We
live in exciting, challenging times; times when God is bringing about many
changes in the Church as we know it. One
of the changes that I have observed and participated in is the restoration of
prophetic acts. As we keep our eyes
on Jesus and passionately seek His face, everything He IS comes with Him.
He is Spirit and He is prophetic. A
prophetic act is more than - or differs from - a spoken word of prophecy, or
word of knowledge. It’s an
action, something we DO under the anointing and unction of the Holy Spirit as a
step of faith, as an act of obedience to release the power, the presence and the
victory of God into a situation. Yes, it can include prophecy and words of
knowledge, or it can be an act that stands alone without any ‘extras’. The Bible records many prophetic acts, but there is no set
pattern to go by – the Holy Spirit never gets in a rut, He doesn’t grow
stale in His prophetic capacity. If
you and I are willing to be open to the Holy Spirit, we’ll see an explosion of
His fullness working through us to bring wholeness to the Body.
The
story in Joshua Chapter 10, where Joshua makes a prophetic declaration, is
amazing. He was on the battlefield,
fighting against five Amorite kings and their armies, but he needed more time,
more daylight to get the job completed successfully.
So he looked up at the sun and made an awesome prophetic declaration . .
. “Sun, stand still! You will not
go down today, but you will continue to shine and give us light until the battle
is won. Moon, don’t come this way
tonight; we have no need of you, just stay right where you are!” What authority! What
faith!
Just
recently in a “GFM” meeting, the Holy Spirit told me to wave a flag over a
couple who were being ministered to for a wounded spirit.
My mind told me that was crazy - what could waving a flag do?
But as I was obedient, the Holy Spirit caused me to make a strong
declaration over their lives and pronounce victory into their spirits. Next thing, the wife was standing on a chair, waving the flag
high in the air with all her might; she was getting involved in a prophetic act
to break off the wounding in her spirit.
Holy Spirit ministry
is all about bringing life, setting people free, sending them on their way whole
and healed. Later
on, the wife shared with me how significant the prophetic act had been.
No one else in that meeting (except her husband) knew that many years
before, while she had been leading a meeting, the Holy Spirit had prompted her
to stand on a chair and wave a flag to bring a spirit of celebration and joy.
When I approached them with the flag in that meeting, immediately the
wife’s mind went straight back to that occasion and she knew the Holy
Spirit was setting her free.
Again,
in a recent meeting, the Holy Spirit showed me He was “waiting” for a
prophetic whistle. I found myself
having a quick conversation with the Holy Spirit . . . “Whistle? . . . but you
can’t whistle in church . . . it just wouldn’t be acceptable.”
But the reply came straight back, “Who are you to say what is
acceptable? I can use whatever I
choose.” Last
year I was part of a “GFM” women’s team ministering in the South Island of
New Zealand when one of our team began to prophesy on a tambourine. It was simply amazing because it was done as a prophetic act.
It happened after the Holy Spirit caused me to make a strong declaration
over the congregation that we would Move On
In God; that we would RUMBLE for
God! Liz began to RUMBLE
the tambourine, and the sound filled the air. It rose and fell; it stirred my
spirit with such an excitement that, when she stopped playing, I
felt almost robbed; I felt like the link to heaven had suddenly been cut.
Some
Old Testament Examples of Prophetic Acts: Read the
story of Elisha in 2 Kings 13: 14-20. It seems
that Joash the king of Israel had great respect for Elisha, even though Joash
was an evil king. The words he wept over Elisha as he was dying were the very
same words Elisha had cried out to Elijah as he was taken up to heaven in a
chariot of fire . . . “O
my father, my father! The chariot
of Israel, and the horsemen thereof.” King
Joash was saying, “Elisha, my father, you are the strength of Israel.
You’ve been our eyes, our ears, our victory . . . but now you’re
leaving us!” What was Elisha’s
response? He could have had a good
cry too; after all, he was a dying man. Did
he wallow in self-pity? No!
He initiated a prophetic act to bring blessing and victory to his beloved
Israel. His body might have been
“packing it in” but his spirit was just as alert as ever. “Take
bow and arrows,”
he
said to the king. “Put your hand on the bow.”
Elisha was getting the king involved. Then Elisha laid his hands on
top of the king’s hands and imparted victory.
So it was not only a prophetic act but it was also an impartation of
victory from Elisha to King Joash. “Now
open the window eastward and shoot the arrow.”
And as the arrow was shooting through the air,
Elisha made a prophetic declaration, “The
arrow of the Lord’s deliverance and the arrow of deliverance from Syria: For
you shall smite the Syrians in Aphek till you have consumed them.”
Then
Elisha said to the king, “Take
the arrows and strike them on the ground.”
So Joash took the arrows, struck them upon the ground
three times then stopped . . . and Elisha was angry with him.
“You should have
struck the ground five or six times . . . now you will only defeat Syria three
times.” Verse
25 confirms their three victories over Syria, totally fulfilling the prophetic
act and the prophetic declaration. King Joash was
unskilled in such matters as prophetic acts but Elisha understood the POWER that
was unleashed as the Holy Spirit prompted him in this manner.
Moses: Moses was
always carrying out prophetic acts with his rod, he was always prophesying with
his rod. God chose Moses, knowing
he had a speech impediment (see Exodus 4:10), so He (God) could speak through
him; so He could do signs, wonders and miracles through him; so He could do
prophetic acts through him. God
chose a man who now knew how to LEAN ON HIM. God said to Moses in Exodus 4:2, “What’s
that in your hand? . . . USE IT!”
His rod became his point of contact for prophetic acts.
In
Exodus 14, after the Israelites fled from Egypt, we read about the Egyptians
pursuing them with vengeance; they wanted to retrieve their slaves; the exodus
of the Israelites had humiliated them; they were all devastated at the loss of
their firstborn. In verses 15, 16
& 21 we see that Moses
had to DO something, not SAY something.
“Don’t
speak . . . ACT! Stop praying, stop
crying out to Me and get the people moving forward.
Stretch out your rod over the sea and divide it . . .” Prophetic
acts are about going forward; forging ahead in the realm of the prophetic. A
New Testament Example of a Prophetic Act: Jesus turning
the water into wine – Read John 2: 1-10. Jesus isn’t
speaking to His mother as a son to his mother; He’s speaking to her as the
Messiah; He’s speaking to her as Jesus the Christ.
This is the beginning of a new relationship with His mother. “Woman,”
He said to His mother, “My
hour has not yet come. Providing
the wine is not the purpose of My calling.
Don’t bother Me with such trivialities!”
Why,
then, did Mary concern Jesus with the fact that they had run out of wine?
Wasn’t she just a guest at the wedding and therefore not responsible
for the provision of the wine? Maybe
she sensed in her spirit that the time for His public ministry had come?
It seems that Mary totally ignored what Jesus said to her, because she
made this amazing statement to the servants, “Whatever He says to you . . . DO IT!”
and, bear in mind that up to this point Jesus hadn’t performed any
miracles; there was no earthly reason why she should have said it. But Mary’s
statement was a prophetic declaration, and it’s just as powerful a statement
today as it was the day Mary prophetically declared it.
Jesus
didn’t turn the water into wine to grant His mother her request.
He
did it for more reasons than His first miracle. He
did it also as a prophetic act.
Jesus
was signifying to the religious Jews that humanity would no longer need to be
purified by this water; they would no longer have to wash from the ceremonial
pots, which was a strict part of the Jewish purification rites. Jesus was signifying that they were to be washed in the blood
(His blood) to be made clean; they were to be washed in His blood to receive
salvation. He purposely chose to use the ceremonial waterpots, testifying to
them that the natural element of water was to become a spiritual element of
wine, representing His blood: His blood being poured out for them (and for us.) Without
even realizing it, the servants at the wedding reception became part of a
prophetic act. The statement was
made, “They’ve run
out of wine,” so Jesus said, “Fill
the water pots (washtubs!)
with water!”
Then Jesus said to the servants, “Pour
out the wine to the governor of the feast!”
Just as Mary had declared (the servants didn’t have to SAY a thing)
they just had to DO it. ”Whatever
He says to you, DO it!” And
they did! The
comment came from the governor of the feast to the bridegroom . . . “How amazing that you should keep the best wine till
last. It’s the normal practice to
serve the best wine first, then, when everyone has had a ‘skin full,’ they
don’t notice the decline in quality!”
Yes, it’s time to “step outside the box”; it’s time to stop dictating to the Vine instead of abiding in the Vine. It’s time to let the sap of the Holy Spirit flow freely between the Vine and the branches so that we bear much fruit, which, of course, is the very purpose for us abiding in the Vine. If we want to be filled with the fullness of Christ, then we need to be “pressed down, shaken together and running over” with the sap of the Holy Spirit Whose very purpose is to flow freely between the Vine and His branches. For further Bible Studies, books, manuals, tapes, and information, please contact us at the following:
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