I don't know where you got your info. but I graduated from Rhema Bible Center. I never heard Kennth Hagin say anything like your describing. Just because this is the internet you shouldn't explot things that aren't true. Kennth Hagin taught on Jesus was 100 percent man and a 100 percent God. Go to the scripture and check it out. You should go to the campus and walk in and check out some classes instead of making up lies.
God the Father is Word of Faith, Jesus Christ is Word of Faith and the Holy Spirit is Word of Faith so what's you're problem.
If you dig deep enough a fool is a moron - so how deep do you go
God the Father is Word of Faith, Jesus Christ is Word of Faith and the Holy Spirit is Word of Faith so what's you're problem.
If you dig deep enough a fool is a moron - so how deep do you want to go?
more about "Word of Faith...False teachers..", posted with vodpod THE PROSPERITY MOVEMENT:Wounded Charismatics by Roger L. Smalling, D.MinTable of ContentsChapter 1: The “God” in the MirrorChapter 2: Faith or FictionChapter 3: Sovereignty and SufferingChapter 4: Origins of Word of FaithChapter 5: Positive ConfessionChapter 6: Wounded FaithChapter 7: Just Like Your Soul ProspersChapter 8: As Rich As AbrahamChapter 9: Sufficiency, Yes!Chapter 10: The Jesus Died Spiritually HeresyChapter 11: Job and the KingdomChapter 12: The Psychology Behind the Word MovementChapter 13: Denying the Symptoms: Is it valid?Chapter 14: Did Jesus Heal Them All?Chapter 15: How To Grow in FaithAppendix A: Comparative Chart, Word of Faith vs Bible Appendix B: On “Divine Nature” 2Pe.1:3-4 Appendix C: 150 Verses Word of Faith Cultists Don’t Like to Hearhttp://www.smallings.com/Books/ProspENG.htm#Ch4 ====================================================Chapter 4: The Origins of Word of FaithWord of Faith has its roots in a pagan cult that rivaled Christianity during the first three centuries of the Christian era, known as Gnosticism. The early Church fathers, such as Iranaeus eventually refuted and destroyed it.Various Gnostic cults existed, but all held to a form of Dualism. This meant matter is bad and spirit is good. The Bible, however, teaches God created both realms and called all creation, spiritual and material, ‘good’.Some Gnostics even taught two gods: An evil one which governed the material realm and a good one, the spiritual. All, however, held that a series of spiritual laws exist between the two dimensions by which both realms could be controlled. Certain spiritually elite people were endowed with a special "gnosis" or "revelation knowledge" by which they could learn to manipulate these laws to their advantage ... even to controlling their own spiritual destinies.A Gnostic goal was to attain to divinity and become a kind of creative "god." This was through the "releasing" of his spirit from the mate
more about "Word of Faith...False teachers..", posted with vodpod The True Father of the Modern Faith Movementfrom A Different Gospelby D.R. McConnellPeople frequently credit my father, Kenneth E. Hagin, with being the "Father" of the so-called faith movement. However, as he points out, it's nothing new; it's just the preaching of the simple ageless gospel. But he has had a great effect on many of the well-known faith ministers of today. Almost every major faith ministry of the United States has been influenced by his ministry. Kenneth Hagin, Jr., "Trend toward the Faith Movement," Charisma (Aug. 1985), 67.They've all copied from my Dad . They've changed it a little bit and added their own touch. . . , but they couldn't change the wording. The Lord gave him words and phrases. He coined them. They can't put it in any other words. . . It's very difficult for some people to be big enough to give credit to somebody else. Ruth Kenyon Houseworth, taped interview, Lynnwood, Wash., Feb. 19, 1982.The Relationship Between Kennth Hagin and E. W. KenyonThe founding father of the Faith movement is commonly held to be Kenneth Erwin Hagin, the man termed by Charisma magazine as "the granddaddy of the Faith teachers,"1 and "the father of the Faith movement."2With his country Texan accent and a disarming "good ol' boy" charm, Hagin's teachings on faith, healing, and prosperity have been foundational for almost every major minister of the Faith movement.3 Even the other heavyweights of the Faith movement readily admit that Hagin's teaching and leadership were the key both to their own success, and that of the movement.For instance, the heir apparent to Hagin's throne, Kenneth Copeland, frequently acknowledges Hagin as his spiritual father. Although he briefly attended Oral Roberts University, Copeland points to Hagin as his mentor, not Roberts. Ken Hagin, Jr., recounts the beginning of Copeland's relationship with his father this way:A poverty-stricken student from Oral Roberts University attended my father's Tulsa s