Joel Osteen’s new book,
“The Power of I AM: Two Words That Will Change Your Life Today,” contains the
same ideas as his old books. Nothing really new, but the title caught my
attention. In Exodus 3: 14 we read, “And
God said unto Moses, I AM THAT I AM: and he said, Thus shalt thou say unto the
children of Israel, I AM hath sent me unto you.” I do not know if the title
of this book deliberately intended to be on the edge of blasphemy, because the
“I am” in this book has nothing to do with God or His Holy name. The “I am” in
this book is meant for you to be used on yourself, to enhance and better
yourself. Gaze into a mirror so you see only yourself, and ignore the Almighty
God standing in front of you, but behind your mirror.
Leaving the title
alone, let’s look at the real problems in this book, which is the same problem
in every book Joel Osteen writes. They are not “little” theological issues
which any Christian could have with any book written outside of the Bible,
which is the unfaultable Word of God. In fact, his issues are “major” because
of the butchering done to the Word of God. Let us look at what Joel Osteen does
in his writings and teachings, so as Christians, we can avoid these major
doctrinal errors.
Issue number one: Partially
quoting scripture so that it supports your belief system. You partially quote
it because a whole quote will go against your belief system. Let me give an
example from one of my books. Chellell
looked toward the city on the hill and said, “The desires and pleasure of the
flesh seem good.” What! How could you write a Christian book and say that
evil pleasure seems good? How can you claim to be a Christian and a Christian
author and say something like that? The PROBLEM! This is only a half quote. Let
me put the full quote. Chellell looked
toward the city on the hill and said, “The desires and pleasure of the flesh seem
good for a season, but leave you unhappy
and miserable in the end.” Notice I left off the ending about seeming
good for a season, and then leaving you unhappy and miserable. By leaving off
the ending, I changed the whole meaning of a sentence. I turned it 180 degrees,
making it opposite of what it really said. Joel Osteen does the same thing, but
he does it with the Bible. Let’s look at some examples from his book, “The
Power of I Am”.
On page 39 of the
E-book of “The Power of I Am, Joel Osteen says, The scripture says, “Call the
things that are not as if they already were.” He applies this verse in saying
that we (humans) should use our positive words to describe things as we want
them to be. “Use your words to change the situation.” Joel says. Because Joel
used the general term “scripture”, we have to search and find it. Romans 4:17
is probably what he is referring to, though it could possibly be I Corinthians
1:28. Because Romans makes the most sense for what Joel is saying, let me give
you the whole verse: Romans 4:17 (KJV) (As it is written, I have
made thee a father of many nations,) before him whom he believed, even God, who
quickeneth the dead, and calleth those things which be not as though they were.
Even without taking the whole chapter in context (which you should always do),
you can instantly see that it is GOD who calls “things which be not as though
they were”, not US! Why did Joel NOT include the whole verse in his quote?
Because he is trying to tell you that YOU have the power, with YOUR words. The
whole verse changes this, telling us GOD has that power, not HUMANS! By leaving
out part of the Bible verse, he leads you where he wants you to go, which is
not the place God was leading you to in that passage of scripture.
We are to believe God,
and know, that when HE says something or promises something, it will happen,
PERIOD! We need to trust him. This passage DOES NOT tell us that our words have
so much power that if we state things as we want them to be, not as they are,
then what we want, will happen. NOT from this verse, or any verse! Whatever God
says and promises, stands forever, and will happen. Here, Joel makes a fatal
mistake. He says our words can override and stop what God promises to do. I
will quote from e-book page 23:
“Negative words stop God’s promises.” WRONG! I tell you this, from
Creation to Eternity, not one single thought or word from mankind has ever, or
will ever, stop God’s promises or plans. Our prayers ASKING God to do things in
our life can cause God to act, but that is because God in His love and mercy decides
to act, as He deems fit.
Issue number two: Adding
to scripture or adding conclusions that are not in scripture. For example, if I
say, “I am going to travel to New York City next week,” and you tell everyone, “He
is going to New York City to work with a book publisher”, then you are adding a
conclusion I never stated. I only said I was going to New York, you added the
reason I was going to New York, but you really have no idea why I am going to
New York. Now, let’s look at Joel Osteen doing this to the Bible.
On page 23 of the
e-book, Joel Osteen tells the story from Luke 1 about the angel Gabriel
appearing to Zacharias and Zacharias being made unable to talk because he
doubted the word of God being delivered by the Angel. Joel Osteen states this,
“God knows the power of our words. He knew that if Zachariah went around
speaking defeat, it would stop His plan.” The Bible DOES NOT say that was the
reason, which is adding to scripture. That is inserting your opinion of why God
did something into scripture. Luke 1:20 tells us he was struck dumb “because
thou believest not my words.” Adding to scripture the horribly wrong theology
that God struck him dumb because his negative words could overpower God’s plans
is beyond simple ignorance, it borders on heresy. Suppose I went around saying,
“No way Jesus can return today.” Do you think God in Heaven would look at Jesus
Christ and say, “Sorry, not today. We had negative words about your return. Let
us hope that man does not have negative words tomorrow, so that you can return
to the world and defeat Satan.” Do you see how ridiculous that is?
Another example of
adding thoughts to scriptures can be found when Joel discusses the story of the
children of Israel marching around Jericho, which can be found in Joshua 6.
Joel Osteen says on pages 27, concerning the children of Israel being silent,
“God knew they would talk themselves out of it.” First off, Joel wrongly states
earlier that it was God who said to be silent in the first 6 days of marching.
Joshua 6:10 says that was Joshua’s command to the people. However, we again get
the strange statement from Joel that God wanted them silent so that their
negative words could not override God’s work in bringing down the walls of
Jericho. That is adding a conclusion or observation that is not in Joshua 6.
What do we have? We have God telling them what to do, and God expecting them to
obey. Obedience is the key, not verbal words. Adding your thoughts and opinions
thousands of years later does not make it truth. We are NOT told what they
thought about while marching around Jericho.
Besides, being silent with your mouth does not
affect your thoughts! If negative words have such power, what do negative
thoughts cause? What if the people marching around Jericho had extremely
negative thoughts? From the story of Jericho, we know that God told them how to
and for how long to march around Jericho, and when they did exactly as God
said, God caused the walls to fall down. What would have happened if they had
done things different from what God said? We do not know, because that did not
happen. If we want to look at what happens when you disobey God, we go
elsewhere in the Bible, such as the book of Jonah.
Let’s stop here with
the examples, and boil this down. If words have power over God, what would a
real child of God do with those words? Would he or she ask for job promotions,
money, a bigger house, more children, as Joel Osteen constantly states through
this book? That is focusing on self! That is selfish! Our eyes should be on God
and His Kingdom (Matthew 6:33). If my words could override God, I would open
the phone book and say, “God, I want you to save John Johnson. I want you to
save Sue Smith. If my words had such power over God that He was forced to obey
me, I could have Him save everyone I could name! Hell would no longer gain a
single soul as long as I could speak! I would want that instead of using my
words for worldly stuff which is what Joel encourages us to ask God for.
God tells us how to be
a tool for Him in leading someone to Jesus Christ. Tools include prayer,
telling him or her about Jesus, using the Bible, and having a life that shines
the light of Jesus as an example to others. What is not in scripture is that
your words have power. What is in scripture, is that the Holy Spirit has power,
and can use you as a tool to lead someone to the saving knowledge of Jesus
Christ.
Read Luke
16:19-31. Under Joel Osteen’s
philosophy, the poor beggar must have been the most negative person to ever
live. His mouth had to spout thousands of negative things a day. The rich man
had to be a positive person, saying all the right and positive things. Yet, who
ended up in Hell? Who ended up in paradise? Fact: In this parable, faith in God
is what mattered. What did not matter and was worthless, was earthly riches.
Focus on God and his glory. Let the only I AM that comes out of your mouth be
praise to the living God, the great I AM, not an “I am” that is adding to your kingdom.
Joel Bouriaque
http://www.amazon.com/Deception-Magic-Joel-Bouriaque/dp/0615549020