Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Hearing the Voice of Jesus: Role of Faith, Facts, and Feelings

I wrote most of this article in September but its completion was interrupted by a traumatic event in my life on October 8.  I did not expect that God would bring about this situation, but I am both thankful for and amazed at how God prepared me for this time of pain and dependence by allowing me to study the subject of spiritual discernment and write about it beforehand in this article.  Maybe at least some of what I have written will be of help to you.  I hope to give an account of my actual experience in a future article.


It is not uncommon to hear Christians share how God has intervened in the challenges and decisions of life.  Here are some expressions that I have heard and even uttered myself:

“God spoke to me and I have decided to...”
“I’m still waiting on God’s leading before I...”
“After I prayed, God gave me a real peace.”

Perhaps you too have heard these expressions or sensed a time when God was speaking to you.  Like me, you may have asked,

Discerning God's voice for the decisions of life.
“What is God saying to me at this particular time and in this particular situation?” or,
“How can I know whether the “voice” I am hearing is really from God?” (or Jesus…or the Holy Spirit?)

The Bible teaches that God’s Spirit guides obedient Christians (disciples, or Christ-followers) in times of decision-making (e.g. Proverbs 3; 5-6; James 1: 2-8).  However, we must be aware that other voices may compete with the voice of God—voices that may simply reflect our current emotional state; or voices that echo from our own self-delusion. 

A person who is living in open rebellion against God’s principles or who is in self-delusion is unwilling and perhaps incapable of discerning the voice of God (James 1: 5-8).  We are all prone to wander and be influenced by sin, selfishness, and Satan.  So, how can we be sure when God is speaking; and, what He saying to us?

In September, I began reading The Voice of JesusDiscernment, Prayer, and the Witness of the Spirit (InterVarsity, 2003).  The author, Gordon T. Smith, defines life in Christ as “an intentional response to the voice of Jesus, a voice that comes through the presence of the Spirit.” It follows, according to Smith, that discernment is “the discipline of attending to this presence [of God’s Spirit] and responding to this leading.”  The author adds that “discernment is possible only if we are alert to several dynamic tensions [including] the tension between heart and mind.”

Obviously, we must be cognitively engaged if we are to be discerning.  But Professor Smith also emphasizes that Christ-followers must be in touch with their emotions if they are to discern the voice of Jesus. Really?  Emotions?  I must admit, I cringed when I read Smith’s claim that we do not mature in our Christian experience unless we mature emotionally.  Smith adds, more bluntly, that …people who are out of touch with their emotions are out of touch with God, for God speaks to us through the ebb and flow of our emotional lives.

Perhaps you too are cringing upon reading Smith’s claims.  You may have even concluded that The Voice of Jesus is not worth reading.  After all, doesn’t the Bible teach that we are to be controlled by the Holy Spirit and not by our emotions (Ephesians 5:15–18; 1 Peter 5:6–11)?  Doesn’t Scripture emphasize that maturing Christ-followers are those who are being transformed by the renewal of their minds (Romans 12:2)?  Shouldn’t our faith rest on facts and not feeling?

I remember the “Faith-Fact-Feeling Train” illustration which was popular in the early 1970’s through Bill Bright’s “The Four Spiritual Laws” booklet.  The founder of Campus Crusade for Christ (now Cru) wanted Christ-followers to avoid hitching their faith to feelings.  After all, our feelings can change faster than the weather.  According to the train illustration, facts are the engine, and without an engine the train will not operate.  Feelings, on the other hand, are represented by the caboose which is unnecessary for the train to move.  But are our emotions really of no more importance than an optional caboose?  Because the train illustration gives this impression, Gordon T. Smith rejects it.

Today, I wonder how many Christians are spiritually stunted or even deprived of a fruitful life of faith because they have found no way to integrate their personality and emotional makeup into a healthy relationship with God through His Spirit.  Perhaps they have learned to store their emotions in a useless caboose rusting away on a side spur.  Study the accounts of when Jesus encountered men and women in great spiritual need and tell me He didn’t address their emotions (e.g. Luke 19: 2-6; John 4; John 8: 3-11).

Thankfully, Professor Smith emphasizes that an obedient and fulfilling spiritual walk with Christ involves more than simply mental, or rational, capacity.  Much more than simply being primates with a large brain, humans have personhood and personality which is an important expression of what it means to be image-bearers of a personal God, and Creator.  God’s gift of personality includes an emotional dimension that is a major part of who we are as individuals.  Our emotions enrich and empower our expressions of love, joy, and hope; or, fear, anger, and loneliness?


Our emotional dimension occupies what is called the affective domain and is included in what Scripture refers to as the “heart.”  Therefore, as we read and study God’s Word, our minds become engaged (cognitive domain) and we are moved by the joys and sorrows of Bible personalities with whom we can easily relate, both cognitively and affectively.  God’s Truth in turn influences our will (volitional capacity).  As we submit our wills in obedience to God’s Spirit, He empowers us to “walk in obedience” (action). 



According to Smith, true spiritual discernment employs mind, emotion, and will.  He concludes that discernment requires “listening with both mind and heart.”  Then, when we act upon what we discern we are exercising what Rev. Bob Tuck (1) referred to as a “quartet” made up of mind, emotion, will, and action.

As a result of my reading, I have become more aware of the importance of emotions in the spiritual disciplines of worship, prayer, discernment of God’s purposes, and sharing the Gospel.  I can now relate to the message of God’s Word in a more complete way by being more alert to the biblical account of the emotional dimension of biblical personalities like Abraham, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, Joshua, Gideon, David, Abigail, Daniel, Mary and Joseph (parents of Jesus), Peter, John, and Jesus.  In biblical characters we find expressions of both negative emotional traits like fear, anger, and despair; and positive emotions associated with the fruit of God’s Spirit such as love, joy, and peace. 


It seems clear that, central to our spiritual awareness and discernment, is a healthy understanding of our emotions and how God’s Spirit ministers in and through us by our emotional response to daily life.  The challenges and the blessings of our lives produce an “ebb and flow” of our emotions.  If we do not have the habit of entrusting our hearts, representing our cognitive, affective, and volitional facilities, to God’s guidance and comfort, we can become spiritually sluggish or “double-minded and unstable in all our ways (James 1:  5-8).”


Instead of being double-minded, God commands us to be filled with the Spirit (Ephesians 5: 18-21) by which we become attentive to the ministry of God’s Spirit with a “whole heart” (Psalm 119: 10). —i.e. fully engaged in mind, emotion, and will. The Apostle Paul teaches that when we are alive to the Holy Spirit, He becomes a channel through which God’s love is poured into our hearts…(Romans 5: 5 ESV).  This blessed pouring of God’s love occurs in the context of trials and suffering.  Paul writes that it is precisely when we encounter trials and suffering that we are best prepared spiritually to receive this outpouring of God’s love through His Spirit.  Because of this love, Paul explains, we can …rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope… (Romans 5: 3-4).

According to Gordon T. Smith: The suffering that is spoken of here represents all difficulty—the pain we experience physically, emotionally, and spiritually—explicitly because of our identification with Christ, but then also implicitly in all suffering that comes as a consequence of evil in our world.  The apostle indicated that we should actually boast in our suffering…--accept it, walk into it and choose that through suffering we will grow in grace and hope.  Later, while cautioning against doubting God’s love, Smith encourages those who remain faithful: This surely is what it means to live by faith—believing that God loves us, despite the contrary evidence.

In conclusion, how can we be sure when God is speaking and what He saying to us?  We have seen the importance of developing a proper understanding of the role of both our minds and our emotions in discerning and following the will of God.  Yet, many days we experience what can be an unsettling ebb and flow of our emotions similar to those recorded about heroes of the faith in Scripture.  Therefore, if our walk IN CHRIST is to be robust, steady, and alive, we need to learn more of how to discern the inner voice of Jesus. 

I have been motivated through my recent reading of both the Scriptures and The Voice of Jesus to learn more of what it means to discern the voice of Jesus through disciplines noted by Gordon T. Smith.  Discernment is learned through the practices of private worship and prayer, reading and study of Scripture, reading what our church fathers wrote about discernment (Smith recommends Ignatius Loyola, Jonathan Edwards, and John Wesley), and ministry to those in spiritual and physical need. 

Sequal to this Article:   Hearing the Voice of Jesus--2:  When Suffering Comes

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[1] Rev. Robert S. Tuck served as pastor of Central Christian Church, Wooster, Ohio from 1923 until 1967.  I “met” this man of God through a collection of his sermons he published in 1939 entitled “A Sermon Bouquet (Picked Along the Way)” which I purchased from Walnut Street Antiques.

4 comments:

  1. Thanks for sharing your thoughts about "The Voice of Jesus". I read Smith's book a few years ago, and listened to recordings of his lectures given at Regent College, and it was a real eye-opener. I had the notion that the Fact-Faith-Feeling train wasn't apt before I read the book, and afterwards I was really taken by this notion of bridging the gap between emotion and integrity. Smith said, in paraphrase: Character development without intimacy marginalizes the thrill and joy of abiding with Christ, but conversely worship that is about experiencing the joy God without transformation is empty. Wisdom integrates both.

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  2. Thank you, David, for transcribing and summarizing the thoughts you shared more informally and privately with me by a text message. Excellent point for other readers to consider.

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  3. Since we begin life as a "caboose" having nothing but emotions to go on, our instinctive, natural tendency is to be keenly in touch with our emotions. The "locomotive" of known facts begins to pull us ever so slowly through parental guidance, picking up speed with ever-widening social influences, and finally racing along with whatever cultural norms for good or for ill come down the track. Sometimes the world of intellectual fact pulls us along so fast that the "caboose" of emotions is hanging on for dear life, if not uncoupling altogether, leaving us cold, hardened, and insensitive. And therein lies a problem.

    What kind of "locomotive" is pulling this train, and where is it headed? The "locomotive" of chance origins and soul-less scientific theories has no "faith car" to give weight or meaning to the "caboose" of emotions, causing the train to derail at the first sharp curve. Whereas the "locomotive" of divine origins hooks us in to a "faith car" that not only provides a steadying gravitas and meaning to our lives, but is capable of pulling along our emotional "caboose" with complete safety (even joy!) down the right track.

    Get on that right track, and we need worry less about where the train's engineer is taking us, or how and when he is speaking to or through us. Which makes me question whether we really need to more closely analyze our "caboose" in order to be more open to the engineer's leading. Just like in those nerve-jangling runaway train movies, perhaps all we need is to make that death-defying leap from the "caboose" to the "faith car." Do that, and the emotional "caboose" will naturally follow (despite the occasional clickety-clack and bumps along the way), allowing the engineer to guide the entire train safely to our eternal destination.

    Where we invariably get into trouble is putting the cart before the horse, or rather the emotional "caboose" before the "faith car." Faith follows fact because that coupling fits. It was designed that way. By contrast, faith following emotions obscures the signals that might indicate danger ahead.

    If you're not sure about any of this in your own life, merely take a look at the configuration of the train in current culture. Owing largely to the evolutionary assumptions of our time in which there is no possible engineer one might trust, only chance mechanisms going 90-to-nothing, the "faith car" has been shunted off to an ignominious siding, leaving the "caboose" of uninformed, non-directed, unpurposed emotions to lead from behind toward certain derailment.

    Sitting behind the "locomotive", I can't always tell where I'm headed. But looking back,I can see where the tracks have led me so far. And so far, credible biblical facts leading to a trusting faith in Christ that guides and guards my emotions has proved to be an exhilarating journey. If I don't always know as much as I'd like to know about the details, it's enough for me to know that the Engineer up front sometimes moves the train along in mysterious ways. And not just that the particular track we're on sometimes surprises us, but there are times when I faintly sense that I'm traveling along ABOVE the tracks. In those blissful moments, it seems the "caboose" itself has leaped inside my "faith car"!

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  4. Thank you, LaGard, for your insightful response. Like all analogies, and as I had written, the "train analogy" of faith-fact-feeling has its limitations. However, your response provides a crisp, inviting, and graphic invitation to consider the process by which we develop emotionally and how faith and facts can interact with our emotions in negative or positive ways.

    I just ran across Charles Stanley's book, "Emotions: Confront the Lies. Conquer with Truth" which I want to read as a complement to Gordon T. Smith's "Voice of Jesus." Thanks for helping me think more about emotions in the Christian life.

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