1 John 1:2 is not heretical in its application.
To equate 1 John 1:2 w/ Faith Teaching is laughable.
Amen. Hebrews 6:18, Titus 1:2.
Faith Teachers teach that God is bound to what *they think* is His promise to do things for them, when in reality God's word does not do that. They make a set of promises that God has made to individuals or groups at one time or another and then try to bind God to do that for them at any time! You are confusing this matter!
Nobody would disagree with you that God has to be consistent with who He is! But God has *not* promised, in His word, to do all the things that Faith Teachers are "claiming." We cannot claim healing for all sickness (Exo 4.11). We cannot claim prosperity in all situations. We cannot claim to be perfect, sinless, and free of all physical imperfections. We cannot cast Satan and all demons out of the world. We cannot "claim" the Kingdom of God immediately on earth.
All these things are promised to us in God's word. But the key matter is the Faith Teachers try to apply some things that only come when the Kingdom of God comes. They try to apply it in today's world, *before* the Kingdom has come.
There are certainly some elements of the heavenly Kingdom that can impact us in today's world. But these things are limited. I try in vain to get Faith Teachers to explain the limits on what they believe they can claim. I never see them answer this. They may have answered it somewhere. But in all the years I've been hearing them blah, blah, blah, they spend more time selling than checking their product! ;)
I haven't examined JD's fruit and so I don't know if any of it is bad. He does seem to have joy, however. Whether this is because of his obscene wealth or the result of a relationship with God remains to be seen (on the day of judgment).
I don't resent Jesse's wealth. Some people are called to wealth, or have been legitimately given that opportunity by God. David was wealthy, Abraham was wealthy, Job was wealthy. Solomon was fabulously wealthy.
My concern is with ministers who may use gifts from the ministry to built their wealth, or even give the impression that this is okay. Gifts given to the ministry should be for "ministry," and not for someone's personal wealth. If they can't write a book on a subject other than on the Bible, they should not try to get wealthy.