The article below was sent to me by a friend of mine who lives in Denver. It demonstrates the ‘many paths to God’ heresy common to New Age and is becoming accepted by some who call themselves ‘evangelical Christians’.
TORKELSON: New Mile Hi sanctuary: Idea becomes reality
By Jean Torkelson, Rocky Mountain News
Monday, April 7, 2008
A vision, dressed head-to-toe in blazing, squint-your-eyes-white, glided up the steps of Mile Hi Church in Lakewood. Barbara McGhee was trying to match the energy of the new $10 million sanctuary. It opened Sunday, six years to the day the idea was launched.
“I just had a thing this morning – I felt new and clean and white,” said McGhee, 60. She wore a white crochet cap over her shaved head, a beaded Indian pendant on her chest, giant hoop earrings and a long, white cotton dress. The ensemble reflected her American Indian heritage and her rapport with “Wiccan” nature religions.
McGhee might have looked less conventional than everybody else, but she still reflected the eclectic spirit of Mile Hi. It draws from the teachings of many religions and mixes in the possibility-thinking of the self-help movement. At its core is religious science, which champions the mind as the manifestation of the divine.
You could say Sunday celebrated the victory of the mind over what mattered – turning the “vision” of 2002 into reality.
“My heart is so full today it’s almost beyond words – but don’t worry, I’ll find some,” said the senior minister, the Rev. Roger Teel, drawing laughs from the packed auditorium. The church has 1,500 newly-minted seats that were filled for three services.
Teel attended this church as a kid and became its leader in 1993. Under his guidance it’s become the largest U.S. church in the 80-year-old religious science movement, which is now called the United Centers for Spiritual Living. This July, Denver will become the center of the entire organization when the church moves its headquarters here from Los Angeles.
“This God of ours,” Teel boomed, “is not a passionless God but throws itself into creation with mighty abandon!”
A fitting description, that, of Mile Hi’s success. It opened in 1959, holding its first services in a vacuum cleaner store. In 1973 it built the distinctive landmark at Alameda and Garrison, often called “the flying saucer.” That’s now dwarfed by the new, pantheon-shaped, state-of-the-art sanctuary, which will welcome regular guest speakers and self-help icons such as Deepak Chopra, Wayne Dyer and Marianne Williamson.
“I tried some conventional churches where the church was lovely, but the message wasn’t,” said Tom Cauch, a house-flipper, who came with his 9-year-old grandson, Shean. “There, they talked about guilt and fear. Here, they talk about our endless possibilities.”
“The first time I ever walked into this church I felt I was loved,” said longtime member Janet Day.
Ditto for McGhee, a former hospice worker who, years ago, shaved her head to show solidarity with a cancer patient. She then dropped 158 pounds and mustered the courage to be herself:
“It’s all about this church,” she said. “You can do whatever you set your mind to.”
I pray it does not. – B4B
Wow…
That’s one amazing article….
I noticed this quote (in speaking about “regular” churches):
I seem to remember that the first thing the first couple did after they wer conscious of their sin was ‘run away’ – try to hide from God – a rather pointless endeavor, wouldn’t you say?
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This really makes my heart heavy.
Yet for as bad as a place like the Mile Hi Church is, I am even more concerned about those churches where the Gospel was once preached in it’s purest form but now it has been corrupted by a luke-warm, passive, feel-good version of it’s former self.
2 Timothy 4:3: For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear.
Even so, come quickly, Lord Jesus
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Amen to your comment, my brother! Many have had to adapt or risk closure because of so many ‘itchy eared’ folks leaving. I can feel their pain. Then again it’s Jesus who builds the true church. You can’t shut down churches built by the Master builder.
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It is so absurd, it reads like a farce, like something on TomintheBox. so sad.
I cannot say strongly enough how much I appreciate what and how you are saying things here, that is, the whole blog.
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Good Morning, Jason!
I don’t know anything about TomintheBox, so I’ll take your word for it. And thank you for your kind words and encouragement. I’m just a small voice among many who are tired of ‘self-centered’ instead of God-centered church. Some have been in the blogosphere fighting for truth for a long time. I was silent for too long, even where I saw deceptive, me-first, feel-good Christianity creeping in. I even eagerly swallowed some of the lies.
And you know, that we have divinity within us is the oldest one in the book. Didn’t the serpent ask the woman, “don’t you want to be like God?”
Have a great and blessed day!
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