Isn't
Prophecy Supposed To Come To Pass?
By Stan Smith
http://gospelsmith.wordpress.com
Prophetic
ministry is like walking a tightrope: it
doesn't work if we get in the habit of making mistakes.
No
other ministry demands so much attention to accuracy. Deuteronomy 18:21-22 sets a standard for true
prophecy:
And if you say in your heart, 'How shall we
know the word which the LORD has not spoken?'-when a prophet speaks in the name
of the LORD, if the thing does not happen or come to pass, that is the thing
which the LORD has not spoken; the prophet has spoken it presumptuously; you
shall not be afraid of him.
My
wife and I have been doing a lot of heart searching after a string of
prophecies in 2008 that have not come to pass.
The
first was about an earthquake in California
- it was supposed to be the big one, and somehow it got attached to
8-8-08. It didn't happen.
The
second was about the Lakeland Outpouring:
many of the prophecies were aborted when Todd Bentley's issues came to
light.
The
third was about the presidential election.
I knew a lot of people who were hanging on to words that did not come to
pass.
But
prophetic people have something else in common with high-wire artists: a safety net.
The
safety net: prophecy is conditional.
Scripture
itself reveals that a prophecy can be the word of God without coming to
pass. Jonah's story is an example. God sent him to Nineveh
and Jonah took the long way around to get there, but eventually he arrived and
proclaimed: "Yet forty days, and Nineveh will be
destroyed."
It
was God's word, but it didn't come to pass.
The king proclaimed three days of fasting and prayer and led the nation
in repentance. God turned away His
judgment and the city was spared for more than a century.
Jeremiah's
trip to the potter's house - see Jeremiah 18 - explains what happened to
Jonah's word in Nineveh. Jeremiah watched as the potter took a
malformed vessel, reworked the clay, and made a new vessel. Then God spoke:
"O house of Israel, can I not do with you as
this potter?" says the LORD. "Look, as the clay is in the potter's hand, so are
you in My hand, O house of Israel! The instant I speak concerning a nation and
concerning a kingdom, to pluck up, to pull down, and to destroy it, if that
nation against whom I have spoken turns from its evil, I will relent of the
disaster that I thought to bring upon it."
God
went on to say that a nation that turns from righteousness can forfeit a
promised blessing. In other words,
prophecy is almost always conditional, even if the prophet does not bother to
explain the conditions. God will turn
away from judgment if we turn away from sin; He will withhold blessings if we
turn away from righteousness.
Ezekiel
18 says God uses the same pattern with individuals. His promise of blessing or warning of
judgment can change if we turn towards Him in repentance or if we turn away.
For
those of us who prophesy, this principle is a safety net if our words don't
come to pass. God is the one who set the
net there; if anything, more scriptures say prophecy is conditional than
require that every word must come to pass.
Because
of this principle, many prophetic people are saying prophecy is an invitation,
not a prediction. But others look on and
wonder if there's any point in prophecy - if the words are unlikely to come to
pass anyway.
We've
fallen into the net so many times that they're starting to wonder if anyone
knows how to walk on the high-wire.
God
is giving us a hunger to see prophecy come to pass.
Frankly,
the principles of the potter's house easily explain the earthquake that didn't
happen, the glory that never quite got released in Lakeland, and the election that did not
unfold as many had prophesied. I don't
feel at all comfortable throwing stones at any of the people who gave these
words or prayed over them.
But
neither do I feel comfortable with our suave habit of falling into the
net. Granted, God put it there; it's
biblical to use it; it's impossible to judge prophecy rightly without
considering the unspoken conditions that go with it.
What
ever became of the idea that God would simply speak, and the word would come to
pass? Do we have to expect that every
word God speaks is negotiable? Will He
ever speak a word we can count on?
I
Corinthians 12:4-6 implies that God will give us both kinds of words:
There are diversities of gifts, but the
same Spirit. There are differences of
ministries, but the same Lord. And there
are diversities of activities, but it is the same God who works all in all.
Sometimes
God will give a word like the one Jonah gave Nineveh.
It will be conditional, and it may or may not come to pass. But sometimes He will give words that surely
happen, even if it looks impossible:
they will be like Jesus' word to Peter that he was to catch a fish and
would find a coin in its mouth. We can
expect both kinds of prophecy because Paul made it clear that the God who gives
prophecy (or any other gift) will give it in a variety of ways.
We've
been experiencing one kind of word, and it's biblical. But we're hungry for another kind of word as
well. We want to see someone cross the
high-wire without falling into the net.
Jesus
doesn't just speak prophecy - He fulfills it.
"The
spirit of prophecy is the testimony of Jesus."
We've focused on one aspect of this - that Jesus will speak prophetic
words through us. But we may have been
overlooking another side of Jesus: He
carefully fulfills prophetic words.
We
find this in all four gospels, but especially in Matthew. Matthew often said, "This was done to fulfill
what is written." Jesus came not just to
speak prophecy, but to fulfill prophecy.
He hasn't changed. He's still
interested in fulfilling prophecy, whether it be the written words of scripture
or the living words spoken by believers today.
After
He multiplied the loaves and fishes, He went around and gathered the leftovers
so they would not go to waste. Today He
is gathering the leftover fragments of prophecy that others may have tossed
aside. He will not let the word of God
return void. He watches over it, to make
sure it comes to pass.
I'm
taking time for heart searching these days.
It can be biblical for prophecy to go unfulfilled if man does not do his
part, but I see Jesus wanting to bring the word of God to pass. Are our prophecies the kind of words He wants
to fulfill? Are they what God plans to
do, or are they wishful thinking?
I'm
not interested in criticizing everyone else's ministry. Satan is the one who accuses the brethren; I
don't want to help him with his work.
But I'm asking God to fill my mouth with words that He can be glad to
watch over and bring to pass. I'm asking
Him to help me make it clear that a word is conditional, if it is; and that
people will understand what the conditions are.
But
I'm also trusting Him to know whether man will meet the conditions or not, and
to take that into account when He speaks.
I sense that He would like to demonstrate that it is possible to get
from one end of the high-wire to the other without falling into the net.
Are
you hungry for something clearer in the prophetic? If so, it's a God-given hunger, and He wants
to satisfy it. "Open your mouth wide,
and I will fill it."
Stan Smith