Pure
Fiel a Verdad
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Evangelicals
What you might look up, or provide numbers for, dr. m, is the segment of Protestant Christians that are 'evangelical' (or, if you will, 'born again' or 'in personal relationship with Jesus'). I believe their number are growing by leaps and bounds, as shown by the Sunday attendance figures in the thousands (at a single location, the 'home' church).
I believe a main figure, in Texas, in named Osteen, see below. Though his evangelism is rather 'feel good' and materialistic.
Not all are 'fundamentalist', or course, and not all are 'right-wing nutballs.' A small segment may even be progressive in politics. The rest would identify as 'conservative', 'family values' etc.
Another trend may be the increase in Catholics, since most Hispanics are Catholics.
So I think your Christian attrition is in 1) mainstream protestants, like episcopalians, and 2) Anglo-Irish-French-Italian (non Hispanic) Roman Catholics.
----
www.christnotes.org
{This is rather adorational, but the numbers are apparently correct}
Joel Osteen is currently the pastor of America’s largest church, Lakewood Church, located in Houston, Texas. Joel was born to John Osteen, who with his wife Dodie founded Lakewood Church on Mother's Day 1959. Although the church began with a small number of people, it was never small in its vision to reach the world with the gospel.
Today, pastor Joel Osteen continues to pursue the large vision the church has always had through pastoring the nearly 30,000 regular attendees at Lakewood, preaching to hundreds of millions throughout the world through television, supporting hundreds of missionaries throughout the world, feeding the poor, clothing the naked, and holding widely attended meetings through Joel Osteen Ministries.
Joel Osteen is the youngest of four children. He has an older brother, Paul, and two older sisters, Lisa and April. After graduating from high school, Joel Osteen attended Oral Roberts University. However, after his first semester he moved back to Houston. In Houston, he soon discovered what would occupy his time for the next 17 years, working side by side with his father on Lakewood’s television ministry. Through the help of Joel Osteen, the television ministry grew dramatically and reached millions. However, in 1999 John Osteen died, leaving Lakewood without its founding pastor.
With the founding pastor gone, many wondered how Lakewood church and its successful television ministry would continue. On October 3, 1999, Joel Osteen became the pastor of Lakewood. Under pastor Joel Osteen’s direction, the whole concept of church has changed. Through the slogan “Discovering the Champion in You” and an emphasis on a loving God with a positive message of hope, restoration, and healing, Joel Osteen has seen dramatic spiritual and numeric growth in Lakewood. The church has had to add three services and is still quickly outgrowing its 7,800 seat sanctuary.
To accommodate the incredible growth in attendance, in late 2003, Joel Osteen and Lakewood leased the Compaq Center (former home of the Houston Rockets basketball team) for over 10 million dollars. The building, which is located on one of the busiest intersections in America and will seat over 16,000 people, underwent 70+ million dollars of renovations to become the Lakewood International Center.
On the other side, a review of the above book, in Publishers Weekly (generally not given to excesses)
From Publishers Weekly
Houston megachurch pastor and inspirational TV host Osteen offers an overblown and redundant self-help debut. Many Christian readers will undoubtedly be put off by the book’s shallow name-it-and-claim-it theology; although the first chapter claims that "we serve the God that created the universe," the book as a rule suggests the reverse: it’s a treatise on how to get God to serve the demands of self-centered individuals. Osteen tells readers that God wants them to prosper, offering examples of obtaining an elegant mansion or a larger salary ("don’t ever get satisfied with where you are," he cautions).
In seven parts, he details how readers should enlarge their vision, develop self-esteem, discover the power of thought, let go of the past, find strength through adversity, give back to others and choose to be happy. The section on giving comes as too little, too late—Osteen’s message to remember others and "get your mind off yourself" flies in the face of the previous 200 pages.
There are some good pockets of advice, such as letting go of past hurts and avoiding bitterness. Editorially, the book would have packed more of a punch if a third of its repetitive slogans and stories had been pruned. Theologically, its materialism and superficial portrayal of God as the granter of earthly wishes will alienate many Christian readers who can imagine a much bigger God.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
What you might look up, or provide numbers for, dr. m, is the segment of Protestant Christians that are 'evangelical' (or, if you will, 'born again' or 'in personal relationship with Jesus'). I believe their number are growing by leaps and bounds, as shown by the Sunday attendance figures in the thousands (at a single location, the 'home' church).
I believe a main figure, in Texas, in named Osteen, see below. Though his evangelism is rather 'feel good' and materialistic.
Not all are 'fundamentalist', or course, and not all are 'right-wing nutballs.' A small segment may even be progressive in politics. The rest would identify as 'conservative', 'family values' etc.
Another trend may be the increase in Catholics, since most Hispanics are Catholics.
So I think your Christian attrition is in 1) mainstream protestants, like episcopalians, and 2) Anglo-Irish-French-Italian (non Hispanic) Roman Catholics.
----
www.christnotes.org
{This is rather adorational, but the numbers are apparently correct}
Joel Osteen is currently the pastor of America’s largest church, Lakewood Church, located in Houston, Texas. Joel was born to John Osteen, who with his wife Dodie founded Lakewood Church on Mother's Day 1959. Although the church began with a small number of people, it was never small in its vision to reach the world with the gospel.
Today, pastor Joel Osteen continues to pursue the large vision the church has always had through pastoring the nearly 30,000 regular attendees at Lakewood, preaching to hundreds of millions throughout the world through television, supporting hundreds of missionaries throughout the world, feeding the poor, clothing the naked, and holding widely attended meetings through Joel Osteen Ministries.
Joel Osteen is the youngest of four children. He has an older brother, Paul, and two older sisters, Lisa and April. After graduating from high school, Joel Osteen attended Oral Roberts University. However, after his first semester he moved back to Houston. In Houston, he soon discovered what would occupy his time for the next 17 years, working side by side with his father on Lakewood’s television ministry. Through the help of Joel Osteen, the television ministry grew dramatically and reached millions. However, in 1999 John Osteen died, leaving Lakewood without its founding pastor.
With the founding pastor gone, many wondered how Lakewood church and its successful television ministry would continue. On October 3, 1999, Joel Osteen became the pastor of Lakewood. Under pastor Joel Osteen’s direction, the whole concept of church has changed. Through the slogan “Discovering the Champion in You” and an emphasis on a loving God with a positive message of hope, restoration, and healing, Joel Osteen has seen dramatic spiritual and numeric growth in Lakewood. The church has had to add three services and is still quickly outgrowing its 7,800 seat sanctuary.
To accommodate the incredible growth in attendance, in late 2003, Joel Osteen and Lakewood leased the Compaq Center (former home of the Houston Rockets basketball team) for over 10 million dollars. The building, which is located on one of the busiest intersections in America and will seat over 16,000 people, underwent 70+ million dollars of renovations to become the Lakewood International Center.
On the other side, a review of the above book, in Publishers Weekly (generally not given to excesses)
From Publishers Weekly
Houston megachurch pastor and inspirational TV host Osteen offers an overblown and redundant self-help debut. Many Christian readers will undoubtedly be put off by the book’s shallow name-it-and-claim-it theology; although the first chapter claims that "we serve the God that created the universe," the book as a rule suggests the reverse: it’s a treatise on how to get God to serve the demands of self-centered individuals. Osteen tells readers that God wants them to prosper, offering examples of obtaining an elegant mansion or a larger salary ("don’t ever get satisfied with where you are," he cautions).
In seven parts, he details how readers should enlarge their vision, develop self-esteem, discover the power of thought, let go of the past, find strength through adversity, give back to others and choose to be happy. The section on giving comes as too little, too late—Osteen’s message to remember others and "get your mind off yourself" flies in the face of the previous 200 pages.
There are some good pockets of advice, such as letting go of past hurts and avoiding bitterness. Editorially, the book would have packed more of a punch if a third of its repetitive slogans and stories had been pruned. Theologically, its materialism and superficial portrayal of God as the granter of earthly wishes will alienate many Christian readers who can imagine a much bigger God.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
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