Home Pastors Articles for Pastors A Not-So “New” Age: The Church of Oprah-Wan Kenobi

A Not-So “New” Age: The Church of Oprah-Wan Kenobi

Much of her guidance is deeply Christian and highly commendable, pulling from her Baptist upbringing.

In her book, The Gospel According to Oprah, Marcia Nelson outlines some of the orthodox and laudable aspects of Oprah’s spirituality, including the themes of forgiveness and generosity, self-examination, gratitude and community.

But there’s more to her spirituality than a few broad, generic Christian themes.

It increasingly reflects currents of thought embodied by such authors as Deepak Chopra, Marianne Williamson and, most recently, Eckhart Tolle, whose book A New Earth has seen nearly 5 million shipped with the Oprah seal on the front, thanks to a series of 10 “live” Monday night web seminars featuring Tolle and Winfrey on Oprah’s website. So popular were the webcasts that the first night brought down the server when more than 500,000 people tried to log on, and now millions have downloaded or streamed the first class.

So what are people learning?

As Tolle writes in the foreword to his book Stillness Speaks, his thinking “can be seen as a revival for the present age of the oldest form of recorded spiritual teaching: the sutras of ancient India.”

Translation? Hinduism.

Or as he packages it, an eclectic gathering of gleanings from Hinduism, Buddhism and watered-down Christianity.

Result? A fresh presentation of what was once called the New Age Movement, which tends to have four basic ideas:

The first is, “All is one, and one is all.”

Which means, of course, “God is all, and all is God.” Which also means. “I am God.” In his book The Power of Now, Tolle writes he doesn’t like to use the word “God,” or to talk about finding God, because it implies an entity other than you or me.

The second major belief is that since most people don’t realize they are God, they need to be enlightened.

This enlightenment can flow from many sources, including “spirit-channeling.” Marianne Williamson, a frequent guest of Oprah’s, garnered her first bestseller—A Return to Love—by popularizing A Course in Miracles, which the author claimed was dictated by a spirit voice that he says was Jesus but not Jesus of Nazareth.

The third major belief is everything is relative.

What Tolle advocates, and what has been advocated by many of Oprah’s guests, is that the truth is simply within you. Tolle writes, “The Truth is inseparable from who you are … you are the truth.” In fact, he distorts Jesus’ famous statement, “I am the way, the truth and the life,” by claiming what Jesus meant was that He was His own truth, just like we can be our own truth.