Theme

Theme: How Does Jesus Speak?
 
This week’s lessons stress the necessity of obedience if one is truly a disciple of the Lord Jesus Christ.
 
Scripture: Luke 6:46-49
 
Several years ago, when I was in northern California, I turned on the radio and heard part of an unusual religious program. It was called “Have You Had a Spiritual Experience?” and was conducted like a call-in talk show. A phone number was given, and listeners were invited to describe their “spiritual experience” over the air.
 
While I listened two people told their stories. The first was a girl who explained that she had felt a sudden urge to leave her home in northern California and hitchhike down the coastal road to a place about midway between San Francisco and Los Angeles. When she reached that mid-point, she sensed that “this is the place.” So she got out of the car, went down the hill to the shore, found a cave where she camped out for two or three days and communed with nature. She got into the water and swam about among the rocks and seaweed as if she were alone at the dawn of creation. Then an animal came by and went off in a certain direction, and she took this as a “sign” that it was time to go. She climbed back up the hill and hitchhiked home. That was her experience. 
 
The other person told this story. A short while before—on the first Tuesday of November, 1980–Americans went to the polls to choose Ronald Reagan over Jimmy Carter as President of the United States. She said that she had always been a Democrat. “I went into that voting booth planning to vote for Carter, but something happened,” she said. “A strange feeling came over me and I pulled the lever for Reagan.” She did not say whether she thought this experience was of God or the devil, but I think she believed it was the latter— since she was a Democrat. 
 
Is this the way God speaks to people? By feelings? By intuition? Is this the way the Lord Jesus Christ exercises His Lordship over His disciples?
 
This matter was of great concern to the protestant reformers, for they lived in a day when very few people had a sense of a true word from God and were instead burdened by what were only the traditions of the church. Or if they claimed to have received a true word from God, it was often supposed to have come through dreams, trances, sudden movings of the Holy Spirit, or intense personal intimations. Against these errors the reformers stressed two things: 1) the Word of God (the Bible); and 2) the work of God’s Spirit illuminating the Word of God. These worked together. The reformers saw that God does not speak to a person through one without the other.
 
Without the Holy Spirit the Bible is a dead book. That is why a person “without the Spirit” cannot understand it. In order to understand the Word, hear the voice of Christ in it, and begin to follow Him in obedience, the individual must be born again. In addition, He must wait on God and pray for the Holy Spirit’s guidance. On the other hand, without the written Word of God as an objective guide, claims to a special leading of the Spirit quickly deteriorate into the kind of foolishness heard on the “Have You Had a Spiritual Experience?” program. 
 
Study Questions:

Can you think of any examples—either in your own life, or someone you know, or perhaps in something you read or listened to—where the emphasis was on people’s feelings as a means to hearing from God, rather than on the Bible? 
Sometimes people claim to have heard teaching from God apart from Scripture.  According to the Word of God, how are we to regard such assertions?
What two items did the protestant reformers emphasize in knowing a true word from God?  Why were both of these needed? What happens if one exists without the other?

 
Application: Ask the Lord to give you discernment in guarding you from falling prey to false teaching.  Who do you know who can give you wise counsel for what resources to trust and which to avoid?

Study Questions
Application
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email
Print
Tagged under
More Resources from James Montgomery Boice

Subscribe to the Think & Act Biblically Devotional

Alliance of Confessional Evangelicals

About the Alliance

The Alliance is a coalition of believers who hold to the historic creeds and confessions of the Reformed faith and proclaim biblical doctrine in order to foster a Reformed awakening in today’s Church.

Canadian Donors

Canadian Committee of The Bible Study Hour
PO Box 24087, RPO Josephine
North Bay, ON, P1B 0C7