Tests for Prophecy
David Watson, Called & Committed: World-Changing Discipleship, (Harold Shaw Publishers, Wheaton, IL; 1982), pp. 109-110
What are the tests for prophecy, or for any other spiritual gift that purports to bring the Word of God? These questions should be asked:
1. Does it glorify Christ? The prophecy may not mention Christ by name, but does the whole message honor and glorify him? This is always the Spirit's primary work ( 2. Does it edify the body of Christ? Seven times in 3. Is it in accordance with the Scriptures? If we twist the Scriptures, we do so to our own destruction ( 4. Is the prophecy given in the spirit of love? This is the hallmark of the Spirit's presence, even in correction or rebuke. 5. Is Jesus lord of the speaker's life? A false prophet will be known by the fruits of his or her life, said Jesus ( 6. Does the speaker submit to the church leaders? Strong personalities with independent spirits caused splits and divisions in the New Testament church, and do so today. Paul warned the Ephesian elders about those "from among your own selves" who would draw away disciples after them, and so divide the church of God ( 7. Does the speaker allow others to judge the prophecy? Such weighing should be the rule, not the exception ( 8. Is the speaker in control of himself when speaking? The speaker may be "taken over" by an evil spirit, but that is never the mark of the Spirit of God ( 9. Is the prophecy fulfilled, if it speaks about some future event? Most prophecy is forth-telling, not foretelling. A Christian prophesying will normally "tell forth" God's word as an encouragement or exhortation for the whole congregation. Only on rare occasions will prophecy predict some future event When it does, the biblical test is in the prophecy: fulfillment, or lack of it (