April 8, 2024

On Monday, April 8, 2024, the Word of the LORD came to me, saying:

Hear the Word of the Lord, you nations of the earth, you tyrants of clay and dust who trample My people with the sound of your comings and goings. The season of the Gentiles is at its end. My patience has reached fulfillment; my mercy has fulfilled its purpose. Now I give you to the darkness you have chosen. As on this day the moon obscures the light of the sun for the second time in seven years for those in the United States of America, so I will cause darkness to pass between us. Though you seek Me, you will not find Me. I will conceal My presence, withhold My wisdom, and obscure My watchcare. You will have the world as you have wished it. You will experience the freedom for which you have suffered and bled in this place.

I have heard your prayers, and I will answer them. You are alone. In the days ahead, do not pray to Me, do not call out My Name into the heavens, for I will not hear you. You are alone with your inventions. You are alone with your wisdom. You are alone with your transgressions. May they serve you as they have promised. May you find the joy they have told you was your right, and may the taste of your pleasures sicken your innards and rot within you.

On the day that you have received all that for which you have fought, and on the day that you are given eyes to see the deceptions over which you have labored, you will find despair deeper and more profound than any imagined from the creation of the world to that moment of revelation. On that day you will tear your clothing, cover yourselves with sackcloth and ashes, begging for forgiveness and mercy. But I will not hear you. You have ignored My cries during your years of plenty; I will not rescue you from the years of famine.

Only those who have emptied themselves of idols, who have received My purifying fire during the years of mercy, and who have allowed me to cleanse them of their unrighteousness will hear from Me in these days. Only those whose Names are written on My Father’s scroll will feel My arms around them and My hands guiding them in the dark. Once again, I will make a distinction between the wicked and the godly; once again, I will show favor to My sheep and disfavor to the sheep of other pastures.

Come out, come out My people, that you might not share in her punishments, for the harlot has been exposed, the false prophet has gathered a flock around Him, and the beast has uttered blasphemies against Your God. Come out, come out, and follow again the warnings of My prophets, the interpretations of My Apostles, and the teachings of My Son. No more shall I tolerate divided hearts among My people. Release what is perishing, and you will live. Cling to what is devoted to destruction, and you will be devoured by your love for it. The word of the Lord has spoken.

Woe to all who will not listen, for the darkness will not lift when the moon passes by the sun. Though the light of the sun will return, the darkness of chaos will remain. Seven years were devoted to plenty; now seven years are devoted to famine—a famine of the speaking of the Lord. So shall it be. As it was at the beginning, so it will be again. Only those who call upon the Name of the Lord shall be saved. Cry out, My people, for help, and I shall hear. Cry out, those who are not My people, and the heavens will be as bronze. So have you wished; so have you contended; so shall it be. I am the Lord.

January 16, 2024

On Tuesday, January 16, 2024 the Word of the Lord came to me saying:

Too long have My children listened to the whispers of demons in My Name. Too long have the values of the fallen guided the children of light. Too long have My people walked in darkness while calling out My Name into the heavens. This day is the beginning of the end of the lies whispered in My Name.

I will no longer tolerate those who speak the lies of Satan in the congregations called by My Name. I will no longer listen to lessons on leadership, power, control, influence, manipulation, and prosperity. Long have these topics been the stock and trade of false prophets—the teachers and preachers who speak out of the desires of their own hearts and claim inspiration by My Spirit. The blasphemy of the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven this generation, not now nor in the world to come.

All who claim to deliver a word from the Lord that I have not spoken or an instruction to My people that I have not given will be devoted to destruction. I will now free My people from the wolves who are shepherding My flock. For those who speak their own words in My Name, there will be no mercy. I will turn the flocks against the shepherds as I turned Israel against their Egyptian masters. I Myself will send plagues against the shepherds until they release My sheep from their sheep pens. My assaults will be relentless, and My words to the shepherds who lead them are only these: “Let My people go that they may worship Me in spirit and in truth in the wilderness prepared for them.”

I wish to see My people in tents. I will tolerate no more cathedrals. I wish to see My people pray and listen to My voice. I will tolerate no more those who claim to speak to them on My behalf. Even this voice you hear now will not be necessary in the days to come. I will shepherd My people, and I will call out to My flock. My Messiah alone will lead them, and He will come to them as a child comes—humble, submissive, ready to serve, and eager to listen.

If you know of no such children, this is not because My word is false, but because your discipleship is defective. Too long have I tolerated the despoiling of the earth and the corruption of My children. I called out to Abraham in order to preserve through Him a remnant on the earth, a faithful generation, children of righteousness who shine as the stars in the night. But those who call themselves by My Name have worshipped the false gods of this age, and their children have been corrupted by the demons they have worshipped.

No more, no more, children of the earth. My long days of silence and mercy are ended. From the dawn of this new year, 100 days are allotted for preparation for judgment. Repent, My children, if you are My children. Turn from the wickedness of your ways and the licentiousness of your teachings. Why would you be destroyed? Why would you have Me turn My face from you? Judgment is coming on the world. Need the judgment of the wicked consume My people, as well?

Separate yourselves from those who speak in My Name words I have not spoken. You ask, How will we know Your word?” You will know My word by its fruit. And you ask, “What is this fruit?” It is the fruit of obedience to the words I have preserved through My prophets and apostles. Men have not preserved My word. I have preserved My word. Many have attempted to change it, to alter it, to corrupt it, to pervert it to their own ends. But I have protected it by holy hands and hidden places that those who wished to add and subtract from what I have said have been found out. I conscripted the wicked to prove the truthful witness I have preserved that My people might hear and learn.

Listen to what I have preserved, do what I have asked, receive who I am making you, and you will shine in the dark places of the world. Continue worshipping idols of your own making hidden within ideals, principles, laws, constitutions, and cultures you have made yourselves, and I will leave you to the gods you have chosen—gods which could not save the world in the days of Noah, which could not forestall the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, which have lost every nation that they have incited to arise from the beginning to now. Never have they withstood My judgment. They live now only by My mercy.

If you believe they can save you from the curse, then worship them. But those who wish to be called by My Name must separate themselves from false and useless shepherds. Return to My word, and I will speak to you again. Return to obedience, and I will rescue you from the tyranny of your fallen masters. Return to goodness, and I will break the bonds which enslave you to yourselves. May those who have ears to hear, listen to what the Spirit is saying to the churches. Selah and Amen.

Reflecting on the Seasons of Lent and Easter

J. Thomas Johnson

Recently, I took a Lenten quiz, and one of the questions read as follows: Why is the season of Lent forty days? It was a multiple choice quiz, and these were the options:

  • To represent the time Jesus spent in the wilderness, tempted by Satan
  • To recall the 40 days and nights the earth was flooded in the Old Testament
  • To remind us of the 40 years the Israelites wandered in the desert

According to the quiz-writer(s), the correct answer is “a”—”to represent the time Jesus spent in the wilderness, tempted by Satan.” But the quiz is deceptive. “B” is easy enough to dismiss because the earth was flooded for far more than forty days, according to Genesis. It rained for forty days, but the earth was flooded for over one-hundred fifty days. However, “c” is a bit more difficult because it gets at the deeper question as to why Jesus Himself spent forty days fasting in the wilderness.

Why did the Spirit of God drive Jesus out into the wilderness for forty days, where He fasted, was tempted by Satan, and, eventually, ministered to by God’s angels? Well, the answer to that certainly involves the forty years that Israel spent wandering in the wilderness. So, during Lent the Church may be remembering “a,” but Jesus Himself was certainly recapitulating “c.”

There are two passages that help to explain why the Father sent the Son into the wilderness for forty days after His baptism, allowed Him to be tempted by Satan, and required Him to fast and pray. Let’s start with the temptation of Satan. In this aspect of His forty days, Jesus was walking in the footsteps of Israel. Deuteronomy 8:2-3 reads thusly:

Remember the long way that the Lord your God has led you these forty years in the wilderness, in order to humble you, testing you to know what was in your heart, whether or not you would keep his commandments. He humbled you by letting you hunger, then by feeding you with manna, with which neither you nor your ancestors were acquainted, in order to make you understand that one does not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of the Lord.

Deuteronomy 8:2-3, NRSV

When Satan tempted Jesus by suggesting that He turn the stones surrounding Him into bread, Jesus quoted verse 3 of this passage. In part, as Israel before Him, Jesus’ forty days in the wilderness was a time of humbling and of the testing of Jesus’ obedience. God was insistent that Jesus, as the representative of Israel, walk in the footsteps of Israel. Where Israel failed, however, Jesus was faithful.

But, why was Jesus fasting? Perhaps this was simply to join Israel in their seasons of hunger in the wilderness. But, I suspect it was more than that. After all, Israel ate in the wilderness. They were fed with manna and, occasionally, with quail. Because of this, I believe Jesus’ fasting was a fulfillment of an act of Moses. The scene has been preserved in Deuteronomy 9:16-19:

16 Then I saw that you had indeed sinned against the Lord your God, by casting for yourselves an image of a calf; you had been quick to turn from the way that the Lord had commanded you. 17 So I took hold of the two tablets and flung them from my two hands, smashing them before your eyes. 18 Then I lay prostrate before the Lord as before, forty days and forty nights; I neither ate bread nor drank water, because of all the sin you had committed, provoking the Lord by doing what was evil in his sight. 19 For I was afraid that the anger that the Lord bore against you was so fierce that he would destroy you. But the Lord listened to me that time also.

Deuteronomy 9:16-19, NRSV

After Israel sinned by making an idol and using it in their worship of God, Moses fasted for forty days and forty nights, interceding for the people and begging God not to destroy them. I believe that we are meant to see Jesus’ forty days of fasting in the wilderness in this light. Moses’s intercession for the people was a foreshadowing of Jesus’ intercession for sinful humanity. Understood in this way, Jesus’ fasted for forty days asking God to have mercy on fallen humanity. And Jesus embodied this prayer entirely, as He laid down His life for fallen humanity on the cross.

As we observe Lent, may we remember that God humbles us to test our obedience. As we observe Lent, may we remember the prayer and fasting of Jesus, interceding for us while we were still sinners. As we remember Good Friday, may we recall the way in which Jesus not only prayed for us, but lived out His prayer by sacrificing Himself for our salvation. And, as we celebrate Jesus’ resurrection from the dead, may we rejoice that God demonstrated His acceptance of these prayers and this sacrifice by the resurrection of Jesus from the dead. Praise be to God!

Cause & Effect

J. Thomas Johnson – March 2, 2023

Sometimes I assume I have to choose between what is natural and what is supernatural. If an occurrence has a natural explanation—that is, if something can be explained according to the normal patterns of life on earth or of the universe generally—, then I am tempted to assume that it occurred naturally. If an occurrence has no clear natural explanation, then I am tempted to consider supernatural involvement. This all seems very reasonable to me, but I am becoming increasingly aware of how unbiblical this way of reasoning may be.

Recently I’ve been considering the fall of the walls of Jericho in Joshua chapter six. The Scriptures tell us that God told the Israelites to march around the city once each day for six days. Then on the seventh day, the Lord told them to march around the city seven times, with the priests marching before the Ark of the Covenant blasting the trumpets the whole time. Following the seventh time around the city, after the priests had released a long blast from the ram’s horn, the people were to shout a great shout, and the walls of the city would fall. The Scriptures tell us that this occurred precisely as God had described, and the Israelites took the city. What the Scriptures don’t say is whether anything ‘natural’ occurred at the same time.

For what I consider to be dubious reasons, most contemporary critical scholars have rejected the Bible’s date of Israel’s conquest of Canaan (i.e., 1406 B.C.) and have preferred a date of 1250 B.C. There is little archaeological evidence of a major settlement in Jericho in 1250 B.C. But, during the period in which the Bible indicates Israel came into the land, there is evidence of such a settlement. Assuming that the Bible is right both about the dates and about the events surrounding the fall of Jericho, how precisely might the walls have fallen?

Biblical historians who accept the Bible’s dating for the conquest of Canaan have suggested that an earthquake (or a series of earthquakes) might have led to the wall’s collapse. The Jordan River Valley is part of a large fault line sometimes called the Syrian-African Rift. In the last 2,000 years earthquakes have been recorded as causing landslides that have blocked the Jordan River’s flow and as having done substantial damage to human-made structures. Since the conquest of Jericho was preceded by the miracle of the Jordan River’s waters stopping for Israel to cross over, some historians have suggested a large earthquake followed by several aftershocks might have led to the fall of Jericho’s walls.

We don’t know if that is what happened, but if it were, would that mean these were not miracles—that is, that God was not involved? No. Permit me to explain.

According to the Scriptures, life is unnatural. According to Genesis, the natural state of things is lifelessness, formlessness, emptiness, darkness. God imposed life on lifelessness by speaking. For Christians, the universe is not natural, but a miracle, and life along with it. Order and life have been imposed on disorder and lifelessness by God. Nature is supernaturally sourced and supernaturally maintained.

Perhaps, then, it is not surprising that the Scriptures often describe events as both natural (that is, as consequences of cause and effect) and as supernatural (as intended by God). How many earthquakes might Jericho have withstood during its history? We don’t know. However, on that day in the late 1400s B.C. God did not allow the walls to remain standing. Was this a consequence of building on a fault line? Yes. Was this judgment? Yes. Was this the fulfillment of God’s promise to Israel? Yes. As Christians we don’t choose between these interpretations. They were all true simultaneously.

Consequences of poor decisions are both natural and forms of divine judgment. The earth has been created in such a way that God can bring judgment through its design. God does not need to circumvent creation in order to use it for His purposes. God can and has worked through the very mechanisms of nature that He has created and that He maintains. As has always been true and remains true today, consequences can be both natural and forms of divine judgment simultaneously. Perhaps we should look for God’s communications and activities in the natural consequences of our choices and not only in the inexplicable or exceptional aspects of life on earth.

Contentment

J. Thomas Johnson

February 8, 2023

In Numbers 21 we find the people of Israel falling back into a common complaint against God and against Moses. Numbers 21:4-5 reads:

From Mount Hor they set out by the way to the Red Sea, to go around the land of Edom; but the people became impatient on the way. The people spoke against God and against Moses, “Why have you brought us up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? For there is no food and no water, and we detest this miserable food.”

Numbers 21:4-5, NRSV

Wandering in the wilderness between Egypt and the land of Canaan for forty years must have been a tedious misadventure. Of course, Israel was wandering in the wilderness by choice in that they had refused to trust God to bring them into the land of Canaan. Even so, forty years of wandering aimlessly must have been a struggle even if it had been deserved.

Since they were cursed to wander, they could not settle down. So, everything from their Tabernacle to their homes to their possessions had to be mobile. I’ve met a few people in my life who prefer to live that way, but for most of us, living out of suitcases is not something we’d want to do for forty years. I suppose Israel’s growing frustration is not hard to understand.

Even more, the lands through which they were travelling were quite arid. Oases were few and far between, and they often found themselves wandering into areas with little or no potable water. And to top it all off, for forty years, with very little variation, they ate the same food. It was miracle-food, of course, provided to them six days every week by God Himself. When they first ate it, they marveled at it, found it delicious, and gave thanks to God. But after a few decades, eating the same food for every meal every day became distasteful to them.

Israel wanted new and different tastes, but God gave them only manna. Israel wanted houses and lands, but God gave them only tents and sandals that never wore out from walking. Israel wanted water whenever they were thirsty, but God gave them only enough water to survive. So Israel grumbled. Many of the people wanted a God who was less stingy and more gratuitous in His provision for them. Why did God care for Israel in this way?

Later, near the end of their time of wandering, Moses told the Israelites that God cared for them in this way, “to humble you and to test you, and in the end to do you good” (Deuteronomy 8:16b, NRSV). When the Lord leads us through lean times, arid lands, and monotonous repetition, we, too, might allow those seasons to humble and to test us that they might do us good. The Apostle Paul provided similar encouragement when he wrote:

Of course, there is great gain in godliness combined with contentment; for we brought nothing into the world, so that we can take nothing out of it; but if we have food and clothing, we will be content with these.

1 Timothy 6:6-8, NRSV

May we find contentment in obedience to God and His watchcare in these days. May we not be like our ancestors whose eyes were fixed on that for which they wished, rather than on that which God was then providing them. Amen.

~ J. Thomas