Jared C. Wilson
writes in Your Jesus is Too Safe that
real prophets first had a specific encounter with God himself and second they
admonished the nation. Thirdly, he said real
prophets preach repentance. “The call to repent – to change our ways – is a
third major sign in identify real prophets of God. Repentance is not just about
changing our minds; it’s about really changing the way we think, in such a way
that our bodies follow. ‘Repent!’ is
the call to make a complete turnaround in our lives.
Did Jesus call
people to repentance? All the time. In fact, he began his ministry carrying on
the torch from John the Baptist: ‘Repent, for the
kingdom of heaven is at hand!’ ‘Stop what you’ve doing; drop everything!’
Jesus came into this divided and corrupted earthly world, into a culture that
had been infiltrated and diluted by paganism and pluralism, into an oppressed
nation ruled by a foreign king, and told everyone he encountered, ‘God’s kingdom is now coming in, and I am the
king in charge. If you want to be a part of God’s re-forming nation, you will
turn away from trusting the kingdom you can see and start following me into
this invisible kingdom.’
Talk about
audacity! That’s why it was easy for some to reject Jesus. In one incident
recorded in the Gospels, Jesus remarked
that prophets are not, in fact, acknowledged even in their own hometowns (Luke
4:24, John 4:44). What would happen if someone in your family or your small
town came out and said, ‘Hey, I speak for
God now’? And what would happen if that same person also insinuated that he
was actually God himself?
You think
Joseph’s brothers (of the Old Testament) hated him for his uppity dreams? Think
of Jesus’ brothers. What would it be like having an older brother casting a
God-sized shadow? We know, for instance, that Jesus’ brother James did not
believe in him – until after the Resurrection. This is the guy who wrote the
epistle of James in the Bible. So Jesus lived his whole earthly life and died
on the cross without the affirmation and support of at least one of his
brothers. His mother was there at the cross, but James was not.
Jesus called
for repentance and thereby provided grounds for people to reject him. Their
submitting to this ‘ordinary’
person’s authority required a humility that was outweighed by their pride.
Still, in his commissioning, in his mode of prophesying, and in his calls of
repentance that eventually led to his rejection, Jesus Christ authenticated
himself as prophet of God.’
Real prophets had a specific encounter with God himself.
Real prophets admonished the nation.
Real
prophets preach repentance.
A prophet warns us to be prepared.
A prophet intrudes on our space.
What irritates, disturbs and offends about Jesus the
Prophet,
is that he proclaims and prophesies himself,
“I am the way, the truth, and the life.
No one can come to the Father except through me” (John 14:6).
THINK
BIG. START SMALL. GO DEEP.
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