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Hearing God’s Voice: Scripture, Not Subjective Impressions
By Dave Jenkins
Few questions trouble Christians more — or confuse them more — than this one: How do I hear God’s voice? For many believers, the phrase “hearing God” has become closely associated with inner impressions, mental pictures, emotional nudges, or spontaneous thoughts that feel spiritually significant. Some are taught to expect personal messages, individualized directives, or fresh spoken guidance beyond Scripture. Others are told that a vibrant Christian life depends on learning to recognize these internal promptings as divine speech.
The desire underneath this is often sincere. Believers want to know God, follow His will, and walk closely with Him. That desire is good. But sincerity alone does not guarantee clarity. When the question of hearing God is separated from the doctrine of Scripture, confusion quickly follows.
The Bible gives us a clear and freeing framework: God speaks through His Word, and the Holy Spirit illumines that Word to His people. The Spirit applies revelation — He does not add new revelation. Understanding that distinction protects believers from error and anchors them in confidence.
God Has Already Spoken
The starting point for clarity is this: God is not silent. He has spoken — definitively, authoritatively, and sufficiently — in Scripture. The Bible is not a partial message waiting to be completed by ongoing private revelations. It is the written, preserved, God-breathed Word. Through Prophets and Apostles, God has given His revelation to the church. That revelation is now inscripturated. It is fixed, public, and authoritative.
When we open the Bible, we are not searching for hints of God’s voice — we are encountering it. This does not make God distant. It makes Him dependable. His voice is not hidden behind techniques or unlocked by spiritual sensitivity levels. It is available in the text He has given.
Illumination Is Not Revelation
A crucial theological distinction must be kept clear: revelation and illumination are not the same thing. Revelation is God giving new truth through inspired authors. Illumination is the Holy Spirit helping believers understand and apply the truth already revealed.
Revelation produced Scripture. Illumination opens our eyes to Scripture. The Spirit’s ministry today is not to deliver new doctrinal content or personal revelation equal in authority to the Bible. His ministry is to shine light on what He has already inspired — to convict, clarify, and apply the Word to the believer’s mind and heart.
This is why believers can read the same passage many times and suddenly see its significance more clearly. The text did not change. Revelation did not expand. Illumination deepened. That is the Spirit’s faithful work.
How Confusion Enters
Confusion enters when illumination is redefined as revelation — when internal impressions are treated as divine speech. Phrases like “God told me,” “I heard the Lord say,” or “the Spirit revealed” are often used to describe subjective experiences. Sometimes these are sincere attempts to describe conviction or guidance. But when this language is used loosely, it unintentionally places personal impressions in the category of divine revelation.
That creates several dangers. First, it gives subjective thoughts divine authority. Second, it makes personal impressions difficult to question. Third, it pressures other believers to treat private experiences as binding truth. Fourth, it shifts confidence away from Scripture and toward internal experience. None of this produces clarity. It produces instability.
The Spirit Works Through the Word
The Holy Spirit is not silent — but His voice is not independent of Scripture. He speaks through the Word He inspired. He convicts through Scripture. He comforts through Scripture. He guides through Scripture. He corrects through Scripture. He assures us through Scripture. He also uses wise counsel, circumstances, and sanctified reasoning — but never in contradiction to the written Word and never as new revelation alongside it. The Spirit does not bypass Scripture to guide believers. He works through it.
Guidance Without New Revelation
Some worry that if we reject subjective revelation, we are left without personal guidance. But Scripture presents guidance differently than many expect. God guides primarily through:
- Biblical commands and principles.
- Renewed thinking shaped by Scripture.
- Wise counsel from mature believers.
- Prayerful judgment.
- Providence and circumstance.
This is not lesser guidance — it is steadier guidance. It produces mature decision-making rather than impression-dependence. We are not called to decode hidden messages. We are called to apply revealed truth.
Testing Impressions Wisely
Believers do experience strong convictions, burdens, and promptings. These should not be ignored — but they must be tested. They are not revelation. They are impressions that must be evaluated by Scripture. Wise language helps here. Instead of saying, “God told me,” it is more accurate and humble to say, “I believe this is wise,” or “I feel led,” or “I am persuaded this aligns with Scripture.” This keeps authority where it belongs — in God’s written Word.
The Freedom of a Clear Voice
There is deep freedom in knowing that God’s voice is not hidden or fragile. It is written. It is preserved. It is accessible. It is sufficient. You do not need mystical sensitivity to hear God. You need Scripture. Open it. Read it. Study it. Sit under faithful preaching. Meditate on it. Obey it. The Spirit will be faithful to illuminate it. Clarity grows where Scripture is trusted.
An Encouragement
Many believers are weary from chasing impressions and fearing they might miss God’s voice. Scripture offers rest. God is not playing hide-and-seek with His will. He has spoken clearly in His Word. Walk in what He has said. Trust what He has revealed. Ask for wisdom. Seek counsel. Pray for understanding. But anchor your confidence in Scripture, not impressions. The Spirit of God loves the Word of God — and He loves to help the people of God understand it. That is how we hear Him speak.

Clarity in Scripture: The Authority, Clarity, and Sufficiency of God’s Word
Dave Jenkins is happily married to his wife, Sarah, and lives in beautiful Southern Oregon. He is a writer, editor, and speaker who loves Christ, His people, the Church, and sound theology.
Dave serves as the Executive Director of Servants of Grace Ministries and the Executive Editor of Theology for Life Magazine. He is the Host and Producer of the Equipping You in Grace Podcast and a contributor to and producer of Contending for the Word.
He is the author of The War of Worldviews: Truth, Lies, and the Battle for the Christian Mind (Theology for Life, 2026), Contentment: The Journey of a Lifetime (Theology for Life, 2024), The Word Matters: Defending Biblical Authority Against the Spirit of the Age (G3 Press, 2022), and The Word Explored: The Problem of Biblical Illiteracy and What To Do About It (House to House, 2021).
You can connect with Dave on Facebook, X (Twitter), Instagram, YouTube, or subscribe to his newsletter.
When he is not engaged in ministry work, Dave enjoys spending time with his wife, going to movies, sharing a meal at a favorite restaurant, or playing a round of golf with friends. He is also a voracious reader, particularly of Reformed theology and the Puritans, and is often found working through a stack of new books from a wide range of Christian publishers.
Dave earned his M.A.R. and M.Div. from Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary.




