Posted on 07/10/2004 5:58:17 PM PDT by Pikamax
How one man's gospel tale became a global bestseller
You've probably never heard of him, but a man in the loud shirt is well on the way to being the world's most influential churchman. Paul Harris reports from Lake Forest, California
Sunday July 11, 2004 The Observer
For one of the most powerful religious figures in America, Pastor Rick Warren looks very casual. Wearing a blue Hawaiian shirt and loafers, he puts his feet up on his office table and cracks a broad grin. 'If I didn't believe in Jesus, I would be a millionaire with a yacht, sitting in the sun on my own island,' he laughs. 'But instead I am a pastor.' Warren, dubbed 'America's pastor' by the media, has written one of the biggest-selling books of all time, generating tens of millions of dollars. He heads one of America's five largest 'mega-churches' and runs a religious network that spans the globe. If his religion were a business, then Warren would be a Wall Street mogul.
His influence is growing all the time. He now plans to deliver a copy of his religious self-help tract, The Purpose-Driven Life, to every US soldier serving in Iraq. 'Copies are already hitting the sand,' Warren said. He is also preparing a trip to Britain next year when he will headline a meeting of the Baptist World Alliance in Birmingham alongside former President Jimmy Carter.
Yet Warren is not a household name. He has crept under the media radar while building his religious empire. He has been a guest at the White House, he ministers privately to some of the most important figures in American industry and was instrumental in helping market Mel Gibson's controversial religious blockbuster, The Passion of the Christ .
The Purpose-Driven Life has sold a staggering 20 million copies worldwide. It is, Warren says, selling a million a month. 'If you took Bill Clinton's book, Hillary Clinton's book, the latest Harry Potter and the Da Vinci Code and added them together, you still would not get the same as The Purpose-Driven Life ,' he boasted.
But he turns down many requests for interviews and refuses to appear on television. 'I am America's stealth pastor,' he told The Observer in his first interview with a British newspaper.
Warren sits in a spacious office on the 'campus' of his Saddleback Church in the prosperous Lake Forest suburb of Orange County. He is on a mission that stretches far beyond Saddleback, far beyond America even. That mission is world domination. 'We need a billion footsoldiers,' he said 'If you love Jesus, we are on the same team.'
America's pastor works through a global network of churches which have participated in his '40 Days of Purpose' campaign, an activist programme that goes along with Warren's book. In Britain alone, more than 1,000 churches have already taken part. To that can be added 1,500 in the Philippines, 400 in Singapore and many hundreds across the world. In total, more than 15,000 churches in dozens of countries have carried out the programme. They span all denominations. 'They can be Catholic, Free Church, Lutheran, Methodist, whatever. We don't put a sign up. You won't know they are in our network,' Warren says.
Added to that is Warren's enormous network of pastors who have received training through his classes or internet site. He has now trained 300,000 pastors across the globe. Some 125,000 of them get his weekly email that includes his latest sermon, which they then can deliver to their congregations.
Warren's family has preaching in its blood. His father is a minister and his great-grandfather was a follower of famous 19th Century English evangelist Charles Spurgeon and came to America as a travelling preacher. Warren grew up in the small town of Redwood Valley in California. At High School his real passion was politics. However, while attending a Christian summer camp as a lifeguard he became inspired to join the church for life. He left for a Baptist seminary in Texas.
After college, Warren says, he and his young wife Kay decided that God was calling them to come back to California. They abandoned their desire to become overseas missionaries and spent their last 1,000 dollars on a U-Haul in which to pack their belongings and moved themselves to Orange County to found Saddleback Church, which now boasts huge car parks and a series of 'park and ride' buses to shuttle worshippers to Sunday services in a sprawling complex of buildings.
Each weekend more than 19,000 turn up to hear Warren preach, attending one of five venues on the landscaped site. Saddleback looks more like a corporate headquarters than a church. It has modern offices, a cafe, outdoor theatres and an artificial hill on top of which are three wooden crosses, standing above a re-creation of Jesus's cave-like tomb.
Warren proudly tells of a visit he recently made to a poor township near Johannesburg in South Africa. He was instantly recognised by the pastor of a small church. 'I was amazed. I said, "You don't even have electricity. How do you know who I am?"' The South African pastor told him that each week he went to the local post office, where a government programme had installed internet access, and downloaded Warren's latest missive before delivering it to his flock.
Warren's use of the internet and his focus on pastors rather than congregations has allowed him to bypass the media on his rise to the top. 'I looked at TV and didn't like what I saw. I didn't want to be a tele-evangelist. It was not authentic,' he said.
The book takes the shape of 40 biblical lessons to be considered at a rate of one a day, and promises its readers a spiritual journey that will change their lives. Just like Warren's conversation, it is peppered with biblical quotations. Its message is clear: its readers must become completely dedicated to God. The book's now famous opening line simply states: 'It's not about you.'
Its religious basis, just like Warren's, is that of a strictly fundamentalist Christian. The book makes no attempt to disguise Warren's belief in the book of Genesis, Noah's Ark and the existence of Hell. Warren also believes in the end of the world as described in Revelations. When it comes to such matters of faith, he suddenly takes on a serious tone. 'I accept the Bible as the word of God. I do believe the Bible is literally true. I believe the stories in it actually happened.'
Such a book was not an obvious bestseller, not even in America's Bible belt. But the book has now been on the New York Times bestseller list for almost two years.Warren gives away 90 per cent of his earnings to Saddleback, living on the remaining 10 per cent. 'I still drive a Ford,' he said.
The book and its language have now entered the American mainstream. Attending the unveiling of her portrait in the White House a few weeks ago, Hillary Clinton referred to 'a purpose-driven life' in her speech.
Warren also ministers privately to many influential political people in the capital in both parties, though he won't reveal their names. 'I don't touch politics. I deal with their personal matters,' he said.
He admits he has met President Bush. 'I have been to the Oval Office a couple of times,' he said. Others include figures from business, entertainment and international politics, including two senior members of the European Union and a smattering of African presidents. Warren also worked closely with Mel Gibson to promote The Passion of the Christ, hosting a preview screening at Saddleback that was beamed to thousands of evangelicals on satellite television and included a long interview with Gibson.
And the man who inspired it all is looking far beyond simply enlarging Saddleback. This autumn Warren will roll out his sequel to the 40 Days of Purpose campaign. Called 40 Days of Community, it will involve 15,000 churches which have completed the previous programme. It will send activists into their community to carry out tasks such as feeding the homeless. At the same time, an expected 10,000 more churches are expected to sign up for a re-run of 40 Days of Purpose. 'For me, the 1980s were about establishing us locally. Then the next decade was establishing us nationally. Now we have to go global,' Warren said.
Warren will soon be a stealth pastor no more. 'I never wanted to be a celebrity,' he said. But his huge influence and his church's enormous wealth are putting an end to that. 'I guess I can't really hide away any more,' he said.
The word according to Rick
Don't argue with the Devil He's better at arguing than you are, having had thousands of years to practise. You can't bluff Satan with logic or your opinion, but you can use the weapon that makes him tremble - the truth of God. This is why memorising scripture is essential to defeating temptation. If you have no Bible verses memorised, you've got no bullets in your gun!
Love now, not tomorrow Why is now the best time to express love? Because you don't know how long you will have the opportunity. Circumstances change. People die. Children grow up. You have no guarantee of tomorrow. If you want to express love, you had better do it now.
Always love God, even when he seems distant God is real, no matter how you feel. It is easy to worship God when things are going great in your life but circumstances are not always pleasant. The deepest level of worship is praising God in spite of pain.
Jesus cures death If you have a relationship with God through Jesus, you don't need to fear death. It is the door to eternity. It will be the last hour of your time on earth, but it won't be the last of you. Rather than being the end of your life, it will be your birthday into eternal life.
Care for unbelievers God has never made a person he didn't love. Everybody matters to him. When Jesus stretched his arms wide out on the cross, he was saying: 'I love you this much!' Whenever you feel apathetic about your mission in the world, spend some time thinking about what Jesus did for you on the cross. We must care about unbelievers because God does. God leaves no choice.
I would encourage you, if you are seeking the truth about Rick Warren and this phenomenon in the church, to go to Deception in the Church. com. Click on Articles or do a
search. There is a plethora of information. Caution, you will be entering the "no spin zone". The philosophy, theology(lack, thereof) and shallowness of this movement is truly sad.
Yet Warren is not a household name.
Maybe in yur house, but here in flyover land....
He has crept under the media radar while building his religious empire.
Shocking! Given how normally the media does just a good job of covering religion.
(note: that's what's known as sarcasm)
I went throught the 40 Days of Purpose meetings and read the book faithfully. Personally, I found it to be the best Bible study I have ever seen. I don't have alot of scriptures memorized and would honestly have to classify myself as a "babe in Christ". This book varified all the things I had been taught ALL MY LIFE and it backed up ALL statements with not just one reference to scripture, but several references. I believe that Rick Warren's book will help me grow in the word of God and become a better Chrisian. I plan to keep this book for life and use it as a reference book for questions that I have. I consider it to be a "how to" book on Christian living. I heartily recommend it.
The first Disciple study covers every book in the Bible, takes 9 months to complete and meets every week.
One good thing I can say about the Methodist church.
I also took Disciple II; now they have 4 or 5 additional Bible studies in the series.
Could you explain what you think "real teaching" might entail. please?
I am curious as to how you dislike these words.
The host and three other Lutheran pastors discuss the book and its Scriptural implications and interpretations in a roundtable format...very enlightening for those who would take this book as an amazing gospel tool.
Well, there's a little justifiable hyperbole there. By no means is 40 Days without error. On more than one occasion I would read something and it would strike me as unsupported or questionable. But that is to be expected of a book written by a man.
Taken with the appropriate grain of salt, though, I still think it is an interesting and useful introduction to a Christian life.
Jesus matde it clear to the perfect rich man who upheld the law to sell all he owned and follow Him. But there is none righteous among us, is there? No, just some who make a business of religion by writing "feel good" books on a 3rd grade level.
Oh were it so easy that we could all just turn to one human being for an infallible interpretation of God's word
Oh we do -- He was fully human.
Christ told us how we should live and that is in the Bible. He tolds us we should not profit from God; he said we should love God more than even our parents and our neighbors like ourselves. Is there a single person on earth who can claim that -- or do you think Mr. Warren's has turned people into true believers of this kind? Do you love your neighbor as thyself? Do you love your God more than your mother, father, wife child? None of us does! Is there a single one of you "1st century apostles" ready to sell what you have and devote your life to preaching Christ's message? It's all "feel good" religion that makes good money and is easy to follow. Being a Christian is not easy. Do you fast?
You want to read good books? There were many people who write much better than Warren's 3rd grade stuff. I wholeheartedly suggest a giant like St. John of Damascus. He lived in the 8th century AD. Read and compare. It's all about God and not about us.
Let me ask you: is the Bible sufficient or not? Yes or no.
Trying to reach God through logic/reason is the Western approach, as if God were comprehensible and subject to our logic. You are better off figuring out what God is not than what He is.
God bless.
alpha worte:
"GREAT ARTICLE!
does anyone have pastor warrens web site?"
Here:
http://www.saddleback.com
http://www.purposedrivenlife.com
http://www.pastors.com
Just asnwer me if the Bible is sufficient. Yes or no.
Are you saying the Bible is not sufficient?
It confirmed my belief about this new age, pro UN, thinkset that currently has turned main stream churches into nothing more than business fronts that lead the seekers away from the True Word of God...
THANKS. Much appreciated.
If you REALLY think
he doesn't have a high and proper respect and place for JESUS, THE CROSS, A BIBLICAL VIEW OF SIN and hell,
THEN
I think you don't have a clue about the man and his heart felt, vividly lived-out priorities, values and Biblical standards.
I guess being
'absolutely sold out to God'
is insufficient, for you.
AMEN! AMEN! AMEN!
I never have enjoyed haughty pharisaical attitudes nor, usually, the denominations where they seem to particularly reign supreme.
They are plenty abundant in every denomination!
If you think
JESUS, THE CHRIST, OUR LORD, THE KING OF KINGS . . .
IS NOT BEHIND THIS MAN'S WORK WHOLESALE,
then I think your senses are blunted, blind or very confused
or the synapses which make sense out of your sense are confused.
He is clearly sold out to Jesus and doing Jesus' work with every cell and fiber of his being. He's not in it for the money and he's clearly reaching 100's of thousands that you would never reach.
Try throwing rocks at him when you look God the Father in the eye!
Please see my reply to # 18 above.
Sigh.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.