IS THERE  A PROPHET OF THE LORD HERE?
              By Gerhard Pfandl
            Associate Director, Biblical Research  Institute, Retired
(PDF Version)
Introduction
Text: 1 Kings 22:1-9
In 856 B.C., there was a war between  Ahab, king of Israel, and Ben-Hadad, king of Syria. Their armies “encamped opposite  each other for seven days” (1 Kings 20:29). On the eighth day the battle began,  and the Israelites defeated the Syrians. Ben-Hadad fled to the city of Aphek  and hid in an “inner chamber” (v. 30). Eventually, he was brought before King  Ahab, who felt magnanimous after his victory and made a peace treaty with him.  In this peace treaty Ben-Hadad promised to return the cities that his father  had taken from Ahab’s predecessor (vs. 31-34).
              However, as so  often happened in history, peace treaties are made only to be broken. When Ben-Hadad  got back to his palace in Damascus, he forgot all about the treaty he had made  with Ahab and never returned the cities to Israel as he had promised. 
A Royal Banquet
            Three years later, in 853 B.C., Jehoshaphat,  the king of Judah, visited Ahab, the king of Israel. The two royal houses were  related through marriage. Jehoshaphat’s son Jehoram had married Athaliah, the daughter of  King Ahab (2 Kings 8:18). 
            On  the occasion of this state visit Ahab gave a royal banquet at which he invited  his royal guest to go to war with him against Ben-Hadad of Syria, who had never  implemented the terms of the peace treaty. And on the spur of the moment  Jehoshaphat agreed (1 Kings 22:1-4). 
              Now Jehoshaphat  was one of the good kings in Judah. There were no good kings in the northern  kingdom Israel, but there were a few good kings in the southern kingdom, and  Jehoshaphat was one of them. But even good kings had weak moments, and on this  occasion Jehoshaphat had a weak moment. Yet, as soon as he had said “Yes,” he  realized he had made a mistake. To extricate himself from the situation he said,  "Please  inquire for the word of the Lord  today" (v. 5). In other words, he wanted to make sure the Lord approved of this plan. It is always  good to find out if the Lord is on  our side. Before we start a new project or journey, we should make sure the Lord is with us.
              Ahab called  together his prophets, about 400 of them, and he asked them, "Shall I go  against Ramoth Gilead to fight, or shall I refrain?" They answered him  with one voice, "Go up, for the Lord will deliver itinto the hand of the king" (v. 6). Jehoshaphat,  however, was not happy with this answer. So he asked, "Is therenot still a prophet  of the Lord here, that we may  inquire of Him?" (v. 7). 
              Why was  Jehoshaphat not satisfied with the answer of the 400 prophets? First, he realized  that they were not worshipers of Yahweh, the God of Israel, but most likely  worshipers of Baal. Scripture tells us that Ahab had introduced Baal worship in  Israel (1 Kings 16:31-33). Second, when the 400 prophets said, "Go up, for  the Lord will deliver it into  the hand of the king," they used the Hebrew word Adonai, which the English Bibles translate as “Lord.” Jehoshaphat,  however, asked, "Is therenot  still a prophet of Yahweh (Engl. “the Lord,”  with “Lord” spelled in all capital  letters) here, that we may inquire of Him?" He wanted to make sure that  the answer came from Yahweh, the God of Israel, and not from some other source.
              Confronted with  this royal request, Ahab admitted that there was one prophet of Yahweh left in  Israel. His name was Micaiah, the son of Imlah, but, said Ahab, “I hate him,  because he does not prophesy good concerning me, but evil" (1 Kings 22:8).  Knowing the story of Ahab and Jezebel, we are not surprised that the prophet of  God had not much good to say about Ahab. Nevertheless, Ahab ordered that Micaiah  be brought to the royal court. 
              When the officer  of Ahab came to Micaiah, he told the prophet not to upset the king but to fall  in line with the 400 prophets. He said, "Now listen, the words of the  prophets with one accord encourage the king. Please, let your word be like the  word of one of them, and speak encouragement" (v. 13). The prophet responded  in the only way a man of God can respond: "As the Lord lives,  whatever the Lord says to me, that  I will speak" (v.14). This was true for Micaiah then and it is true for  every minister of God today. Ministers of the Lord  are not to preach what the people want to hear but what God has commissioned them  to say.
              When Micaiah came  to Ahab, the king asked him, "Micaiah, shall we go to war against Ramoth  Gilead, or shall we refrain?" And Micaiah answered him, "Go and  prosper, for the Lord will deliver  itinto the hand of the  king!" (v. 15). Now, we would expect Ahab to be pleased with this answer. After  all, this is what he wanted to hear. Yet, in verse 16 we find the king saying  to Micaiah, "How many times shall I make you swear that you tell me  nothing but the truth in the name of the Lord?"  Why was Ahab not happy with the answer? What had happened? 
            Obviously, Micaiah had spoken in such  a way that the king realized this was not the message of Yahweh. Perhaps  Micaiah spoke with a smirk on his face, or maybe he said it in a sarcastic or cynical  voice. Whatever the case, Ahab knew that this was not God’s message. In verses  17 and 18, therefore, Micaiah gave Ahab the true message of Yahweh: "I saw all  Israel scattered on the mountains, as sheep that have no shepherd. And the Lord said, ‘These have no master. Let  each return to his house in peace.'" In other words, “If you go to war,  Ahab, you will die.” 
            Now, if I  had been in Ahab’s shoes, I would have said, “Thank you very much, I’ll stay  home!” But not Ahab. He thought he could outwit God. In the later verses of the  chapter we are told that Ahab disguised himself as a common soldier and went  into battle hoping to avoid death, but human beings cannot outwit God. In verse  34 we read that an unnamed archer in the Syrian army “drew a bow at random, and  struck the king of Israel between the joints of his armor. So he said to the  driver of his chariot, ‘Turn around and take me out of the battle, for I am  wounded.’" A few hours later the king was dead (v. 37). 
Is there a Prophet of  the Lord here?
          Jehoshaphat  and Ahab faced a battle. They had to make an important decision. They asked  God, “Shall we go into battle?” Now, the Law of Moses was in existence at that  time, and the kings knew that law, but in this particular situation they wanted  specific advice. And through Micaiah God told them not to go, but they went  anyway and were defeated, as the prophet had foretold.
            God’s people today face the final  battle in the great controversy. Yes, we have the Scriptures, but living in the  time of the end creates specific problems. So, I am asking, “Is there a prophet  of the Lord here that we may  inquire of him?” When there is a crisis in the church, “Is there a prophet of  the Lord here that we may inquire  of him” how to meet it? 
            I  am glad to be able to give a positive response to this question. Yes, there is  a prophet of the Lord for the time  of the end. How do I know? Because the Bible tells me so. Let us look at some  of the Bible evidence leading us to expect the genuine prophetic gift in the  last days.
The Remnant Church
              Now  a great sign appeared in heaven: a woman clothed with the sun, with the moon  under her feet, and on her head a garland of twelve stars. Then being with child,  she cried out in labor and in pain to give birth. And another sign appeared in  heaven: behold, a great, fiery red dragon having seven heads and ten horns, and  seven diadems on his heads. His tail drew a third of the stars of heaven and  threw them to the earth. And the dragon stood before the woman who was ready to  give birth, to devour her Child as soon as it was born. She bore a male Child  who was to rule all nations with a rod of iron. And her Child was caught up to  God and His throne. Then the woman fled into the wilderness, where she has a  place prepared by God, that they should feed her there one thousand two hundred  and sixty days. (Rev. 12:1-6 NKJV)
What  do the symbols in this passage mean?
- The  woman is a symbol of God’s people (see Isa. 54:5, 6; 2 Cor. 11:2)
- The  dragon is Satan (vs. 9)
- The  male Child is Christ (cf. Ps. 2:9)
- The  1,260 prophetic days refer to the period of papal supremacy from the sixth century  to the end of the eighteenth century (A.D. 538-1798).
In  verses 7-12 we have an interlude explaining where Satan came from. But the  story continues in verses 13-17: 
              Now  when the dragon saw that he had been cast to the earth, he persecuted the woman  who gave birth to the male Child. But the woman was given two wings of a great  eagle, that she might fly into the wilderness to her place, where she is  nourished for a time and times and half a time, from the presence of the  serpent. So the serpent spewed water out of his mouth like a flood after the  woman, that he might cause her to be carried away by the flood. But the earth  helped the woman, and the earth opened its mouth and swallowed up the flood  which the dragon had spewed out of his mouth. And the dragon was enraged with  the woman, and he went to make war with the rest of her offspring [“the remnant  of her seed”—KJV], who keep the commandments of God and have the testimony of  Jesus Christ.
- Verses  13-15 describe in symbolic terms the persecution of the Christian church, first  by the Roman Empire and later by the apostate Roman church.
-  In verse 16, the earth—personified—helps the  church by providing a safe haven on the newly discovered continent of America, pictured  symbolically as swallowing up the persecuting armies (see Rev. 17:15). Sending  armies across the Atlantic in the seventeenth century was a difficult  undertaking.
- In  verse 17, we are now in a time after the 1,260 day period, i.e., in the nineteenth  century. Satan, seeing that he was unable to wipe out God's faithful people, is  angry with a particular group of people called “the rest of her offspring” or  “the remnant of her seed”—the remnant church.            
          The symbolism in verse 17 has changed.  No longer is the focus on the woman—a symbol of God’s people, the invisible  church throughout the ages—but on a particular group, “the rest of her  offspring,” the visible remnant church. The invisible church (the woman) does  not cease to exist at the end of the 1260 years (there are still many of God’s  people in all Christian churches), but the focus now is on the visible remnant  church of God.
            Only  twice in this chapter is an offspring of the woman mentioned. The first one is  the male Child in verse 5, the Messiah; the second, “the rest of her  offspring,” the remnant church. Both times the offspring of the woman is  clearly identified, supporting the view that “the rest of her offspring” is the  visible, not the invisible, remnant church. In other words, this is not simply  the true Christians in any church or no church, but the followers of God in a  distinct, identifiable group.
            The  text gives two identifying marks, or signs, of this remnant church:
            
              a. They keep  the commandments of God
              b. They have  the testimony of Jesus.
              What do these two marks actually mean?
Keeping the Commandments of God
                      Whatever commandments we may want to  include in the first mark, we must certainly include the Ten Commandments. So  the first identifying sign of the remnant church is their loyalty to God's  commandments—all of His commandments, including the fourth, the Sabbath  commandment. In Revelation 12:17 God is saying, "At the end of time I will  have a church—the remnant church—that you can recognise by the fact that they  keep the commandments as I have given them in the beginning, including the  Sabbath commandment." In the time of the apostles, or the early church,  this would not have been a special sign, because they all kept the Sabbath; but  today, when most Christians keep Sunday, the Sabbath has indeed become a  distinguishing mark.
The Testimony of Jesus
The second  identifying mark is "the testimony of Jesus." But what does this  phrase mean? Is it a testimony that Jesus gives, or is it the testimony that every  true Christian may give about Jesus? The expression "testimony of  Jesus" (Greek: marturia Iesou) occurs six times in the book of  Revelation (1:2, 9; 12:17; 19:10 [twice]; 20:4). We will look at some of them  for an indication of what the expression means.
Revelation 1:1, 2
                        The introduction to the book of  Revelation sets forth the source of the book, i. e., God, and the content of  the book—the revelation of Jesus Christ. In verse 2 we are told that John bore  witness to "the Word of God" and "the testimony of Jesus."
                        “The Word of God” is  commonly understood to refer to what God says; and "the testimony of  Jesus" in parallel to "the Word of God" must therefore mean the  testimony that Jesus Himself gives. How did Jesus testify of Himself? While  here on earth, He testified in person to the people in Palestine. After His  ascension, He spoke through His prophets.
Revelation 1:9
            Before speaking in detail about his  first vision, John introduces himself and states his credentials. He mentions  who he is: John, "your brother"; where he is: on Patmos; why he is  there: on account of "the Word of God" and "the testimony of  Jesus"; and when he received the vision: "on the Lord's day."
            Again we see clearly the parallelism  between the "Word of God" and "the testimony of Jesus."  "The Word of God" in John's time referred to the Old Testament, and  the "testimony of Jesus" to what Jesus had said in the Gospels and  through His prophets such as Peter and Paul. Thus, both expressions describe  the content of John's preaching, for which he was banished. 
The Spirit of Prophecy
            In Revelation 19:10, therefore, we  read the explanation, "For the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of  prophecy." However, what is "the spirit of prophecy?" This  phrase occurs only once in the Bible, only in this text. The closest parallel  to it in the Bible is found in 1 Corinthians 12:8-10. There Paul refers to the  Holy Spirit, who, among other spiritual gifts, gives the gift of prophecy. Later  in the chapter, in verse 28, the person who receives this gift is called a  prophet (see also Eph. 4:11).
            Now, just as in 1 Corinthians 12, where  those who have the gift of prophecy in verse 10 are called prophets in verse 28, so in Revelation, where those who have the Spirit of prophecy in 19:10 are  called prophets in 22:8, 9.
       Please note the parallelism, almost  line-by-line, between 19:10 and 22:8, 9.            
| Rev. 19:10 And I fell down at his feet    to worship him,   but he said to me, “You    must not do that! I am a fellow servant with    you and your brethren who have the testimony of Jesus. Worship    God.” For the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy. | Rev. 22:8-9 I fell down to worship him    at the feet of the angel who showed them to me; But he said to me, “You    must not do that! I am your fellow servant    with you and your brethren the prophets. and    with those who keep the words of this book. Worship God.” | 
The situation  in both passages is the same. John falls at the feet of the angel to worship.  The words of the angel's response are almost identical, yet the difference is  significant. Where 19:10 identifies the brethren as those "who have the  testimony of Jesus," 22:9 calls them simply "the prophets." If  the Protestant principle of interpreting Scripture by Scripture means anything,  this comparison must lead to the conclusion that "the spirit of  prophecy" in 19:10 is not the possession of all church members in general,  but only of those who have been called by God to be prophets.
Non-Adventist Interpreters
                          This is not purely an Adventist  interpretation. It appears in the writings of other scholars. For example, commenting  on Revelation 19:10, the Lutheran scholar Hermann Strathmann says:
                According  to the parallel 22:9 the brothers referred to are not believers in general but  the prophets. Here, too, they are characterised as such. This is the point of  verse 10c. If they have the marturia Iesou [testimony of Jesus], they  have the spirit of prophecy, i.e., they are prophets. 
     Similarly, James Moffat explains:
"For  the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy." This prose marginal  comment specifically defines the brethren who hold the testimony of Jesus as  possessors of prophetic inspiration. The testimony of Jesus is practically  equivalent to Jesus testifying. 
The  Witness of the Targums 
                     The Jewish readers in John's day knew what  the expression "Spirit of prophecy" meant. They would have understood  the expression as a reference to the Holy Spirit, who imparts the prophetic  gift to man.
                     Rabbinic Judaism equated the Old Testament  expressions "Holy Spirit," "Spirit of God," or "Spirit  of Yahweh" with "the Spirit of prophecy," as we can see in the  frequent occurrence of this term in the Targums (written translations of the Old  Testament into Aramaic). *
                     Returning now to Revelation 12:17, we can  say that "the rest of her offspring . . . keep the commandments of God and  have the testimony of Jesus Christ," which is the Spirit of prophecy, or  the prophetic gift. 
                     This interpretation is strengthened by a  study of the Greek word echo in  this verse, meaning "to have." This word indicates possession.  They have a gift of God—the prophetic  gift. If the testimony of Jesus were our testimony about Jesus, John would have  written something like this: "They keep the commandments of God and  testify about Jesus," or, "they bear testimony to Jesus." But  the Greek work echo is never used in the sense "to bear a  witness." 
                     In summary, we can say that the remnant  church, which according to prophecy exists after the 1,260 day period (after  1798), has two specific identifying marks: 
- They  keep the commandments of God, including the Sabbath command as God has given  it.
2.  They have the testimony of Jesus, which is the  Spirit of prophecy, or the prophetic gift in their midst.
The  Seventh-Day Adventist Church 
                     From its very beginning in 1863, the  Seventh-day Adventist Church has always claimed these identifying signs for  itself. As Adventists we proclaim the Ten Commandments, including the Sabbath;  and we believe that as a church we have the testimony of Jesus, that is, that  God manifested Himself prophetically in the life and work of Ellen G. White.  Our fundamental belief number 18 says:
                One of the  gifts of the Holy Spirit is prophecy. This gift is an identifying mark of the  remnant church and was manifested in the ministry of Ellen G. White. As the  Lord's messenger, her writings are a continuing and authoritative source of  truth which provide for the church comfort, guidance, instruction, and  correction. They also make clear that the Bible is the standard by which all  teaching and experience must be tested. (Joel 2:28, 29; Acts 2:14-21; Heb.  1:1-3; Rev. 12:17; 19:10). 
Scripture is our rule of  faith and practice. It is the word of God for all people and all times, and it  is necessary for salvation. The Spirit of prophecy is God’s gracious gift to  his remnant church for the time of the end.
                We are a church  prophetically foreseen, not just one church among many. God called this church  into existence for a specific purpose—the proclamation of the three angels’ messages (Rev.  14:6-12).
Conclusion
                     My friends, you are members of God’s  remnant church. However, this identification with the remnant does not give us  an exclusive status with God. Salvation is not guaranteed through membership in  any church—we are saved as individuals, not as a church. But being part of  God’s remnant church gives us access to God’s special guidance in the time of  the end.
                     But what did it help the kings of Israel  and Judah that they had a prophet in their midst? They did not listen to him.  Of what help is it to us that God graciously granted His remnant church a  prophet, if we act like the kings of Israel and Judah?
                     Of what help is the word of the Lord  through the Spirit of prophecy, if we have no time to read Ellen White’s books,  or if we read them but do not follow them? The kings of Israel and Judah refused  to listen to God’s prophet and were defeated. I pray that we may not follow in  their footsteps.
                Jehoshaphat stood  and said, "Hear me, O Judah and you inhabitants of Jerusalem: Believe in  the Lord your God, and you shall  be established; believe His prophets, and you shall prosper." (2 Chr. 20:20 NKJV) 
 
 
* [If the  congregation will understand and relate well to it, the speaker may decide to  include the following details about the use of the term “spirit of prophecy” in  the Targums, inserting this section where the asterisk (*) appears after the  reference to the Targums:]
Thereupon the  Pharaoh said to his servants, "Can we find a man like this in whom there  is the spirit of prophecy from before the  Lord?” (Gen. 41:38) 
Now two men had remained behind  in the camp—one's name was Eldad; the other's name was Medad, yet the spirit of prophecy rested upon them  though they were listed [among the elders], but they had not gone out of the  Tent and prophesied in the camp. (Num. 11:14-15)
Then the Lord said to Moses,  "Take Joshua, son of Nun, a man who has within himself the spirit of prophecy, and lay your hand on him.  (Num. 27:18) 
     Sometimes the term "Spirit of  prophecy" refers simply to the Holy Spirit, but in many cases it refers to  the gift of prophecy given by the Holy Spirit, as the context makes clear.
                     Commenting on this expression in the  Targums, F. F. Bruce says:
                The  expression "the Spirit of prophecy" is current in post-biblical  Judaism: it is used, for example, in a Targumic circumlocution for the Spirit  of Yahweh which comes upon this or that prophet. Thus the Targum of Jonathan  renders the opening words of Isaiah 61:1 as "The Spirit of prophecy from  before the Lord God is upon me." The thought expressed in Revelation 19:10  is not dissimilar to that already quoted from 1 Peter 1:11 where "the  Spirit of Christ" is said to have borne advanced testimony in the Old Testament  prophets. . . .
                In  Revelation 19:10, however, it is through Christian prophets that the Spirit of  prophecy bears witness. What the prophets of pre-Christian days foretold is  proclaimed as an accomplished fact by the prophets of the new age, among whom  John occupies a leading place. 
 
 
 
                      Hermann Strathmann, “Martyrs,” Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, trans. G. W.  Bromiley, 10 vols. (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1964-74), 4:501.
 
  James  Moffat, "The Revelation of  St. John the Divine," The Expositor's Greek Testament, ed. W.  Robertson Nicoll, 5 vols. (Reprint, Grand Rapids, Mich.: Wm. B. Eerdmans,  1980), 5: 465.
 
                      G. Pfandl,  "The Remnant Church and the Spirit of Prophecy," Symposium on Revelation, Daniel and Revelation Committee Series, 7  vols., ed. F. B. Holbrook (Silver Spring, Md.: Biblical Research Institute,  1992), 7:312-313. 
 
 Seventh-day Adventists Believe, second  edition (Silver Spring, Md.: Ministerial Association, General Conference of  Seventh-day Adventists, 2005), 191.
 
  Bernard Grossfeld, The Targum Onqelos to Genesis, The  Aramaic Bible, vol. 6, eds. K. Cathart, M. Maher, M. McNamara (Collegeville, Minn.:  The Liturgical Press, 1988), 138.
 
  Idem, The  Targum Onqelos to Leviticus and the Targum Onqelos to Numbers, The  Aramaic Bible, vol. 8, eds. K. Cathart, M. Maher, M. McNamara (Collegeville, Minn.:  The Liturgical Press, 1988), 102, 145 (italics in the original). Other  occurrences of the term "spirit of prophecy" are found in Exod. 31:3;  35:31; Num. 11:25, 26, 29; 24:2; Judg. 3:10; 1 Sam. 10:6; 19:10, 23; 2 Sam.  23:2; 1 Kgs. 22:24; 2 Chr. 15:1; 18:22, 23; 20:14; Ps. 51:13; Isa. 11:2. See  Hermann L. Strack and Paul Billerbeck, Kommentar zum Neuen Testament, 7  vols. (München: Beck’sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1965), 2:129.
 
                      F.F. Bruce, The Time is Fulfilled (Grand  Rapids, Mich.: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1978),105-6.