferentiated sentiment, handing our forgiveness and love like lottery tickets.
The other childlike quality of the Lakewood account of divine grace has to do with the past β which, together with negative thinking, represents the closest thing to evil in the Osteenβs scheme of salvation. The past is bad because it mires believers in remembered hurts and slights, and thereby obstructs Godβs grander design for their lives. βWhen we hold on to the past, when we donβt go to God, that just puts more baggage in our suitcases,β Victoria exhorted, in a not-altogether-wieldy metaphor.
This spiritual hostility to the past was an all too frequent refrain in the eventβs musical selections β a monotonous offering of anthemic, bombastic Christian rock, all composed without the benefit of a single minor chord or any discernible melody. βIβm moving forward,β went the lyrics to one of these intra-sermon studies in Journey-esque hymnody. βIβm not going back / Iβm moving ahead / Iβm here to declare to you that the past is over.β An American idol contestant named Danny Gokey also offered testimony about how the Osteens had helped him conquer his depression in the wake of the untimely passing of his wife. Gokey then performed a Christian rock number of his own, βMy Best Days Are Ahead of Me,β which seemed to make short work of his once-debilitating grief: βI donβt get lost in the past or get stuck in some sad memories,β he sang, rather creepily; the songβs bridge announced that βAge isnβt nothing but a number,β and then resolved on a Successories-style upgrade of a well-known Army recruiting slogan: βIf I keep getting better / I can be anything I want to be.β
Thereβs a term from the psychiatric clinics that neatly captures the outlook of someone possessed of grandiose fantasies about the imperial reach of the self, and a principled refusal to acknowledge anything poised to diminish such fantasies β such as the passage of time. That term is βnarcissistic personality disorder,β and it does nothing to detract from the positive features of the Osteen gospel β the injunctions to persevere in the face of adversity, or the appeals for donations to World Vision β to note that this is a system of faith tailor-made to sustain narcissistic delusion. To grasp the overweening self-absorption of the Osteen faith, one need look no further than the frequent recourse Osteen makes to his own success story in sealing the case for Godβs providential plan for the believerβs own life. Now, unlike other well-known evangelists, Osteen canβt lay much claim to a hardscrabble Horatio Alger-style life story. His 1920s forebear in Pentecostal media preaching, Aimee Semple McPherson, was a single-mother missionary before coming into fame and fortune as an evangelical celebrity in the Radio Age; Billy Graham was the son of a poor North Carolina dairy farmer. Osteen, by contrast, was a second-generation evangelical leader, whoβd been working as a TV producer for his father John Osteenβs growing ministry before he succeeded to the elder Osteenβs pulpit after his fatherβs death. His personal biography tracks closer to fellow Pentecostal TV preacher Pat Robertsonβs background: Robertson was the son of a U.S. senator before finding his own adult spiritual calling.
Nonetheless, Osteen repeatedly cites his own success presiding over the spiritual flock he inherited as the prime exhibit of Godβs ready transposition of divine grace into worldly success. When he first acceded to the pulpit, he recalled from his riser above second base, he felt no special aptitude for ministering; heβd heard that Lakewood church leaders were raising doubts about his vocation, and the church needed to move into a bigger, upgraded new facility. βAt one point,β Osteen preached, βit seemed like everything was coming against me. The enemy was fighting me not from where I was coming, but from where I was going β¦ He didnβt want Lakewood to be in the Compaq Centerβ β the former home arena for the Houston Rockets, and now home to the Lakewood congregation of nearly 50,000 souls. The Compaq Center deal is a frequent touchstone in Osteenβs faith reminiscence; it occupies a good stretch of his blockbuster best-selling self-improvement tract, βBecome a Better You,β which also finds evidence of divine favor in a home-flipping deal Joel and Victoria struck at the height of the housing bubble, as well as in such mundane votes of divine confidence as setting the pastor up with a premium parking space. Indeed, the steady parade of testimonials from the wider Osteen clan on the Night of Hope risers bespeaks a family-wide penchant for casting oneβs commonplace personal biography as a sort of infomercial version of the Christian faith. (In addition to mother Dodie and wife Victoria, Osteenβs brother Paul, who runs a medical charity in Africa, took to the stage Sunday to relate a more responsible story of healing, in which due medical diligence properly preceded the broader appeal to faith; Joelβs two children, Alexandra and Jonathan, are respectively a vocalist and guitarist in the ministryβs Christian rock ensemble.)
Now, it may very well be that in a certain kind of conviction of grace, believers feel themselves suffused with the divine presence, and find their most quotidian activities reflect celestial favor; the 14th-century Saint Julian of Norwich recorded a vision in which she beheld the entirety of creation in an object no larger than a hazelnut, cupped in her hand. Perhaps, in this view of things, a converted sports arena or excellent parking spot is no great stretch when it comes to testifying on behalf of a God for whom all things are possible.
Still, the claustral feel of Osteenβs success gospel paradoxically works exactly the same effect that he warns believers to resist: It imposes limits on God, by largely confining his workings to the dominant American culture of success. If the Osteen-coached believer does not reap abundant and large reward in career, family life or creative pursuits, they are not necessarily going to curse their God, as Jobβs comforters had counseled him to do amid his notorious personal setbacks. But neither are they going to make the key connections that earlier Protestant divines have preached, going back to Jonathan Edwards and John Calvin: that the divinity does not, in fact, have your own personal happiness occupying pride of place on his exhaustive to-do list. The universe is ultimately about a larger set of concerns, and faith concerns a much vaster striving toward justice than believers are wont to see in their personal affairs, their social conquests or their annual paychecks. This is why Edwards, for all of his better-known hell-and-brimstone sermons, urged onto believers a stoic βconsent to being in generalβ β not a plan for individual life advancement.
This disjuncture between Protestantismβs more humbling counsel and the feel-good Word Faith gospel became most painfully evident during one of Osteenβs closing perorations. In chilling detail, he recounted the story of a young Tutsi Christian woman whoβd hid out in the bathroom of her church pastorβs office at the height of the 1994 Rwandan genocide. The machete-wielding Hutu killers who pursued her returned to the pastorβs office every day for 91 days, usually calling out for her by name. At one point, Osteen said, a Hutu militia man was poised to turn the knob on the door to the tiny bathroom where the woman was quartered alongside six other Tutsi believers β but at the last moment, he became distracted and walked away. Finally, when the genocide had been contained, the woman was free, and has been traveling with ministers ever since to testify to the amazing story of her survival. βNearly 1 million Rwandans were killed in this genocide,β Osteen said as he wound up to the storyβs larger moral. βIt was very sad.β
Well, no. The Rwandan genocide was something far more than sad β it was a colossal failure of moral and political agency, going back to the German and Belgian colonial partition of the country that set up artificial power conflicts between the nationβs two main tribes. This horror also most certainly came about thanks to the wretched failures of the Clinton administration and other Western powers to arrest a well-documented string of massacres, even as senior U.N. officials such as Lt. Gen Romeo Dallaire, the leader of the agencyβs Rwandan peacekeeping mission, implored them to.
For Osteen, of course, the story of this womanβs survival was a divine miracle. But if this one survivor was enjoying the loving favor of an omnipotent God, what are we to conclude that this same God thought of the more than 800,000 Rwandans murdered in the genocide? Was their faith wanting? Was God planning unparalleled new successes and joys for their surviving family members? Are these the people Osteen has in mind when he exhorts his listeners not to be victims, but victors?
Itβs something of an obscenity even to frame such questions. Yet they are the inevitable outcome of a theology-free success gospel, pitched exclusively to tales of individual triumph. Osteenβs sermons all begin with a self-empowering chant from believers. βThis is my Bible,β it goes in part; βI am what it says I am. I have what it says I have.β But there are legions of dead β now confined by definition, itβs true, in the hated past β who come bearing the testimony that the Bible is not actually about you.