While it would be very encouraging to see Benny Hinn repent from his long career of teaching for shameful gain the things that he ought not, there doesn't seem to be a lot of truth or repentance in this article.There seems to be a lot of denial about the actual lavishness of his lifestyle. Benny Hinn's own nephew, Costi, who grew up in the family business but left it when God saved him, has been open and transparent about the lifestyle he lived as a Hinn. He talks about flights on private Gulfstreams and hotels that were $25,000 per night. In his new book, he mentions how he would shop in the finest stores every single time he was in Los Angeles. It was a life of abject luxury, and according to Costi, it was built by taking advantage of [people], exploiting the poor, using our greed, squeezing every last dollar out of people so we could live the way they could never [live]. But here Hinn downplays all that, as he always does, and says, yes, I may have gone a bit too far with the prosperity teaching, but I don't live as lavishly as people say.To see what true repentance from the prosperity gospel looks like, I would recommend an article on the same website about Costi Hinn: www.christianpost.com/news/benny-hinns-nephew-hinn-clan-like-royal-family-and-mafia-prosperity-teaching-is-twisted-204152