The Prophetic Savant
By Chip Brogden, Edited by Gary Amirault
Every Christian should have a person like the one described below speak into
their life. Every Christian assembly should have someone like them visit on
a regular basis. The chances are, most churches HAVE been visited by someone
like this, but they were either politely asked to leave or forcefully thrown
out. Only God knows how many churches have fulfilled in this era the role
Jerusalem fulfilled under the Old Covenant. One doesn't have to stone a
prophet to kill them, one only has to reject their word which is the Word of
God. --Gary Amirault "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you who kill the prophets and stone those sent to
you, how often I have longed to gather your children together, as a hen
gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing. Look, your
house is left to you desolate. (Matt. 23:37, 38, NIV) Anyone who receives a prophet because he is a prophet will receive a
prophet's reward, and anyone who receives a righteous man because he is a
righteous man will receive a righteous man's reward. (Matt. 10:41, NIV) _________________________________________________________ THE PROPHETIC SAVANT "...the prophet is a fool, the spiritual man is mad..." (Hosea 9:7). "What then is genius? Could it be that a genius is a man haunted by the
speaking Voice [of God], laboring and striving like one possessed to achieve
ends which he only vaguely understands?" --- A. W. Tozer (*The use of the male pronoun in this writing is for convenience only. We
mean no partiality to our brothers, and no disrespect to our sisters.)
The prophetic savant is a person afflicted with a heavenly autism, making
him nearly incapable of normal relations with those around him. Accused of
being aloof, cold, and distant, he is apt to hide himself from people,
withdrawing into a world of his own. He never seems to be all "there". Even
if he forces himself to come down to Earth for a moment, those around him
may have the sense that there is an unspoken dialogue going on somewhere
inside of him, a secret communion carried on beneath the surface that never
allows him to be fully "in the moment". How do we explain this? As a prophetic savant he sees, hears, and relates to
the world differently than the rest of the population. They have not seen
what he has seen; they have not heard what he has heard. And so he finds
very little camaraderie, very little sympathy or understanding, no one with
whom he can open his heart and share his soul, because he no longer speaks
the same language, and they no longer speak his. Of course, he may have
surface-level exchanges with anyone: he is approachable, not haughty, or
high-minded. He may even be personable and likeable. Yet there is something
so other-worldly in his demeanor that he is more often frightening that
friendly, in spite of his best efforts. He is a spiritual autistic, and no
matter how hard you try to know him, he is generally unknowable, and to a
certain degree, he resists all attempts to know him. If a prophet is anything, he is extra-terrestrial - above the Earth. He
walks the Earth with others, but he is not of the Earth. He is from beyond;
he is from above. If we trace his history we will find that he may or may
not have had a normal childhood. He may or may not have come through
extraordinary experiences. But at some point in his life, either as a child,
or as a young adult, or as an old man, something from another realm broke
through the thin membrane between Heaven and Earth and took hold of him. It
may have been a burning bush, or a Voice crying out to him from beyond the
veil, or a Heavenly Vision which brought him briefly into contact with
something and Someone that he could not completely fathom.
However it happened, for one moment at least, the clouds parted and the Veil
was rent, and he saw something that is unseeable; he heard something that is
unhearable; Heaven itself was opened up to him, and he saw into another
world. The thing he saw and heard now burdens him like a mantle that has
been draped over his shoulders. He feels its weight, for it is with him day
and night, whether he is eating or drinking, working or resting. It is the
impression that everything around him is a lie, and what he has seen and
heard is the Truth, and this Truth is not static, but it is living, growing,
and increasing within him from the day it comes to him in the form of a
seed. For a long time he struggles to find words and vocabulary to express the
inexpressible. He cannot explain why he feels the need to try and express
it, but for some inexplicable reason something drives him to open his mouth,
or take up his pen, and make it known. Whatever it is, it will not permit
him to savor it or keep it to himself, and it seems intent on coming to the
surface and interrupting the normal course of his life. This process can be
frustrating and painful, so much so that he may give up several times,
content to simply walk in what he has seen and heard and leave it at that.
But try as he might, he cannot run away from what he has seen and heard, and
he cannot deny the compulsion to bring it forth. On the one hand he cries
out for a "normal" life, while on the other hand he knows he cannot deny
what has been revealed to him. When he does achieve some modest success in
articulating something of Heaven he is pleased for a time, but soon grows
impatient with it, and eventually is dissatisfied with it altogether,
because it cannot do justice to what he has seen and heard. And so the
process begins again, the continual search for words to more perfectly
express what he is trying to communicate (and a subtle fear in the back of
his mind that he may never be able to adequately express it), which leads
him to invent words which may have never before existed, or to look for
Spirit-inspired words in some unknown tongue that can be translated into
something others can understand. The prophets of old correctly called it the "burden of the Lord", for it is
like a woman who must live the rest of her life being in perpetual labor,
delivering the same child over and over again. What relief there is only
comes in discharging the burden, but that is not to say it ever really
leaves: it merely allows the prophet time to catch his breath until the next
contraction doubles him over again. The burden is with him the rest of his
life, and he never fully discharges it. Even when he tries to be disobedient to the Heavenly Vision and flees from
the presence of the Lord he is pursued and hunted down like some kind of a
wild animal who has gotten loose, knowing it is only a matter of time before
he is captured again. The Voice never leaves him, the Vision never lets him
go. When he refuses to speak then the fire which is already kindled only
burns hotter, until he ends up doing what he has resisted doing all along,
just to relieve himself of the unbearable tension and inward pressure. He
cannot extinguish or quench the fire no matter what he does, he can only be
obedient and find temporary relief, until the next word comes, and then off
he goes. He may beg God to send someone else, and may protest his inability
to speak, or to write. But he is already ruined for anything else, and even
when he denies the Lord Who called him and returns to his former occupation,
it is all dull and lifeless, and he meets with nothing but frustration and
failure. There is no way to escape it. He knows he is called to something
Higher, even when he is clinging with everything he has to something Lower. Like a wild horse, he resists the dealings of the Lord and must be broken
before he will obey. Eventually he learns not to resist the Lord, but to
cooperate with Him. He becomes pliable and bendable in order to survive. His
very life now is bound up with what he has seen and heard. He cannot be
disobedient to the Heavenly Vision, and if it means he dies, then he dies.
If it means a renunciation of everything he once believed, then he renounces
it - reluctantly at first, then cheerfully. If it means suffering the loss
of all things, then he lets them go. Over time the one who has seen and heard becomes the very essence of what he
has seen and heard. The Man becomes the Message. He bears the Testimony in
himself, and becomes one with it. He needs no preparation to speak; indeed,
preparation does nothing to help the message he brings, and it often gets in
the way. His whole life is the preparation, and since he is the Message, it
is with him constantly. He can no more separate himself from the Message
than he can separate his head from his body. If there is an "On/Off" switch
then it was long ago turned on and then disabled so that it can never be
turned off again. After many seasons of God's dealings he finally perceives
that this is what the Lord has sought for all along, not just to GIVE him a
Message, but to MAKE him a Message; to gain for Himself a Messenger and
capture him completely, embossing the Message into his very being. And so he goes about his daily business, constantly haunted by that voice,
torn between the menial task at hand which calls for his physical and mental
exertion, and the Higher Calling which seeks his undivided attention. He
knows he should do all things, great and small, as "unto the Lord". But he
also knows that Heaven and Earth are locked in mortal combat over him while
he stands there in the middle, torn between the two, desiring to depart the
Earth altogether and be with Christ, but knowing that it is more profitable
for his brethren if he remains. Heaven calls him to rise up, but Earth tells
him to keep his feet firmly planted. His heart is constantly breaking and
longing to go, to ascend, to rise up, to stop seeing through a dark glass,
and see face to face, without the distraction of the natural, the fleshly,
the temporal, because he knows the Earth is not his home. Yet he struggles
with the fact that Earth is where he must live and work. This accounts for
why he may sometimes seem difficult to be around. As a savant he possesses insight and skill which others do not possess. But
it is a gift, not anything of himself, nothing of which he could boast of.
If you were to ask him if he considers this to be a blessing, he would
probably say it is more like a curse, because it sets him apart from others
even when he tries his best to be hidden and to blend in. He cannot read the
Scriptures as others do, for after only a few verses the Heavens are opened
up to him again and he is lost in its depths. A single passage may keep him
occupied for months as Heaven unfolds it to him, and he cannot tear himself
away from it. His preaching is affected, because he cannot decide in advance what he will
say, and even when he would like to bring forth something new and exciting,
he usually ends up saying the same thing, like, "Repent!" He often does not
say what he wants to say, and does not say it in the way he would like to
say it. If he wants to be serious, he finds himself laughing. And when he
wishes to be friendly, he finds himself screaming at the top of his voice to
a startled congregation of people, who wonder how this fellow was ever
allowed access to their inner sanctum in the first place. When he leaves a
place he almost never sees the result of his labor, and only eternity can
reveal the true significance of what was said. For now, it is all hidden,
and he has to live with the fact that his fruitfulness will never be
measured in terms that human beings, including himself, can see and
appreciate.
He cannot go through the motions of religion like most mortals. It is a
dead, shallow thing to him because it cannot compare to the reality of what
he has already experienced. He finds it difficult to listen to another
person preach when he knows they have not yet ascended to the heights nor
plumbed the depths that he has already navigated. And when he tries to lead
them into these heights and depths himself he is often misunderstood or
rejected altogether. So either he attends the meeting and suffers in
silence, or stays home and suffers in solitude; but either way, he suffers. His seeing is affected by a sort of "spiritual dyslexia". While others view
things from a one or two dimensional viewpoint, he sees them through several
dimensions at once - forward, backward, reverse, upside-down, right-side up:
life and death, light and dark, Spirit and flesh, Heavenly and Earthly -
which often puts him at odds with his more pragmatic and doctrinally-correct
brethren. He is so at one with what he has seen that he speaks of it as
having already happened, because he has, in essence, already experienced it
and lived it. It is the Prophetic Tense, which calls those things that be
not as though they were. In his world, the world of the Spirit, they exist
already. We call it "prediction" because we cannot yet see it with our
natural eyes, but he simply stands outside of Time and views Past and Future
as one unbroken and continuous Present. His hearing is affected so that he is increasingly sensitive to his
surroundings, even though it seems as if he is not paying attention. He is
listening, but he is listening inwardly. He no longer trusts his natural
ears, because the Heavenly Voice and the inner witness are more reliable.
Thus, he is able to hear God speaking, while the rest of the crowd says, "It
thundered!" or "It was an angel!" He is also able to hear when God is not
speaking, and does not get carried away with the multitudes who claim to
speak, see, and hear things from God when they have not heard or seen
anything from Heaven. He cannot bear to listen to them.
His concentration is affected in such a way as to make him appear obstinate
and unyielding to others. The truth is that he is actually quite flexible
and pliable before the Lord, but before man he is as solid and impenetrable
as a rock. No amount of persuasion or argument from man will move him but
the slightest touch from the Lord will bring him to his knees. Having
discovered the One Thing that is needed, he will tenaciously and ruthlessly
shun the "many things" which crowd in to seek his attention, for he sees
everything else as a distraction. Indeed, he is quite willing to sacrifice
the good in favor of the holy. And when the Lord has him focused on a
particular thing he is as a beam of light fastened upon a singular point
until everything melts before it. Even his praying is affected, for he can no longer pray as he wills and for
what he wants. He seemingly has no will of his own. Instead the Heavenly
Voice bids him to pray with a Heavenly perspective, and all too often the
Heavenly perspective is at odds with the Earthly perspective. So when his
brothers and sisters pray for blessing and increase, he finds himself
praying for destruction and decrease; and when they are resisting and
praying against something, he finds himself asking God to perform the very
thing the rest of the world is against. To the rest of the world, the autistic savant is a bit of a retarded genius,
an unfortunate mixture of idiocy and brilliance, caught up in a world of its
own. The prophetic savant bears a similar stigma. But if you engage him at
all, you soon discover that he sees all of this as absolutely normal; the
way it is supposed to be. He no longer wishes for a normal life, because the
life he has now IS normal: he has lost his own life in exchange for a new
life. He lives in the Heavenlies while he walks on the Earth. He does not
think of himself as special, as anything other than a regular person, but
often wonders aloud why others cannot see what he has seen when it is all so
self-evident and plain. To him, maybe; but the rest of us are blinded by the
Light he exudes without knowing it. 2002 Watchman.Net.
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