Okay.
From Marvin,
"Over the past year or so,
I've been experiencing very weird dreams.
I've seen angelic figures
and demonic ones as well.
I can hardly understand it.
Lately, I've seen very large snakes
in my dreams too.
What's your say on these?
Should I be worried?
Am I getting some sort of message
from the supernatural world?
What exactly is this
and what should I do besides pray?"
Now, this one almost seems like
maybe we should just deal with Marvin
as to where he's at spiritually.
And I wouldn't argue with that,
but because the subject is dreams,
and I know that in the church realm,
dreams come up.
People talk about dreams
and people have dreams.
I've been asked or I've heard
somebody say that
they had a certain dream.
There are people in our church
that will talk about dreams.
And so let's just think scripturally.
Does God ever give a dream?
It's from Him - not satanic,
it's God giving the dream
because God means to communicate
something to an individual.
Does that ever happen?
Old Testament?
Old Testament and New Testament?
Okay.
So all through the Bible,
we can find examples of God giving dreams.
It's a God-given dream
that communicates some kind of prophecy,
some kind of warning,
some kind of message.
Give me some examples.
Good - by good,
I don't mean that when interpreted
it actually sounded like great news,
but they're good in the sense
that they're God-given.
Give me some examples.
Old and New.
(unintelligible)
Pharaoh.
Joseph interpreted for him.
Yes, you had the cows,
you had the corn stalks or wheat stalks,
seven years, seven years.
There's two Joseph's actually
in the Bible that were pretty prominent
with dreams.
You had Joseph in the Old Testament
and Joseph the husband of Mary
in the New Testament.
Very often, the Joseph
in the New Testament
was receiving dreams
concerning what he should do
as far as escaping Herod
by going down to Egypt,
when to come back,
even taking Mary for his wife.
God was very consistently speaking
to Joseph the husband of Mary
by way of dreams.
Can anybody think of any other place
in the Old Testament
where dreams are fairly significant?
(unintelligible)
Jacob's ladder actually is a dream.
And it says so specifically.
Somebody said Daniel.
Daniel was interpreting.
He interpreted two dreams
for Nebuchadnezzar.
Can you think of any other dreams?
You were talking about Jacob.
Whoever mentioned Jacob,
I don't know if that was exactly
talking about Jacob's ladder.
You know he had another dream.
He had a dream about you remember
when he made the deal with Laban
that he would only take the striped
and the spotted and the
mottled sheep and goats?
And God actually gave him a dream.
And maybe that's how he knew
that he should choose those.
But you remember what he did.
He took those sticks
and he put stripes in them
and he kind of held them up.
But other dreams -
can you think of others?
What's that?
(unintelligible)
God said don't say
anything to him good or bad.
Don't do any harm to him.
Abimelech - do you remember
the guy Abimelech?
He was like a Philistine king
and he had taken Sarah.
And he had a dream
that said you're a dead man.
And he said, "Lord, I did this
in the innocence of my heart."
And he had another dream
and God came to him
and said, "I know you did."
Anyway, okay, good dreams.
Yes, there are God-given dreams.
There are good dreams.
Can you think of anywhere else
in the New Testament specifically,
maybe not where you have
specific examples of dreams,
but where dreams
themselves are talked about
in a good way?
(unintelligible)
Pentecost.
Basically, the fulfillment of Joel 2.
Who is going to dream dreams?
(from the room) young men?
The who?
Doesn't it say the old men?
James: The old men shall dream dreams.
Tim: Yeah, the old men are
going to dream dreams.
So, that's good.
The Spirit moves - good dreams.
How about examples of bad dreams?
And by bad dreams, I mean people
that refer to their dreams
as having come from God,
but the reality is they
don't come from God,
and the only reason they're saying
that they had dreams from God
is so they can set forth their lies.
(unintelligible)
(from the room)
When Job's first friend
is talking to him...
(unintelligible)
Tim: (incomplete thought)
I think that that is not
necessarily a dream.
I think that may be something demonic.
(unintelligible)
Yeah, I'm not sure that's a dream.
(unintelligible)
Jude.
(from the room)
These people were false prophets.
It gives a long description,
but it says they're
relying on their dreams.
Tim: They're relying on their dreams.
Right.
Can you think of some place
that talks about them relying
on their visions?
(from the room)
Like when that man went to go confront
King Jeroboam.
(unintelligible)
He preached against it
and God said go back the way you came.
The old prophet said an angel told me
that you can come back with me.
Tim: Well, I don't think
that's a good example
because he just basically made it up
(incomplete thought).
But I mean in the New Testament,
is there some place you can think of
where it talks about relying on visions?
Being associated with false religion.
(from the room): Revelation, right?
Tim: I'm thinking
specifically of Colossians.
(unintelligible)
But okay, let's look at something here.
Deuteronomy 13.
Let's all go here.
Fifth book in the Bible.
Deuteronomy 13:1,
"If a prophet or a dreamer of dreams
arises among you and gives you
a sign or a wonder..."
So, here's the thing.
God Himself is actually saying,
when He says dreamer of dreams,
you know what's interesting about this?
Is He's not saying somebody
that simply claims to have had a dream.
He's actually saying a dreamer of dreams.
My point here is this,
you can actually have a dream
and be able to do some supernatural things
and it not be from God.
"He does a sign or a wonder
that he tells you comes to pass,
and if he says 'let
us go after other gods,'
which you have not known,
'and let us serve them,'
you shall not listen to the words
of that prophet or that dreamer of dreams,
for the Lord your God is testing you
to know whether you love the Lord your God
with all your heart, with all your soul."
So you see that reality.
Go to Jeremiah 23.
Jeremiah deals with
this fairly extensively.
Jeremiah 23.
Go down to verse 25.
I like this because notice
the direct comparison between dreams
and the Word of God.
Really today, that's
what we're dealing with.
People can talk about their dreams,
but it's the Word of God that is firm.
And in fact, it's the Word of God
whereby those dreams
need to be tested
and the fruit of the individual
claiming to have the dream
is to be tested.
If you go to 23:25,
"I have heard what the prophets have said
who prophesy lies in my name
saying 'I have dreamed, I have dreamed.'"
These guys are just liars.
"How long shall there be lies
in the hearts of the prophets
who prophesy lies and who prophesy
the deceit of their own heart,
who think to make My people forget My name
by their dreams that they tell one another
even as their fathers
forgot My name for Baal?"
"Let the prophet who has a dream
tell the dream.
But let him who has My Word,
speak My Word faithfully."
Isn't that interesting?
There's the comparison.
"What has straw in common with wheat?"
It's like the difference between
the dreamer and the man that has His Word.
Verse 29, "Is not My Word like fire
declares the Lord, and like a hammer
that breaks the rock in pieces?"
Go down to v. 32,
"Behold, I am against those who prophesy
lying dreams declares the Lord,
and who tell them and
lead My people astray
by their lies and their recklessness
that I did not send them or charge them
so they do not profit this people at all
declares the Lord."
Now, Kevin referenced the text in Jude,
so I think maybe we'll finish on this one
here in Jude,
because I want to make some points.
Jude. Right before Revelation.
In verse 5,
"I want to remind you
although you once fully knew it,
that Jesus who saved a people
out of the land of Egypt
afterward destroyed
those who did not believe.
The angels who did not stay within
their own position of authority,
but left their proper dwelling,
He has kept in eternal chains
under gloomy darkness
until the judgment of the great day."
So he's talking about judgment here
and those who have
come under His judgment.
"Just as Sodom and Gomorrah
and the surrounding cities
which likewise indulged
in sexual immorality
and pursued unnatural desires
serve as an example..."
An example to who? To us.
"By undergoing a
punishment of eternal fire."
Look, sexual immorality -
this is an example to us
of what God will do to us
if we are involved in sexual immorality.
"Yet in like manner (notice this)...
in like manner..."
These people are like Sodom and Gomorrah.
"In like manner, these people also
relying on their dreams,
they defile the flesh, reject authority,
blaspheme the glorious ones."
And I got to thinking about this
that Marvin - he's experiencing dreams.
I think what I would ask
a young man like this
is Jude is making a connection
between the people
who rely on their dreams
and he's talking about Sodom and Gomorrah
who's an example.
And then he says "in like manner,
these people also
relying on their dreams..."
It's like he's weaving this together.
A despising of authority
and sexual immorality
and relying on dreams
and defiling the flesh.
He's weaving this together -
these people.
And he says in v. 10,
"They blaspheme all
they do not understand.
They're destroyed by all that they
like unreasoning animals
understand instinctively.
Woe to them."
I can tell you this.
When you find Joseph having dreams,
what does Scripture say
about Joseph's character?
What sort of man was he?
What does Scripture say about Daniel?
What kind of man was he?
What does Scripture say
about the New Testament Joseph?
The husband of Mary.
What kind of man was he?
You know, I think you want
to tie these together.
I would ask Marvin
about the connection
with sexual immorality.
I would ask him about his purity.
See, he's wanting to talk about dreams.
"Should I be afraid?"
I would say this,
if there's sexual immorality in your life,
it's because of that the
wrath of God is coming
and that's what you ought to be afraid of.
Having a dream of snakes?
Dreams - should we put stock in dreams?
Should we guide our lives by dreams?
I think you want to be
very careful of dreams.
Could God speak to a person through them?
There's biblical examples,
but I'll tell you this,
just as much as there's biblical examples
of God-given dreams
directing righteous men,
there's also a lot of warnings
concerning rotten people
and false prophets and evil people
that have dreams, rely on dreams,
want to talk about their dreams.
Dreams - where can they come from?
I mean, some people will tell you
if they eat right before they go to bed,
they have all sorts of horrible dreams
or crazy dreams.
That could be one thing.
There could be natural
causes as to why you dream.
We're dreaming all the time,
but why sometimes we
remember more dreams,
maybe it's got to do with
whether we're in deep sleep
or not so deep sleep.
Could some dreams come
from satanic causes?
Undoubtedly.
Could you have dreams about snakes?
If you sat and watched a movie
like one of these cannibal movies
or zombie movies or something,
would you think it might
affect your dreams?
You know, just an illicit lifestyle
could affect your dreams.
What you read or think about
or watch right before you go to bed
may have a tremendous effect.
I think the thing to ask
with regards to these things
is looking at the lifestyle.
I think the question is
concerning a young man and his life.
Whether you're saved or not
is the real issue.
Not: should I be afraid
because I have a dream about snakes?
Well, the truth is I should be afraid
if I'm lost.
I should fear Him who can throw
body and soul into hell.
That's what I should fear.
I mean, if I'm a Christian,
and I have some crazy dream about snakes
and it's a nightmare, I'm safe.
If I'm lost and I have
dreams about angels -
when I was lost, I had a dream about Mary.
Very comforting.
I have a feeling that had
devilishness about it.
It gave me such thoughts
of Mary that I never had -
I was a nominal Catholic my whole life,
but it gave me such thoughts about Mary
that were warm.
I felt something from that.
But you know, you can have
all sorts of nice feeling dreams
and be lost and go to hell.
You could have dreams about snakes
and horrible things and go to Heaven.
The nature of the dream isn't the thing.
It's the character of the man
that's the issue.
Anything else?
Anything anybody want to say about dreams?
I would just say this,
look, if you have somebody in the church
that tells you that they had a premonition
or an impression or a vision
or a dream,
I would just say this,
be extremely careful
that you not let somebody else's dream -
here's one of the problems that I have.
If God wants to communicate to me
to take my son down to Egypt,
I don't think He's going
to give you a dream
about me taking my son down to Egypt.
He's going to give me a dream
warning me that Herod
wants to kill my child
and so I should take him down to Egypt.
I get very suspicious
when you get third person people
telling me they had a dream
that I'm supposed to marry so-and-so.
I would be extremely suspect
of that kind of thing.
Don't put weight in it.
You will go wrong.
What you want to put weight in
is in the Word of God.
You go to Proverbs 31.
Study it out.
Look at the character of a woman.
Use that as your reference point.
Just be very careful
because there are people
who even in good churches,
people who will say:
I had this dream.
It was about you.
It's almost like there's
some meaning here.
There's something you're supposed to know
that's going to affect decisions
you make in your life.
(incomplete thought)
Your antennas ought to go up
and red flags ought to be waving all over
when people tell you that.
What time do we have?
Okay, we've got time for one more.
Anybody want to say
anything about dreams?
(from the room)
(unintelligible)
Matthew 24:24 -
it says, "For there shall
arise false christs
and false prophets
and shall show great signs and wonders,
so much that if it were possible,
they shall deceive the very elect."
Tim: Right.
If possible, they would
deceive the very elect.
But it's not possible for
the elect to be deceived.
At least, not deceived damnably.