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PROPHET...AND
FOR PROFIT
For some crazy reason I can still remember taking a Latin
vocabulary test way back when. My professor read off the English words he
wanted is to translate into Latin one of which was profit. What he
failed to do was spell profit. Those of us who had no idea what the
Latin was for profit wrote propheta = prophet. When the
tests came back, he humbly had to accept propheta. He wanted lucrum.
How interesting! Back to that in a moment.
Were I to ask most anyone today to define prophet, my
suspicion is that I would hear something like, “a person who foretells
the future,” which would be wrong. No one can foretell what will be. A
prophet is someone who speaks for God. Yes, Old Testament prophets like
Isaiah and Amos usually did foretell the future, but it did not take
anyone special to foretell what they foretold. All Isaiah, Amos and all
the other prophets foretold was that if the people kept on sinning, their
sins would come back to haunt them.
Not rocket science is it? The only future any of the prophets was
concerned about was the immediate future. The people were disobeying their
God and they knew it. And if they did not know it, the prophets were sent
not only to remind them of their responsibilities and duties but also to
warn them that if they kept on sinning, God would not protect them when it
came time to pay the piper.
Again, not rocket science; moreover, we are all prophets in the
same vein as an Amos. We warn those we love (prophesy to them) as those
who loved us warned us (prophesied to us) that sin and selfishness always
catch up to us and we will reap the results of those actions. God wants
us, those who love us want us, and we ourselves should want to cease the
sinfulness and get right with God and one another.
That is all prophecy is. It is not the foretelling of some distant
future. Amos did not predict some far-off event several hundred years
later. The Book of Revelation does not predict something about to happen
2000 years later. Amos was written to his contemporaries who were
disobeying God. John wrote Revelation to those who were being or about to
be persecuted at that time. The Book of Revelation has absolutely no
reference to any time other that to the time at hand when it was written.
That is not the same as saying it has no relevance. Just as Amos
warned and reminded his people that they needed to amend their lives, so
he reminds us today. As John encouraged the people who were being
persecuted for their faith to remain strong and promised them God would
see them through, so John reminds us today of God’s ever-present grace
and strength when we find it difficult to live out the demands of our
faith.
What is happening today is that there are those who are were like
my classmates and me in that Latin class. They are distorting prophet
for profit (Latin: lucrum from which we derive lucre,
as in “filthy lucre”). To assert that Revelation was written about
events that would take place 2000 years later as the Left Behind
and other writers assert, is to say John was lying to the people of the
seven churches to whom he wrote. It would be as if he were saying,
“Times are tough. But have courage. In 2000 years God will make all this
right.” It would be as if Amos said, “You better get right with God
because in 1000 years your sins are going to catch up with you.”
Nonsense!
We are all prophets when we live our lives as we should. There
should be no profit, lucre, in being a prophet.
WJP
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