By Rick Hiebert. All Rights Reserved. Used By Permission.
Evangelist Todd Bentley–when not allegedly getting visions on his tanning bed (“I’m used to the frozen tundras of Canada”) or musing on Twitter that he would have liked to have been a samurai warrior were he not an evangelist (I see John Belushi in samurai garb with Don Pardo announcing: “Samurai Evangelist!”
)–is back on the job.
I’ll be writing about the introductory remarks during his ”Secret Place” webinar of Dec. 15th, but that evening he was very excited about promoting his meeting from last Friday, Decmber 18 at the Morningstar HQ church in North Carolina. He was preaching for the first time in 18 months. “Can you believe it, a revival service,” Bentley said. “If you’re hungry, get on a plane…we’re gonna have a visitation!”
If you are curious, read on…
He went on to mention on Dec. 15th that he had already celebrated Christmas in Disney World with the children from his first marriage. He plans to mark the actual holiday with “Jessa and our two puppies”. (As a dog lover, I recall that he mentioned leaving his “dog” at home in Canada. Does this mean that he not only walked out on his wife and kids he walked out on a Canadian dog too? If my memory is correct…you have to wonder if there is such as thing as a “trophy dog” because he may have one now…)
A few hours before the filming of his latest webinar, Oral Roberts, the famed evangelist, died, which led to some interesting remarks by Mr. Bentley. Todd noted that in the 1940s and 1950s, Roberts was an avid faith-healing evangelist. (This is correct as this emphasis permeates Roberts’ first autobiography.)
Roberts was associated in Bentley’s mind with the Voice Of Healing movement of faith healers, primarily in the USA. (However, church historian David Edwin Harrell Jr., in his fine book All Things Are Possible–a history of the healing and charsimatic movements in the U.S,. notes that although Roberts emphasized healing, he was not eager to link himself up with others in the formal Voice of Healing movement. Harrell suspects this was because Roberts did not want to be dragged down by the reputations of other evangelists.)
(I’ll be citing Harrell’s book as I go on…)
Todd Bentley continues his remarks, by recounting how the very earliest public notices of Roberts in the 1950s was as a faith healer, with massive tent meetings and preaching on radio and television. “At the same time church, it [his death] brought me to the point where I asked myself the question ‘Where are the great Oral Roberts of today? Where are the great Jack Coes? A.A. Allen? Where arer the John G. Lakes? Or the great Aimee Semple McPherson? The Kathryn Kuhlmans?’” Bentley said, “There are some great healing ministries, but are there ministries that had the great influence these men and women had?”
“But there’s a new generation that’s emerging,” Bentley adds, with a sly smile on his face. “But it’s time for us to rise up, ’cause you know, when I heard about his passing, I said “God there’s a great mantle…There’s a vaccuum , right now, I believe, in America. And people are waiting for men and women to demonstrate the power of God, for one to step forward and say, ‘God, I’ll take up the call.’”
“I think about how controversial it must have been for Alexander Dowie…The controversy that’s around every healing ministry. I can’t think of a healing ministry that hasn’t had controversy around them. I said ‘God, why is that?’ But who’s gonna take up the cause…”
Bentley has a lot of friends who practice healing prayer, “But who’s really devoted to the healing revival? How many healing revivalists, healing evangelists do we really have?”
“With the passing of Oral Roberts, it makes me remember all the more, we’ve got be hungry to go before the throne of God and say ‘I will take up the mantle, I will take up the healing anointing, I want to be one of the many–I [Bentley himself] don’t want to be just one,” he said.
Lakeland, he added, was great, “…but I’m not done. I’m 34 years old, I’m not done. I’m getting healed, I’m getting restored, I’m getting stronger, I’m getting better, I’m relaying a foundation…I’m hungry for the kind of anointing that rested on Oral Roberts in 1947….when I heard about the passing of Oral Roberts, I said that I was going to be more committed in my own life and ministry to be sure that…I’m more focused so that more people are healed, body soul and spirit.”
Let’s stop for a moment to break this down.
Christians are not great at remembering the full history of their heroes. You remember that Alexander Dowie was supposed to be a great healer, but not that he ended his life thinking that he was the re-incarnation of Elijah. You recall Allen’s efforts to heal, but not that he had to stop trying to resurrect the dead when the U.S. Postal Service complained that corpses were piling up in the nearest post office to his headquarters–or that he drank himself to death. But Bentley is painting a word picture here of great healers of the past…and guess who you are supposed to think might be next?
Indeed, there is a “vaccuum” and Bentley hopes to be one “of many” to fill it.
Harrell’s book notes that the Voice of Healing movement did some good work, but he also notes the failures and mistakes too. But hindsight and memory are always rosy. And if you can appeal to baby boomers who want another Voice of Healing…Todd Bentley welcomes their support.
He recalls how “controversial” past healers were, and suggests that any healing efforts will always be controversial. If you did not pay close attention to the errors at Lakeland, the idea is planted in your head that Bentley was merely “controversial” like all these heroes of the past, not mistaken, not sinful, not false, not possibly heretical. Merely “controversial”.
How unfortunate, Bentley wishes you to think, that there aren’t more people who specialize in kneeing cancer victims in the stomach.
A historical note. Which Oral Roberts does Todd Bentley wish to replace?
Harrell’s book goes on to note that as the 1950s went on Oral Roberts experienced financial pressures in his ministry. For whatever reason, he began to moderate his views. He still healed, but had other emphases as well. He left the Pentecostal Holiness Church and eventually was closest to being a Methodist, meeting evanglical Christian leaders such as Billy Graham. In a 1967 meeting with evangelical Christians, Roberts would admit that while he had the best of intentions, he made serious mistakes due to excess zeal while pursuing faith healing. (Robert’s seeming moderation in some matters, my friend Bene Diction might note, allowed his new thrust towards “seed faith” and the prosperity gospel–two dangerous ideas–to get more acceptance by appearing moderate and reasonable.)
There are two Roberts perhaps–but Bentley is only interested in the avid faith healing one, not the Roberts who, for good or bad, had rethought his earlier thinking.
It’s interesting that Bentley–who railed against the friends wanting to “build something” like a permament revival facility in Lakeland, wants to take up the mantle of Roberts who felt called to build a large university.
Bentley continues.
“I gave my life to this [pursuing the healing anointing] and I really did. And it cost me everything. Of course, I amde some mistakes along the way, but I said ‘God it’s worth it’, the anointing is worth everything…”
Oh really? As early as seven or eight years ago, I heard second-hand reports that Bentley was bragging that he was a millionaire. He told a newspaper in Abbotsford B.C. that he had tried to acquire the local Trade and Exhibition Centre from the city, which is amongst the biggest and most expensive  buildings in the city. Lakeland earned over $8 million Canadian, according to Canada’s tax authorities. We can safely say that Bentkley was never poor, until he walked away from his first wife and his first ministry.
He wants a new wife, he gets one. He demands minsitry on his own terms and Joyner gives it to him. He might even have new and improved “trophy dogs”. Giving up everything? I doubt it.
Bentley adds, after reflecting on what he had done with his old ministry, “What’s it gonna be like it five years? In ten years? That’s up to me…”
With the passing of Oral Roberts, he added, there is an “opportunity to grab ahold of something. When Elijah passed, Elijah was able to pick up the double portion….There’s another passing, a passing of the guard.”
Todd Bentley has already noted that he wanted to follow in Oral Robert’s footsteps, but if he is the only one to do so, can Bentley really be wanting to suggest that he wants a “double prortion” of Roberts’ alleged anointing?
If we remember that Roberts taught some aberrant , if not heretical things, Bentley implying that he wouldn’t mind a “double portion” of this is a bit scary.
Shortly after Bently’s remarks, he began to introduce the topic of “The Secret Place”–intimacy with God. An Internet signal failure on his end then probably lost him most of his audience. The webinar, now up at his website, is based mostly on an old vision/sermon/booklet of his–The Father’s House, one of the first he ever put out circa 1999 or 2000. It’s kind of hard to critique a vision–you can’t really say “you never saw that” if there aren’t any overt things therein that are false according to the Bible.
But I can note that in his offhand remarks at the beginning that Bentley rewrites history–his own, Roberts, and the church’s to make his points. He might also be flirting with a bit of pride in regards to how he hopes to emulate Roberts too.
If we remember that dishonesty and pride were two of the things that let what happened in Lakeland hurt the church as a whole, this means that even when Bentley speaks off the cuff, as he did, he can still be up to mischief.


Thanks, as always, to B.D. for his kindness in letting me post.
Next webinar, TB promises, is January 12…but I plan to spend the Christmas holidays thinking of other stuff.
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Appreciate the post. Mr. Bentley makes me a bit nervous on many levels. But what stood out is this: in two paragraphs in this post that quote Todd, he refers to himself 19 times. I assume that we preach a Christ centered message.
What the world needs is not more great people to take up their calls, truth be told there are no great people – doesn’t our Lord know what is in the heart of a man? What is needed is more ordinary folk to take up their crosses and endure to the end – it’s the only way for Jesus to be fully formed and manifest in a life. He said, “If I be lifted up I will draw all men unto me.” When the Saviour is manifested, lifted up, from an otherwise empty human vessel, a dead tree, who then can resist His wooing? – which is with ressurrection power now – His flesh, which was just as weak as ours and had to be overcome, has been utterly consumed and crucified and He is risen. Oh Lord, grant that we be willing and strengthened to walk after you following in your footsteps all the way to our own personal Golgotha…so that it will no longer be I who live, but Christ who lives in me. He promises that if we lose our life for His sake we will find it, for eternity.
I agree with you Therese!
That’s beautiful Therese. Well spoken. And true.
The webinar told me one thing. WHO TODD BENTLEY IS AND WHO HE IS EXPECTING TO BE. His ‘cup runneth over’, in every sense of the word, therefore we are going to get ‘drunk of the spirit of Mr Bentley’ and his double portion ‘like it or not’ especially as Mr Joyner says ‘todd is the chosen one. So its all ‘sewn up then’, might as well ‘all go home’.
LORD HAVE MERCY FOR THE ONES WHO ARE SUBJECTED TO a double portion of anything other than you.
Lead us not into their temptation and deliver us from who they are into who you really are.
Best wishes from one who has had to be gifted speech after witnessing Mr Bentleys abundance of it.
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Yicks, has’nt Todd B. done enough damage with his false works not of God but of his own doing? It’s quite obvious that he is on his own beaten path trying to do works in his own flesh which is not going to amount to anything. Rest assured anything done in the flesh will amount to nothing only works done in the Spirit will be profitable to God’s kingdom. Todd you are still trying to run the show, please believers in Christ do not fall for the false teacher. test all the Spirits God warns we will be accountable for falling for anantichrist type, get back to reading the word of God and you wont be so easily deceaved. God your will be done in Jesus Christ name, Amen! In God I Trust
The proud person takes little account of their own weaknesses and don’t look for stubbling blocks in life. That person may believe they are above common people or human fralities. With this type thinking they can be taken down a road of many deceptions. A proud person will not realize that pride is the problem. However, everyone around that person will see and know that person has a pride problem. Could it be that some of the things we are seeing around Todd Bentley and his new ministry, are self-gratification, and has blinded them to obvious warnings about pride?
Proverbs 16:18
Pride goes before destruction, and haughtiness before a fall.
Those that follow after this false teacher will be led one place and it is the same place the blind will end up when they are led by the blind. Run away from this man, if you have any discernment whatsoever!
It’s one thing when others speak highly of a person, but when a person starts comparing himself to one of “the greats” and doubly so?! (even before it has happened), it sure does seem like another thing altogether.
Not sure if I’m overthinking things or not, but “Hear O Israel, the Lord is One” seems to be a clue that all of God’s attributes and gifts exist in the one God, in our one Messiah – when a ministry attracts a lot of attention for only one of those traits, such as healing, is it just me or isn’t that somehow missing the person of Jesus as a unified whole? Jesus healed, but He also preached, also prophesied, also loved, also obeyed the Father, also cast out demons, also ate with ‘sinners’, also taught, also suffered, also walked the walk to Calvary, also sorrowed, also prayed, also rested,….etc. I would think that any crowd of people coming to a meeting would have more than just one need.
It must be such a temptation when a ministry becomes “popular” to give the people only what they came to see, instead of the whole Jesus, and to attribute the popularity as a sign of God’s approval. Just thinking out loud, but maybe that has something to do with why most of these ‘big’ ministries go off the rails somewhere along the way even if they seem to start out on the right track. Jesus was popular too because of His miracles, for a little while, and then people began to walk away when He started telling them the things that were hard to accept. Miracles are supposed to be following after the preaching of the gospel, they are not meant to be the star attraction themselves. When it becomes apparent that the gifts of the Spirit are being idolized, I think those ministering would do well to take the opportunity to teach and correct the idolatry in people, help them get free of it, instead of feeding into their problem or worse taking advantage of it to their own gain.
We needn’t wonder why we don’t see more miracles or why these movements/revivals don’t last longer – one big reason I’m sure is because our hearts are very prone to being drawn away from Him to the miracles themselves and to those who are supposed to be His mere servants. When the idolatry becomes too much, the Holy Spirit has to withdraw, and I believe a counterfeit spirit then moves into the vacuum. Our God is able to do so much more, but it seems there are not many who are ready to handle it without stumbling, neither shepherds nor sheep.