For a time
around the turn of the millennium, it seemed that all Bibles were going to have
to be reprinted to include a fifth gospel – The
Prayer of Jabez. It was a wildly popular book when it was published in
2000, and it became wildly controversial. An obscure Old Testament passage had
become the basis for a new theology. At one point, I was hearing the book
preached from the pulpit, studied in a small Bible study group, and serialized
in a Sunday School class.
The
message of the book: pray to God and ask him to “enlarge your territory,” that
is, bless you spiritually and materially. And he’ll do it. If that sounds like a modernized version of
the prosperity
gospel, that’s because, in my opinion, that’s exactly what it is.
I was
reminded of The Prayer of Jabez and
its teaching as I read Hashtag
Faith: A Powerful Gospel in the Hands of a Distracted Generation by Chris Buscher, co-founder and CEO
of Lay Me Down Ministry. One of the things
Buscher does in this relatively short book on faith is take the prosperity gospel
head on and strip it down to the false teaching it is. Faith is not about gaining
material wealth, enlarging your territory, or experiencing worldly success, he
says, and he’s exactly right. Jesus and the apostles did not teach “how to
become rich and be as powerful as the Romans.”
Buscher
provides a primer on what faith is, and what it isn’t. He explores what the
foundation of faith is and where the word “faith” comes from. Faith is not the
prosperity gospel; neither is it the social gospel, “which secularizes the
faith and attempts to secure harmony and recognition with other religion and
people groups.” Both the prosperity gospel and the social gospel are creations
of humanity, not creations of God. What we do in this world for this world is
aimed at spreading God’s kingdom.
Chris Busches |
He
particularly takes aim at the prosperity gospel. It is motivated by greed, he
says, and it shares one essential element in common with all false teachings –
that our thoughts control reality. “Whether it is the power of positive
thinking or the ‘prosperity gospel,’; he writes, ‘the premise is the same: what
you think or believe will happen is ultimately what controls what will happen.”
It other words, it’s all about us, and all about me.
Buscher, a
pastor, is also the author of My
Confession: Finding Myself at the Feet of Jesus and Take
Up Your Cross and Follow Me: A Christian Devotional Inspired by Those Who Gave
Their Life for Jesus.
True
Biblical prosperity has nothing to do with material wealth or riches. It is
seeking God first, understanding the purpose for which you were created, dying
to self, and making heaven your goal. That’s the core message of Hashtag Faith, and it is a welcome one.
Photograph by Ben White via Unsplash.
Used with permission.
1 comment:
Smiling over your thoughts on the fifth gospel. When we "studied" The Prayer of Jabez in a SS class I was attending, I remember asking the teacher what the author did with stories like Corrie ten Boom's. Her "enlarged territory" was a concentration camp.
This new book sounds like it has a message we need to hear more of.
Post a Comment