As with much of everything, there is a caste system when it comes to all things prophetic, spiritual, or otherwise supernatural. Notice I didn’t say Biblical because very little that goes on in the modern-day Western church is Biblical. There aren’t enough fireworks in Biblical living. We live in the age of entertainment, and there’s nothing entertaining about denying yourself.
One rung up from the internet prophets who troll social media
hoping they get a bite are the guys who do crowd work. Granted, crowd work is
limiting in that your potential victims have to be present and in the audience.
But it’s also the best way to solidify an individual’s belief that you are
communicating with the Almighty Himself.
Because the potential victims never bothered to learn the
difference between a true prophet of God and the Amazing Kreskin, they believe
someone guessing their zip code, or whether they’re troubled about something, is
just as good as foretelling the birth of Christ 700 years before he was born.
Until he got caught, Peter Popoff had one doozie of a scam
going. He’d get people attending his meetings to fill out prayer cards with
their name, address, prayer need, ailment, and the such, collect them at the
door, then his wife would transmit the information to him via an earpiece, and
he would wow and dazzle the crowd by guessing their names, ages, and various
other things.
Unlike Peter Popoff, there are some who do crowd work that
are naturally gifted and don’t need earpieces to guess at certain things.
Between body language, observation, intuition, telltale signs, and leading
questions, they get close enough to the mark that people who don’t know better
are left in awe of their ‘prophetic’ abilities.
Why yes, I do have a dog, and I do smoke cigarettes, and yes,
I’ve been having trouble sleeping lately. Dog hair on your coat, yellow teeth,
fidgeting, cigarette smell on your hair, bags under your eyes! So prophetic,
it’s scary.
Now, there’s a difference between that and stopping in the
middle of a sermon, pointing out one woman in a crowd of twelve hundred,
telling her it was time to quit and that she should pull the pack of smokes
from her brazier and lay them at the altar. As Paul would say, I knew a man in
Christ who did just that.
When it comes to crowd work, it’s not foolproof. Sometimes
they get ahead of themselves and tell a brother and sister that it’s the Lord’s
will that they become one flesh in His sight because they showed up at a
meeting together. Still, people are hungry for the supernatural and are willing
to overlook a lot of red flags and ignore that disquiet in their bellies. Even
if they’re caught in a full-blown lie, if they’re quick enough on their feet,
they’ll spin it and say it was symbolic, of the spiritual realm, beyond the
understanding of those not gifted.
Before the angry birds’ choir chimes in, notice I never said
I do not believe in the work of the Holy Spirit, the gifts of the Holy Spirit,
revelation, or prophecy. The enemy wouldn’t be tirelessly counterfeiting something
that didn’t exist, to begin with. That would make him a creator, not an
imitator. It would no longer be counterfeit; it would just be a different
thing.
You don’t potentially lead a Christian astray by introducing
them to Scientology and calling it Christianity light. It would be like someone
saying they’ve got a watch they want to sell you and producing a flashlight.
You know, offhand, it’s not a watch.
As such, because we are warned of the wave of fakes and
counterfeits attempting to deceive, if possible even the elect during the last
days, we know that the real exists and has existed all along. Perhaps not as
bombastic, flashy, boisterous, self-indulgent, spotlight-chasing, or
attention-starved as the fake, but the real exists.
The real, however, is exclusive. There will always be more
forgeries of something truly valuable than there will be of the authentic.
Because the authentic has intrinsic value, it will always come at a higher
price than the counterfeit, and it will be harder to find.
To be blunt, most people settle for a counterfeit because
they don’t want to put in the effort or make the requisite sacrifices to attain
the real. The authentic comes at a price that few are willing to pay, and
because they are unwilling to pay it, they grow bitter toward anyone who is.
That we would call the Christian version of palm reading prophecy is in itself criminal. That we would follow the Christian version of palm readers simply because they tell us good things is spiritually suicidal.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
Having been sucked into a Signs & Wonders cult 20 years ago, who knew the buzz words like 'thus sayeth the lord!' which is accepted as final proof of authority, I can claim that experience is a great teacher.
ReplyDeleteSince the charlatans have been around forever. I think the more dangerous ones are those who say really good sounding level-headed moderate words as they gather huge followings, build huge buildings, amass great fortunes and then kneel with their wife in silence for 8 minutes at their podium to honor a drug addicted thug and thus appease some of their contributors and not rock the boat.
We live in the age of compromise with the mainstream consciousness now, which, of course, moves us farther away from where we ought to be and closer to judgment.
I wish I could believe we have more time to warn those who are too easily flimflammed. But if they can't be awakened what about those who ought to know better? Are they accountable? Are they those who are blinded lest they see?
Yes!
ReplyDeleteThank you. Looking forward to reading this each morning.
ReplyDelete