Ask Your Preacher - Archives

Ask Your Preacher - Archives

“Dreams For Tomorrow”

Categories: DOCTRINE, NEW TESTAMENT
God says in Acts 2:17-19, “in the last days He will pour out the spirit upon all flesh and that sons and daughters will prophesy and young men will see visions and old men will dream dreams.”  My question is: why do you say that dreams and visions are not of today when the Bible clearly says so… God Himself says they will.

Sincerely,
Visions For The Future

Dear Visions For The Future,

Acts 2:17-19 is an excerpt from Peter’s sermon on the day of Pentecost, the very first sermon preached after Christ ascended into heaven. Peter is quoting the book of Joel (Joel 2:28-32) and stating that what Joel wrote about was happening now. The verses have nothing to do with our behavior today or the end of time. It has nothing to do with modern visions and dream.  Peter specifically says that he is talking about what was happening right then (Acts 2:15-16) Those verses refer to that particular day and the time period surrounding Christ’s life and death. Let me explain the context.

For 400 years, the Jews had received no word from God – no prophets, no visions, no dreams, nothing. Then, after all that silence came:

  • Zacharias and the angel (Lk 1:13)
  • Elizabeth’s prophecy (Lk 1:41)
  • Simeon’s prophecy (Lk 2:26)
  • Anna’s prophecy (Lk 2:36)
  • The vision of the shepherds (Lk 2:8-9)
  • John the Baptist’s preaching (Matt 3:1)
  • Jesus’ miracles (Jhn 2:11)
  • The miracles of Jesus’ seventy disciples (Lk 10:17)

There was a veritable explosion of supernatural events. Peter is explaining how this influx of miracles, visions, and prophecy were a fulfillment of what Joel had said would happen in the last days of Israel. ‘In the last days’ doesn’t mean the end of the world in this circumstance; it means the end (or last days) of the Old Covenant. Peter is using these verses from the book of Joel to illustrate that Jesus really is the Messiah that the Jews had been waiting for. Jesus fulfilled Joel’s prophecy, and today we reap the benefits of it.