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  • #212118
    Anonymous
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    Roy wrote:


    I liken this to being told that a particular road was completely safe for worthy church members – by divine protection. One day you get beaten and mugged – maybe your loved one was killed – on this same road. You struggle with feelings of failure because perhaps the divine protection was lacking because of some personal failing on your part. After much soul searching and meeting with priesthood leaders you come to understand that “Life” happens to the good and the bad. Random chance exists in God’s universe. Also that a fair number of assurances of divine protection were not really doctrine at all – they were anecdotal stories, faith promoting rumors, personal testimonies, and other words to describe the tendency of the imperfect membership to preach the prosperity gospel above and beyond what is justified by scripture.

    Unfortunately in subsequent church meetings many examples of the prosperity gospel continue to be taught. Sometimes you speak up, sometimes you do not. sometimes after you speak another individual will approach you after class in gratitude, sometimes they do not. But almost always the elements of the prosperity gospel seem to be more accepted, more welcome, and more consistent with the message of the lesson. Everyone seems eager to proclaim that a particular road is completely safe for worthy church members – by divined protection.

    Wow that’s deep Roy. And clear. Well put.

    #329316
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Roy wrote:

    But almost always the elements of the prosperity gospel seem to be more accepted, more welcome, and more consistent with the message of the lesson.

    And yet they can never satisfactorily explain how prosperity “gospel” comes from that same God, who in His own Son’s words “maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust.”

    I mean, when Christ Himself, in His most famous, best documented sermon tells you God doesn’t play favorites, that sort of limits the possible sources of supernatural preferential treatment, doesn’t it?

    #329317
    Anonymous
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    NightSG wrote:


    Roy wrote:

    But almost always the elements of the prosperity gospel seem to be more accepted, more welcome, and more consistent with the message of the lesson.

    And yet they can never satisfactorily explain how prosperity “gospel” comes from that same God, who in His own Son’s words “maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust.”

    I mean, when Christ Himself, in His most famous, best documented sermon tells you God doesn’t play favorites, that sort of limits the possible sources of supernatural preferential treatment, doesn’t it?

    We are by far not the only church of the prosperity gospel. In fact, I believe we borrowed it from mainstream Protestantism.

    #329318
    Anonymous
    Guest

    NightSG wrote:


    I mean, when Christ Himself, in His most famous, best documented sermon tells you God doesn’t play favorites, that sort of limits the possible sources of supernatural preferential treatment, doesn’t it?

    Well, Christ Himself did have a very short, pitiful, tragic life. But after Christ, the Roman Empire and the kingdoms of the middle ages twisted the doctrine to support their rule and authority. God gave them their standing as a divine right, and the peasants and serfs aught to obey (even if they don’t understand or felt they were wrong). I still think in the LDS Church we follow that same dogma.

    #329319
    Anonymous
    Guest

    DarkJedi wrote:

    We are by far not the only church of the prosperity gospel. In fact, I believe we borrowed it from mainstream Protestantism.

    Granted, my experience beyond a single service is limited to growing up Methodist, with some Baptist friends I’d occasionally attend with, a CoC aunt I’d attend with a few times, and a couple of the “praise band” nondenominationals, I’ve never heard it preached as some sort of tenet of faith. Sometimes tangentially alluded to in the sense of “being righteous may improve your odds in life,” but certainly not to the extent it’s upheld by LDS at least in the culture.

    The Methodist church I grew up in would blow it out of the water with a single (well, dual) example; one well known couple there had been public school janitors all their lives, and yet put every minute they could spare to volunteering in the church. He would drive the church bus to pick up kids for after school activities while she prepped the rooms, and they would both clean the building a couple times a week. For over 40 years they’d use their vacation time to assist with medical missions. (Even doctors forget how valuable it is to have two people with decades of experience in cleaning up vomit and working hard before the air conditioners come on in the 80F+ Texas summer mornings along when you’re trying to fix up a third world clinic.) They were certainly never wealthy; they were frugal, which did allow them some extra options later in life compared to many manual laborers, but for every luxury they had in retirement, they’d foregone plenty up to that point,and even then I’d have to say they were well short of the upper middle to upper class lifestyle many of the members who contributed far less were living.

    dande48 wrote:

    Well, Christ Himself did have a very short, pitiful, tragic life.

    Tragic, certainly, but only unusually short by modern standards; how many of us here wouldn’t have made it to our mid 30s if not for modern medicine?

    #329320
    Anonymous
    Guest

    You never heard of this guy?:

    https://www.joelosteen.com/Pages/Home.aspx” class=”bbcode_url”>https://www.joelosteen.com/Pages/Home.aspx

    Other well known preachers of the prosperity gospel include Oral Roberts, Kenneth Copeland, Jim & Tammy Baker, and Pat Robertson.

    And the prosperity in prosperity gospel does have some to do with wealth, but there’s an out in that health or general well-being are considered “blessings” or wealth. It has lots to do with the idea that “If we’re doing what God wants no ill will befall you.” Everyone knows janitors are probably not going to be wealthy – but I’m sure there are many who thought those janitors were very “blessed” for all they did. That’s the prosperity gospel. The trouble with the prosperity gospel is those who are not doing what God “would have them do” and are still blessed and perhaps wealthy.

    (FWIW, I am familiar with Methodism and the prosperity gospel is not a core teaching/belief among Methodists. That does not mean that there are some Methodists that do believe the prosperity gospel. And perhaps my ward is a bit different than yours, I do not regularly hear the prosperity gospel preached although it admittedly does exist. There are also others in my ward who do not believe in it.)

    #329321
    Anonymous
    Guest

    NightSG wrote:


    dande48 wrote:

    Well, Christ Himself did have a very short, pitiful, tragic life.


    Tragic, certainly, but only unusually short by modern standards; how many of us here wouldn’t have made it to our mid 30s if not for modern medicine?

    True, but those with access to good food, sanitation, healthcare lived about as long as we do. Caesar Augustus lived til he was 75 and Caesar Tiberius lived til he was 77. Christ was the “King of Kings” and his divine blood completely trumps even the most advanced modern medicine. I’d say most lives in Christ’s time were tragically short; folks weren’t dying of old age. Not to mention, only ministering for 3 years before being unjustly executed…

    #329322
    Anonymous
    Guest

    The Prosperity Gospel is rampant in Protestantism. I have worked at faith-based colleges and universities for much of the last decade, and I heard it taught directly and sometimes blatantly at a small mainstream Christian school, a large evangelical school, and (to a much smaller degree) occasionally at a smallish Catholic school.

    Religious people believe, collectively, that God rewards proper behavior – not just in the next life but in this life, as well. A focus on those blessings being economic is a simple extension of that core belief, even though pretty much every scriptural reference, in context, obviously speaks of collective, communal prosperity and not individual prosperity.

    #329323
    Anonymous
    Guest

    And to be totally fair, the prosperity gospel is not absent from Catholicism and Judaism. I don’t know enough about Islam or Muslims to say.

    #329324
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Old Timer wrote:


    The Prosperity Gospel is rampant in Protestantism. I have worked at faith-based colleges and universities for much of the last decade, and I heard it taught directly and sometimes blatantly at a small mainstream Christian school, a large evangelical school, and (to a much smaller degree) occasionally at a smallish Catholic school.

    Religious people believe, collectively, that God rewards proper behavior – not just in the next life but in this life, as well. A focus on those blessings being economic is a simple extension of that core belief, even though pretty much every scriptural reference, in context, obviously speaks of collective, communal prosperity and not individual prosperity.

    American Protestantism. Not really worldwide although there are attempts to spread it.

    #329325
    Anonymous
    Guest

    DarkJedi wrote:

    The trouble with the prosperity gospel is those who are not doing what God “would have them do” and are still blessed and perhaps wealthy.

    More to the point, he trouble is when those people use their wealth as “proof” that their way is the right way, and/or that even their blatant transgressions are “minor, necessary evils” that God is willing to overlook.

    Quote:

    (FWIW, I am familiar with Methodism and the prosperity gospel is not a core teaching/belief among Methodists.

    One could even argue that it runs counter to the Methodist 11th Article of Religion, which is directly copied from Martin Luther, so no Protestant church true to its roots should be pushing a “do more than you have to so you’ll get more than you need” attitude toward good works.

    Quote:

    And perhaps my ward is a bit different than yours, I do not regularly hear the prosperity gospel preached although it admittedly does exist. There are also others in my ward who do not believe in it.)

    Maybe not by name, but I hear a whole heck of a lot of “and I know I/we have received all of these extra financial blessings because I/we ____” in various talks.

    #329326
    Anonymous
    Guest

    NightSG wrote:


    Maybe not by name, but I hear a whole heck of a lot of “and I know I/we have received all of these extra financial blessings because I/we ____” in various talks.

    I seriously do not hear this in my ward – but I do live in a rather depressed area of the Rust Belt and frankly most of my ward members are on the lower end of the middle class (or even lower class). Interestingly, with our modest income in the middle-middle class (well above the average for this area, though) we are one of the more “wealthy” couples in the ward. We don’t flaunt that, and I don’t think most people know it. And we don’t buy into the prosperity gospel, nor do we talk about any of our blessings (I don’t really believe people are blessed in any way).

    Quote:

    More to the point, he trouble is when those people use their wealth as “proof” that their way is the right way, and/or that even their blatant transgressions are “minor, necessary evils” that God is willing to overlook.

    I was thinking more of those who are not religious, and they don’t tend to look at it the same way we do. Our small business owner neighbor, for example, accredits it all to his own hard work (a very American principle). He does make more than we do, but he’s also way farther in debt.

    #329327
    Anonymous
    Guest

    33? Pretty good going compared to the very well known 27 Club (i.e. all the famous people who died at that age – Hendrix and Cobain to name but two)

    #329328
    Anonymous
    Guest

    We’ve been discussing the prosperity gospel at length in another thread, that conversation has been moved here to allow that thread to stay on topic while continuing the discussion.

    #329329
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Many of us have certain expectations related to the gospel that are not true or exaggerated. Prosperity is just one.

    For example, in my life I expected that when bad times or hardships developed, I would be given special inspiration or

    insight or comfort that would kick in when I needed it. This I assumed because of my membership in the Church, baptism, etc.

    What I got was darkness & depression every time I went to church after my FC. It took many years before I could go back again.

    God never said that he would come in during difficult times like a superhero & save the day.

    My FC took time to work through. In the process I believe I got a more realistic understanding of how the gospel works.

    I can easily go back to those dark times if I focus on them.

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