Benny Hinn

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External Websites
Also known as: Toufik Benedictus Hinn
Quick Facts
In full:
Toufik Benedictus Hinn
Born:
December 3, 1952, Jaffa, Tel Aviv–Yafo, Israel (age 72)

Benny Hinn (born December 3, 1952, Jaffa, Tel Aviv–Yafo, Israel) is a televangelist, faith healer, and author known for his “miracle crusades” that are held in major cities and broadcast on his Christian television show This Is Your Day. Hinn frequently espouses a prosperity gospel message that teaches that faith and donations to the church are divinely rewarded with health, wealth, and happiness in this life. He has been criticized for his lavish lifestyle and accused of taking advantage of vulnerable people.

Early life and spiritual revelation

Hinn was born in Jaffa, Tel Aviv–Yafo, a port city in Israel. His father, Costandi Hinn, was Greek, and his mother, Clemence Hinn, was Armenian; both Hinn’s parents were born in Palestine. Hinn and his seven siblings were raised in a devout Greek Orthodox home, and he attended a Roman Catholic elementary school. In 1968 a teenaged Hinn immigrated with his family to Toronto shortly after the Six-Day War. There he was a student at the Georges Vanier Secondary School, although he did not graduate.

His own accounts of his conversion vary; Hinn has sometimes said his first religious experience was in Israel. He reports having a second and more significant spiritual experience—a vision of Jesus—at a prayer meeting with some of his classmates in 1972, and he began pursuing a more evangelical Christianity at that time. As a young man, Hinn was inspired by evangelist Kathryn Kuhlman, through whom people professed to have healing powers. Hinn recounts discovering the power of healing during a trip to hear her speak. In 1974 he had another vision, this time he saw people falling into an inferno if he did not minister to them, and he began preaching that same year. He said that he had been cured of a lifelong stutter during one of his earliest preaching sessions.

Ministries

Hinn moved to Florida in 1979 and soon met Suzanne Harthern, the daughter of a local pastor; the two were married that same year. Charismatic and affable, Hinn adopted several mannerisms and phrases from Kuhlman, including the use of an iconic white suit and her practice of “slaying in the Spirit” (in which followers fall to the ground, overcome by the power of the Holy Spirit) and gained a following. He founded the Orlando Christian Center in 1983, where he began to hold healing services that purportedly cured people of illness or injury. As these miracle crusades quickly grew in popularity, Hinn held them in increasingly larger venues in Florida and then in other locations in North America and eventually abroad.

A dynamic preacher, he readily acknowledges his lack of formal theological training and maintains that the Holy Spirit provides him with the requisite divine revelation. He professes that his faith healings are made possible by “the anointing” through which God’s power is transmitted through him, and he has allegedly healed attendees of countless maladies, including blindnesscancer, and HIV/AIDS. The first miracle crusade was televised in 1989, and the following year he began to host This Is Your Day, a Christian talk show with highlights of his miracle crusades, on the Trinity Broadcasting Network of Paul Crouch. The show continues to be broadcast in more than 200 countries.

Hinn stepped down as pastor of the Orlando Christian Center in 1999 and established corporate headquarters for the larger Benny Hinn Ministries (BHM) in Grapevine, Texas. Later he founded the World Healing Center Church in Orange county, southern California, where he lived with his family. Hinn continues to perform miracle crusades around the world and often draws large audiences. According to its website, BHM is also involved in crisis relief, hospital care, and feeding programs, and it provides clothing, medical supplies, and educational materials through its partners worldwide.

Hinn has authored a number of books, including the bestseller Good Morning, Holy Spirit (1990), The Anointing (1992), The Blood: Its Power from Genesis to Jesus to You (1993),The Biblical Road to Blessing (1996), The Miracle of Healing: Promises of Healing from Every Book in the Bible (1998), and Prayer that Gets Results: The Key to Your Survival (2005). His autobiography, He Touched Me, was published in 1999.

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In 2010 Suzanne Hinn filed for divorce from her husband, citing “irreconcilable differences.” They were officially divorced but later reconciled and were remarried in 2013. In 2024 Suzanne Hinn again filed for divorce; the couple were living separately in Florida at that time.

Controversies

Over the years Hinn, his ministry, finances, and the veracity of his miracles have been investigated by a number of television shows, including Dateline, The Fifth Estate (a Canadian news program), Inside Edition, and HBO’s American Undercover. Hinn and several other televangelists were investigated by the U.S. Senate Finance Committee led by Chuck Grassley in 2007, but no evidence of wrongdoing was reported as a result. (Other Christian figures investigated by the Senate panel included Joyce Meyer, Paula White, Eddie L. Long, Creflo Dollar, and Kenneth Copeland.) In 2017 federal agents raided the headquarters of BHM to investigate tax evasion; the investigation is ongoing as of 2024.

Many Christians take issue with Hinn’s unconventional theology. Over his decades of ministry, Hinn has made a number of unorthodox doctrinal claims and assertions, including the suggestion that each member of the Godhead is a triune being by himself (a nine-person Godhead, rather than a Trinity) and a statement that Jesus died a spiritual death on the cross, rather than only a physical death as traditionally taught. He has made many prophecies that did not come to pass, though he has since apologized for “false prophecy.” Although a number of Christian leaders have warned people against his teachings, others, including Pat Robertson and Kenneth Copeland, have voiced their support of Hinn as an anointed servant of God.

“The blessings of God are not for sale.”

Despite being one of the major proponents of “health and wealth” prosperity gospel, Hinn has rejected the theology several times throughout his ministry. In 2019 he again recanted, telling his studio audience, “The blessings of God are not for sale.” This purported denouncement came just months after his nephew Costi Hinn released his damning book God, Greed, and the (Prosperity) Gospel: How Truth Overwhelms a Life Built on Lies. In 2024, however, Hinn appeared to return to prosperity teachings, proclaiming that those who will be faithful in funding God’s work will be financially protected in the dark days to come.

Luisa Colón Melissa Petruzzello