As we’ve been discovering at MGPC through our examination of Hebrews, God speaks today, and we all know what He says to us by reading the Bible.
Nancy Guthrie explains why Christians are blessed to have all of God’s Word available to us, and why the notion of everyday personal revelation by God apart from the Bible is not as biblical as some would assume.

When someone begins a sentence with “God told me . . .” I have to admit a silent alarm goes off somewhere inside me—unless the phrase is followed by a verse of Scripture. I know that many see this as the way the Christian life is supposed to work—that if we are really in fellowship with God we will be able to sense him speaking to us through an inner voice. But I’m not so sure. And it’s not because I think God is incapable of or uninterested in speaking to his people today. In fact I resist this language precisely because God is speaking to his people today. He speaks to us through the Scriptures.
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But many of us want something more, something different. We read the Scriptures and witness God speaking to individuals in amazing ways throughout the history of redemption. Job heard God speaking from the whirlwind. Moses heard him calling from the fiery bush. Samuel heard him calling in the dark. David heard him speak through the prophet Nathan. Isaiah felt the burning coal and heard assurance that his guilt was taken away and sin atoned for. Saul and those traveling with him on the road to Damascus heard Jesus asking why Saul was persecuting him. Prophets and teachers at Antioch heard the Holy Spirit tell them to set apart Barnabas and to send out Saul. John felt the glorified Jesus touch him and heard his assurance that he didn’t have to be afraid.
Many of us read these accounts and assume that the Bible is presenting the normal experience of all who follow God. But is it? Graeme Goldsworthy speaks to this question in his book Gospel and Wisdom. He writes, “Every case of special guidance given to individuals in the Bible has to do with that person’s place in the outworking of God’s saving purposes.” He adds, “There are no instances in the Bible in which God gives special and specific guidance to the ordinary believing Israelite or Christian in the details of their personal existence.”

Read the rest of Why Do We Say ‘God Told Me’? at The Gospel Coalition.

One thought on “What Do We Mean When We Say ‘God Told Me’? (via Nancy Guthrie)

  1. Brian Johnson's avatar Brian Johnson says:

    God definitely speaks to us through Scripture and uses those who explain Scripture to us, but we see the evidence of God working in our lives when we look back over our lives with Scripture in mind and see just where and how God has led us.

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