John 6:24-35
Little Gods and
True Life
James Sledge August
1, 2021
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I Am the Bread of Life, Joseph Matar, 2006
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I’m going to assume that most of you have
heard of Joel Osteen, the televangelist and pastor of the Lakewood Church in
Houston, Texas. The church occupies the renovated, former home of the Houston
Rockets and pre-Covid hosted around 50,000 worshipers each week. On top of
that, another ten million or so watch on television.
Osteen may be the most successful of the
so-called prosperity gospel preachers, and along with millions of worshipers,
he has a popular book, Your Best Life Now. According to him, God wants
you to be happy, content, and have the best of everything, and the Christian
life is about tapping into God’s goodness, God’s desire for you to have a nice
house, a fancy car, and flush bank account.
From a biblical and theological
standpoint, Osteen’s sort of Christianity is rather easy to critique. It
ignores large portions of Jesus’ teachings. It is all about acquiring while
Jesus speaks frequently of the need let go of the material and refocus our
lives on doing God’s work in the world. In a very real sense, Osteen is
heretical in that his teachings put God in service to us rather than us in
service to God and God’s hopes for the world.
I’ve not noticed very many progressive
Presbyterians who seem drawn to Osteen or the prosperity gospel in general. I’m
not entirely sure why, but perhaps those raised in more traditional, mainline
Christian traditions find him a bit on the crass side. He turns God into a sort
of fairy godmother, a small god whose primary purpose is to improve your life,
granting you everything from money and possessions to a parking spot right up
by the store entrance.
Of course it is possible to create a less
crass, more sophisticated version of a divine fairly godmother. We Americans
have been well trained in consumerism, making it easy to think of God or
religion as simply one more item we need to make our lives better. In this less
crass version of a small god, making us feel better spiritually can become the
good thing God exists to provide us. Perhaps we might call it a spiritual
prosperity gospel.