Discerning the Voice of God
(Amidst the Noisy Voices in My Head)
Last year, I worked remotely as a content writer. Most of the time, I sat at my desk and worked independently, without the distraction or interruption of meetings or co-workers. But, at random times throughout the week, I would get spontaneous Zoom calls from my boss wanting to review a proposal I'd submitted.
Most of the time, when he would call, he hadn't read my work beforehand. I'd stop what I was working on, answer his Zoom calls, and then watch him skim my document, looking for edits. I would sit at my desk, watching his expressions on my screen as he read, paused, and pondered. Then, as his head turned back to face the screen, I'd prepare myself for the critique.
"Don't use puns," he'd say in a father-knows-best voice. "They're cheesy."
"This headline to your story doesn't make sense. Rewrite it."
"You've missed the whole point of this program."
"Where did you get this information? This can't be accurate."
I didn't mind his feedback but wasn't crazy about his condescending delivery. I appreciate good edits and feedback, even when it involves swallowing my pride and starting all over. However, I wouldn't say I liked sitting across the screen from him, waiting for him to review my work, and then getting barraged with negative feedback. It made me dread those Zoom calls.
I didn't dread those meetings because his assessment was inaccurate. I dreaded his calls because they made me feel small, sometimes stupid, and inferior.
I've spent a fair amount of time thinking about this. I couldn't help but draw a parallel between how we may perceive God watching us disapprovingly, scrutinizing our choices, and how my boss delivered his feedback about my proposals. Have you ever felt like God was watching, just waiting to catch you doing something wrong? (I have.) In your thoughts, have you ever imagined Him saying:
"That was such a stupid thing for you to say!"
"Why did you do it that way? You are an embarrassment."
"Is that the best you can do? Anyone else could do better!"
Friend, God does not talk to us like that. When God speaks to us, His Words are full of truth, grace, and patience. One of my favorite examples of God speaking is in 1 Kings 19:12 when the Lord approaches Elijah.
Elijah has been through a huge spiritual victory. He challenged the prophets of Baal in a "battle of the gods," so to speak, and won. (Naturally!) Yet after this big win, Elijah ran and hid. He was exhausted and even depressed. When the Lord sought out Elijah, He spoke to him in a "gentle whisper" (1 Kings 19:12, NIV). No accusations, no tone of disbelief. He was gentle and understanding.
When Adam and Eve disobeyed and ate the fruit from the tree of good and evil, God didn't call them names or tell them how stupid they were. When He walked into the garden, He asked, "What is this you have done?" (Genesis 3:13) Again, no name calling. No adjectives or expletives.
How about Saul's encounter with the Lord on the road to Damascus? Acts 9:1 reminds us what Saul had been up to, breathing murderous threats against the Lord's disciples and looking for Christians so he could throw them in jail. When God stopped him on the road, Saul heard God's voice: "Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?" (Acts 9:4). If anyone deserved a scolding from God, it was Saul. But even with him, the Lord's tone is calm and practical. He approached Saul with a legitimate question; He didn't firehose him with accusations.
Are you catching on to what I'm suggesting? God doesn't talk to us like the voices in our heads do. He didn't even speak to those who opposed Him in the mean, hurtful way we let the voices in our heads talk to us.
God spoke gently to a tired old prophet like Elijah and calmly to Adam and Eve after they gave in to their sinful nature and altered His perfect plan for all humanity. He even spoke patiently to Saul, whose favorite pastime was hurting God's people. How can you believe He'd speak anyway else to you, His child, friend, redeemed?
The Bible calls the devil a deceiver (2 Corinthians 11:3), accuser (Zechariah 3:1), and the father of lies (John 8:44). He prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour (1 Peter 5:8). When he lies, he speaks his native language (John 8:44). If the voice you hear sounds like any of these descriptions, stop listening immediately because that's not the Lord's voice or His thoughts about you.
Dear friend, let us be discerning of the voices we allow to shape our thoughts, actions, and views of ourselves. Listen for the Lord's voice—it will be the gentle voice whispering messages of truth, patience, and grace.
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