"The Discipline of Spiritual Discernment is a truly important work-one that should be required reading not only for church leaders, but for all sober-minded laypeople as well."

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"If you were more discerning you’d probably buy this book. If you do read this book, you will be! This book on discernment is simple, clear, well-written and well-illustrated...

Mark Dever

Welcome to the online home of Tim Challies, blogger, author and web designer. My first book, "The Discipline of Spiritual Discernment," is now available everywhere.

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06/11/07
Comments (20)

Book Review - The Secret

Rhonda Byrne - The Secret The Secret is a phenomenon. Since the book debuted late in 2006 it has sold over four million copies with some thirty other translations now available or underway. It is likely to become one of the best-selling self-help books of all time and is being constantly praised and endorsed by celebrities. Venture into your local bookstore or look around you while waiting at an airport, and you’re bound to see people reading it and absorbing it. They will not just be people who consult astrologers and who listen to Tony Robbins tapes, but normal, average people like the ones who live next door to you. There are almost 1400 reviews of the book printed at Amazon with an average rating of 3.5 out of 5. The breakdown of those scores is interesting: fifty-two percent of them are 5-star, thirteen percent are 4-star and twenty-one percent are 1-star (Amazon does not allow a 0 rating). This means that the majority of people, the great majority even, believe in at least some aspects of the book’s premise and teaching. They believe in the law of attraction.

The Secret began as a DVD. Rhonda Byrne had faced a particularly difficult time in life and came out of it only after she learned The Secret, which is her term for what is commonly known as the law of attraction. In gratitude she created a DVD presentation to share this knowledge and, having seen the remarkable success of this DVD (which has sold in excess of 1.5 million copies), she created a book by the same name. The claims are lofty: “There isn’t a single thing that you cannot do with this knowledge. It doesn’t matter who you are or where you are, The Secret can give you whatever you want.” Imagine that: the power to get absolutely anything. Who can resist that claim?

The law of attraction, which Byrne says is the most powerful law in the universe, states that people experience the logical manifestations of their predominant thoughts, feelings, and words. This gives people direct control over their lives. A person’s thoughts (whether conscious or unconscious) and feelings bring about corresponding positive or negative manifestations. Positive thoughts bring about positive manifestations while negative thoughts bring about negative manifestations. The theory is very simple. Because it is an absolute law, the law of attraction will always respond to your thoughts no matter what they are. Thus your thoughts become things. You are the most powerful power in the universe simply because whatever you think about will come to be. You shape the world that exists around you. You shape your own life and destiny through the power of your mind.

The steps to utilizing this law in life are simple and supposedly founded upon the wisdom of Jesus as we read it in Matthew 21:22. “Whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.” The law of attraction demands only this:

  1. Know what you want and ask the universe for it.
  2. Feel and behave as if the object of your desire is on its way.
  3. Be open to receiving it.

There are aspects of this law that are clearly attractive to the human heart. We all like to think that we have ultimate control over our lives and that we can have anything we want. We all want to control our destinies and to feel that the universe is at our beck and call—that it is a friendly force working with and not against us. This is, I am convinced, what draws people to the law of attraction.

But there are many areas in which The Secret has nothing to offer—in which the law of attraction as the most powerful law in the universe is simply an incomplete, irrational and even depressing answer. Allow me to suggest a few.

First, The Secret has no real ability to respond to the problem of human evil—surely the greatest problem anyone can face. Byrne admits that people’s first thoughts, when they hear of the law, is to think of times where masses of people lost their lives. According to the law of attraction, these people were necessarily on the same frequency as the event that took their lives. They may not have had thoughts of the event, but somehow their negative thoughts drew them into it. But this simply does not prove a satisfying answer to the world’s problems. Does this not mean that the millions of Jews who perished in the Holocaust were ultimately responsible for thinking negative thoughts that summoned this even to them? Does it not force us to believe that the people who died when the Twin Towers collapsed on 9/11 were responsible for calling this negative situation to themselves? Does it not mean that a young girl is ultimately responsible for the years of sexual abuse her father imposed upon her? The Secret offers nothing to these people but the understanding that their suffering is somehow their own fault. When we look at The Secret as the law that can bring you anything you want it has a clear attraction; when we look at it from the perspective of one who has suffered, it is clearly flawed.

Second, the law works itself out in ways that are breathtaking for their selfishness. For example, Byrne warns against listening to people speak about their illnesses or problems lest you begin to think negative thoughts and begin to manifest the negative consequences in your own life. She warns against sacrifice, either financial or personal, saying that sacrifice makes you prove your belief in lack rather than in abundance. She tells you to always place yourself first and to always look out for your own interests ahead of anyone else’s. She puts you in the place of God, as the one who stands at the center of the universe. The law of attraction continues in logical progression until it arrives at the inevitable end result of ascribing divinity to humanity.

The earth turns on its orbit for You. The oceans ebb and flow for You. The birds sing for You. The sun rises and it sets for You. The stars come out for You. Every beautiful thing you see, every wondrous thing you experience, is all there, for You. Take a look around. None of it can exist, without You. No matter who you thought you were, now you know the Truth of Who You Really Are. You are the master of the Universe. You are the heir to the kingdom. You are the perfection of Life. And now you know The Secret.

She goes on: “You are God in physical body. You are Spirit in the flesh. You are Eternal Life expressing itself as You. You are a cosmic being. You are all power. You are all wisdom. You are all intelligence. You are perfection. You are magnificence. You are the creator, and you are creating the creation of You on this planet.” The law offers no higher power than yourself. This makes me wonder: what would the world look like if everyone followed The Secret and devoted themselves primarily to their own interests, forsaking compassion and sacrifice and other “negative” elements of life?

Third, the law, at least insofar as it is described in this book, makes no allowance for what happens when desires clash. What happens when two people set their thoughts on the same thing? While I understand that the universe offers infinite opportunities, can two people equally have the same thing? What happens when what one person wants is harmful to another person? What if one person’s pleasure is another person’s pain? If the law of attraction is the highest law in the universe, it must be that there is nothing to govern such cases.

Finally, the law also works in ways that defy both common sense and human experience. For example, when considering weight loss Byrne makes the unbelievable claim that food can only make you fat if you think it can make you fat. If you determine that food is unable to make you gain weight, you can eat as much as you want and never gain wait or suffer any ill effects. When considering health she suggests that we can heal ourselves of any affliction simply through the power of our minds. Interestingly, The Secret has been championed by Oprah Winfrey who offers her own life as testimony to the power of the law of attraction. The week after Oprah’s endorsement sales of The Secret jumped from 18,000 to 101,000. The week after a second endorsement sales rose to 190,000. Winfrey has since had to soften her enthusiasm as people were following the book’s advice to the extent that they were forgoing medical treatment, believing in the power of their thoughts to heal themselves. Doctors were unimpressed, as were the diseases and disorders which did not respond to the mind’s attempts to destroy them. Byrne even says that the law of attraction can grant immortality. Yet the people who teach this law seem to be aging at the same rate as the rest of us.

As I read The Secret it occurred to me that if the Bible were a product of human minds it would undoubtedly resemble something like this: a celebration of humanity, a portrayal of humans as divine, and probably the most idolatrous thing I’ve ever read. Within the Bible, in the first chapter of the book of Romans, God addresses this desperate desire to rid ourselves of God’s claim to our lives. “Claiming to be wise, they became fools, and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and creeping things. Therefore God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts…because they exchanged the truth about God for a lie and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever! Amen.” And amen. The Secret claims to be able to give us everything we could ever want. Yet it can’t even address the fundamental problems of human nature. It represents only the latest in a long line of attempts to revoke God that has continued since the first man turned his back on His Creator. There’s nothing new here but the fancy, twenty-first century packaging.

Book Review - The Secret

Comments (20) »


1. CV
June 11, 2007
11:12 AM

Thank you for such a discerning book review. I think because this is such a high profile book which is being endorsed by celebrities that many are being misled. Someone close to me insisted that The Secret was founded on biblical principles. I tried to explain why this wasn’t true when you look into the author’s message more deeply. This book is simply this generation of the positive thinking philosophy. Once again, thanks for an honest in-depth review.


2. Tim
June 11, 2007
11:54 AM

Thank you for this discerning book review.

I work in a law office which has shown the video to its whole staff. Of course immediately it shows forth what they believe, to the discerning eye, but it deceives so many. I do a bible study, in the office, and it was intresting to see the looks I got just from suggesting that this stuff was a bunch of bologna.

It is the tolerance game and it is unbelievable but a local “Christian” station did a series on the book and what good we can take from the book. We can’t look at the Bible anymore, been through that once. I will give your link to some of the people who were giving me the ‘third eye’ look and show them that I have friends in my dissenting opinon.

Take care,

Tim


3. Tim Challies
June 11, 2007
11:58 AM

I was directed to an article by Barbara Walters in which she describes a recent phone call with Paris Hilton who is, of course, in prison:

She has had a person whom she described as a spiritual adviser who said, “My spirit or soul did not like the way I was being seen and that is why I was sent to jail.”

“God,” she said, “has released me.”

She is reading newspapers — The LA Times and the Wall Street Journal — and books like “The Secret,” “The Power of Now” and the Bible.


4. DLE
June 11, 2007
12:24 PM

Tim,

While The Secret is a spurious piece of man-centered junk (and a rip-off of Napolean Hill’s book, Think and Grow Rich, which somehow also got read by a lot of Christians), it’s not 100% wrong.

The Bible does have to say quite a bit about the power our thoughts and words have over our lives and the lives of others. Too many Christians repeatedly fall into patterns of negativity and doubt that impact their lives. By expressing faithlessness in our thoughts and words, we tend to reap what we sow.

When I look back on my life, I see that the Christian people who had the most impact on my life definitely did have a “positive confession,” an idea that gets tossed in with some of the worst aspects of Word Faith theology, but wrongly so. The Lord wants us to express faith, not doubt. James wrote that we fall prey to double-mindedness and should not expect to receive anything from the Lord. And the way we prevent doubt from crushing out faith is to not let doubt rule in our thoughts, words, and actions.

Our scientific rationalism in the West naturally thwarts faith. We believe what our eyes and ears tell us, then we set up their input as reality. But God does not work that way. The mountain gets cast into the sea by the person who believes God, rather than what his senses say. Science tells us that mountains do not get cast into seas by faith, but the Bible says they do.

If we do not see miracles, it is largely because we fail in a positive confession of faith. Christ could only do a couple miracles in his hometown because the people’s thoughts and words were anti-faith. We must always remember this.

The Lord can do anything He wishes in the hearts of people who take Him at His word. That means aligning our thoughts and words in that direction.


5. carmen
June 11, 2007
1:14 PM

Thank you Tim for your comprehensive and piercing book review. I picked this book up in Chapters the other day to see what all the fuss is about, and appalling passages similar to the ones you quote jumped out at me. As I do not possess your eloquence in and devotion to posting book reviews, this entry will be very helpful for those instances when my friends/collegues start to wonder about the authenticity of such Oprah-endorsed bestsellers. :S


6. Junction
June 11, 2007
1:18 PM

Thanks for reviewing this book Tim, I’ve been waiting for some to break it down from a Biblical perspective.


7. Zach Nielsen
June 11, 2007
2:47 PM

Good review Tim:

My take: This is health and wealth gospel for unbelievers along with classic pantheism (drawing no real lines between the creation - in this case “The universe” - and the Creator) and secular hedonism (the pursuit of pleasure; sensual self-indulgence). It’s probably helpful for the Church to be aware philosophies like this that are permeating our culture through huge mediums of communication like Oprah. This framework of thinking is extremely destructive as it does not touch on people’s real needs, i.e., spiritual ones and is simply a symptom of our culture of instant gratification and ease. Good ole’ fashion idolatry here folks; exchanging the creation for the Creator.

Another huge problem with this is that it assumes that our desires are good. Here is the problem: What if someone is a pedophile and what they want to “claim” is a little girl under the age of ten to have sex with? How does that fit in with The Universe’s power and desire to give me what I want? At least Christian “name it and claim it” thinking has some very loose Biblical boundaries. What boundaries does the The Universe have and who decides what they are?

Another huge problem: Can you imagine trying to apply this philosophy to someone who is suffering horrible atrocities in the Sudan? Unthinkable. Any theology or system of philosophy that does not deal with the problem of suffering is to be seen with suspicion from the outset as suffering is universal to our human condition.

Finally, you can be sure that the creators of this system are going to make a truck load of money preying upon the idolatry of our culture. Notice the clever marketing of calling it “The Secret”. Who doesn’t want to be in on a secret? Does this sound familiar? 2 Tim 3:1-7 -

3:1 But understand this, that in the last days there will come times of difficulty. 2 For people will be lovers of self, lovers of money, proud, arrogant, abusive, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, 3 heartless, unappeasable, slanderous, without self-control, brutal, not loving good, 4 treacherous, reckless, swollen with conceit, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, 5 having the appearance of godliness, but denying its power. Avoid such people. 6 For among them are those who creep into households and capture weak women, burdened with sins and led astray by various passions, 7 always learning and never able to arrive at a knowledge of the truth.

8. Tim Challies
June 11, 2007
3:18 PM

“While The Secret is a spurious piece of man-centered junk (and a rip-off of Napolean Hill’s book, Think and Grow Rich, which somehow also got read by a lot of Christians), it’s not 100% wrong.”

Nor have I ever come across anything that is 100% wrong. In fact, the bits of it that are right are the bits that make it at least somewhat credible. If it were 100% wrong I don’t think anyone would believe any of it. Let’s be clear, though, that while there are times that we can recommend things that are far from 100% right for the small bits that are good, this is not such a case. This book is far beyond redemptive value.

“This is health and wealth gospel for unbelievers…”

Interestingly, I was struck time and again by how much this book resembled the health and wealth gospel. There are many parts of it that Benny Hinn and his ilk would enthusiastically agree with.


9. Ann Addison
June 11, 2007
4:05 PM

“The Secret” does remind me of the “word of faith” and positive confession movements. Faith in faith, faith in myself, faith in the power of my words…. Those are seductive attempts to wrest some power away from God.

Marcus Aurelius Irenaeus, a second century bishop said, “Error, indeed, is never set forth in its naked deformity, lest, being thus exposed, it should at once be detected. But it is craftily decked out in an attractive dress, so as, by its outward form, to make it appear to the inexperienced (ridiculous as the expression may seem) more true than the truth itself.”

Tim, thanks for the review.


10. Reluctantly Reforming
June 11, 2007
5:00 PM

Well said, Tim (review and comments above)

I find it interesting that even in the secular world there are numerous good old stories illustrating what an unqualified disaster the world would become if people were granted the power to have what they want. King Midas is the obvious example. A more recent parable is Michael Crichton’s novel The Sphere, in which a team of explorers encounter an extraterrestrial object that carries out one’s wishes. One team member (before understanding the object’s power and purpose) wishes there were a Coke machine handy, and the next day a Coke machine appears. The situation quickly descends into chaos as each team member’s sinful desires are enacted.


11. Michelle
June 11, 2007
5:27 PM

Ann beat me to the punch - as I was reading this, I was suddenly transported to a Joyce Meyer conference I attended back in my early Christian years…it didn’t sound right then and it certainly doesn’t sound right now!


12. Sewing
June 11, 2007
6:37 PM

What’s scary is how quickly The Secret is sweeping popular culture. In the sheer rapidity of its proliferation, it seems to be eclipsing any and all false gospels that have come before it.

It’s hardly suitable to even call it a false gospel, as if it started out as an offshoot of the gospel…it is completely unrooted in the gospel. Apparently, Rhonda Byrne is a disciple of a New Age group called “Abraham” which claims to channel the wisdom of evolved teacher spirits (source). In other words, this is either an elaborate scam and some people are making serious moolah—or it’s demon worship.

It’s only a matter of time before the unbelievers I know force me to watch the DVD, then complain that I don’t believe in success (or some such nonsense) when I start deconstructing it.


13. Sewing
June 11, 2007
6:39 PM

Come to think of it, it’s a pretty simple scam…nothing elaborate about it all.


14. Nath @ Reformed Geek
June 11, 2007
8:15 PM

“This is health and wealth gospel for unbelievers…”

You said it exactly. Tim’s summary of what The Secret taught is almost exactly what I was taught for two years in the Word of Faith movement.

Word of Faith teaches that their “Name it and Claim it” principles work for non-believers as well as believers…God is not sovereign, and cannot prevent people utilizing His laws.

Thanks for this review Tim.


15. John K
June 11, 2007
11:44 PM

My daughter began a new sales job last month. As part of the training they wanted her to watch “The Secret”. I told her, “Tell them you already know where your strength comes from. (Psalm 121.)” She didn’t watch the DVD, but she is the top salesperson on her team.


16. SingForHim @Real Life
June 12, 2007
8:38 AM

John K, that is so awesome!

What strikes me about this book is that it is a classic attempt of Satan to take God’s Truth (ie: “you reap what you sow”, Prov 22:8, 2 Cor 9:6, Gal 6:6-8) and distort it just as he did in the Garden of Eden. Complete with a promise to be like God, even a god.

Some of my friends are into this book. I couldn’t put into words what disturbed me about it, so I’ve been waiting for a discourse just like this. Thanks, Tim


17. Greg S
June 12, 2007
8:43 AM

In reading Calvin’s Institutes yesterday, I came across this quote which is relevant to why the Bible does not sound any bit like The Secret:

… But in the whole Law, there is not one syllable which lays down a rule as to what man is to do or avoid for the advantage of his own carnal nature. And, indeed, since men are naturally prone to excessive self-love, which they always retain, how great soever their departure from the truth may be, there was no need of a law to inflame a love already existing in excess. Hence it is perfectly plain, that the observance of the Commandments consists not in the love of ourselves, but in the love of God and our neighbour; and that he leads the best and holiest life who as little as may be studies and lives for himself; and that none lives worse and more unrighteously than he who studies and lives only for himself, and seeks and thinks only of his own. Nay, the better to express how strongly we should be inclined to love our neighbour, the Lord has made self-love as it were the standard, there being no feeling in our nature of greater strength and vehemence. The force of the expression ought to be carefully weighed. For he does not (as some sophists have stupidly dreamed) assign the first place to self-love, and the second to charity. He rather transfers to others the love which we naturally feel for ourselves. Hence the Apostle declares, that charity “seeketh not her own,” (1 Cor. 13: 5.) Nor is the argument worth a straw, That the thing regulated must always be inferior to the rule. The Lord did not make self-love the rule, as if love towards others was subordinate to it; but whereas, through natural gravity, the feeling of love usually rests on ourselves, he shows that it ought to diffuse itself in another direction - that we should be prepared to do good to our neighbour with no less alacrity, ardour, and solicitude, than to ourselves. -Calvin “Institutes” 2:8:54

18. Richard
June 12, 2007
9:34 AM

Yup, “The Secret” sounds like a typical Joel Osteen sermon. And, of course, Joel has the biggest “church” in America. Makes you proud to be an AMerican, doesn’t it?


19. Gina
June 13, 2007
1:16 AM

I find the new age movement to be strikingly similar to the word of faith movement as well. Really, the only major difference is in the way they define God. I read a lot and I was surprised by the number of scriptural references I found in a lot of the new age stuff.


20. Chris Lyons
June 13, 2007
3:09 AM

I am both a believer and a non believer in the law of attraction. The one problem that The Secret poses to me is that it simplifies and speculates way too much. I am a personal development/human potential coach and facilitator and have been in the industry for over five years now and by teaching what is taught in The Secret I can be sure that I would have a great many law suits on my hands just due to misinterpretation.

But wait a minute. I’m not saying that it’s all rubbish and doesn’t work because I am a strong believer in the law of attraction but without concrete research, you can’t say that you send this or that vibration and energy out and bla bla bla. This is irresponsible because if there is absolutely nothing to back this up then people may have it all wrong. I meet people every day who have had positive and negative experiences with this material.

Before I ramble too much I’ll sum it up. What I am getting at is; if you apply the principles of the law of attraction and have absolute faith in the object of your desire and you back it up with consistent action and prepare for failure and set backs along the way, then you will inevitably have what you want if you can persist long and hard enough. There are forces at work here but they can’t be stated as fact and we can’t be specific about how they work until we truthfully know.

My advice is to use the principle, have total faith in what you are doing and change your approach when what you’re doing is not working. It’s called good old fashioned hard work backed up by intense focus and actually knowing what you want. Just don’t believe you can have what you want with little effort and no action.

Anyone who wants to see a complete interpretation of the law of attraction can visit: http://www.endlesshumanpotential.com/law-of-attraction.html have a browse around the site, you may find some other pages of interest also.

To your ultimate fulfilment,

Chris Lyons.