UNDERSTANDING THE VOICE OF GOD FOR THE NATION (Series 5) 

  1. Prophetic Seasons 

Every prophecy is not for every person; every prophecy is not for every season.  A prophecy could be right and potent, but if it should miss its season, it loses validity and potency while retaining authenticity.  That a prophecy is authentic does not mean that it is still valid.  That a passport is genuine does not mean that it might not have expired.  Expired drugs could be dangerous, so are some prophecies, applied indiscriminately without regard to their season.  We can learn from expired prophecies, but not so safe to put all our weight on them. Unfortunately, not always do we take time to check expiry dates when we pick up essential items. 

Read more

UNDERSTANDING THE VOICE OF GOD FOR THE NATION (Series 4) 

4.  Prophetic Parts 

Apart from the fact that God could confront a people with prophetic possibilities, even opposite possibilities at times, God’s particular message could sometimes be so large that the human agent is able to see and report only a part of it.  Paul acknowledged that fact when he remarked that “we know in part, and we prophesy in part” (1 Corinthians 13:9).  By using the collective personal pronoun “we,” Paul included himself in that handicap, lofty though he was in relation to God and spiritual matters.  If the mighty Paul should say so of the class, who then considers themselves so prophetically exceptional as to exclude themselves? 

Read more

UNDERSTANDING THE VOICE OF GOD FOR THE NATION (Series 3)

3. The Human Veto to Prophetic Options 

Can such negative possibilities emanate from a good God?  Can opposite prophecies proceed from the same God? Does He contradict Himself?  The answer is in the verses between verse 15 and verse 19, where God shows that whichever of the options becomes a possibility was going to be determined not by His omnipotence but by the lifestyle and choices of the people, whether they would obey Him or rebel.  In other words, the power to ‘fulfil’ any of such prophetic options would not be divine determinism but human prerogatives.  In other words, some future (not every future) is a set of undetermined possibilities any of which can be ‘created’ by the human choice.  God respects the choices that earthlings make in their space (1 Samuel 8:4-7; Psalm 115:16), which explains why He once lamented thus over Israel, without interfering, 

Read more

UNDERSTANDING THE VOICE OF GOD FOR THE NATION (Series 2) 

  1. Prophetic Opposites 

Of the four divine options presented in two mutually opposite sets in Deuteronomy 30:15, two are positive (“life and good”) and two are negative prophecies (“death and evil”).  Can opposite prophecies emanate from the same God? Does God contradict Himself?  Is God so unsure of the future as to leave so wide a window open?  Is He not in control of the world?  Four verses later, in verse 19, the earlier list of four options is extended with the addition of four more possibilities.  

Read more

UNDERSTANDING THE VOICE OF GOD FOR THE NATION (Series 1) 

  1. Prophetic Options 

Can God truly say something to one person different from what He says to another person about the same matter?  Would it still be God when His prophets seem to be at variance in their declarations on the same subject?  Can God be so uncertain of what to do with a nation as to leave an open door of multiple (sometimes opposite) options?  Are some prophecies so determined that no prayers may change them, and others variable, so that they might be amended by human response? 

Read more

Show Buttons
Hide Buttons