joel osteen

Historic Night Caps Week of Success for Joel Osteen

::By Eric Young|Christian Post Reporter :: Nearly 42,000 people filled the seats at the new Yankee stadium in New York this past weekend and they weren’t there to watch baseball.

They were there to listen to an uplifting message from the pastor of America’s largest church – Lakewood Church’s Joel Osteen.

During the first non-baseball event at the newly opened stadium, Osteen delivered the same message that has made him one of the most watched pastors in America and also the author of two bestselling books.

Throughout the evening, Osteen encouraged attendees to “magnify God” and not their problems, to live each day in faith and not discouragement, to give God praise first even when things are bad, and to get their hopes up.

“You can’t have faith ‘til you first have hope,” he exhorted.

Aside from marking a first for the new Yankee stadium, Saturday night marked a first for Osteen, who didn’t go searching for his biggest venue to date but was contacted by the Yankees baseball organization to preach there Saturday.

In addition to Saturday’s “Historic Night of Hope,” Osteen was invited last week to join members of the New York City Council, community leaders, and clergy in the Bronx for a Luncheon of Hope to kick off the week.

For the event, Osteen had formed an exclusive partnership with the Trinity Broadcasting Network, which broadcasted Saturday night’s event around the globe. With more than 90 percent national coverage, TBN touts itself as the most watched and most requested faith-based channel in the United States and the world leader in faith-based broadcasting.

In less than two weeks, Osteen will be marking 50 years since his church in Houston was founded by his father, John Osteen, a former Southern Baptist pastor who later became charismatic. Osteen succeeded his father in 1999, more than eight months after the elder Osteen died of a heart attack.

Though Osteen has been praised by many for his uplifting messages and popular bestsellers, the charismatic minister has also received much criticism for his lack of formal theological training and for preaching what critics call the “prosperity gospel,” a belief that prosperity and success – particularly financial – is a sign of God’s favor.

Osteen, however, insists that his theology is not “dangerous,” as some say it is, and that God has used him to turn people’s lives around and to give them hope.

Aside from the 38,000 churchgoers that Osteen draws each week to his 16,000-seat church – previously the arena of the Houston Rockets – up to seven million Americans each week and more than 20 million each month reportedly view Osteen’s weekly sermon, which is broadcast into television markets across the United States.