Another Joel Osteen Biography

[ This information is from Christnotes.org. ]

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.

In addition to Lakewood’s growth and incredible spiritual impact on the city of Houston, Joel Osteen’s television ministry has also experienced exponential growth. Joel’s television program is available to over 225 million people in America alone, and that number is regularly increasing. As a response to Joel Osten’s incredible growth and popularity, in July 2004, Joel Osteen Ministries began traveling to cities across America and holding “An Evening With Joel Osteen.” As the Joel Osteen tour has swept across America, he has again presented the message of love, hope, and encouragement found in Jesus Christ.

Thousands have accepted Christ as Savior and thousands more have recommitted their lives to Christ as a result of “An Evening With Joel Osteen.” Even more impressive is the fact that in 2003 alone, over 18,000 people walked down the isles of Lakewood to publicly accept Christ as Savior or rededicated their lives to Christ.

Joel Osteen's first book, Your Best Life Now, was released in late 2004 and contains seven steps to living at your full potential.

Christ Notes is not affiliated with or sponsored by Joel Osteen Ministries or Lakewood Church. For the official website of those organizations, see: www.joelosteen.com and www.lakewood.cc.

Joel Osteen Biography

[ A Wikipedia from Answers.com]

Joel Osteen

Joel Osteen is the pastor of Lakewood Church in Houston, Texas, North America’s largest church, averaging around 25,060 weekly attendees in 2004.1 Lakewood was founded on Mother’s Day 1959 by Joel’s parents, John and Dodie Osteen. The first meeting was held in an abandoned feed store. John Osteen once said, “Great it is to dream the dream, when you stand in youth by the starry stream. But a greater thing is to fight life through, and say at the end, the dream is true.”

The elder Osteen developed Lakewood into a body of approximately 6,000 members with an active television ministry, crusades, conferences, missionary support and food distribution. He died of a heart attack in 1999. Having produced his father's television program for years, Joel Osteen (who had never received formal religious training) succeeded him. Adopting the slogan Discover the Champion in You, by fall 2004 Lakewood was holding six weekly services in a 7,800 seat sanctuary.

After a process involving much litigation, in late 2003 Lakewood Church acquired Compaq Center (former home of the NBA’s Houston Rockets). Following over 85 million dollars in renovation it become the Lakewood International Center, with 16,000 seats for Lakewood’s services and a media department for Joel Osteen Ministries.

Osteen lives in the Houston area with his wife Victoria and two children, Jonathan and Alexandra. Critics have decried his lifestyle as "lavish" pointing to the fact that he lives in a house valued at over $1 million. Supporters however say that his income is largely the result of his book sales and state that he declined to take his 2005 annual salary of $174,000 as pastor of the church in order to use the money for other ministries. They also point to the church's charity work, particulary during the aftermath of Tropical Storm Allison. For example, according to Lakewood, the church donated over 1 million dollars to flood victims in one year alone.

Osteen is associated with the Word of faith movement in charismatic protestantism.

Thousands Gather to Celebrate Megachurch

[ Here's an article about Joel Osteen's Lakewood Church moving into the Compaq Center. ]

By KRISTIE RIEKEN
The Associated Press
Sunday, July 17, 2005; 5:21 PM
---------------------------------------
HOUSTON -- America's largest church celebrated its move into the former arena for the Houston Rockets with a capacity crowd of 16,000, an upbeat sermon from its televangelist pastor and a spirited welcome from the governor of Texas.

"How do you like our new home?" Lakewood Church pastor Joel Osteen asked to thunderous applause. "It looks pretty good doesn't it? This is a dream come true."

[ Lakewood Church members photo here. ]

Members of the Lakewood Church along with first time visitors worship Saturday, July 16, 2005 at the grand opening of the new facility in Houston. The Lakewood Church, led by televangelist and best-selling author, Joel Osteen, officially opened the doors of the new building, formerly the Compaq Center, home of the Houston Rockets. The Lakewood Church Central Campus took 15 months and approximately $75 million to complete and will seat 16,000 people. (AP Photo/Jessica Kourkounis) (Jessica Kourkounis - AP)

The new home for the nondenominational Christian church is the former Compaq Center, once home to the Rockets.

There were no vacant spots in the arena as Lakewood, which recently became the first church in the United States to average more than 30,000 worshippers weekly, held its first service there Saturday night. The service also was televised live.

Gov. Rick Perry praised the church's new look and told the crowd, "As lawmakers we do a lot of things, but only the church can teach people to love.

"This is nothing short of amazing," Perry said. "It is so great to look across this crowd and see the wonderful diversity of this great state we call Texas."

It took more than 15 months and $75 million to complete the renovations _ which included adding five stories to make more room.

"I couldn't believe how beautiful it was," Osteen said afterward when asked to describe how he felt when he first entered what he called the "Texas-sized" sanctuary. "It almost felt surreal."

Video clips playing on three gigantic screens showcased the building and recounted the history of the church. One video recalled the church's humble beginnings in an abandoned feed store in 1959 and traced Osteen's rise to the pulpit after his father and church founder, John Osteen, died 40 years later.

Osteen took over the church in 1999 and has increased the size of the congregation almost five-fold since then. His book, "Your Best Life Now: 7 Steps to Living Your Full Potential" has sold almost 3 million copies.

The service was highlighted by a 25-minute sermon by Osteen, who told the crowd that he and his wife, Victoria, went on their first date in the arena 19 years ago.

The crowd roared with approval throughout the message and was often brought to its feet as Osteen spoke in front of a large golden-colored globe that rotated slowly.

Members of the choir swayed happily, belting out several different songs below pictures of a crisp blue sky with puffy white clouds.

While collection plates were passed, video messages from people around the world, including Pastor T.D. Jakes of the Potter's House in Dallas, welcomed Lakewood to its new location.

"It is overwhelming, unbelievable, fantastic," Ann Bell, one of the church's original members, said after the service. "Words can't even describe it."

___

Click here for the Washington Post article.

Selling God A Lucrative Business

[ Excerpt from the CBS news site, June 28, 2005. Some good stats on Joel Osteen's Lakewood Church -- congregation size, weekly attendance, growth, etc. ]

(CBS) ...

Joel Osteen is pastor of Lakewood Church, the largest evangelical church in America with 30,000 weekly attendants. With a TV ministry, it's watched in at least 100 countries.

His production staff and studio rival any network. As CBS News Correspondent Byron Pitts reports, Osteen looks like an anchorman, talks like a Southern salesman and runs this congregation like a CEO.

Asked if it's part message and part marketing, Osteen says: "To me, we're marketing hope."

And hope sells. Last year, Lakewood brought in $55 million. Sales of Osteen's book "Your Best Life Now" became an instant best seller. But he makes no apologies for his style or his success.

"We need to be excellent for the Lord," says Osteen. "There's nothing that says we can't come in and have great sound and great lighting and be on time and have this service more produced if you'll call it that, because, you know what, God deserves the best."

After being diagnosed with a rare form of breast cancer, Nada Couture was drawn to Osteen's church for spiritual healing.

"It speaks to a lot of young people and a message that world needs to hear today," says Couture. "Not a preaching at you message, but a preaching with you thing."

And preaching to the young is something evangelicals across the country have mastered by offering everything from Christian-themed parks to rock bands.

Critics like Notre Dame sociology professor Michael Emerson say it cheapens religion by making it just another commodity for people to consume. They call it "feel-good theology."

"Religion changes to nothing more than 'make me feel good,' and there's no sacrifice," says Emerson.

That's not how they see it at Lakewood.

"The Bible says it's the goodness of God that leads people to repentance, and you know the more we preach hope and that God is good for you, the more people we will see come and get their lives turned around," says Osteen.

If Osteen's Lakewood Church is the Cadillac of all mega churches, then this new facility will be the Hummer. It's the old Compaq Center where the Houston Rockets played professional basketball and where Osteen hopes to soon save souls.

It's a $90 million facility that will seat 16,000 people, double the current space. Osteen sees a day when up to 100,000 will stop in for weekly services.

"It's the same message that people were preaching hundreds and hundreds of years ago, we're just repackaging it," he says.

Osteen says it's a new day, and God's people need a new house.

For the full Joel Osteen story with pictures.

‘The Smiling Preacher’ Builds on Large Following

[ Here's an article from earlier this year on Joel. ]

Washington Post, USA
Jan. 30, 2005
Lois Romano, Washington Post Staff Writer
www.washingtonpost.com
---------------------------------
HOUSTON -- The pastor once startled his own mother by exhorting the women in his congregation to shop at Victoria's Secret to improve their marriages. Last weekend, his glamorous musical director led four services in a hot pink coat and black spiky boots, stomping around the stage and singing the praises of Jesus in rousing, original rock sounds.

No one needed to know the words. The lyrics scrolled high above, across three gigantic screens, as a dynamic 10-piece orchestra and 100-person choir shook the church. The captivated flock of 8,000 stood singing for 30 minutes.

And then, not unlike in a Las Vegas production, the stars of this show bounded up to the pulpit of Lakewood Church. Pastor Joel Osteen and his wife, Victoria, were greeted like royalty.

Osteen is called "the Smiling Preacher," and he is perhaps the hottest commodity in the world of multimedia religion these days. His is the new face of Christianity, upbeat and contemporary, media-smart with a heightened sense of entertainment and general appeal.

The charismatic, nondenominational church he inherited from his late father six years ago has quadrupled in size, and today is the largest and fastest-growing in the country, welcoming upward of 30,000 visitors a week, according to Church Growth Today, a research center that follows church trends. Osteen's television broadcast is shown in every U.S. market, reaching 95 percent of the nation's households, and in 150 countries.

This summer, he will move his church into Houston's 16,000-seat Compaq Center, former home of pro basketball's Houston Rockets. The $92 million renovation is, Osteen says, "a leap of faith" that if he builds it, they will come.

All this from a man who dropped out of Oral Roberts University after one year and never received formal theological training -- although he does note that religion is the family business and he benefited greatly from on-the-job training. (He was ordained through his father's church in 1983.)

Osteen, 41, does not sweat or yell, or cry for sinners to repent. He preaches an energetic, New Age gospel of hope and self-help -- simple Scripture-based motivational messages, notably devoid of politics and hot-button policy issues.
Marketing Word-Faith Theology
Word-Faith theology is a collection of un-biblical and extra-biblical teachings - usually with an extra focus on money (How to get more by either 'speaking it into existence' or by donating it to Word-Faith teachers)

Word-Faith teachings

The Leaven of Lakewood

Joel Osteen's Word-Faith theology documented

Christian Capitalism : Megachurches, Megabusinesses

"You'll never be what you ought to be if you play it safe," he told his audience last weekend. "I want to challenge you today to get out of your comfort zone."

He was impeccably dressed in a navy pinstripe suit, crisp white shirt and gleaming black dress shoes. He aims to present himself as neutral as possible, he says, in order not to offend or generate controversy. If he thinks he looks too emotional as he edits a tape of his service for television broadcast, he cuts the segment out. "I don't want to give anyone a reason to flip it off," he said.

The crowds he attracts in Houston come away inspired. "He pushes us to a level God wants us to be at," said Juli Hain, who attends regularly. "He kicks us in the rear to take steps that will take us to a higher [personal] level."

Osteen's approach to religion and his goals are not totally new. For at least a decade, shrewd preachers have been attracting tens of thousands of people to nondenominational "mega-churches," where the faithful are unknown to their pastor, as are the people in the next pew. They come to listen to messages of self-empowerment -- not just salvation.

"Joel is doing it better than most," said William Martin, a sociology professor and religion expert at Rice University. "He is purposely seeking to lower the barriers that keep people from going to church. They don't know the hymns; they don't have to learn the creed. It's all there for them."

Detractors criticize the style as "Christian-lite" -- all show and platitudes and no theological depth. Osteen's older brother Paul, a surgeon who left his practice to help the church, differs. "There is a disconnect between religion and what people need," he said, calling some sermons in traditional churches impenetrable, "almost goofy."

"What people want is an unchurch," Paul Osteen said. "They don't want pressure. Joel makes faith practical and relevant."

Joel Osteen has been likened to Billy Graham in terms of appeal, if not message. At any given service, his church is filled with people of diverse races and economic backgrounds. His book, "Your Best Life Now: 7 Steps to Living at Your Full Potential," has sold 1.5 million copies. (Because of the royalties, Osteen will not take his $200,000 church salary this year, he said.)

During his few forays outside of Houston last year, he filled New York's Madison Square Garden twice, and had to turn 4,000 people away in Atlanta. This year, he will visit 15 cities. An appearance in Dallas next month is sold out. (The $10 tickets cover costs and are not a moneymaker, Osteen said.) Tapes of his sermons are for sale.

"For a long time, churches beat people down," he said during an interview in his home office. "People are looking for inspiration and encouragement. So many negative voices are pulling us down during the week. People respond when you tell them there is a great future in front of you, you can leave your past behind."

His goal, he said, he is to "get beyond the church walls . . . I want to reach the guys in the high-rise, the people in the neighborhoods . . . the people who are not quite comfortable with their faith."

The pitch for money is quick and low-key, usually made by Victoria Osteen in a less than two-minute appeal before the buckets are passed. Osteen does not solicit offerings on television. "We're not on television to beg people for money," he said. "Television is an outreach."

He is unapologetic that he lives well in a $1 million house in an upscale neighborhood and that he is pouring the church's offerings into the Compaq Center these days, not into charities.

"I feel like God wants us to prosper," he said. "My dad grew up in the Depression. . . . It is not God's will for anybody to live where you can't support your family. . . . [Houston Astros pitcher] Roger Clemens just signed for $18 million -- man, don't tell me I can't have a nice house and send my kids to college."

Osteen said if the church "had that vow-of-poverty mentality, I don't know if we could raise $80 million" for the Compaq Center.

Osteen acknowledged that the church has cut back on its charitable giving because of the Compaq project. He said that this is the "season" for establishing the church and building his base.

The services are surprisingly intimate considering the size of the congregation. People who need a special prayer are invited up front to counsel with a "prayer partner" -- which could be a member of the Osteen family or a volunteer trained for the job. Behind them stand more volunteers holding boxes of Kleenex.

At last week's service, one man asked Osteen to bless his marriage, another came up with his children, who wept as the father told of losing his job. Others talked of illness and death. Later, Osteen stood in the lobby and greeted congregates who wanted to shake his hand or get an autograph -- or just a hug. At least half a dozen people said they saw him on television and he changed their lives.

Laurie Beppler, whose first visit to the church was last weekend, said she watches Osteen on television regularly because "he tells us that with God, we can be empowered. He doesn't get bogged down."

Jodee Schallehn said she was up late, unable to sleep on the eve of her wedding last year, when she caught Osteen preaching while channel surfing. "I had been married before, and he was talking about not letting the past [impede] the future," she said. "I believe God gave me a sign . . . I was very inspired."

The church service and the meet-and-greet are the only opportunities his followers have to get close to Osteen. Unlike his father, Osteen does not perform weddings or funerals. He avoids sickbeds and doesn't do personal counseling. For those needs, the church employs another 60 ministers. Members said that is fine.

"I'm not here to meet the pastor; I'm here to meet God," said Pam Hall, 47, who has been coming to Lakewood for 15 years but who acknowledged that Osteen does not know her name. "He is a great inspiration to me."

Osteen and his wife say there are just so many hours in the day and his time has to be reserved for his calling: the sermons. "The truth is, if someone says I want to be counseled by Joel Osteen, my first thing is to say get the tapes, read his book," said Victoria Osteen, who is a major part of each service. "It's not like he's got a secret he's not telling us."

Lakewood Church was founded in 1959 in an abandoned feed store in Houston, after John Osteen was booted out of the Baptist Church for speaking in tongues and advocating God's healing powers. His church was popular, and grew steadily, until it had a congregation of about 6,000, televised services and a $10 million budget when he died in 1999.

Joel Osteen, the fourth of five children, was considered by his family the least likely to follow his father to the pulpit, as he happily worked for 17 years behind the scenes on the television ministry. He said his father asked him to preach on the Sunday before he passed away. Osteen said it was clear to him shortly thereafter he had been "called" to succeed his father.

Since taking over the ministry in 1999, Osteen has created a little city at Lakewood, increasing the budget to $50 million, adding three major services, and creating a burgeoning community of youth groups, singles socials, and home groups organized by Zip code, so members can meet. There is also a Spanish-speaking service.

Osteen's self-effacing, shy demeanor belies a keen eye for the theatrical value of a church service and an absolute belief in what he is doing. Seven professional cameras pan the cavernous church, recording every tear of joy, every note of music, every religious utterance. Through aggressive marketing and purchasing, Osteen's sermon is broadcast on network affiliates in the top 30 U.S. markets, including Washington, and on major nonreligious cable networks nationally and internationally, such as BET, PAX and the Discovery Channel.

The church is run by the Osteen family and a cadre of 4,000 volunteers, 1,200 of whom are needed for each service. It is a tightly organized Sunday operation at which ushers looking like Secret Service agents wear earpieces and microphones and manage to get 6,000 to 8,000 people to their seats quickly. Parents are able to check their infants and toddlers at the door with volunteer caregivers. They are given a numbered token, and if there is a problem with their child, the token number flashes on the big screen during the service.

Indicating his priorities, Osteen's first hire was the music director, Cindy Cruse-Ratcliff. She and songwriter Israel Houghton create all the original music for the service. "I just think we're in a society these days that we're so distracted or busy. . . . It's harder to hold people's attention," Osteen said. "We try to package the whole service -- I hate to use the word production or show."

He knows that some people just come for the music. And that is a good thing, he said. Whatever gets them in the door.

Research editor Lucy Shackelford contributed to this report.