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Charismatic Rockstar Heidi Baker Says She Loves to Smell Lepers and Kiss their Toes

Heidi baker is a rockstar within the Charismatic movement and is a very busy lady. She’s the founder & President of Iris Global and Rolland & Heidi Baker Ministries, and is a missionary partnered with and sent out by Bill Johnson and Bethel Church. She’s the Global Leader of Empowered 21, as well as the Co-founder of the Revival Alliance Network.

Notably, the Revival Alliance was formed around Easter 2006 in response to a prophetic assignment from Bob Jones. Charter member Che Ahn explains:

“In 2005, Bob Jones prophesied to Heidi and Rolland Baker to form a new network that would be the container for the one billion souls coming in. He named John and Carol Arnott, Bill and Beni Johnson, Randy and Deanne Clark along with Sue and me among those to be involved. God also revealed Georgian and Winnie Banov’s involvement as we all met together to pray and strategize.”

Baker is also about as crazy as a rat in a coffee can and has terrible theology (despite what the Remnant Radio guys say about her), which you can read more about here.

Baker insists that she is frequently taken to heaven, where she speaks with God the Father directly and where he shows her the mysteries of the faith. She has specifically taught that there is a “body parts” room in heaven, where severed eyeballs, skin, arms, and bones are, and that God gives her access to this room, where he pulls the “product” from whenever she heals people. 

In a recent video, she reiterates a recent trip to the Body Parts room and declares how much she loves kissing, hugging, and smelling lepers, whom she ostensibly heals. She also insists that she uses the Body Parts room to heal the hearing of every member of certain African tribes. 



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Kenneth Copeland Prophecies That God is Giving Heidi Baker ‘The United States’

When arch-heretic Kenneth Copeland is not giving false prophecies about COVID being destroyedthrowing someone in a wheelchair to the floor, casting away bald spots in Jesus name, or even running his own bizzaro Bible college, arch-heretic Kenneth Copeland, 86, the world’s richest prosperity preacher in America, can be frequently found making up stuff about Jesus and justifying his personal theological idiosyncrasies.

Speaking at his Eagle Mountain Christian ‘Church’, Copeland claimed to be speaking for God as he ‘prophecies’ over Heidi Baker, a charismatic prophetess who routinely gives false prophecies and claims she frequently visits heaven where she is given special revelation. Copeland claims that she has being given the gift of “The United States” and then later “Canada.”

“I have given you and Roland favor in places where people hated you, and wanted to kill you, and I’m changing their minds and changing their hearts. My goodness is falling in the hearts of men and women in this country, in the United States, where so few know of you and Roland.

I am giving you the United States. I am giving you this place and opening it up to you. And you’ll go back and forth, back and forth, then will come Canada. You will go to the far North, you’ll go to the Inuits….”



h/t Shawn at Revealing Truth

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bad theology Charismatic Nonsense Heresies

Documentary ‘Send Proof’ Released, Ft Charismatics Giving ‘Evidence’ of ‘Supernatural’ ‘Healing’

On Sept 14th, 2021, the documentary ‘Send Proof’ was released, featuring a ‘who’s who’ of false charismatic faith healers, including Hillsong’s Brian Houston, Shawn Bolz, Heidi Baker, and Randy Clark.

Collectively these men and women have not healed a single person, on account of their atrocious heresies and theology, and yet the video purports to show them as the best evidence for healers that Christendom has to offer, with the four of them collectively alleging to have healed thousands if not tens of thousands of people from cancer, blindness, regrown legs, back backs, short legs, deafness, and a couple of resurrections for good measure. The film’s promotional material reads:

Follow Elijah Stephens in his search for evidence surrounding miracles. When his former pastor leaves the faith, Stephens finds his own worldview falling apart, and embarks on a journey to find proof for the supernatural. Along the way, he encounters sharp atheists and skeptics but also finds others who claim to have evidence for miraculous healings.

Apart from the NAR folk, the film likewise brings on famous atheist skeptics (and notably no cessationists Christians) to refute the believers, all who are adamant that miracles do not take place.

The film disagrees, offering up one example as proof being Heidi Baker, a New Apostolic Reformation ‘Miracle Worker’ and Apostlette. Researchers headed down to Pemba, Mozambique which is the headquarters of their Iris Global Missions Base ministry to test the veracity of the known “healer.” There, researchers tested 24 people before and after Baker prayed for healing.

They concluded that unlike Jesus or Paul who performed miracles and healed the sick and dying, seeing instant, indisputable, complete and permanent healings, after Baker’s prayer, further testing only allegedly detected “statistically significant improvements in hearing and vision.”

The video is available for download for 15$, but we have no intention of watching it.


Bonus. One of the healers, Randy Clark, getting wild with the Holy Ghost