Rethinking Robert Schuller
By
Warren Smith
As
a former New Age follower, I could hardly believe it. On Oct. 17, 2004,
more than 20 years after his first appearance on the “Hour of Power,” New
Age leader Gerald Jampolsky was once again Robert Schuller’s featured
guest. I was not surprised on one level because I had always been aware of
Schuller’s affection for New Age teachings. What did surprise me was
Schuller’s willingness still to be so openly aligned with a veteran New
Age leader like Jampolsky.
I was very familiar with Gerald Jampolsky. When I was
exploring New Age teachings, he was the first one to introduce me to the
New Age Christ and to the New Age/New Gospel teachings of “A Course in
Miracles.” Widely reputed in New Age circles to be the closest thing to a
New Age bible, “A Course in Miracles” taught me that “there is no sin,” “a
slain Christ has no meaning” and “the recognition of God is the
recognition of yourself.”
On
this “Hour of Power” program, Schuller praised Jampolsky (right) and
recommended all of his “fabulous” books
– in spite of the fact that every one of them was based on the New Age
teachings of “A Course in Miracles.” He also stated that Jampolsky’s
latest book, “Forgiveness,” was available in the Crystal Cathedral
bookstore. Amazingly, Schuller had begun the year as a featured speaker at
the annual convention of the National Association of Evangelicals. He was
now closing the year by featuring a prominent New Age leader as his
special guest. As usual, no one in Christian leadership was holding him
accountable, or even seemed to care. Over the years, Robert Schuller had
obviously done a good job of softening up the church.
Schuller’s latest move is to hold a “Rethink Conference” at
his Crystal Cathedral. With an unusual mix of Christian and non-Christian
speakers, the conference will take place Jan. 17-19, 2008. He is
co-hosting the conference with Emerging Church movement leader Erwin
McManus. Schuller’s “rethink” website states the purpose of the
conference: “Our aim is to bring together a cross-section of the key
leaders in today’s culture so we can grapple with what’s truly happening
in our world.”Top
of Form
Among
the 30 speakers lending their names and varying degrees of credibility to
Robert Schuller’s conference are Lee Strobel (right), Dan Kimball, Charles
Colson, George Barna, Rupert Murdoch, George Herbert Walker Bush, Larry
King and Rick Warren’s wife, Kay Warren. While Rick Warren has tried
desperately to deny his spiritual ties to Schuller, his wife’s presence at
the conference speaks volumes.
Conference speaker Lee Strobel’s recent book, “The Real
Jesus: A Journalist Investigates Current Attacks on the Identity of
Christ,” purports to expose today’s deceptive false Christs, yet an
in-depth discussion of the false New Age Christ is completely missing from
his book. Meanwhile, apologist Strobel, a former Saddleback pastor, makes
no apologies for aligning himself with New Age sympathizer Robert
Schuller.
The Emerging Church also refuses to take the New Age
seriously. Not surprisingly, two of its top leaders – Erwin McManus and
Dan Kimball – agreed to participate in this Schuller “Rethink Conference.”
The word “rethink” can be found throughout Kimball’s book “The Emerging
Church,” which was forewarded by Rick Warren and Brian McLaren. The word
“rethink” can also be found throughout the books of other Emergent
leaders, including McLaren. So what is this “Rethink Conference” really
about? What do Schuller and “the forces that be” hope to accomplish?
In defining the word “rethink” Webster’s states: “to think
over again, with a view to changing.” From my perspective as a former New
Age follower, I believe that Robert Schuller’s mission has always been to
“rethink” and “change” biblical Christianity into something “new” – as in
New Age/New Spirituality. There is a reason that New Age leader Neale
Donald Walsch and his New Age “God” refer to Robert Schuller as an
“extraordinary minister.” There is a reason Gerald Jampolsky and so many
other New Age leaders go out of their way to praise Schuller. They know
that Robert Schuller has always been open to spiritual compromise.
In fact, in his latest book, “Don’t Throw Away Tomorrow:
Living God’s Dream for Your Life,” Schuller eagerly writes about the
virtue of compromise. In this book, that bears New Age leader Gerald
Jampolsky’s endorsement on the back cover, Schuller states, “We need to
learn the healing quality of wise compromise.” He further states, “Perhaps
the only way to deal with contradictions is to combine them creatively and
produce something new. That’s ingenious compromise.” Whether Schuller
knows it or not, he just presented the recipe for a New World Religion.
In “Don’t Throw Away Tomorrow: Living God’s Dream for Your
Life,” Schuller uses the term “God’s Dream” in the subtitle and within the
book. He used the term “God’s Dream” heavily in his 1982 book
“Self-Esteem: The New Reformation.” Saddleback pastor Rick Warren used the
Schuller term “God’s Dream” to introduce his widely publicized global
“P.E.A.C.E. Plan.” He described his peace plan as “God’s Dream for you –
and the world.” Brian McLaren, Bruce Wilkinson, Joel Osteen, Erwin McManus
and a host of other Christian leaders also use the Schuller term “God’s
Dream.” Why?
Although “God’s Dream” is a Schulleresque term with no
biblical foundation, it has become part of the vocabulary of the church’s
new emerging purpose-driven mindset. It is interesting that Warren uses
the Schuller term “God’s Dream” to describe his peace plan. Is “God’s
Dream” suddenly becoming the metaphor for world peace? Will we be asked to
“rethink” and “compromise” our faith for the good of the world? Will we be
asked to “rethink” and “compromise” our faith to attain the world peace
that is “God’s Dream”? Is this Schuller-inspired conference designed to
initiate this kind of “rethink” and “compromise” process? So what are we
expected to “rethink”? What must we ultimately “compromise”? The answer
lies within the New Age itself.
The New Age also has a “peace plan” and its
adherents are also calling for conferences like these. They insist
that world peace will only occur when Christians abandon their “exclusive”
and “divisive” relationship with Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior.
Neale Donald Walsch, speaking for his New Age “God,” unequivocally states
that “the era of the Single Savior is over.” Yet at the same time,
Walsch’s “God” suggests that Robert Schuller could be instrumental in
providing a bridge from the church to the peace and oneness of a New
Spirituality. Is this New Spirituality where Robert Schuller and these
kinds of conferences are ultimately headed? Time will tell. It is
important to note that Walsch is not some obscure New Age leader. He is a
best-selling author and highly regarded by his New Age peers. Just ask
Gerald Jampolsky. It was Walsch who wrote the introduction to
“Forgiveness” – the book that was so highly recommended by Schuller on
that 2004 “Hour of Power” program with Jampolsky.
In Revelation 2:2, Jesus Christ commends the church of
Ephesus for exposing false teachers and driving them out of the church.
Men like Robert Schuller wouldn’t have lasted five minutes in Ephesus. And
neither would those who continue to stand alongside Schuller giving him
undeserved influence and credibility. The church does not need to
“rethink” and “compromise” its God-given biblical doctrines to accommodate
the world. It needs to rethink its willingness to follow worldly leaders
like Robert Schuller.
Endnotes:
1.
https://www.hourofpower.org/interviews/interviews_detail.cfm?ArticleID=3079
2.
https://www.rethinkconference.com
Volume 2, 2008 |