Myles Munroe Got It Wrong | Here's Why

Myles Munroe is still respected by many for his leadership teaching, communication skill, and emphasis on purpose, but that does not mean his ministry should be beyond biblical scrutiny. In this video, we take a serious look at why Myles Munroe was a problem, not because he was influential, but because influence without sound doctrine can mislead a lot of people. For many Christians, Munroe’s teaching sounded deep, intelligent, and practical. He spoke with confidence, used memorable phrases, and presented the Christian life in a way that felt empowering. But beneath that polished presentation were real doctrinal concerns that believers should not ignore. One of the biggest issues with Myles Munroe was his repeated emphasis on the kingdom in a way that often seemed to sideline or minimize the centrality of the gospel itself. Scripture does speak about the kingdom of God, but the kingdom cannot be rightly understood apart from the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ for sinners. Too often, Munroe’s teaching made the kingdom sound like a message primarily about rediscovering purpose, reclaiming dominion, unlocking leadership, and learning principles for success. That kind of framework may sound inspiring, but when sin, repentance, substitutionary atonement, and justification by faith are pushed to the background, something is deeply wrong. The kingdom of God is not a self-improvement program, and it is not merely a message about regaining influence, leadership, or personal potential. It is inseparably tied to the King and to the gospel of His saving work. Another major concern was the way Munroe often spoke about prosperity, success, wealth, and dominion. He may not have always sounded like the loudest prosperity preachers on television, but many of his teachings were clearly prosperity-gospel adjacent. He regularly connected purpose, principles, management, and kingdom living to prosperity and success in ways that can easily train people to view Christianity through the lens of achievement, increase, and personal advancement. Even when prosperity is framed as a “byproduct” instead of the main goal, the danger is still there when material success becomes a recurring feature of the message. Christians need to be discerning here, because a polished version of error is still error. Sometimes false teaching is not obvious because it is wrapped in leadership language, kingdom vocabulary, and motivational appeal. This video also examines how Myles Munroe’s message could give people a man-centered view of the Christian faith. Rather than centering everything on Christ crucified and risen, his teaching often pushed listeners toward discovering themselves, activating their potential, maximizing their purpose, and understanding their personal significance. Those topics can have a place in a broader biblical worldview, but they become dangerous when they begin to overshadow the holiness of God, the sinfulness of man, and the necessity of redemption through Christ alone. The Christian message is not first about discovering the leader inside of you. It is first about being reconciled to God through the blood of Jesus. Software I use (Ecamm) Sign up with this link: https://www.ecamm.com/mac/ecammlive/?... AFFILIATES Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/shop/allthings... Covenant Eyes: https://covenanteyes.sjv.io/zNYmqG Join this channel to get access to perks:    / @kdubtru   Website: kdubtru.com Music: https://open.spotify.com/artist/1TohV... Subscribe & click 🛎 for notifications of premieres and live streams! Follow me on social media: Twitter.com/kdubtru Facebook.com/allthingstheology instagram.com/kdub.tru/ SUPPORT: Patreon.com/kdubtru Listen on podcast: https://anchor.fm/allthingstheology Email for interviews or booking: [email protected]