Ernie :
If the prophetic must always be subordinate to the  pastoral,
how would Jeremiah have been possible ?  He challenged directly
the "pastoral" priesthood of that time.
 
Billy
 
 
------------------------------------------
 
 
3/23/2012 11:04:40 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]  
writes:

Hi  Chris,

> I, too, have been fascinated at this for years.   Unfortunately, 
profit-recognition tends to be subjectively in the eye of the  beholder... may 
the 
best profit salesman win.  This is why unscrupulous  charlatans can gain so 
much traction and truly inspired profits may go  unnoticed.  I don’t know if 
there ever will be a wide spread solution to  this short of a divine 
Revelation.

Actually, the solution is quite  simple.  "The prophetic must always be 
under the authority of the  pastoral."  

Like with any other prediction/confidence game, the  key is to have a 
"closed community" where people are held accountable for the  consequences of 
their words.  If prophets are acknowledged but tested in  both their words and 
their character -- "by their fruits" -- the dangerous  ones will be weeded 
out quickly.

-- Ernie P.


On Mar 23,  2012, at 8:16 AM, Chris Hahn wrote:

> Billy,
>  
>  I think the crux of the problem is, as you said, sorting out the 
charlatans  from the genuine article.  And the problem is exacerbated by the  
exaggerated damage done by the charlatans vs. the (possibly) humble demeanor  
of 
the true profit.
>  
> I, too, have been fascinated at  this for years.  Unfortunately, 
profit-recognition tends to be  subjectively in the eye of the beholder... may 
the 
best profit salesman  win.  This is why unscrupulous charlatans can gain so 
much traction and  truly inspired profits may go unnoticed.  I don’t know if 
there ever will  be a wide spread solution to this short of a divine 
Revelation.
>   
> Chris  
>  
>  
>  
>  From: [email protected]  
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf [email protected]
>  Sent: Thursday, March 22, 2012 9:41 PM
> To:  [email protected]
> Cc: [email protected]
> Subject:  Re: [RC] Prophetism then and now
>  
> Chris :
> Some  years ago I carried out a major study of prophets in the religions
> of  the world. Months and months of research, the topic fascinates me.
>  There is incredible variety among prophets ( or would-be prophets ).
>  It is a "revelation" ( pun intended ) to study all the forms that  
prophetism
> can take. So I really should better qualify my  views.
>  
> You are quite right, of course, "God chooses"  who will or won't be a 
prophet
> --or prophetess.  Guess what I was  most trying to say is that there 
needs to
> be reliable criteria for who  is and who isn't a prophet since there are
> a multitude of claimants in  today's world and there have been far more
> charlatans in the past than  the genuine article. Still, in the 
here-and-now
> there are a good  number of well-meaning people who sincerely believe
> that they are  called by God for this purpose but who really, from
> every indication,  are stumbling in the dark and not doing others
> any real  good.
>  
> In a way it is like the dispute among various  Protestants about who
> is qualified to me a pastor. Some groups believe  that no special learning
> is necessary and all that is required is a  pure heart and inspiration.
> I simply cannot take that kind of view  seriously.
>  
> To use a metaphor borrowed from  Thessalonians, it isn't religion that
> we are part of, but a spiritual  war for the souls of mankind. Another 
metaphor
> then is that we need to  take part in a Crusade. But there is all the 
difference
> in the world  between the actual Crusaders who took Jerusalem
> after years of hard  fighting and the much later Children's Crusade
> that ended up with all  the devoted Christian children killed or enslaved.
> Not the path we  should take.
>  
> My view anyway
> Billy
>   
>  
> ======================================
>  
> 3/22/2012 8:21:10 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]  writes:
> Billy,
>  
> I agree with you about the LDS  take on prophets, but I think you are 
setting too rigid an Old Testamentesqe  standard for prophetism.
>  
> I think a prophet can be an  uneducated amateur in religion.  God spoke 
to some improbable characters  in the Old Testament.  If the spirit truly 
catches any give individual  (and I agree that this is a relatively rare 
phenomenon), and if the individual  can effectively communicate the message, 
then 
I would give that individual  prophetic qualities.  I go with the Calvinist 
flow here that God makes  the selections.
>  
> Your definition.... “A genuine prophet  has to go through a helluva lot 
of bad stuff to be
> taken seriously,  has to persevere, and has to not only have a powerful
> moral message,  but an original message that contributes to knowledge.”
>  
>  I am not sure that a prophet has to be taken seriously to be a prophet, 
but I  do agree that the prophet should have a message that is moral and 
contributes  to knowledge. 
>  
> Chris
>  
>   
>  
>  
> From: [email protected]  
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf [email protected]
>  Sent: Thursday, March 22, 2012 8:58 PM
> To:  [email protected]
> Cc: [email protected]
> Subject:  [RC] Prophetism then and now
>  
> Ernie :
> Coming  from a Baptist background, also with Lutheran and Buddhist 
experiences
>  that have shaped my understanding,  and more could be added, my 
standards  for
> what constitutes valid prophetism are "high bar," to use that  metaphor.
>  
> My experience with Charismatic / Bible church  prophetism in action is 
very limited
> and, from it, is essentially  negative. By way of comparison, today's 
"church prophets"
> strike me as  similar to a shop keeper who goes into politics, or a 
dentist, or a
>  high school teacher. In either case it is something that one makes up as 
 one
> goes along. And, allowing for special exceptions, I have extreme  
difficulty
> in accepting  any such thing. Amateur hour in politics  has no more appeal
> than amateur hour in matters of faith , at least  concerning such matters
> that effect whole congregations or whole  populations.
>  
> Hence my criticisms of LDS doctrine that  holds that all male heads of 
families
> are "prophets."  Sure they  are ,    and being a lifelong rancher 
prepares one for
> being  a prophet how ?  Or for that matter a lifelong banker or lifelong  
salesman.
> Same exact principle for Bible churches, etc.
>   
> My standard is Old Testament or, cie vous plait, Zoroastrian --in  which 
genuine
> prophets , or prophetesses, are uncommon in any  population.
>  
> A lot about Jeremiah I disagree with, and  also parts of Amos and Isaiah 
1,
> but these, to me are "real" prophets.  As was Zarathushtra. In each case
> they took on the establishment of  their day, they were not reluctant to
> challenge political power or  religious authority.  They did not do so 
100%
> of the time, but in  all cases where it was needed.
>  
> Do Mormon "prophets" do  any such thing ?  Do church "prophets" do any
> such thing ?   To ask the question is to answer it, of course not.
>  
> For  me that disqualifies such people from any kind of authentic  
prophetism.
>  
> Not sure exactly how best to read the  Apostle Paul on this issue. At 
times
> he seems to affirm the  "Charismatic" position, yet taking a very dim view
> of glossolalia, but  at other times his standards seem to be consistent
> with the views in  the Hebrew Bible / OT. In any case, while I make 
allowances
> for  exceptions, basically I am OT about this.
>  
> A genuine  prophet has to go through a helluva lot of bad stuff to be
> taken  seriously, has to persevere, and has to not only have a powerful
> moral  message, but an original message that contributes to knowledge.
> Simply  expressing inner spiritual feelings doesn't begin to cut it.
>   
> My view, anyway
> Billy
>  
>   
>  
>  
>  
>  
> --  
> Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community  
<[email protected]>
> Google Group:  http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
> Radical Centrism  website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org
>  



-- 
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