Apostles: True or False?
By
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In chapter two of the
book of Revelation, Jesus is walking in the midst of the seven golden lamp
stands, which represented the churches of Asia Minor. Among the few positive
things that He said to them are the following words to the church at Ephesus, “
. . . you tried those pretending to
be apostles, and are not, and have found them liars” (Revelation 2:2). The
trial of those who pretended to be apostles is listed among the positive
actions of the Ephesian Church, which pleased the Lord. We are fully aware that
we are living in a day when many of God’s children fail to understand the
difference between testing and judgment, discernment and criticism, and view all
speech and writing of a negative nature as critical and destructive. This has
led to a general no-speak climate
enforced by those in control that resists reform and allows unchecked
deception. We are commanded to prove (dokimazo
- to test, examine, scrutinize) the genuineness of all things and hold fast to what is good. (See 1Thessalonians
5:21). It is in this spirit that we
write the following article.
In
certain circles today, a great emphasis is placed on the restoration of
the "office of apostle." We believe
this has led to an unwholesome preoccupation by power hungry men and women
seeking to corral the saints of God in a sheepfold that does not belong to the
Good Shepherd. As a result, you cannot kick over an ecclesiastical rock without
finding an “apostle" under it. At first this seemed rather innocuous
because those claiming this title were a scattered few, but lately this
inordinate ambition has risen like a ziggurat on the plains of Shinar.
You
can never underestimate the resolve of ambitious men. When people set their
minds to a thing, and become one around a central ambition, "nothing will
be restrained from them, which they have imagined to do" (Gen 11:6). This
preoccupation with the restoration of apostles has resulted in a network of
so-called apostles and a "presiding
apostle" sitting over them in kingly regalia. Under the name of biblical apostleship, these men have
created a new Romanism. They move in both secular and religious power,
"mapping" an empire tantamount to global papalism, issuing their own
versions of the papal bulls called memorandums. These men set themselves over
the people of God by the frequent use of honorific titles and extravagant
ministry names. Although they claim that
their actions are biblical, there is
little scriptural evidence to support them.
We
do find one passage that aptly describes the driving force behind this new
apostolic reformation. It is found in 2 Corinthians 11:13 where the apostle
Paul wrote:
.
For such are
false apostles, deceitful workers, transforming
themselves (3345
metaschematizo—self-transformation) into the apostles of Christ. And no
marvel; for Satan himself is transformed
(self-transformed) into an angel of
light. Therefore it is no great thing
if his ministers also be transformed
as the ministers of righteousness; whose end shall be according to their works.
Who
is doing the transforming, God or men? If it is God, the apostle is true, but
if it is men, these apostles are Satan's ministers. From what we have seen so
far, today’s apostolic reformation more resembles Horatio Alger’s self-made man
than the birthing of true apostles. True apostles are God-birthed, not
self-transformed. They are born from above, not made by the hands and wills of
men.
Not
to long ago, I (Michael) went to one of these big name conferences where these
self-made men and women presided. The worst sort of pride and lust for power
permeated not only the elevated leaders, but went out from them and saturated
the crowd that gathered to worship at their feet! The unspoken message from the
stage for three days was, "If you give us power and honor, you will
receive power and honor from us as well!" We are convinced that these self-transformed “apostles” who come as
messengers of light are deceiving thousands. For the sake of God's children we
can no longer keep silent!
True
apostles are not called and made by men, they are birthed and transformed by
God. Nothing reveals a counterfeit as effectively as the genuine article. It is
an issue of the organic verses the synthetic, the real opposed to the
knock-off. Let us first look at the calling of a genuine apostle, whose birth
and preparation was unlike anything known by most of today's so-called
apostles.
We see in Paul an
example of the birth of a genuine apostle. Paul spoke of this birth in 1
Corinthians 15:8-10.
"Then last of all He (the risen Lord Jesus) was seen by me
also, as by one born out of due time. For I am the least of the
apostles, who am not worthy to be called an apostle, because I persecuted the
church of God. But by the grace of God I
am what I am, and His grace toward me was not in vain; but I labored more abundantly than they all,
yet not I, but the grace of God which was
with me." (NKJV)
Note here that Paul attributed who he was and what he did to the
transforming grace of God. He was indeed God's workmanship born in travail and crisis. Paul spoke of his calling
in Galatians chapter one. " Paul, an apostle, (not of men, neither by man,
but by Jesus Christ, and God the Father, who raised him from the dead)"
(Galatians 1:1). Paul's election was not of men. What does this mean? The Greek
word for of here is apo [575],
which should more correctly be translated from. Paul's calling did not
come from man. Neither did it originate with or was it sustained by or through
man. It was not the result of years of working his way up through a religious
hierarchy, accumulating degrees and finally receiving the recognition due him.
Paul’s calling and ministry were heavenly in their conception, inception and
fruition. From beginning to end, Paul was what he was by the grace of God. Paul
was not a self-made man. Those days were over for him when he forsook his past
as one of the religious vanguard of Jerusalem in favor of Jesus Christ and Him crucified. Even the gospel that he preached
was not formulated or pre-approved by man. It was not developed in a church
conclave. In fact, it was not well received by many religious men and therefore
brought him into constant conflict with those who did not known the true
meaning of the precious gospel that he preached.
"But I certify you, brethren, that the
gospel which was preached of me is not after (kata -down from, through out, according to) man. For I neither
received it of (para- with, from, by, near)
man, neither was I taught it, but
by the revelation of Jesus Christ. (Galatians 1:11-12)
The
gospel that Paul preached did not come down (kata) through an approved religious agency. He didn't receive it
through association with men. He was not near men when he received it. Paul
went out of his way to deny all human involvement regarding his calling and
ministry. If his calling and gospel were not purely divine and untainted by
ecclesiastical persuasion and ambition, then his ministry could not be purely
from heaven. Paul did not seek the approval of men. In fact he saw searching
for man's approval as a disqualifying factor, clearly stating that if he sought
the approval of men he could not be the servant of Christ. (See Galatians
1:10). He received his Gospel first hand by the revelation of Jesus Christ. How then did God birth and
equip this "one born of due season"? How did God transform a Pharisee
by the name of Saul into Paul?
In
Hebrew culture the changing of the name represented a change of character and
station. Names were also prophetic, foretelling your destiny. We see this name
changing by the hand of God throughout the scriptures. In the early chapters of
Acts, we are introduced to Saul of Tarsus, an ambitious young Pharisee who
guarded the cloaks of those who were stoning Stephen and consented to his
death. The name Saul means “desired.” We know that King Saul of the Old
Testament was desired and chosen by the people because he met the outward
standard of greatness. This standard was not God's standard of leadership, but
pagan through and through. Saul was the son of Kish, who descended from
“Aphiah, the son of a Benjamite, a mighty man of valor.”
This
son of Kish was “an impressive young man; and there was not among the children
of Israel a better (towb) person than
he. From his shoulders and upward he was higher than any of the people”
(1Samuel 9:2).
In
what way was Saul better? He was towb
[02896] good, “pleasant, agreeable to the senses.” He appealed to the
soulish nature of fallen man. When Eve look upon the tree of the knowledge of
good and evil, she "saw that the tree [was] good (Heb. towb) for food." In physical
stature Saul was taller than any one else in Israel and quite handsome. He was striking in personal appearance. From
a purely human perspective Saul was the perfect male, gifted with great
potential and charisma for leadership. Let’s not forget that Israel had
requested a king like those of “all the nations” (1 Samuel 8:5). This is
exactly why Saul appealed to them. He fulfilled the lusts of their hearts
perfectly.
Now
back to Saul of Tarsus.
Saul of Tarsus had a "little-man complex" that may have motivated him to do spectacular things and do whatever was necessary to excel above his peers. From all appearances he was trying to live up to his namesake, King Saul. From what we know of his pre-conversion days, he was very ambitious. His persecution of the church was to further his career as a Pharisee. Saul of Tarsus was a man on the make, climbing, excelling. He worked hard to reach the top of the religious ladder, overcoming great obstacles along the way. The greatest of all was his weak outward stature and his speech, which some referred to as "contemptible” (See 2 Corinthians 10:7).
In
chapter thirteen, verse nine of the book of Acts, something life-changing
happened to Saul of Tarsus. By this time, even his name was changed from Saul
to Paul. The name Paul or Paulus
means “small or little.” Are you catching the drift here? Something happened to
Saul that ended his striving to be head and shoulders above the rest. The old
Saul-life had passed away and a new name had been assumed that matched his God
given character and calling. A new nature and destiny had transformed the man
who had struck fear in the hearts of believers, who now preached “the faith
which once he destroyed” (Galatians 1: 23).
How
had such a radical transformation occurred? What would cause an ambitious
man to count his life-pursuit and his
perfect religious credentials as dung? What
would cause such a man to join the very ones he had persecuted? How was Saul
transformed into Paul? The amazing story is recorded in Acts chapters nine
through thirteen. Understanding this portion of scripture is key to
understanding the birth of an apostle and also discerning the true from the
false.
In
chapter nine we find Saul in his quest for greatness, doing the very thing that
would give his religious career the boost it needed. “Breathing threats and
slaughter against the disciples of the Lord,” he went to the high priest, to
request a letter of permission to go to Damascus and bring believers bound to
Jerusalem (Acts 9:1-2).
A
funny thing happened to Saul on his way to the top. He was knocked off his
religious horse on his religious posterior by a blinding light. After being
properly introduced to Jesus Christ as Lord,
he was led blind to Damascus.
Unbeknownst to Saul, God was speaking to a dear saint named Ananias,
telling him that Saul was a chosen messenger. The Lord said to Ananias, "Go your way, for he is my chosen
vessel to bear my name before the nations and kings, and the children of
Israel. For I will show him how many things he must suffer for my name's
sake" (Act 9:15-16).
Here
is the rub. We all want to stand before nations and kings and preach the gospel
to them, but no one wants to suffer. How many times have we heard the verse
parroted, "A man's gift makes room for him, And brings him before great
men" (Proverbs 18:16, NKJV)? Have you ever considered the condition God's
gifted ones were in when they were brought before the kings of this earth? Some
were flogged, starved, and even beheaded as they were presented to these great men of the world system. This
could explain why there are so few true
apostles today. For this call -- the call of an apostle--IS a call to suffering
and that suffering is preparatory and necessary to the work. I (George) told my
son, who has recently been going through a severe trial, "Pressure creates
the diamond." His answer, though quite candid, is very relevant here.
"Yes, but how long do I have to be a chunk of coal?"
I am sure there are
many with this call on their lives who feel this very way. We also have called
out, "How much longer, Lord?” But take heart and know that true apostles
are born through such travail and suffering. The sufferings of this present
hour are not to be compared with the greater weight of glory that lies just
beyond the cross.
We
see this clearly borne out as Saul's story continues. Ananias found Saul,
embraced him as a brother, prayed for him and God healed his blindness. Because
of his newfound zeal for Christ and his effective preaching in the local
synagogue, the Jews set guards at the city gates to take and kill him. Thus his
suffering began. The other disciples heard of this plot and lowered Saul down
through the city wall in a basket and he escaped to Jerusalem. There, the
disciples at first distrusted Saul and later found him too hot to handle. Yes,
as soon as Saul hit the city gates he was stirring up trouble again. He preached
boldly in the name of the Lord and disputed against the Grecian Jews, who also
wanted to kill him.
When
the brothers discovered the intentions of the religious Jews, they brought Saul
down to Caesarea, and sent him off by ship to Tarsus (Act 9:30). And then
"the assemblies throughout all Judea and Galilee and Samaria had peace,
and were built up" (9:31). Perhaps
it is not fair to say that the reason for the unrest in the Jerusalem Church
was Saul's white-hot zeal, but Luke did think it necessary to record the calm
after his departure. Saul's suffering continued as his zeal for preaching the
gospel far outweighed any desire he had for a life of Christian enjoyment. His
passion for the lost was greater than his desire for his own comfort and safety.
Saul stirred the religious pot in
Jerusalem. This would not be the last time he would do so. Things were just
beginning to calm down after the trouble that Stephen stirred up when he
challenged the high council of Jerusalem, and here came another radical. Saul
cannot even find consolation in the community of believers. His zeal separated
him from them as well.
God
had separated him unto Christ from his mother's womb, separated him from the
"Jews' religion" (Galatians 1:12-13), and now he was still being separated,
but now unto Christ alone. When God sets you apart, He REALLY sets you apart!
Jesus was insuring that man would have nothing to do with the birthing and
transforming of this apostle, nor would men influence the gospel that he would
preach. Where was Saul to go? He was initially sent away to his hometown,
Tarsus, but it is clear from his own account of this time of preparation that this is not the whole story. Where
did he go? In Acts, Paul completely disappears from the scene for a long period
of time.
Here
is his own account:
"For you have heard of my way of living in
time past in the Jews' religion, how that beyond measure I persecuted the
assembly of God, and ravaged it. I advanced in the Jews' religion beyond many
of my own age among my countrymen, being more exceedingly zealous for the
traditions of my fathers. But when it was the good pleasure of God, who
separated me from my mother's womb, and called me through his grace, to reveal his Son in me, that I might
preach him among the Gentiles, I
didn't immediately confer with flesh and blood, nor did I go up to
Jerusalem to those who were apostles before me, but I went away into Arabia.”
After
Paul's conversion he did not confer with flesh and blood but instead went into
Arabia. The area called Arabia or Arab extends into the Great Syrian Desert. Where is the first place
that God led Saul, to prepare him for this great call on his life? The Spirit
lead him into the wilderness. Where else
would Jesus prepare a chosen vessel? The one common thread that we find in the
lives of those God separates unto Himself to do His will is an extensive time
of wilderness that kills everything of their old natures and places the kingdom
of heaven in their hearts. The stripping process of the wilderness is what
makes a true apostle impermeable to the things of men and devoted to the things
of God. We don't know much about what happened during this period of Paul's
life, but we do know that God had His way with him and made him ready for the work
that was ahead in building HIS kingdom.
Before
Paul returned to Damascus, Christ had been formed in Him. Today many want the
power, the title and the authority that Paul had, but few are willing to be
tested and proven in their own wilderness period. Few are willing to let God
strip them down to nothing and then raise them up in the character of His own
Son. Most think that they can use the strength of their natural man to do
"the work of God." To this we emphatically say, "NOT!"
Isaiah
prophesied of this dichotomy when he said,
"Who among you fears the LORD? Who obeys
the voice of His Servant? Who walks in darkness And has no light? Let him trust
in the name of the LORD And rely upon his God. Look, all you who kindle a fire,
Who encircle yourselves with sparks: Walk in the light of your fire and in the
sparks you have kindled--This you shall have from My hand: You shall lie down
in torment.”(Isaiah 50:10-11, NKJV).
Apostle
Paul continues,
“Then I returned to Damascus. Then after three years I went up to
Jerusalem to visit Peter, and stayed with him fifteen days. But of the other
apostles I saw no one, except James, the Lord's brother. Now about the things
which I write to you, behold, before God, I'm not lying. Then I came to the
regions of Syria and Cilicia. I was still unknown by face to the assemblies of
Judea which were in Christ, but they only heard: "He who once persecuted
us now preaches the faith that he once tried to destroy." And they
glorified God in me… Then after a period
of fourteen years I went up again to Jerusalem with Barnabas, taking Titus
also with me." (Galatians 1:13-2:1).
It was over
seventeen years before Paul went up to Jerusalem to resolve the Antioch
conflict. True apostles are not born overnight.
During
this fourteen-year period (2:1), Barnabas, at the bidding of the assembly at
Jerusalem, went to see if the reports of the vital Gentile church at Antioch
were true. Obviously those apostles who sat in comfortable popularity in
Jerusalem did not start that work, or they would have known about it. The
Antioch Church that Barnabas witnessed was a great source of rejoicing to him,
and we have no record of him reporting back to Jerusalem. Who was the first one
that Barnabas thought of when he found this glorious Antioch Church that had
mysteriously sprung up? He remembered Saul and his burden for the Gentiles, and
without so much as a by your leave
from the Jerusalem apostles, Barnabas straightway set out for Tarsus to find
Saul.
When Barnabas found Saul he told him about this anomaly at Antioch. They returned together and stayed there at the Antioch Church, teaching the believers for the following year (see Acts 11:22-26).
It
was while Saul was there at Antioch that another great transformation occurred
in his life and ministry. Let’s read the account in its entirety to see the
final stages of the birthing of an apostle.
“And in Antioch some among the existing church
were prophets and teachers. (such as Barnabas, and Simeon who was called Niger,
and Lucius of Cyrene, and Manaen, the foster-brother of Herod the tetrarch) and
Saul. As they ministered to the
Lord and fasted, the Holy Spirit
said, So, then, separate Barnabas
and Saul to Me for the work to which I have called them. Then having fasted
and prayed and laid hands on them, THEY LET THEM GO (to set free, to let go, dismiss, to detain no longer). Then these
indeed sent out by the Holy Spirit
went down to Seleucia. And from there they sailed to Cyprus. And when they were
at Salamis, they announced the Word of God in the synagogues of the Jews. And
they also had John as an assistant. And when they had gone through the island
to Paphos, they found a certain conjurer, a false prophet, a Jew whose name was Bar-jesus; who was with the proconsul
of the country, Sergius Paulus, a
prudent man. He called for Barnabas and
Saul and asked to hear the Word of God. But Elymas the conjurer (for so his name is, if translated) withstood them, seeking to turn the
proconsul away from the faith. Then Saul
(who is also Paul), FILLED WITH THE
HOLY SPIRIT, set his eyes on him and said, O son of the Devil, full of all
deceit and all craftiness, enemy of all righteousness, will you not stop
perverting the right ways of the
Lord? And now, behold, the hand of the
Lord is on you. And you shall be
blind, not seeing the sun for a while. And immediately a mist and a darkness
fell on him, and he went about seeking some
to lead him by the hand. Then, seeing the thing happening, the proconsul
believed, being astonished at the doctrine of the Lord. And Paul and those around him sailed from Paphos and came to Perga of Pamphylia. And John
left them and returned to Jerusalem.” (Act 13:1-13 MKJV)
Note
the transition here. It all began with a prayer meeting where prophets and
teachers, including Barnabas and Saul, were ministering to the Lord and
fasting. It is noteworthy that in the long list of those attending this
meeting, Saul is mentioned last. The one who excelled beyond his peers in the
Jews’ religion was now last in the ekklesia
of God. God had him right where he wanted him. Also, when Barnabas and Saul are
mentioned together, Barnabas is mentioned first.
As
they ministered to the Lord the Holy Spirit spoke a word of separation,
“SEPARATE Barnabas and Saul to Me….” Let’s consider for a moment the true
nature of this separation. This was a call that severed all human attachments,
a call to let them go, a call to be
set aside BY and UNTO the Spirit of God alone. It was a call to be filled, led
and empowered solely by God’s Spirit. Something was about to change! Before
this time Barnabas and Saul had not been fully SEPARATED by the Spirit unto the
work. They had taught and preached the gospel in previous days but something
was about to change! Saul had performed no miracles before this time that we
know of. Again we see Saul being separated, first unto the Holy Spirit and then
unto the work. Then after more fasting and prayer they laid hands on them and
let them go.
Please
hear us! These brothers were not sent out by the church; they were sent out by the Holy Spirit! They were
led out. All that was required of the other brothers in that meeting was to LET
THEM GO! That’s exactly what they did. They prayed and laid hands on them and
let them go. They did not send them forth. They simply set them free to be
fully led by God’s Spirit—to raise their sails and to be directed by HIS Wind
(see John 3:8).
Only
God knows all the hidden ties that His children put upon each other, if only
the expectation that they should faithfully fill a pew every Sunday morning.
God’s call on other believers is really none of our affair. Before their Master
they will stand or fall. To believe otherwise is to assume a lording-over
posture rather than one of caring and obedience. No matter how much we love
each other and desire to be together, we must hold all relationships loosely,
understanding that the Holy Spirit still SEPARATES believers unto Himself. We
are always called to be ministers to God before we are set forth to minister
unto men. On judgment day we will answer to Him, not mere mortals. Do you
remember Jesus’ words to Peter, who was excessively curious about John’s
calling? "If I desire that he stay
until I come, what is that to you? You follow me" (John 21:22).
Barnabas
and Saul sailed to Paphos, where they met a conjurer and false prophet named
Bar-Jesus, who hindered them in any way he could. Note Barnabas is still
mentioned before Saul here. Finally, in verse nine, Saul (who is also Paul), FILLED WITH THE HOLY
SPIRIT, pronounced blindness upon this “son of the Devil,” who afterwards had
to be led about by the hand for a season. As a result the proconsul was
astonished at the doctrine of the Lord and believed!”
In
verse 13 we read these pivotal words. “And Paul
and those around him sailed from
Paphos and came to Perga of Pamphylia.” Hallelujah! Saul is dead! Paul is born!
Now it is “Paul and
those around him.” When King Saul was little in his own eyes, God could use
him. So it was here. Saul of Tarsus had grown into his new name. Paul…Paulus…small
or little. The wilderness had done its work. God gives grace to the humble and
resists the proud. Here we see something said of Paul that was never said of
him before. Paul, “FILLED WITH THE HOLY SPIRIT…” There is no doubt that in the
past he had been full of zeal, but now, having been fully separated unto the
Spirit, he was FULL OF THE SPIRIT and power. As the prophet Zechariah
prophesied, "`Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit,' says the LORD
of hosts" (Zechariah 4:6, NKJV). The way up is down and the way down is
up. As Paul’s life indicates, the
preparation to be an apostle first consists of an emptying and stripping of the
old Saul-life (Philippians 3:4-8) and then a filling of the Spirit.
Now
that we have witnessed the birthing of a true apostle, let's compare it to the
apostolic network that is appearing center-stage, cheered on by many in
Christendom today.
One
of the defining differences between Paul and many of the so-called apostles of
today is that Paul decreased. By
contrast, these men and women who flaunt their titles and positions are ever on
the increase. Another big difference
is that Paul preached Christ, while these are ever preaching their apostleship.
Paul wrote, “For we preach not ourselves, but Christ Jesus the Lord; and ourselves your servants
for Jesus' sake” (2Corinthians 4:5). In contrast, all the books by today’s
rising stars are written in defense of their supposed ministries. Their sole
preoccupation is the resurgence of apostles in the church and the restoration
of apostolic authority. To our knowledge, only those who view themselves as apostles have written such
books. This is a clear conflict of interest since they preach themselves!
Paul
warns us that the identifying mark of false apostles is masquerading. "For such
men are deceitful workmen, masquerading as apostles of Christ" (2
Corinthians 11:13). If you are not a
true apostle, it requires constant posing and posturing to convince others that
you are. This may explain the need to make up new and extravagant ministry
titles almost daily. They want us to think they are as important as they think
they are.
They
clearly state that victory in "spiritual warfare" is dependent upon
them "going into an area and doing spiritual battle with territorial
spirits." One of these so-called apostles wrote,
"These evil prince spirits will be defeated
little by little, and they will be eventually dethroned by the warfare of the
Church. In contrast, a man who is an apostle and submitted to Christ will now
reign spiritually over that locality in place of the displaced evil prince
spirit . . . As these evil prince angels are defeated one by one, Satan's
control over the world is seriously weakened. Finally, in unified global spiritual
warfare, the last apostles and the Church will confront Satan himself."
Talk about visions of
grandeur! We thought that the Angles of
God were the ones who throw Satan into the lake of fire at God’s appointed
time. It was this kind of insanity that Jude warned against when he wrote:
In the same way these dreamers make the flesh unclean,
having no respect for authorities, and say evil of rulers. Now when Michael,
one of the chief angels, was fighting against the Evil One for the body of
Moses, fearing to make use of violent words against him, he only said, May the
Lord be your judge. But these men say evil about such things as they have no
knowledge of; and the things of which they have natural knowledge, like beasts
without reason, are the cause of their destruction.
(Jude 1:8-10, BBE).
These presumptuous
men also believe that the restoration of "the office of the apostle"
is key to "releasing finances" for the church. In their own minds,
these men see themselves as the answer to all the needs of the church. A few
have even dared to place themselves at the top of the apostolic heap.
After
the 9 -11 attacks one of these "apostles," who refers to himself as
the "Presiding Apostle," gives us a glimpse into the megalomania of
these poor self-deluded men and women.
"In our roles as apostolic leaders of the
International Coalition of Apostles, both John Doe (not his real name) and I
have written initial apostolic declarations. This is mine, and John Doe's will
be attached to it in the same communication . . . I habitually read a chapter
of the Bible before each day begins. On September 11, I read 2 Kings 18 before
I had heard that we were in a national crisis. Naturally my reading for
September 12, after I knew about it, was 2 Kings 19. This is the story of Hezekiah.
In 18 he went on a spiritual offensive and wiped out idolatry from Judah. The
devil did not like this, so he sent Sennacherib of Assyria against him with a
threat, which I liken to the destruction of the twin towers. As I prayed for my
personal role in this crisis, I came to 2 Kings 19 recording Hezekiah’s
reaction. Hezekiah inquired of the Lord, then sent for the Lord’s word through
Isaiah the prophet. He was aware that "God does nothing unless He reveals
His secret to His servants the prophets" (Amos 3:7).
Only when
he had received the word of the Lord through Isaiah did Hezekiah go back before
the Lord and make his kingly declaration.
I saw that the Lord wanted me to postpone any declaration about the twin towers
war until word had come in from the prophets. The word, at least a preliminary
word, has now come in from the prophets (we have received over 1,000 emails),
so I am ready to write this memorandum."
Does
this man actually envision himself as a king, making a kingly declaration?
He
continues,
"I imagine that numbers of other apostles,
besides John Doe (not his real name) and me, will be doing the same thing. Who
knows? Maybe some day we will be able to collate them in order to agree on what
the Spirit is saying to the churches… the Strategic Prayer Network, the
Observatory, Generals of Intercession, the International Coalition of Apostles,
the Apostolic Council of Prophetic Elders, the Jericho Center and other vital
units."
Thank you, commander
and chief! Did you notice how they gravitate to the titles that this world
system employs – titles like Strategic, Network, Generals, Coalition, Center
and units? One of these men spoke of an ever increasing ascendancy of titles as
the emphasis changed from the ministry of pastors to teachers, from teachers to
evangelists, from evangelists to prophets and from prophets to apostles over
the last five decades. When I heard this, I (Michael) thought, what title will
they clamor after next – the title of Jesus Christ the King? After reading the memorandum
above, this does not seem to be so far out of reach. There is nothing so
blinding as pride. In contrast, the words of Paul come to mind,
Therefore, holy brethren, partakers of the heavenly
calling, consider the Apostle and High Priest of our confession, Christ Jesus,
who was faithful to Him who appointed Him, as Moses also was faithful in all
His house. For this One has been counted worthy of more glory than Moses,
inasmuch as He who built the house has more honor than the house. For every house
is built by someone, but He who built all things is God. And Moses indeed was
faithful in all His house as a servant, for a testimony of those things which
would be spoken afterward, but Christ as a Son over His own house, whose house
we are if we hold fast the confidence and the rejoicing of the hope firm to the
end. (Hebrews 3:1-6, NKJV).
The one who builds
the house gets the glory. We ask you, "What house are these men building
and who is getting the glory?" The answer is all too obvious.
These
self-appointed kingdom builders also charge exorbitant prices to get in to
their meetings, often over $300 per seat.
They make merchandise of the unsuspecting people of God. Other than the
Bible, the Didache is among the
oldest “Christian” documents. It was written about 150 AD. In it we find the
following instructions.
“Now about the envoys (apostles) and prophets,
do just as according to the tenet of the good message. Now each envoy who comes
to you, accept as you would the Lord.
But he will not remain for one day. Now if there is need, also the next day. But if he remains for three, he is
a false prophet.
”Now when the envoy departs, he should take nothing except bread until he
lodges. But if he should ask for money, he is a false prophet.”
The signs
of an Apostle
The
scriptures clearly state that there are signs that prove whether or not a
person is "one sent."
Paul's ministry was questioned by the Corinthian ekklesia. He wrote them and reminded them that "the signs of an apostle"
had accompanied his ministry. The article "the" in "the
signs of an apostle" implies that in the first century ekklesia, it was common knowledge that
these signs would confirm the ministry of those who were truly sent. These
signs were miracles, wonders, and works of power (dunamis).
Truly the
signs of an apostle were wrought among you in all patience, in signs, and
wonders, and mighty deeds. (2Corinthians 12:12)
Through mighty signs and wonders, by the power
of the Spirit of God; so that from Jerusalem, and round about unto Illyricum, I have fully preached the gospel of Christ. (Romans15:19)
When
Paul preached the gospel, it was fully
preached "Through mighty signs and wonders, by the power of the Spirit of
God." We ask all who think
they are apostles today, Are you sure? Do
the signs of an apostle bear witness of your ministry? Are you truly a "sent one"? This is clearly
the only true test of an apostle. If these signs are absent, you are not an
apostle. Sorry!
If
you cannot say with all sincerity, “ by the
grace of God I am what I am,” and if the words “I labored more abundantly . . . yet not I, but the grace of God which was with me" do not
describe your ministry, you had better rethink your calling. You had better seek God and ask Him to try
your heart to see if your apostleship is man-made or God birthed—driven by
ambition or grace. There is nothing to lose except your illusions.If you
discover that you are not an apostle and that you were duped by your own
heart-ambitions, you have not lost anything, but have gained the truth. God
knows whether the driving force behind our so-called ministries comes from a
desire to be first or love for Him and His people. “For the word of God is living, and active, and
sharper than any two-edged sword, and piercing even to the dividing of soul and
spirit, of both joints and marrow, and is able to discern the thoughts and
intentions of the heart” (Hebrews 4:12).
The
time when God winked at this kind of foolishness is over. You can not run a con
on God. If you persist in this game you will loose. Paul was warning of this
when he wrote,
The coming of the lawless one is according to
the working of Satan, with all power, signs, and lying wonders, and with all
unrighteous deception among those who perish, because they did not receive the
love of the truth, that they might be saved. And for this reason God will send
them strong delusion, that they should believe the lie, that they all may be
condemned who did not believe the truth but had pleasure in unrighteousness. (2
Thessalonians 2:9-12, NKJV).
In
our years in institutional Christianity,
we have witnessed the christianization of every ambition known to man.
Let’s get honest with ourselves, dear saints, and allow God’s two-edged sword to pierce and divide between our
soulish ambitions and what is birthed of God’s Spirit in our lives. The flesh
cannot mysteriously be transubstantiated into something spiritual. No, what is
born of the flesh IS now and always will be flesh and shall not glory in His
presence. The heart is desperately wicked and always tries to put the best face
on the flesh. Only God is able to discern and expose its thoughts and
intentions. So as living sacrifices, let
us put ourselves on the altar before our Great High Priest. Let our inward
thoughts could be laid bare and known to us. Better to find out now than later!
God is setting us
apart so that we are no longer our own. Our minds are no longer ours either.
The God who makes all things new is working to form the mind of Christ in us.
Part of God’s work in us is to bring us to see that in our flesh dwells no good
thing. There is nothing redeemable there. Many people who call themselves
"Christian" today are reinventing themselves to avoid the work of the personal cross of
Christ, the Cross that requires death to their ambitions. When Peter said to
Jesus, "Lord spare yourself..." Jesus' reply was to the point,
"Get behind me Satan, for you do not desire the things of God, but rather
the things of men." He was speaking to the antichrist spirit within Peter.
It is a harsh reality that the temple where the antichrist sits is the very
temple of God, those who profess to be Jesus' followers. It was true then and
it is even truer today. John wrote:
Little children, it is the last hour; and as you have heard
that the
Antichrist is coming, even now many antichrists have come, by which we know
that it is the last hour. They went out
from us, but they were not of us; for if they had been of us, they would
have continued with us; but they went out that they might be made manifest,
that none of them were of us. (1 John 2:18-19, NKJV).
"Went out
from" - Greek - exerchomai - 2a) to go out of an assembly, i.e. forsake
it, 2b) to come forth from physically, arise from, to be born of, 2c) to go
forth from one's power, escape from it in safety, 2d) to come forth (from
privacy) into the world, before the public (of those who by novelty of opinion
attract attention).
The antichrist spirit rises up above others ("little children") in
order to attract attention to itself.
Now consider Paul's
warning to the Ephesians,
"For I know this, that after my departure savage
wolves will come in among you, not sparing the flock. "Also from among
yourselves men will rise up, speaking perverse things, to draw away the
disciples after themselves. "Therefore watch, and remember that for three
years I did not cease to warn everyone night and day with tears. (Acts
20:29-31, NKJV).
This
constant tendency to come out from the humble brethren and raise yourself up,
to draw attention to yourself and build a following is the most perverse and
yet the most common form of the man of sin. The son of perdition "opposes
and exalts himself above all that is called God or that is worshiped, so that
he sits as God in the temple of God, showing himself that he is God” (2
Thessalonians 2:4). It is evident that
the falling away was well underway by the time the last of the early apostles
died, even though there was some effort to counter the rising tide of
hierarchy. “You will not exalt yourself, nor will you give over-boldness to your soul. Your soul will not cling with the high
people, but you will conduct yourself with the just and lowly ones” (the Didache).
Most of what is parading around in much pomp and circumstance as the
"apostolic and prophetic movement" these days is antichrist to the
core. These men and women who rise up over the saints of God have been duped
and are not modeling the lowliness of Jesus Christ in the slightest degree. As
we read their writings we see many chapters about their ministries and their
right to rule over the people of God, but very little about Jesus. Maybe it
takes being outside the camp, bearing His reproach for a few years, before you
finally get eyes that can see what is going on in Christendom. We are praying
that something as truly new as heaven itself comes forth rather than a rehash
of the old Roman system with Biblical titles to cover its shame.
God bless you as you
follow the Lamb wherever He leads!