Subjective “Spirit Leading” is when one is moved by imagined nudging and
impulses, then attributes that imagination to the “leading of the
Spirit”. It often never is in complete harmony with Spirit “revelation”
in the Bible. It is sometimes outright contrary to Spirit guidance
through “revelation”
(Eph.3:3-5).
It is
completely subjective as to whether it is the Holy Spirit instead of a
deceiving spirit or just plain human desire and imagination. Yet, you
get drawn into the language and thinking that imagines the Lord walking
and talking with you, and then you start saying “the Lord told me this”
or “the Lord showed me this”.
Francis
Chan offers stories from those who have experienced “real encounters”
with God. He says each of us has the choice every day "to depend on
yourself, to live safely, and to try to control your life. Or you can
live as you were created to live—as a temple of the Holy Spirit of God,
as a person dependent on Him, desperate for God the Spirit to show up
and make a difference." Yet, he is basically telling people to imagine
the Spirit “showing up” in some emotion-driven and imagination-perceived
way, and all such imaginations automatically becomes self-confirmation
that the Holy Spirit instead of Satan as an angel of light is doing this
“showing up”.
Beth Moore is another that uses this imagination-driven approach where
her imagination of talks with God become conversations with God in which
she reports “what God told me”. This kind of thinking is very dangerous,
and yet some of our brethren are jumping on the band-wagon of these kind
of authors and speakers and promote them as truly guided by God.
The real “Holy Spirit” showed up in guiding the apostles into “all
truth”. He revealed and confirmed “the faith once for all delivered to
the saints” –
Jude 3-4; Heb.2:1-4.
He powerfully leads through that revelation
(Heb.4:12; Eph.3:3-5).
When we are listening to the Spirit in scriptures used correctly we are
listening to the voice of the real Holy Spirit.
Imaginations must be cast down and not exalted to the level of God’s
word. When a person does not “abide in the doctrine of Christ” but gives
greater or equal guiding authority to their imagination of conversations
with God, they have quit “holding fast to the Head”
(Col.2:19)
and have “intruded into those things which he has not seen, vainly
puffed up by his fleshly mind”
(Col.2:18).
This is “empty deceit” because it imaginary conversations with God told
as if it happened in reality, and this is a form of lying since God did
not actually tell them anything. It is purely adult form of make-believe
and empty of real revelation. Be careful of those who promote such.
Other Articles by Terry Benton
These Things Became Our Examples
The Pharisee Shield
Review of Radical Restoration Chapter
1