There is nothing ungodly about exposing heresies and heretics. Bill Johnson has been identified as a false teacher who teaches heresies, you perhaps you should reconsider your estimation of this preacher.
1. He teaches that Jesus SET ASIDE HIS DIVINITY.
2. Bill Johnson incredibly teaches that Jesus was "born again" in the resurrection!
3. Bill Johnson promotes the false Prosperity Gospel
4. Bill Johnson teaches that it is always God's will to heal Christians
5. Bill Johnson teaches the Word of Faith heresy
6. Bill Johnson falsely teaches that all Christians can be prophets
1. He isn't saying that Jesus EVER ceased to be God. He's just saying that Jesus emptied Himself of His divine attributes (Phil. 2:7) and ministered as a man anointed by the Holy Spirit. He may have worded it clumsily, but what he was saying is essentially what John MacArthur stated about the Holy Spirit in Jesus at the Strange Fire conference. Only a heretic hunter would interpret Johnson to mean that Jesus ever ceased to be God.
2. Johnson was saying that Jesus was born in Bethlehem, and then he was born (or "begotten" in Acts 13:33) from the dead in His resurrection. Ergo, He was "born again". That doesn't mean that He ever had a sin nature and needed regeneration as we do. It just means that was born twice - once as a baby and once as the resurrected Son of God. Only a heretic hunter would miss what Bill Johnson was saying here.
3. "Tribulation" doesn't mean that you won't prosper or get your prayers answered. It means that you will receive opposition and persecution from those who don't share your world view. Bill Johnson receives plenty of opposition from people who don't like his theology and misrepresent what he believes and teaches, so he qualifies as experiencing "tribulation". But even if it wasn't always God's will to prosper His children, it wouldn't be heresy to teach that it is. It's a nonessential issue. Only a heretic hunter would claim otherwise.
4. We don't take our theology from what this guy or that guy experiences. We go by what the Bible says. Physical healing has been provided for us in the atonement. (Is. 53:4,5; Mat. 8:16,17) Jesus never turned anybody down for healing due to the fact that it wasn't God's sovereign will to heal them, and He told us that if we've seen Him we've seen the Father. Paul preached to a lame man in Acts 14 and the message that he preached caused the man to have faith for physical healing, so apparently Paul thought that healing was God's will if he was preaching it. But even if Bill Johnson was wrong about that, it's a nonessential issue and hardly qualifies as heresy. Only a heretic hunter would suggest that it's heresy to believe that God's will is healing.
5. Word of Faith teaches that faith is based on the will of God revealed in the Word of God, so it essentially agrees with what you said. And WoF teachers hold to all of the essential doctrines of the Christian faith, so WoF teaching isn't heresy. Only a heretic hunter would claim that it is.
6. I don't know if Bill Johnson teaches that or not, but the Apostle Paul said that he wished that we would all prophesy. Even if Bill is wrong on this, it's not a violation of any essential doctrine of the Christian faith so it's not heresy. Only a heretic hunter would claim that it is.
I'm not NAR and I don't agree with Bill Johnson on some things, but he's not a heretic and I am really tired of seeing people misrepresent the nature of heresy and mischaracterize people they don't agree with as heretics. Calling everybody you don't like a heretic trivializes heresy just like calling everybody a Nazi trivializes the horrors of the holocaust. Let's be a bit more responsible here, shall we?