How will God Speak to Me? (Part 5 of 5)
I once asked an audience to tell me which book was more inspired, between St Luke’s Gospel and St John’s Gospel. There were those who were sure that St John’s Gospel was more inspired, that it was more ‘the word of God’ than St Luke’s Gospel. A few maturer folks said that both books had equal inspiration as the word of God. The Introduction to the Book of Revelation clearly shows that Apostle John had an encounter with the Almighty where he was instructed to write; so, the authenticity of that book cannot be questioned (Revelation 1:1, 10-11). The same apostle wrote the Book of John, which opens in a unique mystical way, almost like Genesis: “In the beginning…” But St Luke’s Gospel with a different mode of inspiration is part of the same Bible.
Many people have set out to write accounts about the events that have been fulfilled among us. 2 They used the eyewitness reports circulating among us from the early disciples. 3 Having carefully investigated everything from the beginning, I also have decided to write a careful account for you, most honorable Theophilus, 4 so you can be certain of the truth of everything you were taught (Luke 1:1-4, New Living Translation).
The Gospel of Luke was a product of research; it was “a careful account” of “eyewitness reports … carefully investigated.” It is no less the word of God than Revelation or Genesis. Strange. Knowledge.
What God does not give by revelation He might have chosen to give by investigation. Elisha the doubly-anointed prophet once had a case about which he confessed, “the LORD hath hid it from me, and hath not told me.” He did not say he could not see “it”; he said God deliberately “hid” that information from him, and wouldn’t tell him, despite how much he sought it by revelation. Why? God knows. So, the prophet’s limitation about that information was not because he had become blind or had backslidden. God Himself did not want to transmit that information by revelation. He had to seek it by investigation, sending his servant to “Run now” and seek the information from the woman: “Is it well with thee?” (2 Kings 4:26-27).
Does God sometimes hide certain matters, even from His prophets? Does He choose at times to reveal information by a different channel than we are used to? It says in Amos 3:7 that “Surely the Lord GOD will do nothing, but he revealeth his secret unto his servants the prophets,” but it doesn’t say how He would reveal it, and we do not know all His “servants.” Many of them are not on our billboards or at our ‘high tables.’
At the birth of Jesus, the wise men from the east were led to Jerusalem by the sign of the star they had seen. Their mission was in fulfilment of prophecy of which they had not been aware. To be doubly sure, when they arrived Jerusalem, they sought by information what they could no more access by signs and revelation, because they had lost the star. They enquired to the palace of Herod. That was an error. Having begun in the spirit, they sought perfection by the flesh (Galatians 3:3). Discernment was important every step of the way (Matthew 2:1-12).
A young woman was going to get married. Her pastor, a very gifted man who has had remarkable encounters with angels and with Jesus, prayed about it. He proceeded to make investigations on the proposed husband’s background. He shared his very worrisome findings with the woman. She waved them off. She was ready to go, maybe too much in love to care, or too much in a hurry to worry. Two months after, she was the victim of such severe domestic violence that she ended up in the hospital, abandoned to her parents. The husband had also deserted. The pastor received credible information, not by revelation but by investigation. That information was no less the voice of God than the visions or when he had prophesied. It was to her detriment that she had not valued the voice of knowledge and wisdom as she might have done a ‘prophecy.’
When Jesus would go into Samaria, the people gave Him ‘latest news’ about the hazards along that path. He had to process the news and certify if God was in that information, as far as it concerned Him (John 11:7-9). It was probably the same safety concerns that had made Him unable to respond as urgently as it seemed when the call came from Mary and Martha about Lazarus their dead brother, His friend.
Because God has not spoken by a prophet does not mean that He has not spoken at all. That He does not speak through popular names that we have elevated as ‘His servants’ does not mean that He has not, for “The Lord knoweth them that are his” (2 Timothy 2:19), and not all that bear His name as His.
The more we draw nigh to the Lord, the more clearly we would hear Him. The more He reaches us through His many channels, so much will the enemy strive to corrupt the same channels. Peter had a nasty experience just after one fantastic endowment from Heaven, and Paul might have been fooled by a fine voice that sounded much like the recent prophetic commendations he had known at Antioch (Matthew 16:22-23; Acts 16:16-18). Try the spirits. I have had my little share of voices and visions and trances, even though not as much as others have. Still, I am my greatest critic. I have had my share of the privilege of dreams and illuminations and sensations, still, I do not run at the instance of one voice, being my own greatest critic. Yet, caution against mistakes should not keep one from the miracles of the Father’s channels.