CURRENT REVELATION REPORT
By Dr. Stephen Jones
May
03, 2019 -- Posted 5-11-2019
In
the past month or so, a lot has been happening behind the scenes in the area of
revelation. Some of this has been so unusual and startling that I have not
known whether or not to report it to you in this public arena. There is much
that I cannot report, simply because there are too many people out there who
read and study everything I write so that they may find fault or use it against
me.
On
April 6, 2019 we unexpectedly crossed into a new level of intercession and
revelation in the divine court. We came to realize that the divine court is in
heaven, yet also on earth, and that in the end there is neither distance nor
time in the spirit. Hence, we are able to be in more than one place at the same
time, and likewise, we are able to be in more than one time period at the same
time. So we have encountered people from both the present and the past in the
divine court.
Adam and Eve
This
revelation has given us certain insights into their lives, emotions, and
spiritual states at crucial junctures in their lives. We have given comfort to
Eve as she wept, saying, “I’m so sorry, I’m so sorry,” and as she wailed, “I
don’t want to die!”
We
have had to admonish Adam for blaming his wife for his sin, when in fact she
was deceived but Adam sinned with full knowledge of his actions (1 Timothy 2:14).
Esau
We
encountered Esau, confronting him for his hatred of his brother. Esau refused
to repent after being given opportunity in the divine court, continuing to
maintain his position claiming the birthright. At the same time, he blamed God
for doing this to him, which is how so many handle the idea of the sovereignty
of God. So he was turned over to Jesus for judgment as He sees fit.
Saul of Tarsus
We
found ourselves on the Damascus Road in an encounter with Saul of Tarsus, as if
we were there when Jesus appeared to him. The account in Acts 9:3-7 gives
few details, but our eyes were opened to a much longer encounter, showing
Saul’s Old Covenant mindset and his objections. His faith in the decisions of
the Council (or Sanhedrin) authorizing him to persecute Christians had to be
overcome. In the divine court, I somehow manifested to Saul as Stephen who had
been stoned in Acts 7:58-60.
In
the end, Saul encountered both Jesus and Stephen, who had each been condemned
by the Council for blasphemy, and yet had been glorified as sons of God,
directly contradicting the decisions of the Sanhedrin. When I presented this
proof to Saul that the Council was wrong, he had no answer, because the
evidence was staring him in the face. At that point he took the hand of Jesus,
and they left the court. We knew that he was in good hands.
King Saul
We
later encountered King Saul, who had been deeply wounded by the fact that both
Samuel and God had abandoned him. This spirit of abandonment was the foremost
emotion we encountered in Saul and gave us great insight into his mind and
emotional state in his latter years. He had a difficult time understanding that
he himself had abandoned God by rejecting His word. We had to explain to him
that he was the one who needed to repent, rather than expect God to repent of
abandoning him.
In
that encounter, Saul saw me as Samuel, and so I took that role and talked to
him face to face. We saw in this a definite parallel to the night when Saul
went to the witch of En-dor to conjure up the spirit of Samuel in order to get
the word of the Lord from him in an unlawful manner. Bible teachers have
disagreed for a long time about whether Samuel himself came out of the grave to
talk to Saul or if it was just a demonic counterfeit. But our experience showed
me that it truly was Samuel who appeared to Saul in 1 Samuel 28:14, for I found myself in
a parallel situation, as Saul perceived me as Samuel.
The
main difference is that Samuel passed judgment on Saul in his immediate
situation, for he died in battle the next day. But in our context, we gave Saul
another opportunity to repent. In the end, the divine court revealed and
exposed things that were hidden from Saul in that earlier encounter with Samuel
in 1 Samuel 28:14. Hence, we were able to
show Saul his error, and he repented, taking the hand of Jesus. The two of them
then departed from the divine court.
I
found this encounter to be of particular interest to me, because my next novel
will be about King Saul, and this has given me a unique insight into the mind
of Saul. Scripture gives us a few clues about this, but in the end the story is
from Samuel’s point of view, and we are not given Saul’s psychological profile.
I feel that I now have much more insight into the situation from Saul’s twisted
perspective.
We
have encountered others as well, including religious leaders, who are alive
today. Such spiritual encounters are difficult to interpret, of course. We do
not know if those men were aware of their divine-court encounter or not. I
suppose it depends on their spiritual discernment. Each had to repent in
different ways and had different objections, but most of these repented in the
end. Hence, most of them were referred to Jesus for further revelation.
In
all of these cases, the object of their judgment in the divine court was to
provide them with the opportunity to repent, so that they could be restored to
a relationship with Jesus Christ. It is unclear at this point how or when these
confrontations and experiences will manifest in the world. We still have many
questions, but over the past month we have been given sufficient understanding
and confirmation to give us confidence that this is the Lord’s doing.
Pentecost Revelations
Our
encounters with King Saul and Saul of Tarsus have emphasized the importance of
the feast of Pentecost this year. Somehow these revelations (and more) are
preparing the way for the Pentecost conference in Charlotte on June 7-9. There
is no way to put it all together prior to the conference itself, but there is
no doubt that the decision to hold the conference at Pentecost, rather than at
Passover, has been confirmed.
For
whatever reason, God is now focusing on Pentecost in 2019, and so we are
receiving the necessary revelation to flow with the Holy Spirit at this time.
The Commissioning as Judges
Today’s
weblog is late, because this morning we were called into another divine court
session, which put all else on hold. Once again, we received a lot of
revelation and insights into things that are yet to come, both short-term and
long-term.
The
most significant thing, however, was Jesus’ word that we were being
commissioned as Judges. How far this calling extends to others is unknown as of
now. While this was surprising to us, we realized immediately that this was
connected to my series on the Judges which was finished yesterday. It is too
early to know precisely what the implications of this may be, but it is somehow
connected to Emmet Flood, the attorney who joined the Trump team as the White
House Counsel a year ago on May 2, 2018.
Emmet
is the Hebrew word for Truth, so we understood this (a year ago) to be a sign
of a Flood of Truth that was coming. Now, a year later, I happened to finish my
series on the Judges on May 2, 2019.
Jesus
also gave us Habakkuk 1:5,
5 Look among the nations! Observe! Be astonished! Wonder! Because I am
doing something in your days—You would not believe if you were told.
That
immediately called to my remembrance a prophetic word given to me on October
16, 1986, which was three days after the 120th Jubilee from Adam. It
was a long-term word, showing me “a few glimpses down the road.” The word spoke
of an “open door,” and he said in part: “You’re going to find in there a
greater anointing.” Regarding the overall prophecy itself, he said, “You’re
going to have to take that and immerse it in prayer, into intercession.”
I
have done that, of course, and here we are 33 years later, still wondering what
that word meant. But at the end of the prophecy, the prophet was overwhelmed by
what he was seeing and feeling. He said, “Wow! Just an increase, increase.
Tremendous, tremendous increase. Brother, I don’t know how to say this, except
that it’s going to be beyond your wildest dreams and imaginations. The
Scripture is that I will work a work in your day, that though you see it,
you will not believe it. (Habakkuk 1:5 KJV). So watch and see
what God is about to do in your life.”
The
fact that this Scripture came up again today brought me back to this prophecy
in 1986. This seems to suggest that we have entered into a new level of
fulfillment of that prophecy. Further, the unusual nature of revelation that we
have been experiencing in the past month is certainly something that, in 1986,
would have been beyond my “wildest dreams and imaginations.”
So
my conclusion is that we have moved to a new level of revelation and have
received a new anointing for the work that lies ahead. We are all in this
together, of course, for we function as one body, regardless of our depth of
understanding. There are many things that none of us truly understand at this
point, but we will see the hand of God nonetheless. The year 2019 is a year
preparing the way for 2020—which, technically begins on Trumpets, September 30,
2019.
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