John Hagee's
Heresy
Beware!
Christians have listened for many years to the preaching of John
Hagee, senior pastor of Cornerstone Church in San Antonio, Texas.
Hagee attended Trinity University on a football scholarship, where
he graduated with a bachelor's degree before earning his master's at
North Texas State University. He also studied at Southwestern Bible
College and was granted an honorary doctorate from Oral Roberts
University.
Hagee's ministerial
activities began in 1958 as an evangelist. In 1966 he went to San
Antonio to become the founding pastor of what eventually became
Trinity Church. After resigning his pastorate of Trinity in May
1975, Hagee took the helm of the 25-member Church of Castle Hill in
San Antonio. That church — rebuilt to seat 5,000 and dedicated in
October 1987 as Cornerstone Church — now has an active membership of
over 13,000.
Through his writings
(books, booklets, and articles in his bimonthly John Hagee
Ministries magazine), taped messages, and daily appearances on his
Global Evangelism Television broadcasts (Cornerstone and John Hagee
Today) aired by the Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN) and other
media outlets, Hagee has gained broad visibility and influence among
evangelicals.
A number of people
consider Hagee's teachings to be thoroughly biblical. We would
disagree with Hagee, however, on the following points.
Preaching
Prosperity
John Hagee believes
that all Christians should be financially prosperous so long as they
continue to walk in obedience to God's ordinances. Although he does
not subscribe to every doctrine common to the so-called Faith
movement, he does agree with the movement's view that "poverty is
caused by sin and disobeying the Word of God."1 Hagee, like most
other prosperity preachers, believes that "poverty is a curse."2
Christians achieve
prosperity through giving, asserts Hagee. "When you give to God, He
controls your income. There's no such thing as a fixed income in the
Kingdom of God. Your income is controlled by your giving."3
According to Hagee, Christians grow prosperous through giving
because "God created a universe where it is impossible to receive
without giving. Everything that God controls, gives. . . . Givers
gain. You do not qualify for God's abundance until you give."4
Turning to the Bible,
however, one finds a number of passages that run contrary to Hagee's
teachings concerning prosperity. Jesus Himself said, "Blessed are
you who are poor, for yours is the kingdom of God. . . . But woe to
you who are rich . . ." (Luke 6:20, 24 NASB). James underscores this
point when he asked, ". . . did not God choose the poor of this
world to be rich in faith and heirs of the kingdom which He promised
to those who love Him?" (James 2:5). James later follows with stern
words to the rich (5:1-6; cf. Mark 10:25).
This is not to say that
Christians should consider wealth as something inherently evil. The
Bible simply tells us that material wealth is not the measuring
stick for righteousness or God's blessing; its proper value lies in
the purpose for which it is used.
This is precisely why
Paul gave the following exhortation to Timothy: "Instruct those who
are rich in this present world not to be conceited or to fix their
hope on the uncertainty of riches, but on God, who richly supplies
us with all things to enjoy. Instruct them to do good, to be rich in
good works, to be generous and ready to share, storing up for
themselves the treasure of a good foundation for the future, so that
they may take hold of that which is life indeed" (1 Tim. 6:17-19).
The power of wealth,
however, is such that it can lead people into idolatry. Some, for
instance, may become so caught up in matters of finances and wealth
that they neglect or completely forget about their duties and
responsibilities to God. God, for some of these individuals, may
begin to fade out of the picture altogether, being replaced by crass
materialism. Rather than grounding their primary concerns on the
eternal, they instead devote their lives to that which perishes
(John 6:27; Matt. 6:19-21).5
Promoting
Positive Confession
Along with the
prosperity message, Hagee accepts and promotes the doctrine of
positive confession — a foundational teaching of the Faith movement
which maintains that Christians can speak (i.e., positively confess)
physical realities into existence as long as the believer exercises
enough faith to accompany his or her verbal confession. "There is a
relationship between your soul and physical and financial
prosperity," declares Hagee. "'This book of the law shall not depart
out of your mouth' [quoting Josh. 1:8 KJV]. That's the spoken Word
of God. 'And then thou shalt prosper and have good success.' When?
After you speak and act upon the Word of God. And you've been
hearing that tonight out of the mouth of [well-known Faith teacher]
John Avanzini."6
Like his teachings on
prosperity, Hagee's reiteration of the Faith movement's doctrine of
positive confession runs contrary to the teachings of Scripture.
Nothing confessed by believers in faith — verbally or otherwise —
automatically comes to pass. Only God has the power to create as He
wills (Gen. 1:1). Christians are certainly instructed to pray to God
for their requests (Matt. 6:8-13; 21:22). Ultimately, however, all
such requests are subject to God's sovereign will; whichever ones
come to pass only do so as a direct result of God's will and not the
will of the believer (1 John 5:14).7
Salvation
Without Conversion?
Hagee is recognized as
a fierce foe of anti-Semitism. An outspoken supporter of the Jewish
people, Judaism, and the nation Israel, he has been given the
"Humanitarian of the Year" award by the San Antonio B'nai B'rith
Council. Hagee has also been bestowed the "ZOA Israel Service Award"
by the Zionist Organization in Dallas and honored with the
"Henrietta Szold Award" by the Texas Southern Region of Hadassah.8
While his bold stance
against anti-Semitism is certainly praiseworthy, Hagee's zealousness
for the Jewish people and their cause has led him to commit a most
serious doctrinal error — salvation for the Jews without conversion
to Christianity. One newspaper account puts it this way:
Trying to convert Jews
is a "waste of time," he [Hagee] said. . . .
Everyone else, whether
Buddhist or Baha'i, needs to believe in Jesus, he says. But not
Jews. Jews already have a covenant with God that has never been
replaced with Christianity, he says.
Added comment by David J. Stewart,
webservant of Jesus-is-Savior.com...
John Hagee is a false prophet, working for
the New World Order gang. Hagee teaches a heresy known as "Zionism."
Religious Zionism teaches that God has a separate covenant with
Israel and another for the Gentile Church. This is unbiblical and is
sometimes called a "Dual Covenant." Hagee stated to the Houston
Chronicle that he believes Jews have a special covenant with God and
do not need to come to the cross for salvation. According to Hagee
Jews don't need to be born-again. Mr. Hagee told the Texas
newspaper:
"I believe that every Jewish person who
lives in the light of the Torah, which is the word of God, has a
relationship with God and will come to redemption" (Houston
Chronicle, April 30, 1988).
The Houston Chronicle newspaper
then quoted Hagee's own shocking words...
"I'm not trying to convert the Jewish
people to the Christian faith... In fact, trying to convert Jews
is a waste of time. Jews already have a covenant with God and that
has never been replaced by Christianity." (Houston Chronicle,
April 30, 1988, sec, 6, pg. 1).
I love Jewish people, but they will
burn in Hell as quick as any Gentile who rejects Jesus as their
Christ.
END
"The Jewish people have
a relationship to God through the law of God as given through
Moses," Hagee said. "I believe that every Gentile person can only
come to God through the cross of Christ. I believe that every Jewish
person who lives in the light of the Torah, which is the word of
God, has a relationship with God and will come to redemption.
"The law of Moses is
sufficient enough to bring a person into the knowledge of God until
God gives him a greater revelation. And God has not," said Hagee . .
.9
"There are right now
Jewish people on this earth who have a powerful and special
relationship with God," declares Hagee in one of his books. "They
have been chosen by the 'election of grace' in which God does what
he does without asking man to approve or understand it. Let us put
an end to the Christian chatter that "all the Jews are lost" and
can't be in the will of God until they convert to Christianity! . .
. there are a certain number of Jews in relationship with God right
now through divine election." 10
Hagee also affirms: "If
God blinded the Jewish people to the identity of Jesus as Messiah,
how could He send them to hell for not seeing what he had forbidden
them to see?"11 He continues, "All people will gain entrance into
heaven through Christ. The question is one of timing." 12
Such rhetoric raises
some thorny questions. When Hagee says "all people will gain
entrance into heaven through Christ," he is either advocating
universalism (literally all people — Jewish and Gentile — will be
saved), or he believes that all Jews will be saved. In either case,
both positions are in serious error, but the latter is more
consistent with his other statements.
The "timing" of the
salvation of the entire Jewish nation is actually irrelevant to
Hagee's argument since he advocates that it is a waste of time
attempting to convert them. At best, then, Hagee implies that even
if they are not currently saved, God will save all Jewish keepers of
the Law — past, present, and future — at some future point.
The Bible paints a
different picture. The apostle Paul demonstrates that Israel had a
responsibility to respond to the Gospel, but rejected it. In Romans
10:19-21, he asks, "Did they [the Jews] fail to hear?" The
rhetorical answer is "no." Paul relates that, as light and darkness
are understood by all, so the gospel has been made known to all the
Jews (cf. Acts 17:6; 21:28). He continues, "Did they fail to
understand?" The answer once again is "no." Since Israel has become
disobedient through unbelief (Rom. 11:30), God has delivered the
gospel to the Gentiles.13
But God has not
entirely rejected Israel — Paul (himself a Jew) is living proof of
this (Rom. 11:1). God has preserved a remnant, while the others were
hardened as a consequence of their unbelief and trusting in works
instead of the righteousness of Christ (Rom. 11:5-7; cf. 9:31-32;
11:20-23). Elsewhere the apostle writes, ". . . by the works of the
Law no flesh will be justified in His [God's] sight; for through the
Law comes the knowledge of sin. . . . for all have sinned and fall
short of the glory of God, being justified by His grace through the
redemption which is in Christ Jesus" (Rom. 3:20, 23-24, emphasis
added).
To drive the point
home, Paul goes on to say, ". . . the promise to Abraham or to his
descendants that he would be heir of the world was not through the
Law, but through the righteousness of faith. For if those who are of
the Law are heirs, faith is made void and the promise nullified; . .
. it is by faith, that it might be in accordance with grace" (Rom.
4:13- 14, 16). Scripture draws no distinction between Jews and
Gentiles on the issue of salvation, which is attained by grace
through faith alone in Christ, "apart from works of the law" (3:28;
cf. vv. 21-22).
Paul recognized that
the Jews of his day had a misguided zeal that caused them to stumble
on this very point (9:31-32; 10:2-4). Why would he suffer great
anguish and wish he were accursed for Israel's sake if none of them
were truly lost? His anguish comes from the realization that many
Israelites are not saved (Rom. 9:3, 6, 27; 10:1, 9-15; cf. Acts
2:14, 21, 37-39; Rom. 11:14, 17-23).
The Law, revealed
through the Jews, was meant to be "our tutor to lead us to Christ,
that we might be justified by faith. But now that faith has come, we
are no longer under a tutor" (Gal. 3:24-25). As the Bible clearly
states: "There is neither Jew nor Greek . . . for you are all one in
Christ Jesus. And if you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham's
offspring, heirs according to promise" (vv. 28-29). To be saved, a
person — whether Jew or Gentile — must turn to Christ (5:4-6; cf.
John 14:6; Acts 4:12; Rom. 10:9-13) who is "the end of the law for
righteousness for everyone who believes" (Rom. 10:4). In writing
that the "message of the gospel was from Israel, not to Israel,"14
Hagee discourages Christians from sharing the Good News with unsaved
Jews who, like everyone else, have need of the gospel if they are to
spend eternity with God in heaven.
The
Reluctant Messiah
In Hagee's theology,
the Jews can hardly be faulted for not flocking to Christianity
since it was supposedly Jesus who declined their request for Him to
be their Messiah. "The [Jewish] people wanted Him to be their
Messiah, but He absolutely refused," writes Hagee. "The Jews were
not rejecting Jesus as Messiah, it was Jesus who was refusing to be
the Messiah to the Jews!"15
Suffice it to say,
Jesus' explicit claim to be the Messiah (or Christ) during His trial
before the Sanhedrin, the supreme Jewish tribunal (Matt. 26:64),
flatly contradicts Hagee's assertion. In that same passage, Jesus
called Himself the "Son of Man," an unmistakable reference to the
Book of Daniel (7:13) which alludes to the Messiah. Jesus also
applied the same title to Himself in revealing His identity to "a
man of the Pharisees named Nicodemus, a member of the Jewish ruling
council" (John 3:1, 14-15), as well as to the crowd who questioned
His authority to forgive sins (Mark 2:10).
Furthermore, in
response to Jesus' question, "Who do you say I am?" (Matt. 16:15),
Peter answered, "You are the Christ [Messiah]" (v. 16). Surely, had
the Jewish apostle been wrong, Jesus would have corrected him at
that moment; instead, Peter received the Lord's blessing (v. 17).16
Jesus, however, instructed Peter, along with several others, not to
reveal His messianic identity until due time (v. 20). He did so to
avoid the prevalent misconceptions about the title, which had by
then become largely understood in political terms17 — something
wholly inappropriate for Jesus' mission at that time — though Jesus
did, on occasion, give public indications of His messiahship (cf.
Luke 4:17-21; 20:41-44).
Indeed, Hagee's view is
made especially ironic by the fact that Jesus Himself said, "I was
sent only to the lost sheep of Israel" (Matt. 15:24). Scripture
clearly teaches that Jesus' own people rejected Him, and not the
other way around (John 1:11; Mark 12:1-12).
Judging
Alternative Viewpoints as Anti-Semitic
Hagee's personal view
regarding the Jewish people has led him to render harsh and
inaccurate statements about individuals who differ with him on
Israel's relationship with the church. Those who believe the church
is now the true Israel are, in his opinion, guilty of spreading the
message of anti-Semitism.18 And along with amillennialism — "the
view that when Christ returns, eternity begins with no prior
thousand-year (millennial) reign on earth"19 — it is condemned as
"ancient Godless heresy that is again raging through the Church
masquerading as truth."20
Whether Hagee realizes
it or not, a number of orthodox Christian denominations (especially
in the Reformed and Presbyterian traditions) espouse the very view
he caricatures and condemns. The view that there has always been and
will only be one people of God (namely, Israel) and that the church
comprises that faction of humanity (the new Israel, made up of both
Jews and non-Jews) is a feature of what is commonly known as
Covenant theology — a theological framework long recognized as
biblical and in no way anti-Semitic.21
According to Hagee,
this purported "heresy" goes by various names, including "Kingdom
Now, Kingdom Age, New Wave and New Age."22 He declares, however,
that such "Replacement theology" (so-called by Hagee because of its
view that the church is the new Israel or spiritual Israel — though
Hagee did not originate the term) is in reality an "old heresy"23
and "idolatry."24 He also claims that so-called "Replacement
theologians are now carrying Hitler's anointing and his message."25
Judging from the quotes
and references he cites, Hagee seems to have based his idea of
"Replacement theology" primarily on the teachings of Earl Paulk, the
premiere advocate of Kingdom theology.26 While Paulk can be
criticized for any number of unbiblical elements comprising Kingdom
Theology (including positive confession, the "fivefold ministry,"
and the "Manifest Sons of God" doctrine),27 Hagee all but limits his
attack on Paulk's view that the church is spiritual Israel — a view
that is, in fact, orthodox.
Paul states, ". . .
they are not all Israel who are descended from Israel" (Rom. 9:6).
Going on, he clarifies that ". . . it is not the children of the
flesh who are children of God, but the children of the promise are
regarded as descendants" (v. 8). Paul explains that ". . . he is not
a Jew who is one outwardly; neither is circumcision that which is
outward in the flesh. But he is a Jew who is one inwardly; and
circumcision is that which is of the heart, by the Spirit, not by
the letter; and his praise is not from men, but from God" (2:28-29;
cf. Phil. 3:3).
Clearly, then,
believers in the One true God are, at least in a spiritual sense,
identified with Israel — as God's chosen people. "Therefore," as
Paul so aptly puts it, "be sure that it is those who are of faith
who are sons of Abraham" (Gal. 3:7; cf. vv. 26-29; 6:15-16).28
Conversely, Judaizers — those who rejected justification by faith by
their insistence that adherence to Jewish laws and practices is, at
least in part, necessary for salvation — are called the "synagogue
of Satan" (Rev. 2:9; 3:9).
"Is it important to be
right on the Israel question?" asks Hagee. "When you consider that
being wrong brings you under the curse of God and headed for
eternal, everlasting fire with the devil and his angels . . . it's
important! Israel is not a 'take it or leave it' subject. It is a
life and death matter . . . eternal life!"29
It is indeed
unfortunate that Hagee would think one's personal view of Israel can
radically affect an individual's eternal destiny. Nowhere does
Scripture state that salvation hinges upon a person's perspective of
the new Israel. Hagee has no biblical basis for his denouncement. By
making such unwarranted statements, Hagee winds up condemning many
erstwhile believers, theologians, and defenders of the faith — both
past and present.
Though many may claim
Hagee's preaching is helping to spread the Word of God and building
a bridge of unity between the Christian and Jewish communities, the
fact remains that his message contains elements which lie in direct
and serious opposition to biblical truth.
NOTES
1John Hagee,
Praise-A-Thon broadcast, Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN), 16
April 1993.
2John Hagee,
Praise-A-Thon broadcast, TBN, 4 November 1992.
3Ibid.
4Hagee, Praise-A-Thon
broadcast, 16 April 1993.
5For extended critiques
of the so-called "prosperity gospel," see Hank Hanegraaff,
Christianity in Crisis (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 1993),
181-231; and D. R. McConnell, A Different Gospel (Peabody, MA:
Hendrickson Publishers, 1988), 170-83.
6Hagee, Praise-A-Thon
broadcast, 4 November 1992. Avanzini, a leading figure in the Faith
movement, focuses much of his message around the theme of financial
prosperity. He teaches, among other things, that Jesus was a wealthy
individual who "wore designer clothes" and "had a nice house, a big
house," while the apostle Paul "had the kind of money that people .
. . would block up justice to try to get a bribe out of old Paul"
(John Avanzini, Believer's Voice of Victory program, TBN, 20 January
1991).
7Detailed discussions
can be found in Hanegraaff, Christianity in Crisis, 61-102, 285-90;
and McConnell, A Different Gospel, 134-47.
8John Hagee, Should
Christians Support Israel? (San Antonio, TX: Dominion Publishers,
1987), [174-75].
9Julia Duin, "San
Antonio Fundamentalist Battles Anti-Semitism," The Houston
Chronicle, 30 April 1988, 1.
10Hagee, Should
Christians Support Israel?, 124-25, 127 (emphasis in original).
11John Hagee, personal
faxed correspondence to CRI, 18 October 1994, 3.
12Ibid., 6.
13To cement the use of
the rhetorical "no," these verses are supported by the Greek
negative particle me. Whenever the me particle is used in an
interrogative sentence, the response is negative (cf. 1 Cor. 9:8-10;
11:22; 14:29-30; Rom. 11:1). Had a "yes" — rather than a "no" —
response been intended, the Greek particle ou — instead of me —
would have appeared (cf. Rom. 9:21). For documentation, see A. T.
Robertson, A Grammar Of The Greek New Testament In Light Of
Historical Research (Nashville, TN: Broadman Press, 1934),1173-74;
and A. T. Robertson & W. Hersey Davis, A New Short Grammar Of The
Greek Testament, 10th ed. (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House,
1977), 390.
14Hagee, Should
Christians Support Israel?, 61 (emphasis in original).
15Ibid., 67-68 passim;
cf. 69, 72.
16For further
discussions on the messianic identity of Jesus, see Robert L.
Reymond, Jesus, Divine Messiah (Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian and
Reformed Publishing, 1990); and Alfred Edersheim, The Life and Times
of Jesus the Messiah (Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing
Co., 1976 [orig. 1886]).
17See, for example,
Leon Morris, The Gospel According to Matthew (Grand Rapids, MI: Wm.
B. Eerdmans Publishing Co./Inter-Varsity Press, 1992), 427; R. C. H.
Lenski, The Interpretation of St. Matthew's Gospel (Minneapolis, MN:
Augsburg Publishing House, 1964), 632-33; and D. A. Carson, The
Expositor's Bible Commentary, ed. by Frank E. Gaebelein and J. D.
Douglas, 12 vols. (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House,
1984), 8:374-75.
18Hagee, Should
Christians Support Israel?, 1.
19Robert Lightner, The
Last Days Handbook (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1990),
22. Quoted in Lightner's book is amillennialist J. G. Voss, who
defines the amillennial position as follows: "Amillennialism is that
view of the last things which holds the Bible does not predict a
'millennium' or period of world-wide peace and righteousness on this
earth before the end of the world. At the second coming of Christ,
the resurrection and judgment will take place, followed by the
eternal order of things — the absolute, perfect kingdom of God, in
which there will be no sin, suffering, nor death" (72). For
presentations and critiques of the various options regarding the
millennium by theologians who take different sides on the issue, see
Robert G. Clouse, ed. The Meaning of the Millennium: Four Views
(Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1977).
20Hagee, Should
Christians Support Israel?, 1.
21For an exposition of
this particular view, see Edmund P. Clowney, "The New Israel," A
Guide to Biblical Prophecy (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers,
1989), 207-20. Paul E. Leonard presents the opposite point of view
in the article following Clowney's, titled "Two Peoples of God"
(221-30), though he does not classify the former as anti-semitic.
For a detailed treatment of Covenant theology, see O. Palmer
Robertson, The Christ of the Covenants (Phillipsburg, NJ:
Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co., 1980).
22Hagee, Should
Christians Support Israel?, 1.
23Ibid., 74. Hagee
quotes Ignatius of Antioch (c. A.D. 30-107) as a teacher of this
"old heresy." Ironically, Ignatius was one of the earliest defenders
of orthodoxy noted for his forceful responses against false
teachings. He supported apostolic authority and became the bishop of
Antioch, one of the leading churches in the first century (cf. Acts
11:19-29; 13:1-3). His view that the church was the new Israel would
thus have been a teaching passed on to him by the apostles.
Ignatius's writings are reprinted and translated in J. B. Lightfoot
and J. R. Harner, eds. The Apostolic Fathers (Grand Rapids, MI:
Baker Book House, 1984), 97-162; and Alexander Roberts and James
Donaldson, eds. The Ante- Nicene Fathers, 10 vols. (Grand Rapids,
MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1985), 1:45-131.
24Hagee, Should
Christians Support Israel?, 86.
25Ibid., 132.
26Ibid., 1, 59, 76-77,
105.
27A reprint of the
two-part Christian Research Journal article,"The Gospel According to
Paulk: A Critique of 'Kingdom Theology,'" is available through CRI
(order part #DK-150).
28Commenting on
Galatians 6:16, Bible scholar Alan Cole writes: "This would identify
the new group, the 'third race of men' of whom the Church fathers
delighted to talk — neither Jew nor Gentile, but Christian — with
God's Israel. This is often put bluntly as 'the Church is the new
Israel'" (The Epistle of Paul to the Galatians [Grand Rapids, MI:
Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1965], 183). Cf. Herman N. Ridderbos,
The Epistle of Paul to the Churches of Galatia (Grand Rapids, MI:
Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1953), 227; and R. C. H. Lenski, The
Interpretation of St. Paul's Epistle to the Galatians, to the
Ephesians and to the Philippians (Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg
Publishing House, 1961), 321.
29Hagee, Should
Christians Support Israel?, 169.
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