I rarely, if ever, watch any of the cable news talking head shows anymore. But tonight I left Headline News on while I was cooking dinner, and I caught Glenn Beck interviewing Joel Osteen. A lot of Christian thinkers have a lot of questions about Osteen, but Beck beautifully distilled most of them by asking (my paraphrase): “if you’re a Christian leader, shouldn’t you talk about Jesus more?”
Osteen made a tip of the hat to Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection as tenets of faith, but it took him less than 3 seconds on the subject before he shifted to talking about “life beyond that”. Now, I get the importance of talking about living the Christian life in practical terms — it’s good and right and important to do so. But the most practical thing you can do as a Christian is to turn your attention toward the Cross and what it accomplished and to fix your mind upon the person of Jesus Christ as our Lord, our great high priest, our savior, our righteousness, our God; when we fail to do that, our attempts at “Christian living” invariably go badly awry. So I worry about ministries that spend too much time “beyond the cross” because their message starts to become indistinct from Tony Robbins-style “we’re all okay, let’s be better”, diminishing the importance of the Cross and encouraging us to think more highly of ourselves and think less frequently about the place of Jesus in our worlds — which amounts to a sick kind of baptized idolatry.
But, if Your Best Life Now isn’t as “best” or as “now” as you want it to be, I suppose you can take the more modest step of buying Osteen’s new book, “Become a Better You”.



dead on, bro… the best use of our time isn’t improving ourselves it’s acknowledging, glorifying and worshiping our god.
Comment by thomas — October 18, 2007 @ 5:38 am
Amen and Amen! It’s when we focus on worshipping, loving and obeying Jesus that we then change, from the inside out as a result of our relationship with Jesus, we do not change just because we decide to think positive and be a better person. That is so new age and worldly…and if that worked, well..then there was no need for Jesus to die on the Cross! Give me a break!
Comment by Holly — October 31, 2007 @ 9:16 pm
I truly see this man as a false prophet. He barely talks about Jesus at all. Jesus is what Christianity is all about. What he preaches is definitly just motivational speaking — you can get that anywhere.
Comment by Maria — November 1, 2007 @ 11:05 am
Once again, Joel Osteen’s utter failure to uphold Christian truth in an age of apostacy only further supports what is all too clear about his teaching: it is spiritually bankrupt.
Here is a link to articles our ministry has created on Osteen’s heretical compromise that is anointed as “Christianity” today.
http://www.spiritwatch.org/behindsmile.htm
Comment by Rafael — December 29, 2007 @ 4:40 am
Wonderfully put. Gotta give it to Beck for a change - finally asking a good question
Comment by Andy Borgmann (Allen Hunt Show Producer) — January 2, 2008 @ 10:56 pm