Copyright © 2004 by The Voice of Prophecy
David B. Smith

P.O. Box 53055    
Los Angeles, CA 90053   

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January 30, 2004
HANGING ON FOR DEAR LIFE #5

“BUT HE SOUNDED SO SINCERE!”

You can follow an Internet road map with absolute, down-to- the-millimeter precision. And end up completely lost — if it’s a bad map. Spend a million dollars buying stock from the most sincere-sounding broker in the world, and end up broke if he’s a crook.

There’s a story floating around — pure fiction, as you’ll soon see — where a guy is just going about his business, making a living. And all at once, out of the blue, he hears an inner voice. “Sell your house.” What? “Sell your house.” Over and over this clear but disembodied voice inside his brain tells him to call Century 21 and put his house on the market.

After about nine hundred repetitions of The Voice, he does so. He lists his house, he sells it, escrow closes, and he’s got a check in his hand . . . much to the consternation of his wife and kids. Then The Voice speaks up again. “Get on a plane — go to Vegas.” What? Vegas? “Get on a plane — go to Vegas.” So he buys an airline ticket with his $250,000 in his pocket, and he flies to Nevada. At McCarren International Airport, The Voice tells him with great precision: “Get a taxi — go to the . . . Excalibur Hotel.” Or whatever. He goes. “Go into the casino, turn left and stop at the second roulette table.” He gets there and the table is packed with players. And The Voice — remember, it’s an internal voice, of course, and he’s the only one who can hear it — instructs him: “Take your $250,000 and bet it on Number Twenty-five. All of it, every penny.” With his heart in his throat, the man takes his pile of cash and puts the entire amount on #25. A quarter million bucks on #25, at 35 to 1 odds. And the little white ball goes around and around . . . bounces around, skips around, and comes to rest in number . . . seventeen. And The Voice from heaven says: “Rats!!”

Well, friend, that is probably the dumbest story we’ve ever told here on The Voice of Prophecy, and I very carefully do so for just one reason. Here it is: it makes a whole lot of difference what voice we pay attention to in life. Do you agree?

We’ve been spending an entire week here just studying one verse in the book of Psalms. In chapter 31, King David looks around his empire, and he sees people listening to all sorts of voices — all of them false. Really, throughout the sorry history of the Children of Israel, that’s about all they ever did: heed false voices and chase after false gods. And he writes in frustration:

“I HATE it when people cling to their useless idols.” And then the seven beautiful words directed toward the True Voice, toward God: “I have decided to cling to You.”

Now friend, here is my Friday question for you. On what basis does King David decide that THIS Voice is worth clinging to? Our empty-handed friend standing out in the parking lot of the Excalibur Hotel has the same question. Why did I listen to YOU? he wonders in his despair.

We remembered a fantastic soundbite, and it comes from one of our favorite books: The Victorious Christian Life by Dr. Tony Evans. He writes about “the shield of faith,” which is a common Christian metaphor, and makes this observation:

“Your faith will protect you, PROVIDED it is the right kind of faith. You could have enormous faith in gifted preachers, talented choirs, or your most zealous Christian friends. But that kind of faith won’t get you anywhere.” And please mark down this next line, because it is huge: “The INTENSITY of your faith is irrelevant if the OBJECT of your faith is erroneous.”

Did you get that? Friend, you can listen to a voice out there with pure intensity, with slavish devotion, on a day-and-night 24/7 basis. But what if it’s the wrong voice? You might choose to hang from a tree limb, and put all your weight on that tree limb. What if it’s the wrong limb?

Back in September, 2001, Kenneth L. Woodward of Newsweek magazine had a cover article entitled “A Mormon Moment.” The 2002 Winter Games were coming up in Salt Lake City, and this unique American denomination, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, was going to be in the spotlight. And here are 11 million people who say they listen to the “Voice” found in the Bible, but also listen to the voice of Joseph Smith, who claimed the angel Moroni told him about golden plates, and who, on Mount Cumorah, near Palmyra, gave him tablets containing new truth. Should people listen to this new voice, which teaches that people can become gods, that we all pre-existed in heaven as spirit children procreated by God Himself and His divine wife, that we are all working our way toward one of three kingdoms – celestial, terrestrial, or telestial?

Well, friend, that’s why a person studies. You don’t hang onto a rope until you’ve tugged on it and determined how good a rope it is, and what it’s fastened to. That’s why — in everything we do here at the Voice of Prophecy: this radio program, our Discover Bible Course, the books and resources we send out — we urge you: Get into your own Bible. Test all things by the Word. Hold fast to that which is true. But do a lot of tugging on that rope before you put any spiritual weight on it — or especially, any ETERNAL weight.

Ironically, just two weeks after that Newsweek article by Woodward, he had another one entitled “A Peaceful Faith, a Fanatic Few.” And he wrote about how good, devout Muslims everywhere read the Quran, and devour the ahadith, or “sayings and stories of Muhammad.” But there were those in the movement who also listened to men like Osama bin Laden . . . and yes, this was in the Newsweek magazine which came out just after the September 11 massacre in New York City and Washington, D.C. So let’s mark those words of warning down again:

“The intensity of your faith is irrelevant if the object of your faith is erroneous.”

I want to tell you this, friend: there comes a time when we all have to pick a rope. We all have to cling to something. In terms of eternity, you are going to put the full weight of your destiny on something or SomeONE. What or who will it be?

We began this week telling a heart-rending story from Leadership magazine, and I want to return there as we close. Marshall Shelley, who is a very young-looking senior editor of that very magazine, has an article entitled “My New View of God.” Back in November of 1991, he and his wife, Susan, had a baby boy named Toby. He lived just two minutes before succumbing to fatal birth defects. And you mothers and fathers know that in just two minutes, 120 ticks of the clock, you can already bond in such a way that death is absolutely heart-breaking. But get this: just three months later, February of ‘92, their little two-year-old, Mandy, died of pneumonia. Talk about a double whammy of grief! I can’t imagine it. And this young father begins his article with a startling admission:

“I hadn’t realized the cost of discipleship. God assigns some people incredibly hard situations. . . . Living for God’s glory is not for sissies.”

But then he begins to write about “clinging” . . . which is why we noticed this particular piece. What does it mean to hold on in the darkness, to keep on believing when your tears and your heart tell you there may be nothing beyond the two little headstones in the cemetery?

Listen to this testimony, though:

“Before my children died,” Marshall writes, “I considered the [Christian] doctrines of resurrection and heaven pleasant but remote, a bit quaint. NOW, THEY ARE CENTRAL AND STRATEGIC.”

Now that he has desperately studied, and now that he has no other rope to hold onto, Marshall and Susan are clinging to this one big-time. Can you imagine how they clutch at the Christian doctrine of resurrection until their hands of faith almost bleed?

“Many times now,” he writes, “heaven seems so much more substantial than earth.” Can you conceive of it, friend, if all God’s people got to that point? “My wife, Susan, sometimes says, ‘I have one foot in heaven and one foot on earth.’” Then he adds: “We’ve already sent part of ourselves on ahead — and we understand better what Jesus meant when He said, ‘Where your treasure is, there will your hearts be also.’ Our hearts are continually drawn heavenward.”

Friend, here in the last minute of this program, it’s not my place to choose your rope. I’m just a Christian preacher in a fairly small Protestant denomination. But I want to lift up for your consideration the God of Heaven, and His only Son, Jesus Christ, and the words of this one Book, the Bible. That’s pretty much it. From what studying and praying I’ve done, I think Marshall and Susan’s choice of a rope is absolutely right on. They’re clinging, and I’m right there with them, clinging too. We’re surrounded by a “great cloud of witnesses,” as it says in Hebrews 12:1, and the great giants of God through the centuries, brave men and women of the Kingdom, tell us: “Here. Hold on to this. This Rock holds; this Anchor is secure. We’ve tested it, and the intensity of our faith IS relevant, because the object of our faith is the Lord Jesus Christ and His guaranteed sure Word.”

 

 

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