Sunday, March 4, 2018

#2231 (3/4) SUNDAY SPECIAL:'Yes, Christians Do Hear God’s Voice - Call Me Crazy"

Let's continue to be in prayer for the family and friends of those murdered and wounded in the school shooting in South Florida yesterday.
"In Wake of Florida School Shooting, Trump Calls for Culture That ‘Embraces the Dignity of Life’" - Fred Lucas / Feb. 15, 2018; http://dailysignal.com/2018/02/15/in-wake-of-florida-school-shooting-trump-calls-for-culture-to-embrace-the-dignity-of-life 

"YES, CHRISTIANS DO HEAR GOD'S VOICE - CALL ME CRAZY" by Eric Metaxas/ Anne Morse, Breakpoint.org, Feb.27, 2018; http://www.breakpoint.org/2018/02/breakpoint-yes-christians-hear-gods-voice/ [AS I SEE IT: The lack of understanding of Christians and the cynicism of so many of our cultural elite (even those who claim to be Christian) never fails to astound me. We can only pray that they will truly hear God speaking to their hearts through His Spirit before they have to stand before God's Judgement Seat and face his wrath (John 3:36) and hear His judgement.  Stan]
A Washington Post writer once said that evangelicals are “poor, ignorant, and easy to command.” Well, at least he didn’t say we were mentally ill. Until now that is.

On a recent segment of “The View,” Joy Behar took aim at Mike Pence’s belief that God speaks to him. Responding to a comment by another host, Behar said, “It’s one thing to talk to Jesus. It’s another when Jesus talks to you. That’s a mental illness if I’m not correct. Hearing voices.”

That’s a sign of how ignorant elites truly are about beliefs and practices common to something like two billion Christians.
     I actually find it surprising that Behar, who claims to be Catholic, hasn’t found time in her seventy-five years to learn a little more about prayer.
     Behar’s comment outraged Americans from coast to coast. Twenty-five thousand people let ABC know what we thought of a network that allows an employee to sneer at the way other people practice their faith. The next day, Behar responded to her critics with a sarcastic clarification, saying, “I don’t think Mike Pence is mentally ill even though he says he is hearing voices.” Wow. That’s some apology.

I’d like to propose a solution. I invite Joy Behar to spend some time looking into what Christians mean when they say they hear God’s voice.
     She might start with the writings of J. Warner Wallace, a Senior Fellow at the Colson Center. In a piece posted by FOX News, Wallace notes that when Christians say, “God spoke to me,” they don’t “necessarily mean that God spoke audibly.”  Christians, he explains, “believe the Bible is the ‘word of God,’ and by reading it, [we] gain access to the mind of God.”
     He points to 2nd Timothy, which notes that Holy Scripture is “God-breathed,” and Hebrews 4, which says “the word of God is living and active.” Reading these verses, one could see how Christians might legitimately say, “God spoke to me,” Wallace explains.

Second, God can use wise and mature advisors to teach us about God’s will–people who have invested long years reading and meditating over scripture. Wallace writes that a believer who says God spoke to her “may simply mean that one of God’s children provided them with Biblical wisdom.”

Third, God may speak to us through difficult experiences.  As C.S. Lewis writes in The Problem of Pain, “God whispers to us in our pleasures . . . but shouts in our pains: it is His megaphone to rouse a deaf world.”

Fourth, God may indeed speak audibly to His followers. Many people have written about hearing God’s voice in a crisis. And in my own case, God spoke to me through an amazing, mind-blowing dream.

Bible-reading Christians know this. Open your Bible, and you’ll find all kinds of examples of each of the ways God speaks to His people—audibly, through prophets, and through the written word.

Finally, it’s worth reminding our media that, if Mike Pence is crazy for believing he hears God’s voice, then so are George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, FDR, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, and Barack Obama—all of whom said they listened for the still, small voice of God.

I really do hope Joy Behar will give it a try. And for more by J. Warner Wallace on Christian apologetics, please visit BreakPoint.org.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

RESOURCESAs Eric points out, followers of Christ hear Him speak in many ways–by reading and meditating on Holy Scripture, through wise advisors and fellow believers, through dreams, and even through experiences and circumstances. To quote Francis Schaeffer, He is there, and He is not silent.
"What do Christians mean when they say 'God spoke to me?'"J. Warner Wallace | FOX News | February 18, 2018; http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2018/02/18/what-do-christians-mean-when-say-god-spoke-to-me.html
Hearing God: Developing a Conversational Relationship with God
-Dallas Willard | IVP Books | May 2012; http://www.colsoncenterstore.org/Product.asp?sku=9780830835690
He is There and He is Not Silent- Francis Schaeffer | Tyndale House Publishers; http://www.colsoncenterstore.org/Product.asp?sku=084231413X
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'This Is the Part of Scripture Joy Behar Calls Mental Illness': Sen. Lankford's Powerful Message to College Students" - Jennifer Wishon, 02-26-2018; http://www1.cbn.com/cbnnews/us/2018/february/this-is-the-part-of-scripture-joy-behar-calls-mental-illness-sen-lankfords-powerful-message-to-college-students
"This Answer to Joy Behar's Attack And Those Who Dismiss Prayers for Florida"Charlene Aaron, 02-19-2018; http://www1.cbn.com/cbnnews/us/2018/february/senate-chaplain-barry-black-has-this-answer-to-joy-behars-attack-and-those-who-dismiss-prayers-for-florida

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