"Follow after charity, and
desire spiritual gifts, but rather that ye may prophesy. For
he that speaketh in an unknown tongue speaketh not unto men,
but unto God: for no man understandeth him; howbeit in the
spirit he speaketh mysteries. But he that prophesieth speaketh unto
men to edification, and exhortation, and comfort. He that
speaketh in an unknown tongue edifieth himself; but he that
prophesieth edifieth the church. I would that ye all spake with tongues,
but rather that ye prophesied: for greater is he that
prophesieth than he that speaketh with tongues, except he interpret, that the
church may receive edifying." (I Corinthians 14:1-5)
God is a personal God. He
desires intimate fellowship with individuals more than a distant relationship
with humanity as a race. When Adam and Eve were the entire race, God walked and
talked with them. But ever since sin dulled human ears to hearing and human
eyes to seeing God, He has not been able to communicate with everyone
individually. The race as a whole does not desire His fellowship and is not
sensitive enough to hear God's voice.
For this reason, God has had to
find individuals with whom he can communicate personally, and then speak to the
rest of the human race through them. Through the ages God has raised up special
people called patriarchs and prophets to be His spokesmen to mankind. And in
the fullness of time, God spoke to us in the person of Jesus Christ (Heb.
1:1-2), who was God Himself manifest in the flesh (I Tim. 3:16), the full and
complete expression of God Himself (Col. 2:9).
Jesus was God's thoughts,
words, principles, plans and pattern of living manifested on earth. Though the
Old Testament prophets had prophesied in part, often speaking words they
themselves did not fully comprehend, Jesus was more than a prophet. He was God
manifested in the flesh. He was the brightest display of God's glory and the
greatest expression of God.
Jesus tore the veil that kept
us from seeing God, and removed our dullness of hearing. He made the way for
God to come and dwell personally within each individual. When a person is born
again and baptized with the Holy Spirit, that person's individual body becomes
a temple of God (I Cor. 6:19). Every born again believer are then built
together as a spiritual house where the fullness of God can dwell (Ep.
2:19-22).
Jesus was the firstborn, the
prototype of a whole new creation who would become like Him, being conformed to
His very image and likeness. His body, containing the fullness of the Godhead,
was crucified, buried, resurrected and is now the head of the church.
After Jesus ascended to heaven,
the world was no longer able to see the fullness of God in the flesh. But Jesus
sent His Spirit and the Spirit through His apostles wrote in the Bible the
guidelines and standards by which God can be fully known and understood.
Rightly understood the Scripture is sufficient to give us knowledge of all we
need to be in our time of mortality and in to eternity. The Bible is now the
revelation of God, all the sacred writings the Church will ever need to do the
will of God.
Through His Word and Spirit,
God desires to walk and talk with us in an individual, personal, intimate
relationship. Today not all believers understand how to recognize the voice of
God. Even when they do recognize it, many do not know how to respond to it so
that it can be fulfilled. In this way, as in many other ways, no individual is
self-sufficient in his relationship with God; we all need the rest of the Body
of Christ. So God has set within the Body the ministry of the prophet as a
special voice; He has established the gift of prophecy as His voice in the
midst of the church; and He has sent the spirit of prophecy to give testimony
of Him throughout the world.
The coming of the Holy Spirit,
the birth of the Church, and the writing of the Bible did not eliminate the
need for the prophetic voice of God; in fact, it intensified that need. On the
day of Pentecost Peter preached that the prophet Joel was speaking of the
Church age when he proclaimed, "I will pour out my Spirit in those days,
and your sons and daughters shall prophesy" (Acts 2:17). Paul emphasized
that truth when he told the church at Corinth to "covet to prophesy"
(I Cor. 14:39; Eph. 4:11).
God still wants the revelation of
His will to be vocalized. So He has established the prophetic ministry as a
voice of revelation and illumination which will reveal His will to the church
and the world. He also uses this ministry to give specific instructions to
individuals concerning His personal will for their lives.
The ministry of the prophet is
not to bring about additions or subtractions to the Word of God. Any new
additions accepted as infallibly inspired would be counterfeits, false
documents which would contain delusions that lead to damnation. The prophet
brings illumination and further specifics about that which has already been
written. The gift of prophecy through the saints is to bring edification,
exhortation, and comfort to the church (I Cor. 14:3).
The Holy Spirit whispering the
thoughts of God within a believers heart is obviously God's divine order for
communication. But what the individual has sensed in his spirit must be
confirmed: God's counsel is that every word needs to be witnessed to and
confirmed in the mouth of two or three witnesses (II Cor. 13:1). This is a
critical role that can be fulfilled by the prophetic voice.
Personal prophecy must never
become a substitute for the individual's responsibility of hearing the voice of
God for himself. Personal prophecy must not take the place our duty to fast,
pray, and seek God until we hear from heaven ourselves!
There are people who cannot
hear, or will not take time to hear, what God wants to say to them. God will
not force himself on us. When this is the case, God will use the voice of the
prophet to speak to individuals or congregations. God's greatest desire is for
us to take time to seek Him until our mind, emotions, and will are cleared
sufficiently for Him to communicate His will to us clearly.
True prophecy, if not rightly
understood or responded to, can cause confusion and wrong decisions among
believers who are immature, uncommitted, or biblically uneducated. The havoc
created by false prophecies, are much worse, requiring much counseling and time
to resolve the resulting problems. The godly solution to the problems of
personal prophecy is not to isolate the believer from it, nor to discourage
them from seeking to hear from God personally. The church needs to train the
church to discern what is true, and how to respond properly to the true word
from God.
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