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Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Is Oprah America's spiritual leader?

In a recent poll 33% of Americans go to Oprah for their spiritual guidance. 33%! 33% of all Americans say they listen to Oprah before their priest, rabbi or pastor.

I believe that it a commentary not so much on Oprah but on several facts influencing our country.

1. There is a continual bowing before celebrities and what they have to offer (for good or for bad) in our country.

2. There is an obvious disconnect with organized religion.

Is Oprah the culprit? Or is it the fact that people are looking to something beyond the church for their guidance?

What do you think?

Here's an article to get you thinking from the U.S.A. Today:

By Ann Oldenburg, USA TODAY
Thu May 11, 7:28 AM ET

After two decades of searching for her authentic self - exploring New Age theories, giving away cars, trotting out fat, recommending good books and tackling countless issues from serious to frivolous - Oprah Winfrey has risen to a new level of guru.

She's no longer just a successful talk-show host worth $1.4 billion, according to Forbes' most recent estimate. Over the past year, Winfrey, 52, has emerged as a spiritual leader for the new millennium, a moral voice of authority for the nation.

With her television pulpit and the sheer power of her persona, she has encouraged and steered audiences (mostly women) in all matters, from genocide in Rwanda to suburban spouse swapping to finding the absolute best T-shirt and oatmeal cookie.

VOTE: Is Oprah a spiritual leader for the new millenium?

"She's a really hip and materialistic Mother Teresa," says Kathryn Lofton, a professor at Reed College in Portland, Ore., who has written two papers analyzing the religious aspects of Winfrey. "Oprah has emerged as a symbolic figurehead of spirituality."

On Monday, Winfrey shares one of her most ambitious events of the past year -Oprah Winfrey's Legends Ball- as a special on ABC (8 p.m. ET/PT). It lets viewers in on a weekend in which she invited 25 legendary black women and other guests to her home in Montecito, Calif., for a luncheon, ball and gospel brunch in their honor.

It was something she spent a year planning and describes as one of the "greatest moments" of her life. She appears on The View on Friday to talk about the special.

"This weekend was the fulfillment of a dream for me: to honor where I've come from, to celebrate how I got here, and to claim where I'm going," Winfrey says on her website. And now, as Winfrey "lives her best life," as her TV motto says, we get to experience it with her.

Although the concept of the Rev. Oprah has been building through the years, never was it more evident than this season of her talk show, during which she conducted the public flogging of author James Frey. Feeling stung and embarrassed after endorsing his memoir about addiction, A Million Little Pieces, which turned out to include exaggerations and falsehoods, Winfrey had Frey on the show to do an about-face.

"I left the impression that the truth is not important," she said on the show. "I am deeply sorry about that because that is not what I believe."

It was a watershed Winfrey moment, showing herself as not only a talk-show host with whom you don't want to mess, but also someone who is fully aware of the power of her own image. Think back: She appeared in New Orleans to take on the government after Hurricane Katrina hit last August, and she sent a message to us all about civil rights as she stood by the casket of Coretta Scott King in February. Last week, she shed a tear with Teri Hatcher over sexual abuse memories, and she jumped on the Darfur bandwagon, encouraging viewers to support refugees there.

"She's a moral monitor, using herself as the template against which she measures the decency of a nation," Lofton says.

But while this past year showed Winfrey at new heights, it also was a year that polarized people, particularly after the Frey incident.

"A self-righteous attack dog," wrote arts and culture critic Steven Winn in the San Francisco Chronicle.

"A sanctimonious bully," said media critic Robert Thompson on the PBS NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.

"She puts the cult in pop culture," wrote media critic Mark Jurkowitz in The Phoenix

Winfrey was applauded by many for her public mea culpa and for getting Frey to do the same, but her righteous demand for justice also evoked criticism.

"No one person should have that kind of power to affect markets, politics or anything else," says Debbie Schlussel, a lawyer, conservative columnist and blogger.

Deifying Oprah

Love her or loathe her, Winfrey has become proof that you can't be too rich, too thin or too committed to rising to your place in the world. With 49 million viewers each week in the USA and more in the 122 other countries to which the show is distributed, Winfrey reaches more people in a TV day than most preachers can hope to reach in a lifetime of sermons.

"One of the things that's key," says Marcia Nelson, author of The Gospel According to Oprah, "is she walks her talk. That's really, really important in today's culture. People who don't walk their talk fall from a great pedestal - scandals in the Catholic Church, televangelism scandals. If you're not doing what you say you do, woe be unto you."

In Ellen DeGeneres' stand-up comedy act several years ago, she included a joke about getting to heaven and finding that God is a black woman named Oprah.

Last fall, at the start of this 20th season of The Oprah Winfrey Show, guest Jamie Foxx said much the same thing, but he wasn't joking. "What you have is something nobody can describe," Foxx said to Winfrey on the air. Then he explained about how he told Vibe magazine: "You're going to get to heaven and everyone's waiting on God and it's going to be Oprah Winfrey."

He told her she has "different gears" than most people. "You're on the top of the world, and we really do watch and listen for everything you do and say to kind of get our lives together. It's the truth."

In a November poll conducted at Beliefnet.com, a site that looks at how religions and spirituality intersect with popular culture, 33% of 6,600 respondents said Winfrey has had "a more profound impact" on their spiritual lives than their clergypersons.

Cathleen Falsani, religion writer for the Chicago Sun-Times, recently suggested, "I wonder, has Oprah become America's pastor?"

"I am not God," Oprah said in a 1989 story by Barbara Grizzuti Harrison that ran in The New York Times Magazine titled The Importance of Being Oprah. But at the time, Winfrey called her talk show her "ministry," Harrison wrote. It remains an interview Winfrey says she hates. In a Los Angeles Times interview in December, the talk-show host said that "at every turn everything I said was challenged and misinterpreted."

She declined to be interviewed for this story, and she declined to allow USA TODAY to cover her most recent, and now rare, Live Your Best Life seminars. Tickets, priced at $185 each, sold out in minutes.

Katrina Singleton, 34, paid $450 each for tickets to the February event in Charleston, S.C., which she purchased through a ticket broker. "For Oprah, nothing is too much," she told the Associated Press. "It's a once-in-a-lifetime experience."

At the seminar, according to AP, Winfrey repeatedly spoke of her relationship with God. She even sang a chorus of I Surrender All.

"I live inside God's dream for me. I don't try to tell God what I'm supposed to do," she told the crowd. "God can dream a bigger dream for you than you can dream for yourself."

Claire Zulkey, 26, an Oprah follower who has written about Winfrey in her online blog at zulkey .com, says, "I think that if this were the equivalent of the Middle Ages and we were to fast-forward 1,200 years, scholars would definitely think that this Oprah person was a deity, if not a canonized being."

Marcia Nelson says that it's not going too far to call her a spiritual leader. "I've said to a number of people - she's today's Billy Graham."

Nelson said that concept was most apparent when Winfrey co-hosted the 2001 memorial service held 12 days after the terrorist attacks in New York. She urged the people who filled Shea Stadium that day, and all Americans, to stand strong, rousing the audience by repeating the refrain, "We shall not be moved."

One of Winfrey's most appealing subtexts is that she's anti-institutional, says Chris Altrock, minister of Highland Street Church of Christ in Memphis. He says Winfrey believes there are many paths to God, not just one. After doing his doctoral research three years ago on postmodernism religion, a religious era that began in the 1970s as Christians became deeply interested in spirituality and less interested in any established church, he came up with what he calls "The Church of Oprah," referring to the culture that has created her.

"Our culture is changing," he says, "as churches are in decline and the bulk of a new generation is growing up outside of religion." Instead, they're turning to the Church of Oprah.

"People who have no religion relate to her," Nelson says.

Oprah's own evolution

When Winfrey started in the talk-show business 20 years ago, her goal was to beat Phil Donahue, then the reigning talk-show champ. As the Jerry Springer era of tabloid talk shows came into favor, she vowed to use her show to promote good, not sleaze.

By the late '90s, Winfrey's focus was Change Your Life TV, and a New Age message was more prevalent. She preached making the message of her life - take responsibility, and greatness will follow - the substance of the show. Keep a personal journal, purchase self-indulgent gifts, take time for you - because you deserve it. The notes rang true to millions of viewers.

Debbie Ford's book, The Dark Side of the Light Chasers, shot up the sales charts after Ford appeared on Winfrey's show in October 2000 to talk about aspects of ourselves that we deny but which can be sources of joy and strength.

"I think at the time when she had me and Gary Zukav and a lot of the other spiritual teachers on her show, it was her own journey, and she was taking all of the world on that spiritual evolution," Ford says.

Lately, Winfrey has seemed to focus more on social issues (along with the inescapable talk-show fare of celebrity guests, home and diet makeovers, and marriage and financial troubles).

"She's fabulous. She looks great and is not suffering," Ford says, so it makes sense she isn't exploring New Age philosophies anymore. Instead, Ford says, people now "look to her to find their greatness. She is so real. That's why people are attracted to her - for different reasons. Some people will say her brilliance. Others will say authenticity. Others will say her power. They're seeing part of themselves in her."

Adds Ford, "We're all on Oprah's journey, in a sense."

Maybe not quite "all" of us.

Schlussel says Winfrey followers "are incredibly gullible, bandwagon-jumping trend-slaves." Winfrey, she says, "acts as if her show has 'evolved,' but in fact, she still has the salacious sex and deviance stories, with a psychologist in the audience to make it seem highbrow and give it the kosher seal of approval. If this is the person whose morals we are putting on a pedestal, then America's moral compass is in much need of retuning."

The fact that Winfrey has never been married, never had children and is a billionaire distances her from her audience, Schlussel says. "How could anyone like this be in touch with the average American woman?"

The roots of faith

Lofton points out that any discussion of Winfrey should not be one that criticizes her or how she came to be a spiritual icon for the history books but one that examines how it came to be that way. "Why do we all need her so much? What is wrong with us that we so need this little woman in Chicago?"

Jim Twitchell, a professor at the University of Florida who has written several books about branding and describes himself as a cultural anthropologist, says Oprah reverence makes sense.

"Religion essentially is based on high anxiety of what's going to happen to you." Winfrey pushes the idea "that you have a life out there, and it's better than the one you have now and go get it."

It's most apparent in the setting of her show, Twitchell says.

"The guest is sitting beside her, but what she's really doing is exuding this powerful message of 'You are a sinner, yes, you are, but you can also find salvation.' What I find intriguing about it is it's delivered with no religiosity at all, even though it has a powerful Baptist, democratic, enthusiastic tone.

"It has to do with this deep American faith and yearning to be reborn. To start again."

3 comments:

Jon said...

In their first album, Casting Crowns has a song that mentions Oprah as a spiritual leader, or someone to whom people go to solve their theological issues. It's a cool song so you should listen to it...it's the first song on the album so you won't have to listen to much if you don't like that style of music (Yep, I sure do like that style of music!) much.

A lot of people look to Oprah, or her friend and devotee Dr. Phil, for guidance to get through their day. I don't know if I would go so far as to say that Oprah has set herself up for this "deification" but she does have quite the following. She's better than that old E.F. Hutton commercial because when she speaks, whole industries listen! And she doesn't do everything right (who does?) and she makes mistakes in judgment (who doesn't?) and she can be petty and mean (who can't?) and she can throw her financial weight and power around (who can't/wouldn't if they could?) so why are people throwing stones?

It's not my task to judge Oprah but it is my task to make sure that I stay true to God. So, if Oprah says something unBiblical, then I feel free to ignore her. If she says something right in line with the Word of God, I can support her! This is a woman who donate $63 million dollars to various charities last year...I didn't see that in the article. This is a woman who does her best to lift the spirits and lives of those around her or who she comes in contact with...I didn't see that in the article, except in a snide way. This is a woman who came from a humble beginning to one of the most powerful people in the world through being true to her faith (I don't know her professed denomination so I couldn't tell you how closely she followed it) and being true to herself and to those that she loves. Is she a bad woman? I'd fall on the side of no, she's not. Is she bad for the country? I'd say that no, she's not. Is she bad for Christianity? As in most things, Christians can only be led astray if they allow themselves to fall to the temptation. Non-Christians could be swayed by Oprah but she's not preaching her own deification. She hasn't set herself above God and regularly mentions her faith in Him and the wonderful blessings that He has brought her. I seem to get the feeling that some folks just want her to turn it on or turn it off...that is, either let everyone know each and every day that God is the answer (basically become a televangelist) or to deny her popularity and her ability to help others.

Now, I don't watch Oprah and I don't let Oprah-isms influence my life. When God is the king and God is in control, then God is the answer for all your questions.

Oops, ranted again and missed the general points of the discussion. My apologies. To the bullet points: Both are true in our society...we follow celebrities ad nauseum and people are turned off by their parents religion. For many years, church has been that place down the road where you go if you have nothing else to do or no friends or need a hand or whatever. Our society, commonly referred to as a "fast food society," needs immediate gratification...you don't find that in what they know of the Scripture. They want it now and they want it loud and they want it hot and they want it appealing! Doesn't describe any church I know, how about you? We must reach out to those who are lost and find a way to connect...the way is through relationships. We cannot hide within our walls and expect that people will come. This isn't "Field of Dreams." God's mission for us was to take the Good News throughout the world. That includes our backyard and our fast food society. We have to find a way to appeal to them within the context of Scripture!

I've babbled enough...on to the rest of you!

Love God, love people!

Jon

Teresa O. said...

As Jon referenced, Oprah has come from humble beginnings. She has done incredible things for people and communities. Do I think she should be looked at as my spiritual guru? Absolutely not. I remember seeing Oprah in her early years clearly resonating with Christian beliefs, especially when she had the Winan’s on her show. However, in previous years, and I only see a few episodes here and there, it appears she is for whoever is on her show, without a commitment to one specific religion. Of course this sells better than saying you are a Christian, which would cause you to stand up for one set of beliefs opposed to many other set of beliefs. I use to have more respect for her when she appeared committed to her own values, instead of the values of the majority of those that appear on her show. Do I still find some of her shows intriguing and fascinating, sure I do, but they are not gospel or truth to me, whether it’s a spiritual issue or another topic where I could do further research to find out more. Isn’t it cult mentalities when someone looks only to one individual to find the answers to life’s meaning?

Should one person have that kind of power? Unfortunately our society creates it with our fascination of celebrities, whether or not they are experts in the field or not. If one person can have that power and use it for good, so be it, but they do need to be careful they are not acting or thinking they are God. They can use their power for many things and hopefully it is for the good of all, not selective.

One doesn’t have to look far to know that the world’s truth comes form People Magazine and others like it. It is true she can reach more people in an hour than preachers can in a lifetime, but that doesn’t’ mean she is influencing them to make eternal decisions. My truth comes from the Word of God no matter what I hear from another person. My pastor may only reach one percent of those in comparison to hers, however, his legacy will be felt into eternity whereas Oprah’s will one day be past news, history. She may be satisfied with that but I want to ensure my own legacy reaches into eternity and not just in this lifetime. The sad part about that is that she can influence millions, and has done so in a positive manner, however, when it comes to spiritual issues, she hasn’t appeared to commit to her own set of values and beliefs. I would like to know what it is? For me I don’t always see that she walks her talk because I have heard conflicting messages through the years.

“People who have no religion relate to her and that’s her church”…unfortunately, their “church” is not what God would desire for us in fellowship with other believers. How sad that people are so hungry for something that they choose a celebrity and an hour show to fill a void. There is a song that I love by Rita Springer about God being my hero and one about Jesus being my friend. The one line says it all for me, “he’s the only one that saves me, the only one that stays, and the only one that loves me.” Oprah can and never will be there for them like a best friend and especially the Lord. Unfortunately these people who know Oprah only by the TV screen and magazines are missing out on the best relationship they could ever have, intimacy with Christ. These people will never know intimacy or true friendship with Oprah, so why would they desire to think that she is their church and spiritual guide. The majority will never ever have a relationship with her and by never finding a real church; they will miss out on more personal growth. By tuning in only to Oprah they are not tuned in to the lives of real people, and more importantly not tuned in to the One True God – God Almighty! I know I will watch her again and even learn from some of the shows, but one should always go first to the Word of God to find your source of truth and guidance.

Jon said...

Good comments and I agree with her ambiguity. The major point in all of this is God is the authority we should be looking to for our guidance and our strength and our hope and our daily existence. For anyone to step into place for him, and I would say that anyone who has joined the "Church of Oprah" has placed her above God, is a direct violation of the very first commandment He gave us. As for me and mine, we will serve the Lord!

Praise God in all you do and keep the comments coming. I hope that everyone who reads this blog will feel comfortable commenting. I know there are many who read but don't comment. Please comment as we want to hear your thoughts on all of these issues; your thoughts and opinions are valid and of interest to all of us.

Love God, love people. Love Oprah too!

Jon