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View Full Version : Pastor Benny Hinn being scrutinized on trip to Toronto


John Beckett
08-18-2007, 07:31 AM
Pastor Benny Hinn, in Toronto this weekend for two days of miracle cures and old-time gospel, makes no apologies for all the money his far-flung ministries take in each year.
"The gospels are free, but the means of delivering the gospels is really expensive," Hinn, who got his start in Toronto 30 years ago, told the Star.
Tonight and tomorrow, Hinn brings his Texas-based Miracle Crusade to the Air Canada Centre, attracting up to 20,000 to each of his three shows.
The shows are free but, as at all his crusades, donations will be sought and many buckets will be passed as the audience sings rousing hymns along with a mass choir amid a light show worthy of a rock concert. While Hinn acknowledges people come mainly to see and take part in the healing miracles, that is left to the feverish end – they will first hear him preach, pray and sing in his trademark white suit.
But Hinn arrives under a cloud after the CBC's The Fifth Estate this week challenged his claims of miracle cures and described a lavish lifestyle of fancy cars, a 7,000-square-foot ocean-side mansion and luxury travel to five-star hotels on a private jet.
In the show, reporter Bob McKeown estimates Benny Hinn Ministries takes in as much as $250 million a year in donations and proceeds from sales of such items as autographed bibles.
Hinn, who keeps his finances private, doubts the show will hurt turnout at the ACC.
"They will never stop people from coming to meetings such as ours."
Followers donate money, he says, to ensure his work, including curing the sick, continues.
"They believe that God heals and they want to see something like this go on. They also understand it takes money to rent stadiums."
Hinn's sessions have gained a reputation for sudden miracle cures for cancer, blindness, diabetes and even AIDS over the past 30 years since his humble beginnings in a church hall at Bloor and Yonge. People dramatically fall to the floor proclaiming their health after a touch from Hinn's hand.
Hinn, however, professes to having nothing to do with making anybody healthy. "The Lord has not called me to heal people," he says. "He heals the people."
After the prayers, songs and preaching from the charismatic minister, Hinn tells the crowd he is getting a message from God that people in the audience are being cured, and he asks them to come to the stage. The Fifth Estate used hidden cameras to show staff screening audience members coming forward, ensuring none with obvious physical ailment get near Hinn.
"It's always somebody that has some kind of illness that can't be readily seen" that makes it to the stage, Justin Peters, a Baptist minister in Mississippi who studied Hinn, tells the CBC.
Hinn says the cures take place in the audience, not on stage, so no one still in a wheelchair is allowed on stage. God, he says, has obviously not cured these people.
"I won't let them up, because they haven't been healed," he says.
The CBC tracked down some of the people claimed to have been cured, only to find that they were either still sick, never had the condition they were supposedly cured of, or had died.
Speaking to the Star, Hinn says he is forced to rely on the word of those coming to his crusades to tell him they are cured.
"It's not my job to claim that they are healed. I have never done that," he says. "I'm not a doctor."
Hinn defends his use of luxury hotels and a private Gulfstream jet detailed by the CBC, saying they offer greater efficiency and security.
"People in my position will have threats," he told the Star. "If you ask for a secure (hotel) floor, you're going to pay more money."
Hinn also criticized the CBC for using hidden cameras and old footage he says depicts his wife just before she had a nervous breakdown.


http://www.thestar.com/living/Religion/article/247207

CoreIssue
08-18-2007, 10:55 AM
The old snake oil salesman in a new form.

John Beckett
08-18-2007, 03:47 PM
`

I'll bet we all know at least one person {Christian} who believes Benny Hinn is
some kind of prophet sent from God. I know a woman who is planning to spend
big money on plane tickets to go and see him LOL

Unreal, huh? :(

CoreIssue
08-18-2007, 03:49 PM
`

I'll bet we all know at least one person {Christian} who believes Benny Hinn is
some kind of prophet sent from God. I know a woman who is planning to spend
big money on plane tickets to go and see him LOL

Unreal, huh? :(
:eek:

Jessie
08-18-2007, 05:51 PM
yep, there are lots of them here.

they wont listen to reason either.

hinn in their eyes can do no wrong.

hes so unbiblical.

kay-gee
08-19-2007, 09:26 AM
Why but plane tickets? doesn't he eventually come around to all the major cities any way?

kay-gee
08-19-2007, 09:32 AM
While she's in Toronto, she should check out the other famous religious phenomenon called the Vineyard Fellowship. Folks refer to it as the "Toronto blessing". I hear they roll around and bark like dogs and such. The spirit is supposed to be so strong in the place! Personally I don't think it's any great leap from Benny Hinn to that!
all the best...

Chrystalwuzhere
08-19-2007, 09:39 AM
I remember seeing Benny Hinn supposedly slaying people in the spirit on one of his broadcasts, and then he went "Shew!" and touched himself on the forehead, and he went down too. I kid you not!!!

All the blame cannot be put on Hinn. The church is to blame too. If they would study and rightly divide the Word of truth, these false ministers would have no audience.

CoreIssue
08-19-2007, 12:39 PM
Yep. These movements are strongest where the Bible is the weakest.

We have them in Atlanta, in areas where people don't study, they just want to feel good.

Toronto, the Vineyard Movment founding grounds. In a country that is very weak on Biblical foundation.

Africa, where occult and paganism have ever flourished. Growing back leaps and bounds.

And so on.

Even the US, the areas where the Bible still means something is shrinking rapidly. Now a minority of the population.

Jessie
08-19-2007, 01:50 PM
absolutly chrystal, what is bewildering is that these same folks will
adamently say I believe everything the bible has to say...

not realizing they dont know as much as they think they know.

John Beckett
08-19-2007, 06:15 PM
CHRYSTAL SAID: All the blame cannot be put on Hinn. The church is to blame too. If they would study and rightly divide the Word of truth, these false ministers would have no audience

Chrystal, as much as I would like to concur, I must respectfully disagree a little, but not
because you are wrong in your assessment of what should be done, but rather
because of the sad fact that --even if what you are suggesting was actually done--
it wouldn't change much. And that's because there are too many people that call
themselves Christians who adhere to the beliefs and teachings of both the Benny Hinns
of the world and the Max Lucados.

The latter don't wanna lose their so-called "fans", so they don't push it on the
Christians too much about the dangers of swindlers like Hinn. They are afraid of
being called judgmental, or even outright WRONG! And that would mean losing
many of their respective followers.

Sad, eh?? :(

But remember, I said I only disagree a LITTLE. :nod: I wish they would do what
you are suggesting, because at least then, noone can say they aren't trying.

And the most interesting aspect of all this is that the ones who seem to be
paying most attn to his shennanigans --besides Hank Hanigraf-- are the media.

THE SECULAR media. Go figure.

i just hope this isn't a case of Jesus Using the media to do His Will because
His Own Followers are not.