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A Summary Critique of Benny
Hinn's book, Welcome, Holy Spirit
by G. Richard Fisher and M. Kurt
Goedelman
Just a few miles from Pastor Benny Hinn's
Orlando Christian Center (now called World Outreach Center) in
Florida, at Universal Studios, one can see what, at first glance and
from a distance, looks like a New York street. A closer took reveals
cleverly built facades with nothing behind them.
Hinn's latest literary offering, Welcome, Holy
Spirit, is like those facades. He has crafted a book intended to be
mainstream and as inoffensive as possible. He has even tried to paper
over some old errors. But a closer look reveals the same Benny Hinn
who fabricates events to demonstrate his alleged supernatural powers
from God.
One example is his backing off the claim that
his father once was the mayor of Jaffa, Israel. His new
characterization of his father as having "a prominent position...
in the political life of Israel" (p. 74) still remains an
overstatement.
Another is his story of escaping serious injury
in a 1983 plane crash. "I did not have a scratch," he writes
on page 254. Newspaper and other reports from the time, however,
reveal that he was in a state of shock and was hospitalized for three
days. He might not have had a scratch, but the inference one draws
from his statement — that he was not harmed — is hardly accurate.
Hinn writes on page 50 that he knows whom God is
healing and from what. Yet during a March 1993 interview with Inside
Edition, when questioned about an actress who pretended to be healed
of polio, Hinn told reporter Steve Wilson, "That was one we
missed."
The most notable example of Hinn's persistence
in fabricating the miraculous begins on page 230, where he claims
fulfillment of prophecies by Demos Shakarian and Kathryn Kuhlman.
Shakarian prophesied that someone would walk through a hospital and
instantaneously heal patients. Kuhimans prophecy was an aspiration
that all would be healed in one of her own services. These
"prophecies" caused Hinn to wonder, "Would God raise
masses of people from their beds of affliction?" (230).
In 1976, Hinn went to Sault Sainte Marie,
Ontario for a crusade at the invitation of Pastor Fred Spring at Elim
Pentecostal Tabernacle. Hinn said that "God moved mightily in
that city" and that his meetings drew overflow crowds (231).
Hinn continues: "I received a special
invitation from the Reverend Mother of a Catholic Hospital in the
area. She wanted me to conduct a service for the patients — along
with three other Pentecostal preachers and seven Catholic priests. The
chapel of the large hospital seated about 150" (231). Hinn
describes the chapel as being filled with chronically ill bed and
wheelchair patients, with doctors and nurses watching "from the
balcony." Some were turned away because of limited space (231).
The hospital under discussion is General
Hospital, located at 941 Queen St. E., in Sault Sainte Marie, and has
182 beds. The picture being painted here is that many of the patients
from those 182 beds were at the meeting, since the 150-seat chapel was
so full "that many could not attend because of the limited
space" (231).
Hinn recounts that he took control that day, and
with anointing bottles in hand, ministers and priests were told to
anoint and pray for everyone present. Hinn says one priest kept
knocking down patients as he anointed them. Hinn adds that patients
all over the chapel were being healed instantly (233-34).
At this point even Mother Superior got caught up
in the excitement, according to Hinn: "After the service in the
chapel, the Reverend Mother asked, 'Oh this is wonderful. Would you
mind coming now and laying hands on all the patients in the rooms?'
…More than fifty doctors, nurses, Pentecostal preachers, priests and
nuns joined this 'Miracle Invasion' team as we headed for those
hospital rooms" (234).
Hinn recounts that as they walked down the hall
"you could feel God's Spirit all over the building. Within a few
minutes the hospital looked like it had been hit by an earthquake.
People were under the power of the Holy Spirit up and down the
hallways as well as in the rooms" (234).
Even the visitor's lounge could not escape the
power: "We entered the lounge...One by one, they fell under the
power. In fact, as we began to pray for one gentleman who was smoking,
he fell under the power with a lit cigarette still in his mouth"
(235).
The detailed account of the miraculous in
Welcome, Holy Spirit tops anything in the Book of Acts or in the
annals of church history. Something of this magnitude probably never
would have been forgotten in Sault Sainte Marie (1977 population:
80,219) or especially at General Hospital. Yet there is neither anyone
at the hospital who remembers it as Hinn tells it, nor any records to
confirm facts clouded by faulty memories. The real story is neither
extraordinary nor miraculous.
Contacting the hospital got us the response,
"Benny who?" Lois C. Krause, director of community relations
for Sault Sainte Marie General Hospital, denied all that Hinn claimed.
She said it could not have happened in the way Hinn's book describes.
She laughed after reading a copy of the story. No miracles occurred in
the hospital as Hinn claims, she said, adding that "no patients
left that day" due to miraculous occurrences.
Some older staff members did recall Hinn's name,
but did not remember anything as extraordinary as his book describes.
They did not deny the possibility that the chapel meeting was held,
but did not recall the meeting as recounted in Welcome, Holy Spirit.
Mother Superior Mary Francis, of the Gray
Sisters of the Immaculate Conception order, also disputed Hinn's
account. She said she did not invite Hinn, but reluctantly allowed his
chapel service in deference to the pastoral care department, which
initiated the service.
The hospital then released a statement, which
included the following remarks: "No such events have ever
occurred at General Hospital. His pronouncement can neither be
verified through the medical records nor by testimony from past or
present personnel of this hospital. Mr. Hinn's claims are Outlandish
and unwarranted."
Equally offensive to Hinn's myth-making in
Welcome, Holy Spirit is his appealing to the likes of Charles Ryrie,
Lewis Chafer, John Walvoord, D. L. Moody, R. A. Torrey, and A. J.
Gordon to support his teaching on the third person of the Trinity. It
is obvious that Hinn is working overtime to make it appear that he is
in line with many of the greats in recent church history.
Bearing in mind that Hinn (a Pentecostal) has
spent the last year or so with one foot in the Word-Faith camp and the
other in the Assemblies of God camp, anyone familiar with the above
list of theologians and evangelists is going to see a contradiction
akin to Mormons or Jehovah's Witnesses favorably citing the works of
Walter R. Martin. Ryrie, for example, believed the Pentecostal
position of tongues "is not valid" (The Holy Spirit, 89) and
that sign gifts "were also temporary" (92). Lewis Chafer, in
volume 7 of his Systematic Theology, lists seven errors of
professional healers (183-85), calling their teachings cruel and
unscriptural." He says that "many are driven insane" by
the treatment and teachings of modern-day healers.
A. J. Gordon was a Baptist minister in Boston
during the 19th century, and evangelist heavily involved in foreign
and local missions. He was clearly a noncharismatic who lived long
before the modern Pentecostal movement. The book Who Was Who on Church
History (Keats Publishing, 1974) details the sound, sane, scriptural,
and practical life (168- 69) of this ardent supporter of D. L. Moody.
R. A. Torrey deplored mysticism and
emotionalism, writing, "filling with the Spirit that is not
maintained by persistent study of the Word of God will soon
vanish…Anyone who wishes to obtain and maintain fullness of power in
Christian life and service must constantly feed upon the Word of
God" (How to Obtain Fullness of Power, 18).
The way Hinn uses sources is misleading and
wrong. It creates an illusion of credibility, respectability,
endorsement, and scholarship. The cults have been doing this for
years. Indeed, it is a cultic distinctive to make it appear that there
is scholarly support for one's position when there is no such support.
Hinn, like many big-name Christian authors, has
editors and ghostwriters who help produce his books. However, the buck
still stops with Hinn. His name on the book's cover confers
responsibility for its contents. Hinn and the creators of Welcome,
Holy Spirit have promulgated a scholastic deception.
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G. Richard Fisher and M. Kurt Goedelman serve on
the board of directors of Personal Freedom Outreach (PFO).
PFO materials on Benny Hinn and other Christian
discernment issues are available. Write to Personal Freedom Outreach,
P.O. Box 26062, St. Louis, MO 63136.
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