Touch Not the Lord’s Anointed

Touch Not the Lord’s Anointed

“Do not touch My anointed ones, And do My prophets no harm.” Psalm 105:15, 1 Chronicles 16:22 NASB

When addressing the super apostles that were coming against Paul’s ministry to the Corinthian church and soliciting them for notoriety and greed, Paul counters their boasting by providing an account of his sufferings as an Apostle of Christ, saying, “Are they servants of Christ? I am a better one- I am talking like a madman- with far greater labors, far more imprisonments, with countless beatings, and often near death. Five times I received at the hands of the Jews the forty lashes less one. Three times I was beaten with rods. Once I was stoned. Three times I was shipwrecked; a night and a day I was adrift at sea; on frequent journey, in danger from rivers, danger from robbers, danger from my own people danger from Gentiles, danger in the city, danger in the wilderness, danger at sea, danger from false brothers; in toil and hardship, through many a sleepless night, in hunger and thirst, often without food, in cold and exposure. And, apart from other things, there is the daily pressure on me of my anxiety for all the churches…if I must boast, I will boast of the things that show my weakness.” (2 Corinthians 11:23-28,30) He goes on later to say, “For the sake of Christ, then, I am content with weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and calamities. For when I am weak, then I am strong.” (2 Corinthians 12:30)

Paul demonstrated both confidence in the Lord Jesus Christ and humility. He demonstrated boldness in His call from Christ while exhibiting brokenness before the Lord, rejoicing in trials and tribulations. When we look at the history of the early church and the lives of the Apostles of Christ, eleven of the twelve were martyred. They counted the cost of their lives as worthy for the sake of the gospel of Jesus Christ. What strikes me in these passages is that Paul did not revile those nor did he instruct them not to touch him due to the anointing on him from God. He was bold in his speech towards them as they were false apostles who were deceiving the Corinthian church, undermining what Paul had taught them and calling Paul’s apostleship into question, which had been granted by Christ Jesus Himself. He never said to them, “Touch not the anointed and do God’s prophets no harm.”

I hope that this helps you today because you may have heard this said to you or others at some point, or maybe you have said it. I heard this passage used out of context, but I did not realize it was out of context. This particular Bible verse is misappropriated at times when calling teaching into question against Scripture, and it should encourage us to understand this passage in context because despite its use to potentially deter critical reasoning, this passage does not mean what we may think that it means.

The verse in question is in reference to the kings and the prophets in the time of Israel. David sang this song after he entered Jerusalem with the ark of the covenant. He was giving thanks to God, recalling God’s promises and protection over the people of Israel, which were the anointed ones, particularly the kings. This is the reason why David says in 1 Samuel 24:6 that he would not ever lift his hand against Saul since he was the Lord’s anointed. Notice the word touch as well from the passage featured. When you study this in its context, this means to do physical harm. This in no way means to verbally test questionable teaching.

Despite the verse stating to “do prophets no harm”, the prophets were harmed and killed. This statement was directed at kings encountering Israel as they wandered from nation to nation. However, the prophets were harmed by their own people since these men carried words of repentance and judgment due to Israel’s continuous idolatry and spiritual infidelity and rebellion to God.  After taking a look at this passage, we can see how unfruitful it is to misappropriate Scripture.

I would like to encourage you further with the Word of God today. 1 John 2:20 helps us as believers to know that there are no haves and have nots when it comes to God’s anointing. The anointing is given to all believers. John 14:16 says that believers in Christ are given the gift of the Holy Spirit. 2 Corinthians 1:21-22 states that believers have been anointed by Christ. There is no mention of a particular class of believers being more anointed than the other. Let this truth comfort you, and above all, focus on Christ Jesus, our Lord and Savior. The Word of God brings truth to light, and there is freedom in knowing the truth in accordance with Scripture, and the Holy Spirit leads us into all truth.

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9 thoughts on “Touch Not the Lord’s Anointed

  1. I appreciated that you mentioned that all believers have a measure of anointing and qualify as the “anointed.” I’ve seen this scripture abused in so many ways and misunderstood in others. Part of our new identity in Christ the Anointed one is that we are able to walk out our lives in Him…and bear His anointing in some measure or the other.And there are those who carry/bare a heavier weight of the anointing. Some bare it in humility and some with arrogance sadly.
    Many questions to be asked in this day concerning some of those that might be called the prophetic voices of today…or the “prophets.” I am not always wise and careful in my thoughts and conversations about these men of God who seem to operate in a realm that I haven’t experienced…for which the Lord has given me not only caution but invitation to repent…and change the way I was thinking and speaking and trust them into His hand and His power and authority, while at the same time being careful myself to stay in the Word and know His Ways. Thanks sharing!

  2. I agree, we have an obligation to question ,with honest hearts ,those things that are taught in the church. It is spiritual pride by some leaders to squelch sincere questions. God, please do a deep work in all of us in the body of Christ so that we rightly divide the Word of Truth.

    1. A bear came out of the woods and killed those who were laughing at the man of Gods bald head. We are a generation who knows that the words of our mouths kill or edify. I disagree that the scripture you reference when rightly divided with the rest of the word excludes are words from being volitile. I’d rather be shot than be the victim of a slow murder of someone’s mouth. Much love.

      1. Hi, Jennifer. The account regarding Elisha and the two female bears is not prescriptive for our lives, and the young men who mocked Elisha were living in a time of idolatry taking place in Bethel. They were mocking him to “Go up” as Elijah had done in the translation in the chariot.

        It sounds as if we are both familiar with the teaching of the power of your words, which is unsupported by Scripture in context. God creates with His words. We do not. We are created beings in need of salvation and redemption. We are not to fear man nor their words. We are however, to reverentially fear the Lord. I appreciate you sharing your opinion on rightly dividing the Word, but in rightly dividing the Word, we need to make sure that we are not adopting doctrines that do not align with Scripture and ultimately testify of another Christ. Blessings to you!

  3. Hi Dawn. I just posted exactly the same thing yesterday!
    Appreciate you making your journey public. I have shared and promoted your book, and numerous ones have said how it has really helped and healed them. Praise God!

    I also noticed when your writing changed, when you wrote about the flavour missing in the wine. I was writing about the same thing at that time as well. You’re a real blessing to the Body! Thank you. Daryl

  4. That scripture always bothered me when I heard it through a believer. Thank you for blogging about it.

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