Job 33:19-22,
“Man is also chastened with pain on his bed, and with strong pain in many of
his bones, so that his life abhors bread, and his soul succulent food. His
flesh wastes away from sight, and his bones stick out which once were not seen.
Yet his soul draws near the Pit, and his life to the executioners.”
If Elihu ever
failed at being Job’s self-appointed spokesman before God, he could readily try
his hand at being an utterer of personal prophecy in our modern era. He would
likely get more traction than some of the new brood of internet prophets, who
have measurably less insight and awareness than Elihu. What Elihu was saying
wasn’t revelatory by any means; it was the conclusion to which he’d come based
on Job’s suffering, because if a man suffers from pain in his bones to the
point of abhorring bread, surely he must be under God’s chastening.
It’s funny how
the faces change, but the means by which those who claim revelatory insight use
the same deductive reasoning to reach their conclusions. It’s also the reason that
focusing on the mechanisms and contrivances that such individuals use, rather
than on the individuals themselves, is a better use of one’s time.
The false
prophets, teachers, evangelists, and those pretending to be sheep but are
inwardly ravenous wolves are like the hydra of legend, wherein if one head is
lopped off, two others grow in their place. Different face, same scheme, time
and again, but if you are able to articulate and properly define the scheme,
the face won’t matter because you will know them by their fruit.
Matthew 7:15-20,
“Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly
they are ravenous wolves. You will know them by their fruits. Do men gather
grapes from thornbushes or figs from thistles? Even so, every good tree bears
good fruit, but a bad tree bears bad fruit. A good tree cannot bear bad fruit,
nor can a bad tree bear good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is
cut down and thrown into the fire. Therefore by their fruits you will know
them.”
One of the
biggest scandals within the prophetic movement in recent years was self-titled
prophets using Facebook to mine data about individuals, then passing it off as
authentic prophetic utterance. People were wowed and impressed as though they
were there for a magic show rather than a church service, smiling and clapping like
trained seals when they were told the street they lived on, or the name of
their pet poodle, not bothering to think it through and conclude everything
they’d heard was public knowledge, but receiving it as words from on high.
Those who
understand how such individuals operate and can identify the mechanisms they
employ know that the street number or the name of their recently deceased
grandmother is just a springboard to what they’re really after. It never ends
with “Your cat’s name is Mr. Whiskers, very original”; it begins with it.
Sooner rather than later, also under the guise of prophetic utterance, the
manipulation will begin in earnest, and whether it’s sowing a faith seed for
the new parsonage that will allow for greater spiritual interactions with the
Almighty, or coming under their mentorship which they then use to exploit
toward nefarious ends, the victims go along with it because he knew my pet
hamster’s name offhand, so he must be what he claims to be.
As an aside, when
did the purpose of prophecy become to confirm to you something banal and
spiritually irrelevant that you already knew, or could readily discover by
looking at your driver’s license? When did we lower the bar to the point that
we equate prophecy with a variety show put on by the local high school to raise
money for its summer camp outing? What we are seeing today is what happens when
desire to witness the supernatural meets unwillingness to live lives worthy of
the name Jesus. We want the experience without the repentance; we want the
words of knowledge without sanctification; we want the power without the
indwelling presence because the indwelling presence demands a clean vessel, and
that, in turn, demands that we mortify the flesh and deny ourselves daily.
You can’t have
one without the other, but you can pretend to. It may work for a while; the
crowds may be wowed, and the gullible may swoon, but the end will be worse than
the beginning, and eventually the truth will out.
If by some
miracle we run across someone with true prophetic gifting and they speak a word
that challenges us, calls us to repentance, chastens us, or isn’t what we
expected to hear, we brush it off and go prophecy hunting until we hear the one
we want to hear, because it was never about what the Lord would say but about
confirming our biases and hearing a word that is little more than an echo of
our own machinations.
I really didn’t like
the word about humbling myself and striving for righteousness because it
challenged me and made me feel some kind of way, but that one about being
highly favored and God having a plan for my life where I would reach millions
with my gift - that one hit home. It bore witness, don’t you know, so it must
be God’s honest truth. Never mind that I know I’m not where I’m supposed to be
in my walk with God. Never mind that although by now I should be on a steady
diet of meat, I’m still on milk, and even that only enough to subsist; the man
on stage said that I too would be a prophet to the nations.
Elihu didn’t go
so far as to prophesy or claim he was prophesying, but he allowed his worldview
to determine Job’s guilt and then created a narrative to support his
conclusion. It’s like insisting you know the answer to a math equation before
you’ve heard the equation itself. It’s four; I know it’s four; I don’t care if
the equation is seventy divided by two; the answer is still four.
Such people are
impossible to reason with because they will not allow for a different answer,
no matter how much evidence exists that they were wrong.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
Posted on 9 June 2026 | 11:36 am
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