He is someone who claims to be able to heal people, but 60 minutes exposed him as a hoax. He is always on TBN asking for money. He is an out of control TV preacher.
2006-12-12 15:08:57
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answer #1
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answered by Future Citizen of Forvik 7
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Besides being a televangelist, Benny Hinn, is a major preacher of the Word-Faith movement, and is considered unorthodox even by Protestant standards. Among his claims are the idea that each of the three Persons of the Trinity has a "spirit body" as well as another component. This was supposedly revealed to him by the Holy Spirit, and in a broadcast interview following this "revelation" he described the "contents" of the Trinity by saying "There's nine of them"- meaning three Persons who each have three internal components, something incompatible with God's attribute of simplicity, meaning that he has no parts.
2006-12-12 23:13:52
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Born (Jewish by mother's bloodline) sweep that under the rug, you're not suppose to know he's Jewish., he'll do anything to cover it up..............later he converted to Christianity, and became a minister to scam people out of money. Benny Hinn was born in 1953 in Israel to a Greek father and an Armenian mother. THIS is what's written on many websites.
Now, if you know the history of Israel during 1953........it was the end of WWII. He was born just in the coastal city of Jaffa in Israel in 1952. His real name is Toufik Benedictus Hinn.
Prodominately, Jews entered Israel..... no one wanted to mix with them....GREEK and ARMENIAN people as well. The Israelis had just settled again… and they were not mixing well with any of the neighboring nations- such as Egypt and Syria etc…etc…. Only Cyprus. As a matter of Fact, Israel had refrained from supporting that Cyprus keep relations with Greece. Cyprus and Greece got along.
Now what kind of sense does it make for non-Jewish people to reside in Israel during that time and for what reason? Why would any Greek person want to leave their beautiful islands to live in conflict? How could Benny Hinn possibly have had parents from either of these places?
Not only is he ashamed of his family lineage but he is a sad example to what a real believer of ANY GOD should represent. I know…..I’m harsh about this one.
2006-12-12 23:10:59
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Benny Hinn is a decieved person who believes that the Holy Spirit is leading him and his ministry. He is in the middle of a mess, with a demon spirit decieving him and many people through him. He is a television healing evangelists who holds crusades across the world. He is well known for throwing his coat on people and they being cast down in a supposed, "slain in the Holy Spirit" action.
2006-12-12 23:10:25
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answer #4
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answered by Felicitas 3
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Benny Hinn, is an evangelical Christian on TV. He is very charismatic and demonstrates healing powers. It is a matter of personal opinion what you think of him. I am a more conservative Christian and find it a bit too showy for me. Christian should be drawing attention to Jesus and not themselves.
2006-12-12 23:45:13
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answer #5
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answered by angel 7
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Benny Hinn is a very wealthy TV evangelist who pretends to have powerful contact with God, and says that God uses him to heal people. He manipulates people through their emotions, and they give him lots of money. In reality, he is a scam artist who takes advantage of gullible people.
Here is more information about him:
2006-12-12 23:10:43
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answer #6
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answered by SB 7
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Benny Hinn was born on December 3, 1952 in Tel Aviv, Israel, to a Greek father, and Armenian mother. He was raised within the Greek Orthodox Church, and attended Georges Vanier High School in Toronto, Canada. He states that his father was the mayor of Jaffa, and that as a child, he was socially isolated and handicapped by a severe stammer, but was nonetheless a first-class student These claims, however, have been disputed by some of his critics.
He has written that in December 1973 he traveled by charter bus from Toronto to Pittsburgh to attend a "miracle service" conducted by evangelist Kathryn Kuhlman. Although he never met her personally, he often attended her “healing services” and has often cited her as an influence in his life.
He founded the Orlando Christian Center in 1983. During its heyday the church averaged over 10,000 in attendance[citation needed]. In 1999, he handed the church (by the time renamed to the World Outreach Center) to Clint Brown and moved to Grapevine, Texas, a suburb of Fort Worth, while maintaining the legal entity “World Outreach Center Benny Hinn Ministries”[
He is married to Suzanne Harthern and lives in Redonda, California.
[edit] Ministry and theology
Benny Hinn is well known for his flamboyant, highly theatrical and often controversial style of ministry, at which members of the congregation and the choir are frequently "slain in the Spirit" en masse, and apparent healings of medical conditions, whether Lou Gehrig's disease, AIDS, arthritis or cancer, are televised from the stage.
He hosts a thirty-minute show, This Is Your Day, on various Christian television networks, including Trinity Broadcasting Network, Daystar Television Network, Revelation TV, and The God Channel. He also organizes regular "Miracle Crusades" – revival meeting/faith healing summits that are usually held in large stadiums in major cities.
His teaching is similar in many respects to the Word of Faith doctrine, with a particular emphasis on healing.
2006-12-12 23:10:50
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answer #7
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answered by ? 6
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Benny Hill alter-ego
2006-12-12 23:08:38
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answer #8
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answered by me 2
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He's a tv evangelist with the gift of "healing". He blows on people and makes them fall over and then asks for really big offerings.
2006-12-12 23:21:18
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answer #9
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answered by Annmaree 5
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You mean Benny Hill?
2006-12-12 23:08:01
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answer #10
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answered by Jerse 3
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