Christianity Today
 
 
 
The Story Behind Trump’s Controversial Prayer Partner
What Paula White’s Washington moment implies for the  prosperity gospel’s 
future.
Kate Shellnutt/ JANUARY 19,  2017

 
Donald Trump discovered Paula White the  same way legions of fans and 
followers did: on television. 
Fifteen years of prayer, visits, and friendship later, the Florida  
preacher now serves as the top spiritual adviser for America’s president-elect  
and, essentially, his guide to the country’s religious conservatives. 
Her behind-the-scenes counsel became news as Trump prepared for the  
presidency. It was White who arranged a _meeting_ 
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EQ18exdhR6I)  at the Trump Tower for fellow  
televangelists (including 
Kenneth and Gloria Copeland, David Jeremiah, and Jan  Crouch) to anoint him in 
prayer back in 2015. She defended the sincerity of his  faith to fellow 
Christians, and continues to network Trump with members of  his _evangelical  
advisory board_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2016/june-web-only/whos-who-of-trumps-tremendous-faith-advisors.html)
  to discuss  appointments and 
policy going into office. 
“I’m the bridge-builder,” said White, pastor of New Destiny Christian  
Center near Orlando, in an interview with Christianity  Today. “It really, 
truly is the board and the wisdom of so many great men  and women of God.” 
But White’s involvement carries _major_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2006/april/9.34.html)  _baggage_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2009/february/2.12.html) ,  especially for 
evangelical leaders who have for 
years lamented the endlessly  positive health and wealth theology associated 
with her ministry (_even  doing so in rap_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/gleanings/2013/april/reformed-rapper-calls-out-12-popular-pastors-as-false.html
) ). Critical voices within the church worry that White’s  political 
prominence will push the _prosperity  gospel_ 
(https://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/topics/p/prosperity-gospel/)  
mainstream—or prove  that it’s _already  
there_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2013/august-web-only/prosperity-gospel-is-surprisingly-mainstream.html)
 . 
“The massive congregations and television and Internet audiences that  
people like Joel Osteen, Creflo Dollar, Paula White, T. D. Jakes, and others  
enjoy show us that this theology is already mainstream,” said Leah Payne, who  
directs the Center for Pentecostal-Charismatic Theology Practice at George 
Fox  University. “I don't know that Paula White's position will normalize 
these  teachings any more or less than they already are.” 
While such preachers regularly make their way onto Oprah and CNN,  they aren
’t typical broad-appeal picks for a political event such as the  
inauguration, Payne said. White, who _will  pray alongside five other clergy_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/gleanings/2016/december/who-will-pray-at-trump-inau
guration-franklin-graham.html) , even told CT there’s “a possibility” of  
her assuming an official role in his administration. 
As Kate Bowler, the Duke University researcher and author of _Blessed:  A 
History of the American Prosperity Gospel_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2013/august-web-only/prosperity-gospel-is-surprisingly-mainstream.html)
 , 
told _ThinkProgress_ 
(https://thinkprogress.org/an-ultra-capitalist-christian-sect-is-taking-center-stage-at-the-rnc-thanks-to-donald-trump-39d8ce323288
#.f05uwx8du) :  “This is the culmination of several decades of building 
political capital within  the prosperity gospel movement. This is a new 
political moment for the  prosperity gospel .” 
 
(http://ai.christianitytoday.com/cti/adclick/FCID=40939/random=41480858/viewid=827817/site=ctmag&area=readermode&category=&status=&keyword=ProsperityGo
spel,PoliticsandCurrentAffairs&platform=/position=nav_1&size=300x250,600x250
) 
White recognizes the significance of her role at Friday’s  inauguration: a 
reading and invocation lasting about two to three minutes. 
“I’ve really been seeking God and asking the Lord for wisdom through  his 
Word and to guide me and lead me because this is a huge responsibility,”  
said White, who has looked to her staff, family, and fellow board members like 
 Southern Baptist pastor Jack Graham for assistance. “As I’m doing this, it
’s not  just myself. I’ve sought my spiritual covering from those who 
mentor me.” 
A leading critic, Michael Horton, theology professor at Westminster  
Seminary, _warned_ 
(https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/acts-of-faith/wp/2017/01/03/evangelicals-should-be-deeply-troubled-by-donald-trumps-attempt-to-mainstre
am-heresy/?utm_term=.ced69fd91e98)  in The  Washington Post that White’s  
role in Trump’s inauguration and administration should “deeply trouble” 
American  evangelicals. 
“You’d be hard-pressed to see someone like Jerry Falwell and Billy  Graham 
cozying up to Paula White. The lines are being blurred with their sons,”  
Horton told CT. Jerry Falwell Jr. was one of Trump’s earliest evangelical 
_endorsements_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/gleanings/2016/january/jerry-falwell-jr-donald-trump-evangelicals-liberty-universi.html)
 ,  and Franklin 
Graham will also be speaking at his inauguration. 
“I think that people like White and Osteen are able to tone down the  
heretical aspects of the Word of Faith teaching,” he said. “But make no 
mistake: 
 the toxic doctrines are there.” 
A movement within Pentecostalism, Word of Faith emphasizes positivity  and 
prosperity; it’s often summarized by outsiders as “name it and claim it.”  
Horton considers elements of this approach to religion to be “part of the  
American DNA.” 
“We’re all pretty good people who, with the right data, inspiration,  and 
technology, can be and do whatever we want,” he said, describing the modern  
American worldview. “So when _Kenneth  Hagin_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2003/septemberweb-only/9-22-11.0.html) , 
Kenneth Copeland, and other 
Word of Faith teachers created a whole  theology for the ‘prosperity gospel,
’ there was already a big audience.” 
White resists the negative characterizations of the prosperity gospel  
movement. “There’s a perception … that the prosperity gospel means that you ask 
 for money and promise people they’re going to get something in return, 
which I  absolutely do not do,” she told CT. “Do I believe that God is some 
sugar daddy  or Santa Claus? Absolutely no.” 
This month, she _invited_ (http://paulawhite.org/firstfruits)  followers to 
“sow a month’s pay, a  week’s pay … a day’s pay” as an annual first 
fruits offering to start 2017,  saying: “It is a seed for the harvest I am 
believing for in the coming year. And  God always provides!” 
 
(http://ai.christianitytoday.com/cti/adclick/FCID=41109/random=41480858/viewid=827817/site=ctmag&area=readermode&category=&status=&keyword=ProsperityGo
spel,PoliticsandCurrentAffairs&platform=/position=nav_2&size=300x250) 
White, who leads a majority African American congregation, found  herself 
once again explaining her beliefs following sharply worded concerns  during 
the election cycle from conservative Trump detractors, including Southern  
Baptist Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission president _Russell  Moore_ 
(https://twitter.com/drmoore/status/747803028661669888?lang=en)  and 
conservative radio  host _Erick  Erickson_ 
(http://theresurgent.com/an-actual-trinity-denying-heretic-will-pray-at-trumps-inauguration/)
 . 
“I know you label me a heretic, a prosperity preacher. Have you ever  asked 
me? Have you listened to 100 sermons? Have you really read?” said White,  
who _came  to faith_ 
(http://www1.cbn.com/700club/turning-trash-treasure-testimony-paula-white)  at 
18 after years of  abuse following her father’s 
suicide. 
“Yes, there are things my 50-year-old self would never do or say that  my 
20-year-old self did,” she told CT. “That doesn’t mean my 20-year-old self  
was that doctrinally off, [but] I’ve never denied the Trinity.” 
While most inauguration picks elicit some level of controversy, the  
theological back-and-forth over White reveals a divide even within the 
tradition  
she is portrayed to represent. 
“White is a lightning rod in Pentecostal and evangelical circles,”  said 
Payne, whose research focuses on women within Pentecostalism. “But that  
seems in step with many of Trump’s choices for advisers—religious or  otherwise.
” 
Prior to making headlines with Trump, White was associated with  mentor 
Jakes—at one time_known  for_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/gleanings/2012/january/td-jakes-embraces-doctrine-of-trinity-moves-away-from.html)
  
advocating Jesus-only or  “Oneness” Pentecostalism—and with a group of flush 
televangelists _investigated_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/topics/g/chuck-grassley/)  for financial 
mismanagement by a US  Senate committee. 
In some ways, White has gotten used to the criticism. After spending  a 
majority of her career in high-profile ministry, the 50-year-old has defended  
her teachings, relationships, finances, and faith for decades. 
She and ex-husband Randy White grew Tampa’s Without Walls  International 
Church into a_prominent  megachurch_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2006/april/9.34.html)  in the years  
leading up to their 2007 _divorce_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2007/october/12.18.html) .  Their 
separation 
coincided with news reports alleging they took advantage of  congregants’ 
generosity to pad their lush lifestyle, _including_ 
(http://www.religionnewsblog.com/18404/paula-white)  a $2.1 million waterfront 
mansion and a  $3.5 
million Trump Tower condo in New York. The church halved in attendance  and 
_faced_ (http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2009/january/4.15.html)  
_foreclosure_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2013/november/church-foreclosure-bankruptcy-bonds-new-risky-bet.html)
 ,  though White _returned  to leadership_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/women/2009/july/building-up-without-walls.h
tml) . 
“I know there are people who believe in the prosperity gospel. As  someone 
who covered religion for 30-plus years, I can tell you there aren’t a  lot 
of good stories in the end,” said Michelle Bearden, the former Tampa  Tribune 
reporter who  investigated the Whites’ ministry. “Because they had 
charisma and charm and  these great backstories, _people_ 
(http://www.tbo.com/news/widow-pastors-reneged-on-deal-to-care-for-me-192387)  
were mesmerized and 
sucked into  it.” 
 
(http://ai.christianitytoday.com/cti/adclick/FCID=44258/random=41480858/viewid=827817/site=ctmag&area=readermode&category=&status=&keyword=ProsperityGo
spel,PoliticsandCurrentAffairs&platform=/position=nav_2&size=300x250) 
White has reiterated that the inquiry into her ministry launched by  Iowa 
Republican senator Chuck Grassley from 2007 to 2011 _never  found any 
wrongdoing_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/gleanings/2011/january/grassley-investigation-ends-with-no-penalty-for.html)
 . 
Bearden pointed out that officials were unable to obtain adequate  
financial documentation to complete their investigation. “They never got full  
financial disclosure from the Whites,” she said. “I think they ran out of  
steam.
” 
Grassley ended up _handing  over_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/gleanings/2011/january/grassley-asks-ecfa-to-lead-independent-inquiry.html)
  the 
accountability effort  to the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability 
(ECFA), whose  commission _recommended  no new laws_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/gleanings/2012/december/long-running-investigation-of-televangeli
sts-prompts-no.html) , favoring better enforcement of existing laws. 
The ECFA sets forth responsible _stewardship standards_ 
(http://www.ecfa.org/content/standards) ; among  them, the agency requires that 
organizations 
establish “reasonable expectations”  for donors; avoid manipulating 
potential donors with misleading statements; and  make a reasonable effort to 
ensure 
their giving doesn’t place them in financial  hardship. 
In a statement issued in early January, White assured fellow  Christians 
that she rejects “any theology that doesn’t affirm or acknowledge the  
entirety of scriptural teaching about God’s presence and blessing in suffering  
as 
much as in times of prosperity.” 
She knows quite a bit about the former, describing 2007 as the year  “all 
hell broke lose” for her personally and professionally. 
“The greatest blessing of my life is that God loved me enough to  reduce me 
to Christ,” said White in her interview with CT. In the years after,  she 
moved on to New Destiny and got remarried, to Journey songwriter Jonathan  
Cain. 
White brought up how God uses people “in the marketplace, in the  White 
House, wherever.” She said she has seen how Trump approaches the oath of  
office he will take Friday as something “very holy and very sacred.” 
“My interest is God and people,” she said, laughing at where her  
unexpected friendship with the billionaire businessman had led her. “If he uses 
 
that in the realm of politics, then I believe that is the fulfillment of the  
church.” 
Leading up to the inauguration, Nicola Menzie—founder of _Faithfully  
Magazine_ 
(https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/faithfullymag/faithfully-magazine-celebrating-christians-of-colo)
 , which reports on Christians of color—
_described_ 
(https://medium.com/@namenzie/how-paula-white-donald-trumps-spiritual-adviser-harms-christians-of-color-3f7835af479d#.8gk1pxr03)
  how the “seed”
 model used by White and  others tends to harm African American congregants 
in particular. 
 
(http://ai.christianitytoday.com/cti/adclick/FCID=40955/random=41480858/viewid=827817/site=ctmag&area=readermode&category=&status=&keyword=ProsperityGo
spel,PoliticsandCurrentAffairs&platform=/position=nav_2&size=300x250) 
“Her consistent abuse of Scripture to solicit specific donation  amounts 
from supporters is beyond troubling,” said Menzie, noting how White’s  emails 
have pulled from numbers in the Bible to suggest donation amounts ($229  to 
represent 1 Chronicles 22:9, for example). 
“Do I believe that God is involved in my finances? Absolutely,” White  
told CT, “because I honor God with a tithe. I worship God with an offering. 
“I don’t get it all. That doesn’t mean that God is going to give me  this 
much. He is whatever supply I need.” 
White’s recent statement also addressed concerns over her theological  
beliefs about God, saying: 
I believe and have always believed in the exclusivity and divinity  of 
Jesus Christ, his saving grace and substitutionary atonement made available  to 
all by his death on the cross. I believe and have always believed that he  
was buried and on the third day rose again. I believe and have always 
believed  in the Holy Trinity. I believe and have always believed in the virgin 
birth,  and the second coming.
“Words like Jesus, sin, grace, atonement, salvation,  and Trinity are just 
slogans,” said Horton to CT in  response. “You have to see how [White] and 
other Word of Faith teachers  interpret them within their distorted 
framework.” 
White sees herself growing in faith, and stands by her statement. “We  all 
go from glory to glory. I look at my life and think of all the people the  
Lord has brought into my life over the years,” she said. “Every time, God’s  
saying, ‘I want to take you deeper. I want to show your more.’ Revelation 
is  always progressive.” 
According to Menzie, part of the Christian life is reckoning with the  
disconnect, big or small, between what we say we believe, what we strive for,  
and what we do, “I would not focus alone on what White or any Christian 
minister  says, especially if they say all the right things,” she said. “What 
we 
do while  standing on that Christian confession should also be examined.” 
White said she worries that continued claims of heresy and false  teaching 
that bubble up against her online only reflect poorly on the body of  
Christ. 
“We are all to be one church, one bride,” she said. “If you really  
believe that I am a heretic, if you really believe that, there’s a biblical  
responsibility to come to me … and that’s never  happened.”

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