The God Who Speaks is a monthly newsletter written by Brad Jersak. In it, Brad suggests questions and hints relating to conversation with God, as well as some of the lessons God is teaching him along the way. To inquire about resources or seminars on Listening Prayer, contact us through www.bradjersak.com.

6.24.2006

The God Who Speaks - June 24

"Mysticeti Discernment" by Brad Jersak

When it comes to discernment, we are and should be like the mysticeti. What are the mysticeti? Some sort of mystical magi? Not at all... that's just the technical name for our friends, the baleen whales. I believe that with those great baleen strainers of theirs, they have the corner on discernment and we might learn from them.

They do not swim around looking for a particular fish to bite, hoping that they don't accidentally get something yucky in our mouths. And neither do we, really. Life doesn't work that way. You can't pick up a Time magazine and only read good news or turn on a television and only see good pictures or go into town and only expose yourself to good sights. Every time you read, look, experience… everything in the magazine, movie, ads, and on the streets, in the malls, etc. enters your ears and eyes and senses... I.e. the whale opens its mouth and it all goes in. In fact, when a whale wants to eat, it doesn't just open its mouth... it dives to the ocean bottom, opens wide, and scoops gargantuan amounts of water, shrimp, mud, fish, sticks, weeds into its mouth... We do this from morning until night just by living in the world, leaving our house, engaging with people. Then the whale begins to push everything back out of its mouth, straining it through the baleen apparatus: the strainer doesn't keep bad stuff out... it PUSHES bad stuff out while keeping even the most microscopic bits of nourishment... and it keeps so MUCH krill, plankton, shrimp, etc. that these meals can nourish and grow the greatest mammal in history. From somewhere on the internet:

Baleen whales (also known as Mysticeti, or mustached whales) are filter feeders that have baleen, a sieve-like device use for filter feeding krill, copepods, plankton, and small fish. They are the largest whales and have two blowholes. Baleen whales include blue, gray, humpback, minke, bowhead, and right whales. Many baleen whales species are endangered. [yes, they are]

What we have here is not “garbage in, garbage out,” but rather, ”everything in, garbage out” with an understanding that even the whales develop a sense of where the best feeding routes are and that it’s wise to avoid oil slicks. As my friend, Colleen Taylor, wrote in a recent email:

I don't think "everything in" works if you're going to include ENTERING places like the porn store as a potential source of nourishment. However, walking by the porn store is another matter and fairly unavoidable. Of course there are people who are CALLED to enter porn stores, red light districts, etc., looking for Christ the way Mother Teresa did. Does that mean it is okay for everyone to go there? Does everyone have the same spiritual baleen capacity to sift and spit? No. Even that is part of the discernment process.

The question is what our own spiritual baleen consists of and how effective it is. But the big point here is that you don't strain by not eating for fear of getting something bad. Rather, we take it in and then begin to sift outwards, holding on to the good (as per 1 Thess. 5).

This reminds me of the spiritual exercise that I tried for myself: trying to discern my way through the Nag Hammadi Library (the famous Gnostic collection). Some won't read the library for fear of getting mud in their mouth. Others just scan it looking for every error (as some do with my books). But the baleen whale type of Christian is straining for nourishment... what is the truth here? What seems like delicious? What is only edible? What is poisonous? As I read the library, I encountered a spectrum of writers ranging from Spirit-filled to delusional. I found that with God’s help and sound mind, one could distinguish small-r revelation from capital-H heresy.

I also noticed this perspective alter my approach to preachers: instead of waiting to pounce on the two or three little errors that I supposed I was hearing (and needed to protect others from believing), I changed my question to, "What did God say through this messenger?" I was straining for truth, not error, and it helped me to hear others, engage others, and sometimes win others just by hearing the truth in them. This is why I can enjoy (without swallowing everything), not only the Gospel of Thomas, but the Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna... which is the same process that Solomon used in compiling the Proverbs. He allowed himself to strain other streams, cultures, and even religions for truth and included the “best of” in his collection… a collection now recognized as Scripture. Yet he was not regarded as a syncretist because he knew that Truth and Wisdom are sourced in God and he endeavored (with varying success) to spit out the rest. With God's Spirit as our reliable Guide into all truth (John 16), so might we.

6.06.2006

The God Who Speaks newsletter - June 2006

Dear Friends of the God who speaks...

Before I proceed, I want to let you know that my new book, "Kissing the Leper: Seeing Jesus in the Least of These," is finally available... in the end, Eugene Peterson (the Message Bible guy) graciously did the foreword. If you'd like more information or want to order the book, just click here: http://www.bradjersak.com/ktlfeature.html.

So thanks for tuning in once again and for the many responses to my last newsletter. Are you still feeding regularly on the Bread of Life--listening for the Voice of the Living Lord Jesus? I was surprised to hear some song lyrics recently that addressed our hunger to hear on Paul Simon's new album, "Surprise." He sings an interesting song entitled "Wartime Prayers" in which he asserts, "People hungry for the voice of God hear lunatics and liars." Wow... just a little cynical! But rather than being shocked and defensive, I choose to hear his passionate demand that we who name Christ as Lord be more discerning in what we hear and how we act in the Saviour's name. We need to continue to examine the fruit (i.e. results and consequences) that comes from hearing God's voice and doing what He says.

Recently, while in Maine, USA, some wonderful Christian pastors there shared a tip with me about "testing the fruit" that I found to be so relevant that I figured I'd better pass it on to you. They talked about something called the "faith and pain gap." This involves two facts that make it important to be patient as we wait for the fruit of the Spirit to come:

1. Fact 1: Sometimes, even after we have begun to listen to the Lord and follow His ways, we may still be bearing bad fruit now from seeds that we aren't sowing anymore. There can be a gap in time while we wait for the "old tree" to finally wither and for the bad fruit to stop appearing. Be patient.

2. Fact 2: Sometimes, even after we have begun to listen to the Lord and follow Him, we are not yet bearing the good fruit in the natural world from the seeds we've sown in our spiritual lives. Again, there can be a gap in time while we wait for the new, good seeds to grow to maturity and start bearing kingdom fruit in a consistent way.

The reason that I bring this up is that in the short-term, sometimes listening to God's voice appears to bear bad fruit. An obvious example of this is when someone chooses to follow Jesus (into faith or into service or into a new lifestyle) but whose family or friends react badly to the decision. Sometimes obeying God creates immediate chaos in our lives and relationships, disrupting what had been a rather comfortable way of life before we took up the Cross of discipleship. In fact, the charge of being "lunatics and liars" can come when we have actually heard God correctly. It happened to Jesus... would we say that the Cross brought bad fruit? So let's be patient and watch for God's hand over the long haul. On that note, here's a question you might send heavenward:

"Lord, what seeds are you sowing in my heart and life that just need time before they inevitably sprout, grow, and bear fruit? I.e. Where do I need to patiently wait and watch for the results that I'm longing for? In what areas should I stand firm and not give up?"

Habakkuk 2

1 I will stand at my watch
and station myself on the ramparts;
I will look to see what he will say to me,
and what answer I am to give to this complaint.

The LORD's Answer
2 Then the LORD replied:
"Write down the revelation
and make it plain on tablets
so that a herald may run with it.

3 For the revelation awaits an appointed time;
it speaks of the end
and will not prove false.
Though it linger, wait for it;
it will certainly come and will not delay.

blessings,

Brad Jersak