Introduction
This book stems from an extraordinary dream I had in early 1995. I published a condensed version of the first dream in The MorningStar Prophetic Bulletin and The Morning Star Journal under the title “The Hordes of Hell Are Marching.” As I continued to seek the Lord about this great spiritual battle that I had seen, I received a series of related visions and prophetic experiences. Condensed versions of these were published in The Morning Star Journal as “The Hordes of Hell Are Marching, Parts II and III.”
The articles in this series became the most popular writings I have ever published. We were deluged with requests to have all of the parts published together in a book. I determined to do this and set out to fill in all that had been left out of the condensed versions. However, just when I was ready to give this to our editing department, I had another prophetic experience that was obviously related to this vision, containing what I felt were the most important parts of all. These are included in Parts IV and V of this book.
How I Received the Vision
This is the most common question I receive about this vision, so I will attempt to briefly answer it here. First, I must explain what I mean by visions and “prophetic experiences.”
Prophetic experiences are numerous and diverse and include all of the primary ways that God spoke to His people in the Scriptures. Because the Lord is the same today as He was yesterday, He has never ceased to speak to His people in the same ways, which we see continued in the New Testament just as in the Old. The same supernatural experiences found in the Scriptures can be seen throughout church history and are becoming increasingly common today. In the sermon of the Apostle Peter recorded in Acts 2:14-21, he explains that dreams, visions, and prophecy are primary signs of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit in the last days. As we are obviously getting closer to the end of this age, these signs are therefore becoming increasingly common with Christians.
One reason why experiences such as dreams, visions, and prophecy are becoming so much more common now is because we will need them for accomplishing our purposes in these times. It is also true that Satan, who unfortunately knows the Scriptures better than many Christians, understands the importance of prophetic revelation in God’s relationship with His people. Satan is therefore pouring out his own counterfeit gifts in great measure to those who serve him. However, there would be no counterfeit if there was not a genuine reality, just as there are no counterfeit three-dollar bills because there are no real ones.
Soon after I became a Christian in 1972, I read Peter’s sermon in Acts chapter two and realized that if we were in the end times, it was important to understand the ways that the Lord speaks to us. I do not remember praying at first to have the experiences myself, but I did begin having them, which gave me an even greater impetus for understanding them, which I continue to pursue.
Since that time, I have gone through periods when prophetic experiences were very frequent. I have also gone through long periods of time when I did not have any such experiences. Yet, after each period of not having them, they returned, and were either much more powerful or much more frequent. Through all of this I have learned a great deal about prophetic gifts and prophetic people, and I have addressed the full scope of the prophetic ministry in my book, The Prophetic Ministry.
Different Levels of Revelation
There are many levels of prophetic revelation. The initial level is prophetic “impressions.” These are genuine revelations or guidance from the Holy Spirit, and a primary way that He speaks to believers. They can be extraordinarily specific and accurate when interpreted by those who are experienced and sensitive to them. However, on this level our “revelations” can be affected by our own feelings, prejudices, and doctrines. I have therefore resolved not to use expressions such as “thus says the Lord” with any revelations that come on this level.
Visions can also come on the impression level. They are gentle and must be seen with “the eyes of our hearts.” These, too, can be very specific and accurate, especially when received and/or interpreted by those who are experienced. The more the eyes of our hearts are opened, as Paul prayed in Ephesians 1:18, the more powerful and useful these can be.
The next level of revelation is a conscious sense of the presence of the Lord, or the
anointing of the Holy Spirit, which gives special illumination to our minds. This often comes when I am writing or speaking, and it gives me much greater confidence in the importance or accuracy of what I am saying. However, while we may be emboldened by this sense of God’s presence, we need to realize that this is still a level where we can be influenced by our pre-existing viewpoints and attitudes. I believe this is why, in certain matters, Paul would say he was giving his opinion, but that he thought he had the agreement of the Spirit of the Lord (see I Corinthians 7:40). In general, we need humility rather than dogmatism when we deal with the prophetic.
“Open visions” occur on a higher level than impressions, and they tend to give us even more clarity than we feel with the presence of the Lord or the anointing. Open visions are external and are like watching a movie screen. Since they cannot be controlled by us, there is far less possibility of mixture in revelations that come this way.
Another higher-level prophetic experience is a trance, which is like dreaming when you are awake. Instead of just seeing a “screen” like in an open vision, you feel as if you are in the movie—actually there in some strange way. Peter fell into a trance in Acts 10:10, when he was instructed to go to the house of Cornelius and preach the gospel to the Gentiles for the first time. Paul, likewise, refers in Acts 22:17 to a trance he experienced while praying in the temple.
Trances were common experiences among the biblical prophets. The depth of trances can range from being rather mild—so that you are still conscious of your physical surroundings and can even still interact with them—to feeling as if you are literally in the place of your vision.
This seems to be what Ezekiel experienced rather frequently, and what John probably experienced when he had the visions recorded in the Book of Revelation.
The visions contained in this book all began with dreams. Dreams can also be a powerful level of revelation as it is hard for us to control our dreams. However, this is not to imply that our dreams cannot be influenced by what we are occupied with, or even what we ate before we went to sleep. However, prophetic dreams are unmistakably different. If you have to ask what that difference is you probably have not had one. It is unmistakable, but it is also hard to explain, just as it is hard for me to explain my wife’s voice, but I know it instantly when I hear it. Dreams from God also have that same unmistakable quality so that you know they are from Him.
Some of these visions also came under a very intense sense of the presence of the Lord, but the majority were received in some level of a trance. Usually the visions came on a level where I was still conscious of my surroundings and could even interact with them, such as answering the phone. When the visions were interrupted, or when things got so intense I had to get up and walk around, they would immediately continue once I sat down again. One time the experience became so intense that I actually got up and left the mountain cabin where I had gone to seek the Lord and drove home. Over a week later, I returned and almost immediately was right back where I left off in the experience.
I have never known how to “turn on” such experiences, but I have almost always had the liberty to turn them off at will. Twice, large portions of this vision came at what I considered to be very inconvenient times, when I had gone to my cabin to get some important work done while facing deadlines. Two issues of The Morning Star Journal were a little late being published because of this, and one of my books was delayed a few months from when I had hoped to finish it. However, the Lord does not seem to be very concerned about our deadlines!
In the dreams and the trances, I had what I consider to be greatly magnified gifts of discernment and words of knowledge. Sometimes when I look at a person or pray for a church or ministry, I start to know things about them of which I have no natural knowledge. During the prophetic experiences recorded in this book, these gifts were operating on a level that I have never personally experienced in “real life.” For example, in this vision I could look at a division of the evil horde and immediately know all of its strategies and capabilities.
I do not know how this enhanced knowledge came to me, but I just knew it, and in great detail. At times I would look at things or people and know their past, present, and future all at once. To save time and space in this book, I have included this knowledge as a matter of fact, without going into an explanation of how I received it.
Using Prophetic Revelations
I must state emphatically that I do not believe that any kind of prophetic revelation is for the purpose of establishing doctrine. We have the Scriptures for that. There are two basic uses for the prophetic. The first is for revealing the present or future strategic will of the Lord in certain matters. We have examples of this in Paul’s dream to go to Macedonia (see Acts 16:6-10) and in the trance where he was told to quickly leave Jerusalem (see Acts 22:17-18). We also have
examples of this in the ministry of Agabus. One of these concerned a famine that was coming upon the whole world (see Acts 11:27-30), and the other had to do with Paul’s visit to Jerusalem (see Acts 21:10-12).
Such revelations are also given for illuminating doctrine that is taught in the Scripture, but may not have been clearly understood yet. For example, Peter’s trance in Acts 10 not only illuminated God’s will for Peter, it also provided timely insight on a matter in which Scriptures were very clear (the Gentiles being able to receive the gospel), but which had not yet been understood by the church.
While the visions in this book do contain some strategic revelations, they also shed light on some biblical doctrines that I honestly had not seen before, but now see quite clearly. However, for years I had known and taught most of the truths illuminated to me in these experiences, even though I cannot say that I had lived them all very well. Many times I thought about the warning Paul gave Timothy—to pay attention to his own teachings (see I Timothy 4:16). Confronted by my failure to live up to some of my own teachings, I therefore accepted many of these messages as a personal rebuke. Even so, I also felt they were general messages to the body of Christ, and so I included them here.
Some of my friends encouraged me to write this as an allegory, in the third person, like The Pilgrim’s Progress. I decided against that for several reasons. First, I feel that some would have taken this to be the result of my own creativity, which would have been wrong. I would like to be this creative, but I am not.
I also felt I could be much more accurate if I related these experiences just as I received them, and I endeavored to do so. However, I consider my memory of details to be one of my greatest weaknesses. At times I have questioned my memory about certain details in this vision, and you should therefore have the liberty to question some of them too. I think such scrutiny is wise with any such messages. Only the Scriptures deserve to be considered infallible. As you consider these experiences, I pray that the Holy Spirit will lead you to the truth and separate any chaff that may be present from the wheat.