This past week I came across this great, great posting from John Piper. I have posted it below in its entirety.
It is very important that if you start reading it, that you read it all the way through. Do it. You will be blessed, I promise.
If you would rather listen to it than read it, you can do that here.
Pastor Gene
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Let me tell you about a most wonderful experience I had early Monday
morning, March 19, 2007, a little after six o’clock. God actually spoke
to me. There is no doubt that it was God. I heard the words in my head
just as clearly as when a memory of a conversation passes across your
consciousness. The words were in English, but they had about them an
absolutely self-authenticating ring of truth. I know beyond the shadow
of a doubt that God still speaks today. . .
I couldn’t sleep for some reason. I was at Shalom House in northern
Minnesota on a staff couples’ retreat. It was about five thirty in the
morning. I lay there wondering if I should get up or wait till I got
sleepy again. In his mercy, God moved me out of bed. It was mostly dark,
but I managed to find my clothing, got dressed, grabbed my briefcase,
and slipped out of the room without waking up Noël. In the main room
below, it was totally quiet. No one else seemed to be up. So I sat down
on a couch in the corner to pray.
As I prayed and mused, suddenly it happened. God said, “Come and see what I have done.”
There was not the slightest doubt in my mind that these were the very
words of God. In this very moment. At this very place in the
twenty-first century, 2007, God was speaking to me with absolute
authority and self-evidencing reality. I paused to let this sink in.
There was a sweetness about it. Time seemed to matter little. God was
near. He had me in his sights. He had something to say to me. When God
draws near, hurry ceases. Time slows down.
I wondered what he meant by “come and see.” Would he take me
somewhere, like he did Paul into heaven to see what can’t be spoken? Did
“see” mean that I would have a vision of some great deed of God that no
one has seen? I am not sure how much time elapsed between God’s initial
word, “Come and see what I have done,” and his next words. It doesn’t
matter. I was being enveloped in the love of his personal communication.
The God of the universe was speaking to me.
Then he said, as clearly as any words have ever come into my mind, “I am awesome in my deeds toward the children of man.”
My heart leaped up, “Yes, Lord! You are awesome in your deeds. Yes, to
all men whether they see it or not. Yes! Now what will you show me?”
The words came again. Just as clear as before, but increasingly specific: “I
turned the sea into dry land; they passed through the river on foot.
There they rejoiced in me—who rules by my might forever.” Suddenly I
realized God was taking me back several thousand years to the time when
he dried up the Red Sea and the Jordan River. I was being transported
by his word back into history to those great deeds. This is what he
meant by “come and see.” He was transporting me back by his words to
those two glorious deeds before the children of men. These were the
“awesome deeds” he referred to. God himself was narrating the mighty
works of God. He was doing it for me. He was doing it with words that
were resounding in my own mind.
There settled over me a wonderful reverence. A palpable peace came
down. This was a holy moment and a holy corner of the world in northern
Minnesota. God Almighty had come down and was giving me the stillness
and the openness and the willingness to hear his very voice. As I
marveled at his power to dry the sea and the river, he spoke again. “I keep watch over the nations—let not the rebellious exalt themselves.”
This was breathtaking. It was very serious. It was almost a rebuke.
At least a warning. He may as well have taken me by the collar of my
shirt, lifted me off the ground with one hand, and said, with an
incomparable mixture of fierceness and love, “Never, never, never exalt
yourself. Never rebel against me.”
I sat staring at nothing. My mind was full of the global glory of God. “I keep watch over the nations.”
He had said this to me. It was not just that he had said it. Yes, that
is glorious. But he had said this to me. The very words of God were in
my head. They were there in my head just as much as the words that I am
writing at this moment are in my head. They were heard as clearly as if
at this moment I recalled that my wife said, “Come down for supper
whenever you are ready.” I know those are the words of my wife. And I
know these are the words of God.
Think of it. Marvel at this. Stand in awe of this. The God who keeps
watch over the nations, like some people keep watch over cattle or stock
markets or construction sites—this God still speaks in the twenty-first
century. I heard his very words. He spoke personally to me.
What effect did this have on me? It filled me with a fresh sense of
God’s reality. It assured me more deeply that he acts in history and in
our time. It strengthened my faith that he is for me and cares about me
and will use his global power to watch over me. Why else would he come
and tell me these things?
It has increased my love for the Bible as God’s very word, because it
was through the Bible that I heard these divine words, and through the
Bible I have experiences like this almost every day. The very God of the
universe speaks on every page into my mind—and your mind. We hear his
very words. God himself has multiplied his wondrous deeds and thoughts
toward us; none can compare with him! I will proclaim and tell of them,
yet they are more than can be told (Psalm 40:5).
And best of all, they are available to all. If you would like to hear
the very same words I heard on the couch in northern Minnesota, read Psalm 66:5-7.
That is where I heard them. O how precious is the Bible. It is the very
word of God. In it God speaks in the twenty-first century. This is the
very voice of God. By this voice, he speaks with absolute truth and
personal force. By this voice, he reveals his all-surpassing beauty. By
this voice, he reveals the deepest secrets of our hearts. No voice
anywhere anytime can reach as deep or lift as high or carry as far as
the voice of God that we hear in the Bible.
It is a great wonder that God still speaks today through the Bible
with greater force and greater glory and greater assurance and greater
sweetness and greater hope and greater guidance and greater transforming
power and greater Christ-exalting truth than can be heard through any
voice in any human soul on the planet from outside the Bible.
This is why I found the article in this month’s Christianity Today, “My Conversation with God,”
so sad. Written by an anonymous professor at a “well-known Christian
University,” it tells of his experience of hearing God. What God said
was that he must give all his royalties from a new book toward the
tuition of a needy student. What makes me sad about the article is not
that it isn’t true or didn’t happen. What’s sad is that it really does
give the impression that extra-biblical communication with God is
surpassingly wonderful and faith-deepening. All the while, the
supremely-glorious communication of the living God which personally and
powerfully and transformingly explodes in the receptive heart through
the Bible everyday is passed over in silence.
I am sure this professor of theology did not mean it this way, but
what he actually said was, “For years I’ve taught that God still speaks,
but I couldn’t testify to it personally. I can only do so now
anonymously, for reasons I hope will be clear” (emphasis added). Surely
he does not mean what he seems to imply—that only when one hears an
extra-biblical voice like, “The money is not yours,” can you testify personally
that God still speaks. Surely he does not mean to belittle the voice of
God in the Bible which speaks this very day with power and truth and
wisdom and glory and joy and hope and wonder and helpfulness ten
thousand times more decisively than anything we can hear outside the Bible.
I grieve at what is being communicated here. The great need of our
time is for people to experience the living reality of God by hearing
his word personally and transformingly in Scripture. Something is
incredibly wrong when the words we hear outside Scripture are more
powerful and more affecting to us than the inspired word of God. Let us
cry with the psalmist, “Incline my heart to your word” (Psalm 119:36). “Open my eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of your law” (Psalm 119:18).
Grant that the eyes of our hearts would be enlightened to know our hope
and our inheritance and the love of Christ that passes knowledge and be
filled with all the fullness of God (Ephesians 1:18; 3:19).
O God, don’t let us be so deaf to your word and so unaffected with its
ineffable, evidential excellency that we celebrate lesser things as more
thrilling, and even consider this misplacement of amazement worthy of
printing in a national magazine.
Still hearing his voice in the Bible,
John Piper
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