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LARRY KING, CNN HOST: Tonight, Joel
Osteen, evangelism's hottest rising
star, pastor for the biggest
congregation in the United States. He
literally filled the shoes of his late
father who founded the church, and wait
until you hear what he had to overcome
to do it. Pastor Joel Osteen is here for
the hour. We'll take your calls. It's
next on LARRY KING LIVE.
Joel Osteen is the author of the number
one "New York Times"
best-seller, "Your Best Life
Now." There you see its cover.
"Seven Steps to Living at Your Full
Potential." There is now a
compendium been published called
"Your Best Life Now Journal,"
a guide to reaching that full potential.
Joel Osteen is pastor of Lakewood Church
in Houston, Texas. His father before
him. He has been called the smiling
preacher. We met.
JOEL OSTEEN, EVANGELIST: Yes.
KING: Long ago with your father.
OSTEEN: We did. We met at a charity
event for the Heart Association down
there with Dr. DeBakey, I believe, or
Dr. Cooley (ph).
KING: Dr. Cooley -- about seven, eight
years ago.
OSTEEN: You were my dad's favorite. And
you were sitting up at the table and I
said, I didn't know any better then. I
said, daddy, let's go, I'll introduce
you to him. Like I knew you or
something. And I did. It just made his
day. We didn't meet for 10 seconds, but
he loved you.
KING: Why are you a preacher?
OSTEEN: You know, I never was for 17
years. I worked with my dad there at the
church. He tried to get me to minister.
I didn't have it in me. I worked behind
the scenes. I loved doing production and
things. But when my father died, I just
knew -- I don't know how to explain it,
it sounds kind of odd, but I just knew
down to here I was supposed to step up
to the plate and pastor the church. And
it was odd because I had never preached
before. But I just knew I was supposed
to do it.
KING: Did it come easily?
OSTEEN: It did. It came -- it came
somewhat easily. I had to study. I was
nervous. Still get nervous. But it did.
I believe God gives you the grace to do
what you need to do. And the great thing
about it is the people were so loyal to
my father. They wanted one of his sons
to take over. And daddy had never really
necessarily raised anybody up under him.
KING: What do the other sons do?
OSTEEN: Well, my brother Paul is a
surgeon and he works with us there at
the church. He gave up his practice to
work with us and I have other sisters
and brothers that work, as well.
KING: Is -- have you always believed?
OSTEEN: I have always believed. I grew
up, you know, my parents were a good
Christian people. They showed us love in
the home. My parents were the same in
the pulpit as they were at home. I think
that's where a lot of preachers' kids
get off base sometimes. Because they
don't see the same things at both
places. But I've always believed. I saw
it through my parents. And I just grew
up believing.
KING: But you're not fire and brimstone,
right? You're not pound the decks and
hell and dam nation?
OSTEEN: No. That's not me. It's never
been me. I've always been an encourager
at heart. And when I took over from my
father he came from the Southern Baptist
background and back 40, 50 years ago
there was a lot more of that. But, you
know, I just -- I don't believe in that.
I don't believe -- maybe it was for a
time. But I don't have it in my heart to
condemn people. I'm there to encourage
them. I see myself more as a coach, as a
motivator to help them experience the
life God has for us.
KING: But don't you think if people
don't believe as you believe, they're
somehow condemned?
OSTEEN: You know, I think that happens
in our society. But I try not to do
that. I tell people all the time,
preached a couple Sundays about it. I'm
for everybody. You may not agree with
me, but to me it's not my job to try to
straighten everybody out. The Gospel
called the good news. My message is a
message of hope, that's God's for you.
You can live a good life no matter
what's happened to you. And so I don't
know. I know there is condemnation but I
don't feel that's my place.
KING: You've been criticized for that,
haven't you?
OSTEEN: I have. I have. Because I don't
know.
KING: Good news guy, right?
OSTEEN: Yeah. But you know what? It's
just in me. I search my heart and I
think, God, is this what I'm supposed to
do? I made a decision when my father
died, you know what? I'm going to be who
I feel like I'm supposed to be. And if
it doesn't work, it doesn't work. Not
the end of the world if I'm not the
pastor …
KING: Where were you ordained? OSTEEN: I
was ordained from the church there,
Lakewood, under my dad's ministry.
KING: So you didn't go to seminary?
OSTEEN: No, sir, I didn't.
KING: They can just make you a minister?
OSTEEN: You can, you can.
KING: That's kind of an easy way in.
OSTEEN: Yeah, but I think it happens
more than you think. But I didn't go to
seminary. I have a lot of great friends
that did. But I didn't. But I did study
17 years under my dad. You know …
KING: Are you a pastor? A reverend?
Legally what are you?
OSTEEN: I'm a reverend and a pastor. A
pastor of the church. I go by usually
pastor.
KING: You can marry people?
OSTEEN: Yes, sir.
KING: So the church in a sense ordained
you?
OSTEEN: Right. And then you're ordained
through the State of Texas.
KING: How'd it grow so much?
OSTEEN: I don't know, Larry. I don't
know if there was one thing. I think
part of it was my dad had such a great
foundation. Then all of a sudden here
comes somebody 40 years younger, just
new energy. New life. You know. I think
one thing is my dad had a television
ministry to start with. So all of a
sudden here I was 36 years old and I was
on television. Well, most young men that
age, they're building a congregation and
it costs a lot of money to be on
television and all that. So all of a
sudden there was a young minister across
America. So I don't know if it's part of
that. I think part of it is the message
of hope and that I'm for people.
KING: You're nondenominational?
OSTEEN: We are, we are.
KING: Your father, though, was …
OSTEEN: He was Southern Baptist. But he
left that way back in the early '60s.
And then he just started Lakewood
Church. And we've always been
independent and just for everybody.
KING: Many evangelists feel that the
church, the church itself, the religion,
has failed. You share that view? OSTEEN:
Well, I think in a sense when you see
certain things in society you would
think that. But in another sense I see
faith in America. Faith in the world. At
an all-time high today. When I was
growing up it was a big deal to have a
church of 1,000. Now there's churches of
10,000. So many of them. So I think in
one sense I can agree with that point.
But in another sense I see a real
spiritual awakening taking place.
KING: How many people come to your
church?
OSTEEN: We have about 30,000 each
weekend.
KING: How do you hold them?
OSTEEN: We have multiple services. It
holds 8,000. But we're about to move
into a new facility. But we just do a
lot of services.
KING: You work all day Sunday?
OSTEEN: We do. And Saturday. We do one
Saturday night and then four -- three
Sunday and one Spanish. So it's a lot of
work.
KING: You write all your own?
OSTEEN: I do. I do all my own research
and do all my own service.
KING: And when are you on television?
OSTEEN: We're on different times. We're
in the top 25 markets on one of the
network stations.
KING: Sundays usually?
OSTEEN: Yes, sir. Usually Sundays.
KING: Are you asking for money?
OSTEEN: We never have. Never have. Since
my dad started. I started a television
ministry for my father back in '83. That
was one decision we made. We just don't
ask for money. We never have, we never
will. You know, it's -- I don't
criticize people that do. Some of them
have to. But I just, I don't want
anything to pull away from the message.
KING: How do you get the money to get
the time on television?
OSTEEN: The church supports it.
KING: How does the church get the money?
OSTEEN: Well, they just give. There are
just a lot of them, they're faithful,
they're loyal people, they believe in
giving. And the other thing too, what's
interesting, Larry, we don't ask for
money on television. But people see your
heart. People send in money like you
wouldn't imagine to underwrite it. KING:
Really? Without your ever saying order
this medal?
OSTEEN: Exactly. It's a testament to,
you know, I think if people can see your
heart is right. I'm certainly not the
only one. But I don't get on there and
beg for money. People send it in. You'd
be amazed.
KING: Do you think there's too much of
that, send in this, my new book is out?
OSTEEN: I think in general there
probably is. Because people are so
skeptical anyway. Why are you on there?
You just want my money. We just try to
stay away from it. I don't know if there
is or not. To me sometimes I think, you
know. I would -- I think people get on
and they have to make the television
audience underwrite it. And then they
spend their time doing that.
KING: So it's self-fulfilling. Billy
Graham was here last Thursday.
OSTEEN: I saw.
KING: Might have been his last
interview. Is he a hero to the
evangelists?
OSTEEN: He is a hero to us all. His life
of integrity. Somebody that can stick
with for that long and just stick with
his message. What I love about Dr.
Graham is he stayed on course. He didn't
get sidetracked. That's what happens to
so many people today. It's a good lesson
for me, a good example for me to say,
you know what, Joel, you may have a lot
now but I want to be here 40 years from
now sitting with you.
KING: Do you share Billy's beliefs of
life after death in a sense of going
somewhere?
OSTEEN: I do. I do. We probably agree on
99 percent. I do. I believe there's a
heaven you know. Afterwards, there's,
you know, a place called hell. And I
believe it's when we have a relationship
with God and his son Jesus and that's
what the Bible teaches us. I believe it.
KING: Our guest is Joel Osteen. The
senior pastor for Lakewood Church in
Houston, the author of "Your Best
Life Now," amazing bestseller.
We'll be right back.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OSTEEN: See people are watching you.
Especially your children. They're taking
in every single thing you do. They are
like video cameras with legs. And they
are always in the record mode. They
learn more from what you do than from
what you say. Like that old saying, I'd
rather see a sermon than hear one anyday.
And when you are tempted to compromise
and just take the easy way out, I
challenge you to think generationally.
Know that every right choice you make
you are making it a little bit easier on
those that come after you.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
KING: Our guest, Joel Osteen. Why do you
think "Your Best Life Now" did
as well as it did?
OSTEEN: It surprised me.
KING: There's a lot of books about
improving yourself.
OSTEEN: Yeah. I don't know. I think
coming from the Christian base, and I
think the fact that I don't know, it's a
book of encouragement and inspiration.
And to me it seems like there's so much
pulling us down in our society today.
There's so much negative. Most of my
book is about how you can live a good
life today in spite of all that. So I
think that had a big part of it.
KING: But it doesn't quote a lot of
biblical passages until the back of the
book, right?
OSTEEN: It doesn't do a whole lot of it.
My message, I wanted to reach the
mainstream. We've reached the church
audience. So I just try to, what I do is
just try to teach practical principles.
I may not bring the scripture in until
the end of my sermon and i might feel
bad about that. Here's the thought. I
talked yesterday about living to give.
That's what a life should be about. I
brought in at the end about some of the
scriptures that talk about that. But
same principal in the book.
KING: Is it hard to lead a Christian
life?
OSTEEN: I don't think it's that hard. To
me it's fun. We have joy and happiness.
Our family -- I don't feel like that at
all. I'm not trying to follow a set of
rules and stuff. I'm just living my
life.
KING: But you have rules, don't you?
OSTEEN: We do have rules. But the main
rule to me is to honor God with your
life. To life a life of integrity. Not
be selfish. You know, help others. But
that's really the essence of the
Christian faith.
KING: That we live in deeds?
OSTEEN: I don't know. What do you mean
by that?
KING: Because we've had ministers on who
said, your record don't count. You
either believe in Christ or you don't.
If you believe in Christ, you are, you
are going to heaven. And if you don't no
matter what you've done in your life,
you ain't.
OSTEEN: Yeah, I don't know. There's
probably a balance between. I believe
you have to know Christ. But I think
that if you know Christ, if you're a
believer in God, you're going to have
some good works. I think it's a cop-out
to say I'm a Christian but I don't ever
do anything …
KING: What if you're Jewish or Muslim,
you don't accept Christ at all?
OSTEEN: You know, I'm very careful about
saying who would and wouldn't go to
heaven. I don't know …
KING: If you believe you have to believe
in Christ? They're wrong, aren't they?
OSTEEN: Well, I don't know if I believe
they're wrong. I believe here's what the
Bible teaches and from the Christian
faith this is what I believe. But I just
think that only God with judge a
person's heart. I spent a lot of time in
India with my father. I don't know all
about their religion. But I know they
love God. And I don't know. I've seen
their sincerity. So I don't know. I know
for me, and what the Bible teaches, I
want to have a relationship with Jesus.
KING: The Senate apologized last week
for slavery. You think the Southern
Baptists and a lot of the churches in
the South owe some apology, too?
OSTEEN: I've never thought about it.
Because I just didn't -- wasn't raised
in it.
KING: But you know its history.
OSTEEN: Oh, absolutely. I think that it
would never hurt; anything we could do
to make amends, the better it can be.
That's what I love about our church.
It's made up of all different races.
That's what life should all be about.
That's what God wants it to be.
KING: Doesn't it hurt you that people 50
years ago talking about God and Christ
also didn't -- Martin Luther King call
11:00 a.m. Sunday morning the most
segregated hour in America? Does it
bother you to know that predecessors of
yours …
OSTEEN: Yeah, absolutely bothers me.
It's not right. It's a shame, and I
don't know how they could do it with a
pure heart to God but, you know what? It
happened.
KING: I want to get to the seven steps.
But when the people call you cotton
candy theology. Someone said you're very
good but there's no spiritual
nourishment. I don't know what that
means …
OSTEEN: I think, I hear it meaning a lot
of different things. One I think a lot
of it is that I'm not condemning people.
And I don't know, but Larry I talk, I
mean every week in our church we're
dealing with people that are fighting
cancer, that have their lost loved ones.
That are going through a divorce. I
mean, I talk about those issues, and to
me I don't see how it can get any more,
you know, real than that. So I don't
know what the criticism is.
KING: What is the prosperity gospel?
OSTEEN: I think the prosperity gospel in
general is -- well I don't know. I hear
it too. I don't know. I think what
sometimes you see is it's just all about
money. That's not what I believe. It's
the attitude of your heart, and so you
know, we believe -- but I do believe
this, that God wants us to be blessed.
He wants us to be able to send our kids
to college, excel in our careers. But
prosperity to me, Larry, is not just
money, it's having health. What good is
money if you don't have health?
KING: Also many in the Christian belief
are wary of too much material, aren't
they?
OSTEEN: Yeah, I think some of them are.
But to me, you know, I hope people get
blessed if they can handle it right.
Because it takes money to do good. You
know to do things for people. To spread
the good news. So I think it's all a
matter of your heart.
KING: You think other preachers are
envious of you?
OSTEEN: If they are, I don't feel it.
I've got so many good friends. And the
ones I know are encouraging me. I don't
hear anything but good things from them.
I hope they're not. Because we're all in
it together.
KING: You want to do this the rest of
your life?
OSTEEN: I do. I do. I know it's what I'm
called to do. I feel like this is why I
was born. Even though I never dreamed
I'd be doing it. But I know now I never
dreamed I'd be able to get to help
people like this. I never dreamed it was
in me. I didn't know I could get up to
speak in front of people and impact
people's lives. I didn't know I could do
that. I was shy.
KING: We'll get to those seven steps in
a minute. We'll be taking your calls, as
well. Don't go away.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OSTEEN: And our attitude should be, I
refuse to dwell on the negative things
that have happened to me. I'm not going
to go around thinking about all that
I've lost. I'm not going to focus on
what could have been or should have
done. No, I'm going to draw the line in
the sand. This is a new day and I'm
going to start moving forward knowing
that God has a bright future in store
for me. If you do that, God will give
you a new beginning.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
KING: We're back with Joel Osteen. The
book "Your Best Life Now" a
major bestseller. "Seven steps to
living at your full potential." The
new one "Your Best Life Now, A
Journal." It's a guide for the
earlier book, right? You used it as a
compendium, in a sense. OSTEEN: That's
exactly right. It's just something to
put your notes in. Kind of help you get
along there.
KING: Don't you ever doubt?
OSTEEN: No. I don't -- I wouldn't say
that I do. I guess I do and I don't
think about it too much.
KING: Well, 9/11.
OSTEEN: Well, yeah.
KING: Didn't you say what? Why?
OSTEEN: You do. You definitely do.
KING: And how do you answer?
OSTEEN: To me it comes back and God's
given us all our own free will. And it's
a shame but people choose …
KING: The people in the building didn't
have free will.
OSTEEN: But the thing is, people can
choose to do evil with that will. And
that's what's unfortunate. But you know,
of course you always doubt. I mean, you
have to override it. But we see in the
church every week, somebody's coming up
and my baby was not born properly and
you know, all these other things. You
just …
KING: But don't you want to know, why
would an omnipotent -- assuming he is
omnipotent -- God permit that?
OSTEEN: I don't know, Larry. I don't
know it all.
KING: A deformed baby had nothing to do
with free will.
OSTEEN: Exactly. I don't claim to know
it all. I just think that trusting God
means we're going to have unanswered
questions and God is so much bigger than
us we're never going to understand them
all. And I tell people that have lost a
child or that have gone through some
kind of tragedy, you've got to have a
file in your mind called and I don't
understand it file. And you've got to
put it in there and not try to figure it
out and not let it ruin the rest of your
life and not get bitter. And that's what
we see so many people do.
KING: But you're not asking for blind
faith. Don't you want people to
question?
OSTEEN: Oh, I do. I think you do at a
certain point. But I don't think you can
let something ruin -- I've seen too many
people angry at God and they live the
rest of their life that way. You've got
to say God, I don't understand why this
happened to me but I'm going to move on.
The worst thing we can do is wallow
around in self- pity. I talk in the
book, too, about letting go of the past.
I know it's hard. I'm making it sound
easy, it's not. But sometimes you've got
to say I don't understand it. We were
all praying for my dad. He was 77 when
he died. You'd think we've got a church
full of people praying but I don't know.
It was probably his time to go,
obviously. But I don't understand until
(ph) some of the others.
KING: Do you ever involve politics in
the sermons?
OSTEEN: Never do. My father never …
KING: Never mention President Bush?
OSTEEN: Well, only to pray. Only to
pray. We prayed for President Bush,
Clinton, all of them. But I've never
been political. My father hasn't. I
just, I have no …
KING: How about issues that the church
has feelings about? Abortion? Same-sex
marriages?
OSTEEN: Yeah. You know what, Larry? I
don't go there. I just …
KING: You have thoughts, though.
OSTEEN: I have thoughts. I just, you
know, I don't think that a same-sex
marriage is the way God intended it to
be. I don't think abortion is the best.
I think there are other, you know, a
better way to live your life. But I'm
not going to condemn those people. I
tell them all the time our church is
open for everybody.
KING: You don't call them sinners?
OSTEEN: I don't.
KING: Is that a word you don't use?
OSTEEN: I don't use it. I never thought
about it. But I probably don't. But most
people already know what they're doing
wrong. When I get them to church I want
to tell them that you can change. There
can be a difference in your life. So I
don't go down the road of condemning.
KING: You believe in the Bible
literally?
OSTEEN: I do, I do.
KING: Noah had an ark and Adam and Eve?
OSTEEN: I do. I do. I believe that. I
believe it all.
KING: Isn't it hard to accept that one
day appeared two people and they ate an
apple and …
OSTEEN: It is. But it's also hard, too,
to look at our bodies and say, my
brother's a surgeon, how could our
bodies be made like this? We couldn't
have just come from something. It's just
hard, when my child was born I thought
seeing him in the little sonogram I
thought look at that. He's got eyes. How
is that developing? It's just, I don't
know. I look at it like that.
KING: The book describes seven steps to
living at full potential. I want to ask
you about -- Choose to be happy. Now,
how the heck do you do that?
OSTEEN: Well, I think, Larry. It's just
an attitude we've got to get up and make
a decision every single day. I mean,
what so many people today do, they focus
on what they don't have instead of what
they do have. They focus on what's wrong
instead of what's right. And I believe
that all of us, if we want to, can be
happy right where we are. We may not be
laughing our heads off but we can get up
and say, you know what, I'm in a tough
situation, but this is where God has me
and I'm going to make the most of it.
And I think that that's where so many of
us miss it today. We're waiting to be
happy one day.
KING: How about the Eastern philosophy
that says you're not entitled to today.
Today is a gift. So -- it doesn't matter
if it's raining. It's a beautiful gift
today.
OSTEEN: I've not heard it. But I'd
degree with it.
KING: You aren't entitled to today.
OSTEEN: Well, that's right. It's a gift
God gave us. What if we weren't here? To
me, I say it all the time, every day we
live negative and discouraged and
unhappy, that's a day we've wasted. And
I'm not going to waste you know, just
because I don't get my way or something
happens.
KING: Another seven steps -- one of the
seven steps is live to give, charity is,
in the Talmud, the greatest thing of
all.
OSTEEN: Yeah. I believe it is. I believe
that's the whole spirit of Christianity
is, you know, having a lifestyle of
giving. Not giving at Christmas, not
giving every once in awhile but having
an attitude to give. I've always said
this, if you'll get up and make it your
business to make somebody else's day,
God will make your own day.
KING: I love to give.
OSTEEN: I know.
KING: Giving is selfish. You get a great
reward.
OSTEEN: I know, you really do. That's
what life is all about. We were not made
to be ingrown. I believe, maybe I'm off.
But that's probably 95 percent of
unhappiness is selfishness. I'm only
focused on my problems or thinking about
how I get ahead in my career. And
certainly we want to do some of that.
But we need to get up and focus on
others.
KING: Find strength through adversity.
Bad is good.
OSTEEN: Well, I think the way I believe
that god won't let something come into
your life unless he's going to use it
for your good. Now you've got to keep
the right attitude for that to happen.
But that helps us in our struggles to,
say you know what? God's going to get
something good out of this. This is a
tough time but I'm just going to
believe, I'm going to trust. I may not
see it for a year or five years but I
believe it's going to turn around. And a
great example is in my dad's death. My
dad and I were best friends. Worked with
him for 17 years. I told before my wife
I don't know what I'm going to do when
my dad dies. I loved him. We were good
friends. But when my father died the
darkest hour of my life is when I felt
that stinging here, that I was supposed
to step up and preach.
So I see how in my darkest hour
something new was born. I believe that
God always opens up a new door.
KING: Do you know you're getting through
to people? Billy Graham used to know it
because they came down and gave
themselves to Christ. How do you know?
OSTEEN: I feel the same way. I can see
it there in the church when I see my
book do what it did. And when we go to
arenas across the country and every one
of them's been sold out. Its just, you
know, we get thousands of letters and
stuff. And you know, I feel like we are,
you know. I feel like we're making a
difference.
KING: We'll be right back. We'll include
your phone calls for Joel Osteen, senior
pastor of the Lakewood Church in
Houston. Reportedly the largest, fastest
growing congregation in the United
States and the author of "Your Best
Life Now" and now "Your Best
Life Now Journal." Don't go away.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OSTEEN: And there's nothing the enemy
would love any more than for you to go
around thinking about your faults and
weaknesses, all the mistakes you made
last week and all the times you messed
up last month.
No, don't even go down that road. Quit
dwelling on what you've done wrong and
start dwelling on what you've done
right. You may not be all you're
supposed to be, but at least you can
thank God you're not what you used to
be. And we all make mistakes. But you
know what? You need to learn to just be
quick to repent. Say God, I'm sorry,
forgive me. Help me to do better next
time.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
KING: We're back with Joel Osteen, the
pastor of the Lakewood Church in
Houston. The author of "The New
York Times" best-seller "Your
Best Life Now." He's been called
the smiling preacher. You like that?
OSTEEN: It doesn't bother me. I like it.
KING: You do smile a lot.
Fontana, California. Hello. CALLER: Yes
-- Joel?
OSTEEN: Yes.
CALLER: I have a question for you. We're
a small congregational church here and
we'd like to come and see you next
month, but you charge to get in and
we're a very poor congregation. Why do
you charge to get in to your
appearances?
OSTEEN: Yes. The only reason we charge
-- I hated to charge. The only we
charge…
KING: You charge at the church?
OSTEEN: No, no, never. Never.
KING: When you travel?
OSTEEN: Yes.
The only reason we did is because when
we went New York to Madison Square
Garden they wouldn't let us do an event
without doing a ticketed event because
of the crowds. We sold it out two nights
and we turned so many people away in
Anaheim and Atlanta, it was just a shame
to do that.
Hey, you know, you need to write the
church, because we'll make a way that
anybody can get in to those events. I
don't like charging.
KING: What do you charge?
OSTEEN: $10.
KING: To Milford, Delaware. Hello.
CALLER: Hi, Joel?
OSTEEN: Yes.
CALLER: I have a question for you.
OSTEEN: OK. Go ahead.
CALLER: OK. I heard years ago that your
mother was healed of cancer. Do you know
why it's not God's will that everyone is
healed of cancer?
OSTEEN: You know, I can't answer that. I
think it's a good question…
KING: Do you wonder, though?
OSTEEN: Sure, sure we all do. I don't
know what it is and I just know that I'd
rather believe and just stay in faith
and just hope and you know, that's the
best thing to do. That's better in
case…
KING: So, you've never had an answer to
why he lives and he dies.
OSTEEN: No. We don't. I don't think we
do. I think that's in God's hands and I
don't understand it. I don't claim to
understand it all. I just thank God that
my mother was healed and we pray for
others and ask for that same mercy on
their lives and we've seen it happen.
And you know there are others that
don't.
KING: How do you balance the personal
appearances with the church?
You need to pastor.
OSTEEN: Well, I'm just very careful in
that I put my first priority there at
the church and I'll take a -- I'll
preach the -- a lot of times the same
message there at the church on Sunday
that a preach on a Friday night event.
So, I don't let them take away from the
church, but we just wanted to get out
and be with the people. So…
KING: Are you out every week?
OSTEEN: No. We went -- we're out 20
weeks this -- or 20 dates this year, but
like 15 weeks.
KING: Like concert tours dates?
OSTEEN: Exactly. Just like that.
KING: You're in big arenas?
OSTEEN: Big arenas. Big arenas.
Yes. It's something, Larry, we never
dreamed of. I wanted to do some last
year and we -- when we went to -- we
picked a couple cities and I told some
guys on the team, "I don't know if
we should get an auditorium of a
thousand, or 5,000 or 10,000 and finally
I said, "Let's get a basketball
arena and we'll turn off the top, you
know, the top lights if nobody shows up.
We did it in Atlanta and the building
was filled up, you know, an hour before
and hey had to shut it down. So, you
know, God's blessed us.
KING: Do you get a lot of young people?
OSTEEN: Yes, lots of young people. It's
good. A lot of young people.
KING: Studio City, California. Hello.
CALLER: Hi, how are you?
KING: Hi.
CALLER: Hi, my name is Tricia (ph),
Joel. How are you?
OSTEEN: Good, thank you. CALLER: Good,
thank you. I was just interested in
finding out: You're such a busy man, how
do you juggle family and your personal
life and what do you like to do for fun?
OSTEEN: What I like to do for fun is to
play basketball, play with my kids, hang
out with my family. They're my main
friends, my family and I think it's just
what you said, we just -- you just have
to balance your life. I don't -- it's a
big church but I have a good staff. I
don't -- unfortunately I don't do the
weddings and the funerals and a lot of
things that a pastor of a smaller church
does.
So, I just -- you know, I made a
decision that I don't want my kids to
grow up and not know me just because I'm
so busy and on Dr. Graham talks about
that -- I just I stay at home.
KING: How have you handled fame?
OSTEEN: You know, I never think about
it. I never think about it. I don't feel
like I changed at all. I haven't changed
my routine. I haven't, you know, I don't
-- I guess the main thing: I feel a
bigger responsibility. I spend plenty of
quiet time in the morning searching my
heart, staying on the right course and
just staying humble before God.
KING: Not let it get to you?
OSTEEN: Not let it get to your head.
Because I've seen too many.
They've been where I am and way past and
they've come falling down.
KING: Many people have been calling here
telling me -- asking about your
schedule. Is it printed anywhere? You
know, when you're appearing?
OSTEEN: Yes. It can be on -- it's on the
Web site.
KING: And what's that?
OSTEEN: That is JoelOsteen.com. I guess
just my name dot-com, I think.
KING: OK. You just go to JoelOsteen.com.
OSTEEN: Yes. They can get it.
KING: And you get the schedule.
OSTEEN: Exactly. We're going to be in
Anaheim and back to Madison Square
Garden. We have quite a few more dates
this year. Love to have people come out.
KING: Do you ever use a show business
term: Bomb? In other words, do you ever
not connect? Are you ever speaking and
like a third of the way in saying,
"I don't have 'em?"
OSTEEN: I think so. I think so.
KING: Can't be perfect all the time.
OSTEEN: Even at my own church, sometimes
I feel like: You know what, I don't know
if they're receiving this and sometimes
it's me because I'm tired. Sometimes
when I feel I've done the worst, people
come up to me and say, "Man, that
was great today."
And sometimes, you know, you're looking
for a little bit of feedback and if you
don't get -- but I just try to stay
focused, say, "you know what, I
believe this is what I'm supposed to be
doing." I'm not perfect.
KING: What do you wonder about the most?
Now, I mean, you accept things as they
are: He gets cancer, she doesn't. What
do you -- what though, boggles your mind
about this world?
OSTEEN: What do I wonder about? You know
what, Larry?
I don't know. I don't know. Nothing
comes to the forefront of my mind. I
just…
KING: There's no great searching?
OSTEEN: There's no great thing
KING: Or on going problem?
No, no. I just…
KING: Let's take depression, it affects
over 20 million people.
OSTEEN: Sure. Yes, I just think that,
you know, I speak a lot about that, and
you know, I don't -- I just think, you
know, that's just one way that we all
have to deal with -- sometimes it's
clinically. A lot of times, it's an
attitude and it's that we've gotten so
focused on, like I said, ourselves and
things like that. So, I don't know,
Larry. I don't have any great
wonderment.
KING: "Let Go of the past," is
another one of your seven steps.
That's not easy to do, since the only
thing we have right to this minute is
our past.
OSTEEN: It is and I should have said let
go of the negative things of the past
and really my thing is this: You can't
receive the new things God wants to do
if you won't let go of the old. And bye
that I mean, we talk with so many people
-- they've been through a bitter divorce
and they want to live their life angry.
Maybe it wasn't their fault, somebody
hurt them and I just think that, you
know, dragging yesterday into today, the
negative things, is only going to ruin
today. So --
KING: You think we choose to be angry?
OSTEEN: I think we do. I think we do and
over time it becomes a habit and all of
a sudden, you know, we think that's just
who I am.
No. That's who we've developed into
being, because I don't think we have to
be like that.
KING: Back with more of Joel Osteen.
More of your phone calls right after
this.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OSTEEN: Archie and Jack argued for years
whether Jesus was white or black. Archie
was certain that Jesus was white and
Jack was just as sure that Jesus was
black. As fate would have it, they both
died on the same day and they rushed to
the pearly gates and they said,
"St. Peter please tell us: Is Jesus
white or black? we've been arguing our
whole lifetime."
About that time Jesus walked up and
said, "Buenos dias."
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
OSTEEN: Some of you ladies have been
wearing the same flannel bathrobe to bed
every night that your grandmother gave
you 30 years ago. It's got holes in it.
It's as ugly as it can be, and you know
it doesn't do anything for you, and it
certainly doesn't do anything for your
husband. One of the best things that you
can do for your marriage is to throw
that thing away, and go down to
Victoria's Secret and get something good
that you can wear. You wonder why
Victoria and I have a great
relationship? It's called Victoria's
Secret.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
KING: Good line. Houston, Texas, hello.
CALLER: Yes, hi.
KING: Hi, go ahead.
CALLER: I was just wondering what Joel
-- hi, Joel. I just finished your book
on Saturday. Actually it was audio that
my sister sent me two weeks ago and I
think it's the best thing I've ever
listened to in my life, and I just
wanted to thank you. But my question
was, I was wondering how old you were?
OSTEEN: I'm 42 years old.
KING: You look 14.
OSTEEN: Thank you.
KING: Bellbrook, Ohio, hello.
CALLER: Yes, my name is Matt Maynard,
and Pastor Joel, I'm calling to tell
you, my grandma Bebby (ph) and I, we
watch you every day and we love you so
much and your mom and Victoria, Lisa and
Paul, and we know you came from behind
the scenes to being the pastor of the
church, and I would like to know, what
gives you strength to get up in front of
all those people every single day? Is it
knowing that you touched so many people?
And do you get nervous?
OSTEEN: You know, I still get nervous,
and I think what gives you strength is,
god gives you the grace to do it. You
know, just -- now I've done it for six
years, so I've got a little more
confidence, but yes, it's…
KING: It's only been six years, though?
OSTEEN: That's right.
KING: Grand Forks, North Dakota, hello.
CALLER: Hey, I was calling -- I'm Jerry
Lundabee (ph). I attend Bible Baptist
Church in Grand Forks, North Dakota, and
one of my -- I have a few questions
here. I wonder if you might entertain
all of them. My first question was --
is, do you believe that the bible is
god's inspired word? I haven't heard you
answer that question yet.
KING: And your second question is what?
CALLER: My second question would be -- I
don't know -- I heard him talking a
little bit ago about how he sees faith
getting stronger in America and across
the world, and I believe that it's the
opposite, that -- we're seeing higher
rates of divorce, higher rates of drug
and alcohol use among young people, and
old, and with abductions, and things
like that getting worse and worse.
KING: What do you think, Joel? First,
inspired word.
OSTEEN: Yes, I believe the bible is
god's inspired word. As far as the other
we kind of talked about, I can see his
point, but I think there's another
point. How can we be moving our church
into our basketball arena that seats
16,000 people? I mean, people are hungry
for hope and encouragement.
KING: But there's never been more
division than now in the United States,
politically, certainly.
OSTEEN: That is true. That is true. So,
I don't know. You can look at it. We
could debate it…
KING: You're a glass-half-full, right?
OSTEEN: I am. I see, like I said, you
look back 10 years ago, there was, you
know, not that many churches that had
over 1,000 or 5,000 people. It's a
different day today.
KING: We'll be back with more, and
later, in a little while, we'll met Mrs.
Osteen. Don't go away.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
OSTEEN: There's been eagles spotted as
high as 20,000 feet, up there where the
jets fly. The point is if you want to
get rid of your past, you've got to come
up higher. Don't ever sink down to their
level. Don't ever sink down to their
level. Don't try to argue. Don't try to
pay somebody back. Don't give them the
cold shoulder. Be the bigger person.
Overlook their faults. Walk in love.
Learn to even bless your enemies.
Somebody's talking about you. Somebody's
doing you wrong. Just bless them and
move on anyway. Let me tell you, in the
long run, crows can't hang with eagles.
You do that and you'll rise above all
that junk.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
KING: Hillsboro, Wisconsin with Joel
Osteen. Hello.
CALLER: Good evening. Joel, I had the
privilege a year ago February of
attending Lakewood and got a chance to
meet you, and it was really a wonderful
experience. My question is, I was just
in a conversation with a friend
recently, and he said he believed that
Lucifer was going to be the last one to
enter heaven after the rapture because
he believed that god is a forgiving god,
and even Lucifer will be forgiven. And
that just blew me away. And I wondered
what your thought would be on that.
OSTEEN: That sounds odd to me. I've
never heard that. And it sounds very
off-the-wall to me. So…
KING: I asked Reverend Graham if god
loves the devil. Didn't -- couldn't --
he'd never been asked it before.
OSTEEN: I never thought of it either. I
don't know.
KING: He loves everything. Does he
love…
OSTEEN: I don't know. I'll leave that
for Dr. Graham.
KING: Phoenix, Arizona. Hello.
CALLER: Hello, Larry. You're the best,
and thank you, Joe -- Joel -- for your
positive messages and your book. I'm
wondering, though, why you side-stepped
Larry's earlier question about how we
get to heaven? The bible clearly tells
us that Jesus is the way, the truth and
the light and the only way to the father
is through him. That's not really a
message of condemnation but of truth.
OSTEEN: Yes, I would agree with her. I
believe that…
KING: So then a Jew is not going to
heaven?
OSTEEN: No. Here's my thing, Larry, is I
can't judge somebody's heart. You know?
Only god can look at somebody's heart,
and so -- I don't know. To me, it's not
my business to say, you know, this one
is or this one isn't. I just say, here's
what the bible teaches and I'm going to
put my faith in Christ. And I just I
think it's wrong when you go around
saying, you're saying you're not going,
you're not going, you're not going,
because it's not exactly my way. I'm
just…
KING: But you believe your way.
OSTEEN: I believe my way. I believe my
way with all my heart.
KING: But for someone who doesn't share
it is wrong, isn't he?
OSTEEN: Well, yes. Well, I don't know if
I look at it like that. I would present
my way, but I'm just going to let god be
the judge of that. I don't know. I don't
know.
KING: So you make no judgment on anyone?
OSTEEN: No. But I…
KING: What about atheists?
OSTEEN: You know what, I'm going to let
someone -- I'm going to let god be the
judge of who goes to heaven and hell. I
just -- again, I present the truth, and
I say it every week. You know, I believe
it's a relationship with Jesus. But you
know what? I'm not going to go around
telling everybody else if they don't
want to believe that that's going to be
their choice. God's got to look at your
own heart. God's got to look at your
heart, and only god knows that.
KING: You believe there's a place called
heaven?
OSTEEN: I believe there is. Yes. You
know, you've had a lot of the near-death
experiences and things like that. Some
of that is very, to me, not that you
need that as proof, but it shows you
these little kids seeing the angels and
things like that.
KING: We'll take a break, and when we
come back, the better half, Victoria,
will join us. Don't go away.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
VICTORIA OSTEEN, EVANGELIST/WIFE OF
PASTOR JOEL OSTEEN: You see, if you have
someone in your life today, and you
don't like the way they're treating you,
I want to encourage you to take a look
at how you're treating them. If you will
begin to treat them differently, then
you will get a different response. In
other words, say your spouse isn't
giving you enough love. They're ignoring
you. They're not being kind and
considerate to you.
Well, see, human nature is to give them
a taste of their own medicine, to treat
them the same way. But when we do that,
we're just going to continue to reap
what we're sowing.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK) KING: Joining us now
in our remaining moments -- the screen
obviously improves -- Victoria Osteen,
Joel's wife. How'd you two meet?
V. OSTEEN: In my family's jewelry store.
He came in to buy a watch battery. And I
sold him a watch. And he says, I've been
taking his money ever since.
KING: When did you get into the
preaching business? We saw that clip of
you?
V. OSTEEN: Well, when Joel went through
the transition after his father died, I
just -- he wanted me to take part in
every service. So I do. I take part in
every service. I do just a little
encouraging piece. And then, this is my
fourth Mother's Day message to bring. So
that was on Mother's Day.
KING: Why do you want her in?
OSTEEN: Well, one, she's fantastic. And
you know, she just has so much to give.
And two, I think it increases our whole
reach, to be a team, to do it together.
I mean, here's some young people that
are excited about God, and you know,
there's not a lot of women in the, you
know, ministry.
KING: Were you always a believer?
V. OSTEEN: Yes, I was raised as a
believer, yes.
KING: What happens when you -- do you
two disagree?
V. OSTEEN: Sure. We agree to disagree
sometimes, you know.
KING: You ever disagree on biblical
philosophy?
V. OSTEEN: No, no. We're very -- we're
very much in agreement with the way we
believe. And you know, Joel, what's so
interesting about Joel's message is that
we've been married 18 years. So…
KING: Eighteen years?
V. OSTEEN: We've been married 18 years.
KING: He looks 15 and you look 22.
V. OSTEEN: Oh, OK. Golly, you're younger
than me. I'm going to have to do
something about that. What I was going
to say was, what he speaks every week is
exactly the way he lives. It's the way
he's always lived.
KING: There's no phony here?
V. OSTEEN: No. And you know, that
nonjudgmental, when he sits there and
says, you know, I just don't judge that.
Do you know that's always the way he's
been? He does not judge people. He does
not…
KING: I'll bet you do sometimes.
V. OSTEEN: Well, you know what? I've
gotten better. I've gotten better living
with him. You can't do a whole lot of
judging around our house. You'll get in
trouble.
KING: (INAUDIBLE) drive you crazy? He's
nice. I like him. He wasn't so bad.
Don't hang up. He's nice.
V. OSTEEN: He's nice. He's real nice.
And he always is nice, but I'm getting
nicer. And I like myself better.
KING: What did you think about the
Victoria's Secret sermon?
V. OSTEEN: I thought it was probably we
all needed to hear that. We can all do
better.
KING: Did you think twice before saying
go to Victoria's Secret, to prop up the
marriage?
OSTEEN: I thought about it, because I
write my sermons, and I knew I'd get
some letters. But I thought it kind of
made the point. And I liked it. And I
don't know if it was worth all the heat,
but it was fun.
KING: Was there a hush in the crowd?
OSTEEN: No, they laughed. They were
dying with me, so.
KING: The natural scheme of life is
temptation. It's in front of you every
day.
OSTEEN: Sure.
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