I Could not Shoot, so I Wrote This
May 12th, 2008Sorry About That
I am so mad. I drove all the way to the gun range, and it looks like they’ve changed their rules again. Their sign now says they’re closed on Mondays and Tuesdays. I’m completely positive it was Tuesdays and Wednesdays a month ago. It seems like they do this all the time. And checking their website is pointless, since they don’t update it.
I got an interesting comment RE prophecy:
With respect to prophets, pardon me for not having a cite, but in the gospels Jesus said that John the Baptist was the last of the prophets. The next true prophets will be the two old testament saints that return to Jerusalem during the first 3.5 years of the tribulation. Anyone who claims to be a prophet during this current church age is at best misguided. That’s not to say that God can’t or doesn’t use dreams to speak to people, but my view is that it would be more for personal revelation and not true revelation of future events.
Naturally, I mentioned the New Testament prophecies. Response:
You’re correct Steve, you definitely have to account for the prophetic revelations of John of Patmos. Perhaps the distinction is between the definition of a “prophet” vs. someone whom the Holy Spirit reveals prophetic information to.
I don’t think “prophecy” is something Christians have defined all that well. I always thought a prophet was someone who could function pretty much like a P.A. system or a ventriloquist’s dummy. The prophet’s mouth moves, but God says the words. But having read the book of Numbers and the bulk of the New Testament, I’m inclined to think that “prophet” is a term that can apply to a wide spectrum of people, from Moses, who spoke to God face to face, to Stephen, who died after seeing into heaven. My best guess is, anyone to whom the Holy Spirit gives the ability to perceive things ordinary people can’t perceive is a prophet. And if that’s true, then there are super-prophets like Moses, above-average prophets like Jeremiah and Zechariah, and so-so prophets who occasionally get a revelation which may or may not be of great importance. So I guess that if you have a few bona fide inspired dreams or visions, you’re a prophet. Not the best prophet around, but still, a prophet.
I am among the Christians who believe that the Holy Spirit is being meted out much more generously than it used to be, and that we are supposed to connect to it and be changed and empowered by it. I believe this is what prayer in tongues is all about. I think modern Christians who refuse to admit that this is happening are like divers who want to go down with knots in their air hoses. Doing God’s will and fighting on His behalf have always been extremely hard. I don’t believe we were ever expected to succeed on our own. If anything, God has made a point of proving we can’t do it. The Holy Spirit is the power supply mankind has been lacking.
God is strange. He plants a seed, but doesn’t reap the harvest for thousands of years. He established the Jews and allowed them to ruin Israel and be cast out, and He let them turn Israel into a wasteland inhabited by inept, barbaric squatters. He established a powerful Christian church and let it give up on the Holy Spirit and become worldly and weak. And apparently, He plans to bring it all together toward the end of time. Israel restored, the Church reconnected to the power of the Holy Spirit, and so on. You have to wonder. Why not just make us do it right the first time around? Why let Satan get away with so much for so long?
Regrettably, I was not involved in the decision. I don’t know why God never asks my advice.
God is always letting us screw up and then giving us the power to fix things. It’s a constant pattern.
I sometimes think the story of Samson presages the history of the church. Samson started out strong, because the Spirit of God was in him, and then he was seduced by worldiness and lost his power, and then he was blinded, and in the end he regained his power and destroyed the temple of his enemies, killing them in the process. The church started out full of the power of God, but it became corrupt and full of idolatry and pantheism, and it lost its power and its ability to perceive God’s will. And it ended up serving the enemy. And maybe now the power is coming back.
There are other hints, like the bit about releasing foxes to burn the grain of Samson’s enemies. Jesus compared people to grain. I suspect the foxes symbolized evangelists, destroying the harvest of the enemy.
I dunno. I always see the world in terms of symbols. For that reason, the Bible has always driven me crazy.
One thing I believe very strongly is that Christians need to get over feeling superior to Jews. I believe Jews missed the boat, with regard to the Messiah. But Christians threw away and even reviled the Holy Spirit, which is probably worse. It’s the power to change the world. What we did was like losing the Ark of the Covenant, and the result was pretty much the same. We lost battles we should have won. And a lot of people who feel superior to Jews would have been clamoring for the Crucifixion as loudly as anyone, had they been around to do it.
I can tell you as an eyewitness that the Holy Spirit is still here, and that things that qualify as prophetic events still happen, and I am sure I’m one of many. If I were you, I’d be wary of ignoring what is happening, because to do so is on a par with failing to recognize the Messiah.
I’m not qualified to teach, and I am not fit to be a spiritual leader, but I feel safe in saying that much.
I really will catch up on emails soon. Sorry.