The Witness Ministries
Be renewed in the spirit of your mind
I Was Wrong: Excerpt From Jim Bakker's Autobiographical Book
by Jim Bakker : excerpted from the book "I Was Wrong" (Thomas Nelson)
About
the time of my parole hearing (1993), I completed my
study of all the words of Jesus in the New Testament. To
my surprise, after months of studying Jesus, I concluded
that He did not have one good thing to say about money.
Most of Jesus' statements about riches, wealth, and
material gain were in a negative context. Even "The
Prodigal Son," one of my favorite stories told by Jesus,
took on new meaning as I read it again for the first
time with an overview of Scripture in mind. I quickly
noticed that the story began with the younger brother
saying to the father, "Give me! Give me my part of the
inheritance" (Luke 15:12). He didn't even say, "Please
give me." He simply demanded. Before long, that young
man landed in the pigpen. I began to see that the
fastest way to the pigpen begins with "Give me" ... and
the fastest route to the "big pen," the federal
penitentiary, often begins with the same phrase, "Give
me!"
I was amazed at this "new"
revelation, but beyond that, I was deeply concerned. As
the true impact of Jesus' words regarding money impacted
my heart and mind, I became physically nauseated. I was
wrong. I was wrong! Wrong in my lifestyle, certainly,
but even more fundamentally, wrong in my understanding
of the Bible's true message. Not only was I wrong, but I
was teaching the opposite of what Jesus had said. That
is what broke my heart; when I came to the awareness
that I had actually been contradicting Christ, I was
horrified.
For years I had embraced
and espoused a gospel that some skeptics had branded a
"prosperity gospel." I didn't mind the label; on the
contrary, I was proud of it. "You're absolutely right!"
I'd say to critics and friends alike. "I preach it and
live it! I believe in a God who wants to bless His
people. Look at all the rich saints in the Old
Testament. And the New Testament clearly say that above
all, God wants us to prosper even as our souls prosper.
If your soul is prospering, you should be prospering
materially as well!"
I even got to the point
where I was teaching people at PTL. "Don't pray, 'God,
Your will be done,' when you're praying for health or
wealth. You already know it is God's will for you to
have those things! To ask God to confirm His will when
He has already told you what His will is in a matter is
an insult to God. It is as though you don't really trust
Him or believe that He is as good as His Word. Instead
of praying 'Thy will be done' when you want a new car,
just claim it. Pray specifically and tell God what kind
you want. Be sure to specify which options and what
color you want too."
Such arrogance! Such
foolishness! Such sin! The Bible says we are not to
presume upon God, but we should say, "If the Lord wills,
we shall live and do this or that" (James 4:15).
I
may not always have been so blatant about it, but I
often preached a prosperity message at Heritage USA and
on our PTL television programs. But when I began
to study the Scriptures in depth while in prison,
something I am embarrassed and ashamed to admit that I
rarely took time to do during the hectic years of
constant building and ministering at PTL, I was very
distressed at what I discovered. I realized that for
years I helped propagate an impostor, not a true gospel,
but another gospel - a gospel that stated "God wants you
to be rich!" Christians should have the best because we
are children of God, "King's Kids," as I often put it.
And shouldn't the King's kids have the best this world
had to offer?
The more I studied the
Bible, however, I had to admit that the prosperity
message did not line up with the tenor of Scripture. My
heart was crushed to think that I led so many people
astray. I was appalled that I could have been so wrong,
and I was deeply grateful that God had not struck me
dead as a false prophet!
How could I have taught
and even written books on the subject of "how to get
rich" when Jesus spoke so clearly about the dangers of
earthly riches? One of the statements of Jesus that kept
echoing in my head and heart was in the parable of the
sower, where Jesus said that "the cares of this world,
the deceitfulness of riches, and the desires for other
things entering in choke the word, and it becomes
unfruitful" (Mark 4:19). The deceitfulness of riches.
The more I thought about it, the more I had to admit
that I had fallen into that snare. I had allowed the
quest for material possessions and the deceitfulness of
riches and the lusts for other things to choke the Word
of God in my own life and in the lives of my family
members and co-workers. As PTL grew larger and our
ministry more widespread, I had a financial tiger by the
tail, and just coming up with enough money to meet the
daily budgets dominated my thoughts and my time.
In prison, I decided to
dig into the Scriptures further to see what else Jesus
had to say about money. I noticed that He said,
Do not store up for
yourself treasures on earth, where moth and rust
destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. But store
up for
Another Scripture that
seared into my heart was Matthew 6:24, "No one can serve
two masters. Either he will hate the one and love the
other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the
other. You cannot sere both God and Money" (NIV). In
that same passage, I discovered that God's priorities
were much different from what mine had been.
Jesus said,
Therefore I tell
you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or
drink; or about
Other teachings of of
Jesus scored direct hits upon my heart, as well:
Jesus taught, "How hard it
is for the rich to enter the kingdom of God! Indeed, it
is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle
than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God." (Luke
18:24 NIV). Unwittingly, I had tried to explain this
verse away with the help of modern scholarship. I had
taught people that the "eye of the needle" of what Jesus
spoke of was a low arch in the Holy Land. Supposedly, a
camel carrying a heavy load had to get down on its knees
to slip through the "eye of the needle." This was the
explanation that I had heard from other prosperity
teachers whom I had admired and respected, so I simply
passed on their explanation as fact without really
examining the verse carefully, especially in the
original Greek. Nor had I consulted any Bible
dictionaries or encyclopaedias. If I had done so, I
might have found that not a shred of reputable
archaeological or historic evidence supports the
came-through-the-arch theory.
In prison, however, when I
took time to study the meaning of Jesus' words in the
original Greek language, I discovered that Jesus was not
talking about camels walking on their knees at all. The
word He used was one commonly used to describe a
sewing needle, not an archway. In other words, the
verse meant exactly what it said: It may not be
impossible for a rich man to enter heaven, but apart
from a miracle, he doesn't stand a chance!
In my cell, I studied the
Bible long hours into the night. Often as the sun rose
in the eastern sky, I was still poring over the
Scriptures. The more I studied, the more I had to face
the awful truth: I had been preaching false doctrine for
years and hadn't even known it!
Tragically, too late, I
recognized that at PTL I had been doing just the
opposite of Jesus' words by teaching people to fall in
love with money. Jesus never equated His blessings with
material things, but I had done just that. I had laid so
much emphasis upon material things, I was subtly
encouraging people to put their hearts into things,
rather than into Jesus.
Was Heritage USA of God? I
believe it was; I believe the original concept was His
and that He planted it in my heart. But as I said
before, Heritage USA - with all its facilities and
buildings - was the box, the package. The box was meant
to enhance people's appreciation of the true gift, Jesus
Christ, but before long, many people began to worship
the box ... and I allowed them to do so; no, I
encouraged them to do so by what I was teaching and by
the manner in which I was living. I lived the prosperity
message I was preaching. I should have taught people to
fall in love with Jesus rather than the trappings.
I began to share some of the things I was learning with several of the Christian inmates with whom I often discussed the Bible. I was stunned by their responses. Rather than being excited that I had finally come to a knowledge of the truth, they were aghast that I was denying what they considered to be sound spiritual principles taught by sincere men and women of God.
"Yes, but doesn't Jesus
also say that He came that we might have an abundant
life?" asked David, an inmate whose background was
steeped in the prosperity message. We turned to John
10:10 and read, "I am come that they might have life and
that they might have it more abundantly" (KJV). It was a
wonderful statement by Jesus Himself, so I could easily
see how David had related it to material prosperity. As
we looked up the words in a Greek-English dictionary,
however, we found that the Greek word for "life" used in
this verse was zoe, a word indicating "life in
the spirit and soul" rather than the world bios
which is used to refer to physical, material life. Of
the two words, zoe is usually considered the more
noble, higher word. Basically, Jesus was saying, "I want
you to have an abundant life in the spirit, which is My
highest and best for you."
"Hey, that verse doesn't
have anything to do with material prosperity," David
said, as the light turned on in his heart and mind. "If
abundant life meant having houses, cars, riches, parties
and entertainment, then I guess the world is
experiencing abundant life. Yet we have more hatred,
disease, and pain than ever." "Not only that, " piped up
Jorge, a Spanish guy with a big smile who had walked
into my cell and was leaning up against the bunks as he
watched David and me searching through the Bible
reference books, "but if you're figurin' how much God
loves you by how much money you have, or what kind of
car you drive, or how big a house you live in, what
happens when all that stuff is gone?" Jorge had hit the
nail right on the head.
The next night after work,
David and Jorge were back. David has talked to his
Christian girlfriend on the telephone that afternoon and
she had told him, "Of course God wants us to prosper,
David. You know the Bible even says so in 3 John, verse
two." I knew the verse well. It had been my favorite
"prosperity verse" for years; it was the premier New
Testament verse upon which I had built my prosperity
message and lifestyle. The verse reads: "Beloved, I wish
above all things that thou mayest prosper and be in
health, even as thy soul prospereth" (KJV).
I had preached on this
verse for most of my ministry. It said exactly what I
believed - that God wanted His people to prosper, and by
that, I interpreted it to mean prosper financially and
materially, in other words, to get rich. Again, I never
really examined the true meaning of the text, nor did I
ever seriously consider why this verse, on the surface
anyhow, seemed to contradict so much of what the New
Testament said in other places. I simply pulled this
verse out of context and took it to the bank -
literally!
"First of all, let's look
at this verse, David," I said. "We have to take the
whole counsel of God's Word, just like Jesus says in
Matthew 4:4. 'Man shall not live by bread alone, but by
every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of
God.'" We began going through the verse, word by word,
deciphering the meaning from the Greek with the help of
a few Bible reference books someone had sent me. I
didn't tell David that I had been tearing this verse
apart for nearly two years and trying to find where it
fit with the message of Jesus.
It did not fit. No matter
how hard I tried to make my former interpretation of 3
John 2 consistent with the words of Jesus, the verse as
I had understood it simply did not make sense. How could
John be saying, "above all things, I want you to
prosper"? First, David and I looked up the meaning of
the word prosper in a dictionary. The various
forms of the word all had one common meaning: "to
increase in wealth."
"David, tell me
something," I said pausing and pointing to the Bible.
"Jesus said that our number one concern was to love God
supremely; after that we are to love our neighbors as
ourselves. Why, then, would John say that 'above all' I
should have wealth?"
"I don't know, Jim," David
replied. "What do you think?"
I ignored David's question and asked him another. "Do you think God wants you to have money above your soul's salvation?"
"No. Of course not!"
"Well, then let's find out
what these words mean," I suggested. I suddenly
remembered one of my Bible professors warning me never
to look up Biblical words in an English dictionary,
because the words might have a completely different
meaning than in the original biblical languages. I
pulled a Bible dictionary and Greek lexicon off the
shelf.
We looked up the meaning
of the word prosper. We found the word translated
"prosper" in the King James Version of the Bible came
from a Greek word, eudoo, which is made up of two
Greek root words, eu, which means "good," and
hodos, which means "road, or route, a progress, or
journey." We did not find a single reference in the
Greek to money, riches or material gain from the word
translated prosper in the King James Version.
The
apostle John, the writer, was saying simply, "I wish you
a good, safe, and healthy journey throughout your life,
even as your soul has a good and safe journey to
heaven."
John was not saying "Above
everything else, I want you to get rich. Above
everything, you should prosper and make money." That is
not even implied in the true meaning of the verse. Yet I
had based much of my philosophy at PTL and even before
that on this one verse that I had totally misunderstood!
Just to make certain that
we were not unfairly placing too much emphasis upon the
words in this passage, I began looking up other places
where the same words were found in the Bible. I found
eudoo again, for example, in Romans 1:10. The
apostle Paul wrote, "Making request, if by any means now
at length I might have a prosperous journey by the will
of God to come unto you" (KJV). Paul often took special
care to make sure that his motivation could not be
misconstrued or maligned because of money. It would be
unthinkable for the apostle to say, "Please pray for me
that somehow or other I might obtain wealth by coming to
preach to you," or "Please pray that I will make a lot
of money on this trip." Yet that is how Romans 1:10
would have to be interpreted if we took the King James
Version translation of eudoo to mean wealth or
material gain. Clearly, that was not the intent of the
apostle Paul. He was saying simply, "I sure hope God
grants me an opportunity to visit you soon. Please pray
that I will have a good journey on the road as I travel
to see you."
The apostle John was
saying something very similar when he said, "Beloved, I
wish above all things that thou mayest prosper and be in
health, even as thy soul prospereth." It was a greeting,
a prayerful desire of the apostle's, not a principle
suggesting Christians should be wealthy.
David reluctantly agreed
that to base a prosperity doctrine on this verse would
be shaky indeed, but he was not yet ready to abandon his
belief in the prosperity message with which he had been
indoctrinated. He took some of the notes from our study
sessions and wrote to several leading "prosperity
preachers," some of whom were close friends of mine. Day
after day, David was back, armed with more books sent to
him by prosperity teachers.
"Jim, look at this!" David
said as he pointed to a passage in the Old Testament to
see that he had been referred by some of my friends to
Deuteronomy 8:18. I had used the verse myself in
countless messages and appeals for money. The verse
reads, "But thou shalt remember the LORD thy God: for it
is he that giveth thee power to get wealth, that he may
establish his covenant which he swore unto thy fathers,
as it is this day" (KJV).
At first glance, the verse
did seem to support the idea that God is the one who
gives us the power to get rich. When David and I read
the verse in context with the entire passage of
Deuteronomy 8:1-18, however, it took on a different
meaning. We realized that what God is actually saying to
His people in this passage is, "When I bring you out of
Egypt into the Promised Land and you are enjoying the
blessings I have given to you, don't think that you have
been successful in your own strength. Don't say that it
is your own power, that you did all this yourself." The
Lord then warns His people to remember that He is the
one who deserves the glory. All God was saying was "When
you get into the Promised Land, don't forget who brought
you there and gave to you everything that you have."
David and I dug into the
words in the passage, looking especially at the word
translated wealth. By looking up wealth
in a Hebrew lexicon, we discovered that it comes from
the Hebrew word chayil which is used 232 times in
the Old Testament. In almost every case, the word is
meant to imply, "might, strength, power, ability,
virtue, valor," and, oh, yes: "wealth." It is used most
often to describe valiant men and women and armies.
As
David and I read the passage with new understanding, we
concluded that God was not saying, "I am the one who
gives you riches." What He really was saying was:
"Remember, it is God who has given you the power to
receive everything you have. He is the one who has given
you strength. He is the one who has given you a house,
land, or other possessions."
I admit, in the past I had
used this verse to make it sound as though it was God's
will to make everyone wealthy and if any of His people
were poor it was probably due to lack of faith or not
applying the biblical "formulas" correctly. That was an
improper interpretation of the passage. Yes, it is God
who gives us the power to receive all that we have, but
to assume that He wants all His people to be wealthy
based on this Scripture is an illegitimate extension of
that truth.
As David and I studied the
Scriptures concerning material wealth, he became
convinced that the Bible does not teach that God wants
us to be rich in material possessions. "But Jim, doesn't
God want to bless His people?" David asked. "Of course
He does," I replied, "but we don't have to twist the
Scriptures into saying something they don't mean. There
are plenty of passages in the Bible that tell us that
God will provide for us, and as we honor Him by using
the resources that He gives us for His glory, He will
continue to pour out even greater blessings upon us." (Bakker
then cites Mal. 3:10-11, 2 Co. 9:6)
God has promised to bless
those people who put Him first in their lives. That
principle has never changed. I still believe that God
blesses His people and will meet their needs. The sin is
falling in love with and seeking after money and
material things. He doesn't want us to equate mere money
with godliness. In fact, the apostle Paul said that "If
any man teach otherwise, and consent not to wholesome
words, even the words of our Lord Jesus Christ, and to
the doctrine which is according to godliness ..
supposing that gain is godliness: from such withdraw
thyself. But godliness with contentment is great gain"
(1 Tim. 6:3, 5-6 KJV).
For the first time, I
began to really understand what Paul meant when he
wrote:
But they that will
be rich (which I discovered meant: "they that want to be
rich") fall into temptation and a snare, and into many
foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in
destruction and perdition. For the love of money is the
root of all evil: which while some coveted after, they
have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves
through with many sorrows. But thou, O man of God, flee
these things; and follow after righteousness, godliness,
faith, love, patience, meekness. (1 Tim. 6:8-11
KJV)
For years I had glossed
over that passage in Scripture. I ignored it, made
excuses for it, or tried to explain it away. I refused
to accept the obvious interpretation. I now see that the
message was right there all the time, so plain
that even a child could see it and understand it.
I was wrong.
I
knew I could not keep this newfound information a
secret. I had influenced so many people to accept a
"prosperity message," I now felt that I had a
responsibility to tell my friends what I had been
learning from my studies in the Bible. I wrote a simple,
straightforward letter and sent it to some of the people
who had written to me in prison. The letter was not
meant to be published to the world. I didn't know how
The Charlotte Observer got a copy of the letter, but
the paper ran portions of it on the front page .. Soon I
began receiving mail from all over the country
concerning the letter. Some people were appalled that I
- a person they considered as a primary propagator of
the prosperity message in the twentieth century - had
disavowed my former teaching. Others wrote to me were
delighted that I had "finally seen the light."
Frankly, I was not greatly concerned what the critics or the skeptics had to say about my speaking about against the prosperity message. I knew what God had clearly shown to me from His Word. I had studied every word of Jesus over a period of two years, and I was convinced that the prosperity message was at best an aberration and at worst "another gospel" contrary to the gospel of Jesus Christ. Although I still believed God blesses His people, the prosperity message I had preached for years was wrong.
In retrospect, one
of the main reasons I slipped into believing and
preaching a distorted doctrine was because of my lack of
understanding of what it really means to allow Jesus to
be Lord of my life.