Monday, November 7, 2016

Separating God's thoughts from our own

Ever since I became a Christian 40+ years ago the Lord has given me dreams.  He has taught me how to interpret and apply their meaning. This has been a long process, and often I would sit for hours before the Lord to listen for His thoughts about the dreams and line them up with scripture. I would not have guessed that part of the refining of this gift was to take the dreams away, leaving me with my own. 

Though now I seldom have prophetic dreams from the Lord, He has comforted me with a more present relationship during the day.  Still, for a few years I have been grieved that there were very few dreams.  This last week the Lord brought a word about this.  He said that He took the dreams away because He wants me to know the difference between His dreams and mine.  It is the same process during the day, where I have learned to separate His thoughts from mine.  In my waking hours the Lord often asks what I think about a particular subject.  He does this not because He needs my input, but because He is teaching me to identify how I think about the subject . . . and then He would finish up with how He thinks about that subject.

By taking away His dreams, I was left with my own dreams.  I became familiar with them.  There is a stark contrast between God’s messages and the messages from my own heart and mind.  The contrast is what God wants.  The Lord told me that He already has bold and hasty prophets; He wants submissive, patient prophets.  God has men who speak their own words in His name, not having learned the difference between their own thoughts and His thoughts; the Lord wants prophets who speak His word in His name.  For this to happen, prophets have to learn to distinguish between their own thoughts and God’s thoughts; there needs to be a contrast between the two.

There is a scriptural reference about those who minister to others for the Lord, using their own ideas.  It is found in Ezekiel 34, where the Lord is correcting the Shepherds of His flock.  He then turns to the flock and corrects them as follows;

As for you, My flock, this is what the Sovereign Lord says; I will judge between one sheep and another, and between rams and goats.  Is it not enough or you to feed on the good pasture? Must you also trample the rest of your pasture with your feet? Is it not enough for you to drink clear water? Must you also muddy the rest with your feet?  Must My flock feed on what you have trampled and drink what you have muddied with your feet? (Ez 34:17-19)

If we sup with the Lord, and then pollute our ministry by using our own thoughts, we have “muddied the waters.”  It is not clear what God’s original message was.  The way to preserve God’s thoughts is by separating them from our own.  Then we can minister the clear water we have drunken from the Lord, and the grass from the field will be edible for them.


The flock deserves to hear what God has said from His prophets . . . from all Christians.  Today, listen for the Lord’s thoughts.  Let Him teach you how to keep them separate from your own, whether sleeping or awake.  Then your ministry will nourish the hungry and satisfy the thirsty.  Amen.

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