Have
you ever heard God’s voice?
And,
if so, has that been an exceptional experience, or is it a familiar one?
God
is spirit, and so the way God speaks to us differs from a face-to-face
conversation with another human being, because human beings are animals we can
see, with vocal cords, and lips we can read.
But
the human animal is also spirit, for God has breathed God’s own spirit into the
human animal. This is what distinguishes us from every other animal, including
our hominid ancestors. (God gave them life, but gave us something more: I would
suggest, for the very purpose of conversation with a spiritual being.) And so
we don’t only communicate body to body — including, but by no means limited to
words — we also communicate spirit to spirit.
People
who have experienced a bereavement will often have conversations with the
person they have loved but no longer see. My own parents are still alive, but
we live at a physical distance; nonetheless, there are times when I hear my
mother’s voice, or my father’s voice. Distance and death come between the
physical, but the spirit is not bound by such constraints. Some might say that
is just the imagination or the subconscious; but I would suggest that the
imagination and the subconscious are to the spirit what vocal cords and body
language are to the flesh.
We
have other ways of communicating spirit to spirit. These include writing. I can
read words written down by someone who lived many centuries before me, and
their spirit speaks to mine.
God
speaks to us in many ways, including through our imagination and our
subconscious — that is, through visions and dreams, and a voice in our head
that is not our own conscious voice — and through things written down — whether
the Bible, which is so important to some (much as I love the Bible, I think it
is more a way we learn to recognise God’s voice speaking to others than a
primary way God speaks to us) or the writings left to the Church by those we
cal saints, or any other work written by a fellow human animal into whom God
had breathed the spirit.
God
also speaks to us through such other human animals who do stand in front of us,
whose vocal cords move air waves that hit our ear drums, whose lips we might
read.
The
best way to learn to hear God’s voice is to be present to the possibility that
God would want to speak with us at all. Whether what follows is constant chat
or long companionable silence might depend on your personality or season of
life or simply the overall length of the conversation.
But
to hear God’s voice is not at all unusual, not the preserve of the
exceptionally holy or the mentally ill.