ALL ABOUT ABUNDANCE
LOS ANGELES TIMES
WEST HOLLYWOOD, Calif. -- Della Reese, who played a down-to-earth heavenly being on "Touched by an Angel," isn't acting as she stands in front of a congregation on Sundays in West Hollywood.
She's preaching in her own church.
Her message has no mention of sin, no mention of good and evil and no endorsement of sacrifice if it means doing without. She talks about abundant living, not in the hereafter but here and now.
"There ain't nothin' up there. If you would read that Bible, you would know. There is no Beulah land. Jesus Christ said the only time is now. So whatever it is you want, need or desire or just like to have, you better try to get it now, 'cause this is the only time there is. Yesterday is gone. Tomorrow may be for us and it may not."
About the church
This is the Understanding Principles of Better Living Church, where the Rev. Della Reese Lett (the actress uses her married name in the church) preaches prosperity. She calls the church Christian, but Jesus is described not as the Savior, but as the Way-Shower, pointing to unabashedly abundant living and material success.
Hers is a faith of entitlement and personal empowerment. Change your way of thinking, her churchgoers are told, and you'll change your life. She calls it "practical Christianity" and it stems, she says, from positive thinking.
"If you're not getting the things you want, need or desire, it's because you have not accepted that you can have them," she tells her congregants. "Once you accept that ... this is your inheritance, and you act like that, you become acceptable to the Lord and he starts sending your stuff through."
Where it fits in
The Rev. Mrs. Reese Lett's church belongs to a denomination started by the Rev. Johnnie Colemon of Chicago in 1974, the Universal Foundation for Better Living. The Rev. Mr. Colemon's mega church on Chicago's Southside fits loosely into a broadly defined New Thought movement, which includes the Rev. Frederick Eikerenkoetter, or Rev. Ike, the flamboyant New York "success and prosperity" preacher.
"His whole thing is racism dies out in the face of money. Money kills a lot of adversity," says James Stovall, director of the church's Ministry of Arts and Culture, about the 69-year-old Rev. Ike, who also believes there is no sin in enjoying life.
That's not to say church members don't believe in sacrifice and helping others. But, says Stovall, "If you don't pursue some level of success, there's nothing to give."
Both Rev. Ike and Mr. Colemon teach that abundance comes with being in unity with all-abundant God, says J. Gordon Melton, head of the Institute for the Study of American Religion in Santa Barbara. "There's a great emphasis on prosperity," he says.
For Mrs. Reese Lett, who says she talks to God all day, being one with the Almighty is why she believes she is where she is. It's a far cry from her childhood in a Detroit slum and the Baptist faith of her mother.
Child singer
As a 13-year-old, she sang with gospel singer Mahalia Jackson and then became a gospel, blues and jazz artist in her own right. She went on to break the color barrier as a guest on "The Merv Griffin Show" and became the first woman to host a talk show with "Della," and, as millions of viewers know, she completed nine seasons as co-star of CBS' "Touched by an Angel."
Mrs. Reese Lett, 72, lives in Bel-Air with her third husband, producer Franklin Lett. She recalls her mother, Nellie, telling God she had everything she needed to make sandwiches but bread. Pretty soon, a neighbor knocked on the door and said she and her husband had each bought a loaf of bread and had more than they could use. She asked Nellie if she would please accept one.
Mrs. Reese Lett's church has met for three years in a rented banquet room at the Wyndham Bel Age Hotel in West Hollywood The congregation, which totals about 600, is in the midst of a fund-raising campaign to either build or buy their own building. So far, they've raised about $200,000. The church leases an office in Culver City and has two assistant ministers.
The congregation includes blacks, whites, Hispanics and Asians, many middle-aged.
Now, Mrs. Reese Lett preaches about bread. The Lord's Prayer, she says, is an example of how to pray.
Daily bread
"Give us this day our daily bread. It doesn't say, 'Give us some of your bread, Lord.' Does it? No, it doesn't say that," Mrs. Reese Lett says. "It says give us this day our daily bread. I own this bread! Give me the part I'm supposed to have today. I'm not looking to anything or anybody else."
Mrs. Reese Lett's teaching that people have a God-given right to riches stems in large part from the view that humans are divine because they are part of God.
Abundance "is not necessarily just money," she adds. It's "being able to do what you want to do, when you want to do it, as much of it as you want to."
That includes loving relationships and, she says, love of God.
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