What does he claim, specifically? And would you claim that all those thousands of people who come to his gigs would have a nuanced understanding of his claims?
I think he claims that his religious beliefs teach that it is possible for one person to heal another by the laying on of hands, and that if people who share that belief show up at his services, he will *TRY* to heal them.
It is unremarkable that sick people in wheelchairs with oxygen tanks who share his belief that this kind of healing is possible show up at his services.
Would we substitute our judgment for theirs? In another thread, it was argued that an assisted suicide clinic in Switzerland that has processed 450 people, some of them not particularly disabled, represented a choice by those people that we had no right to interfere in. Benny Hinn isn't giving his patrons poison to drink. If we have no right to prevent his audience members from going to Switzerland and drinking poison, what right do we have to tell them they can't let him touch them and wish real hard, which is far less harmful?
If Hinn and his ilk spread crap all over the dance floor and then wants to declaim any responsibility when someone steps in it, it just won't fly.
What responsibility is he disclaiming. (I believe "declaim" means to make a speech.) They want to go to a person who will touch them and wish them to be healthier. He is offering to touch them and wish. Sounds like a valid implied personal services contract to me.
I think I told this story here long ago, so excuse me if I am repeating myself. I attended a Hinn revival in a large, indoor sports arena that held probably 20,000 people. In the central area of the floor they had admitted hundreds (literally) of people with all manner of crippling diseases. There were wheelchairs and oxygen tanks everywhere. It was quite depressing.
So Hinn is evil because sick people are depressing? Or sick people are like small children who can't make their decisions, and we must take the role of their parents, and make their decisions for them? I'm trying to find an axis here that makes Hinn an bad person, and I'm failing.
But that was mild compared to watching Hinn's minions working these people with prayer and the ubiquitous money pails. I had binoculars with me and watched scene after scene of people giving money and checks to the "officiants". This went on for a couple of hours while the show built up to Benny's eventual appearance.
So forget the theatrics on stage. It is the mind-bending hours of poaching on the utterly helpless that is the real crime. I will never, ever find an ounce of charity for people like Hinn. "Crook", as I said, is the nicest thing about him that can be said. I hope he rots in hell.
Yet, were these sick people to go to Switzerland, and ask for a big glass of poison to drink, it would be their right. How is it not their right to give some of their money to Benny Hinn's ministry, when that is so much less harmful to them.