Dawn Street
(28
Mar 2008)
"Oprah labeled false prophet"
Oprah labeled 'false prophet' and 'conduit ... to
Hell'
Jeff Johnson - OneNewsNow - 3/27/2008 8:00:00 AM
A Christian author who was saved out of the new age movement
says media icon Oprah Winfrey has become a false prophet for a false Jesus.
Oprah Winfrey identifies herself as a Christian. But
she says that, when she was a young woman, she was disturbed by a pastor's
declaration that the God of the Bible is a jealous God. "And something
about that didn't feel right in my spirit because I believe that God is
love and that God is in all things," she told her television audience.
"And, so, that's when the, the, the search for something more than doctrine
started to stir within me."
Warren Smith, author of Reinventing Jesus Christ: The
New Gospel, is a Christian who was saved from the new age movement. He
says Oprah's search led her to Marianne Williamson and the new age teachings
of A Course in Miracles.
"Marianne Williamson was on Oprah back in 1992 with her
book about the Course in Miracles," Smith recalled, "and back then, Oprah
said, 'I believe that the principles of A Course in Miracles can change
the world' -- and she's saying the same thing today."
Williamson is now promoting A Course in Miracles through
daily classes on Oprah's XM satellite radio channel. "I will be on Oprah
& Friends every single day talking about the ideas in A Course in Miracles,"
Williamson said during a promotional announcement for the program. "We
can have miracles. We can have greater inner peace. We can shift from an
experience of fear to an experience of greater love."
Oprah told her audience that she has no problem reconciling
the differences between the new age religion she is now promoting and the
Christian faith she claims. "I reconciled it because I was able to open
my mind about the, um, the absolute, indescribable hugeness of that which
we call 'God,'" Oprah said. "I took God out of the box."
But Smith, appearing on the March 11 edition of the AFA
Report, said the false teachings of A Course in Miracles should be obvious
to any Christian. "Here are some of the lessons: Lesson 29, 'God is in
everything I see.' Lesson 186, 'The salvation of the world depends on me.'
253, 'My self is the ruler of the universe.' 337, 'My sinless-ness
protects me from all harm,'" Smith said, quoting from the lessons. "This
is the Bible upside-down."
Smith also criticized Oprah for the selection of Eckhart
Tolle's new age book A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose as her
book of the month.
"It reminds me of Jeremiah 5 where he says, 'A wonderful
and horrible thing is committed in the land, the prophets prophesy falsely
and my people love to have it so,'" Smith explained. "What is more wonderful
these days than Oprah? A wonderful and horrible thing is happening in the
land, the prophets prophesy falsely. Oprah -- by now teaching this class
with Eckhart Tolle -- is no longer a pointer to deception. She is a false
prophet and part of it herself."
Christians have an obligation, Smith concluded, to point
out the error of Oprah's new age "christianity," even if doing so means
risking public ridicule.
"Unfortunately, Oprah does so many things that are really
good [that] people make the mistake of thinking that she's on to something
with this whole spiritual deal," Smith argued. "What she's doing is, she's
creating a new worldview. They're calling it a 'shift' that will prepare
people for when the next shoe drops.
"And this will be the way that world peace would be achieved,"
he said, explaining the new age philosophy behind A Course in Miracles,
"by everybody adopting this view that 'we're all one because we're all
god, we need to come together, we need to be in unity.'
"And the only people who are going to hinder that are
the people who are saying, 'No, we're not God. Jesus Christ is our Lord
and Savior.'
Internet evangelist Bill Keller, appearing on Fox News
Channel's Cavuto Report, echoed Smith's warnings, calling Oprah the queen
of the new age gurus. "These new age teachings are really sucking in millions
of people to these false philosophies, these false theologies, and they're
literally leading people to Hell," Keller said. "Oprah, whether she knows
it or not, is really being a conduit to lead people to Hell."