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Monday, May 4, 2026

Does God Exist—And How Can We Know

When we ask, “Does God exist—and how can we know?” we’re asking the most foundational question of life. If we are not settled on God, everything else becomes unstable: meaning, morality, purpose, suffering, and even hope. 

 

From a biblical perspective, God’s existence is not presented as a theory but as the starting point of reality: “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth” (Gen 1:1). God is not dependent on the universe; the universe is dependent on God. That is why God identifies Himself as the self-existent One—“I AM WHO I AM” (Exod 3:14). In other words, God does not “become.” God simply is

 

1) We can know God exists through creation’s witness 

Scripture says creation speaks, even when words are not spoken. The heavens declare God’s glory and workmanship (Ps 19:1–4). Paul goes further: God’s invisible attributes, His eternal power and divine nature, are clearly seen through what has been made, leaving humanity “without excuse” (Rom 1:19–20). So when we look at ordered reality, life, design, time, conscience, and the fact that anything exists at all, Scripture says we are not looking at a closed system. We are looking at a creation that points beyond itself.

 

2) We can know God exists through conscience and moral awareness 

Even apart from having the written law, people still demonstrate the “work of the law written in their hearts,” with conscience bearing witness (Rom 2:14–15). We may argue about morals, but we all live like some things are truly right and truly wrong. That moral “ought” inside us isn’t merely social conditioning in the biblical worldview; it’s part of how God has made us. It’s another witness that we are not accidents and that we are accountable beings. 

 

3) We can know God exists because He is near and calls us to seek Him 

The Bible doesn’t portray God as distant in the sense of being unreachable. Acts says God determines our times and boundaries “so that” we would seek Him, because He is not far from any of us; “in Him we live and move and have our being” (Acts 17:24–28). And God promises that when we seek Him with our whole heart, we will find Him (Jer 29:13). That means Scripture treats the search for God as meaningful, not as wishful thinking, because God is real and personally knowable. 

 

4) We ultimately know God most clearly through Jesus Christ 

Creation and conscience can point us toward God, but they do not bring us into the clearest knowledge of who God is. The Bible says no one has seen God at any time, but the Son has made Him known (John 1:18). Jesus doesn’t present Himself as one teacher among many; He says He is “the way, the truth, and the life,” and that no one comes to the Father except through Him (John 14:6–9). So Christianity is not merely “belief in a God.” It is faith in the God who has revealed Himself, and that revelation centers on Christ (John 17:3). 

 

5) Why does this still take faith 

The Bible does not pit faith against evidence. It tells us evidence exists, but it also tells us that knowing God is more than winning an argument. “Without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him” (Heb 11:6). Faith isn’t pretending; faith is trusting what God has made known through creation, through Scripture, and supremely through Christ. 

 

So yes, God exists, and Scripture says we can know it through the witness of creation (Ps 19:1–4; Rom 1:19–20), the testimony of conscience (Rom 2:14–15), God’s nearness and providence over our lives (Acts 17:24–28), and the clearest revelation of God is in Jesus Christ (John 1:18; John 14:6–9). And as we keep seeking, our faith grows as we hear God’s Word (Rom 10:17), until what began as a question becomes a lived relationship with the living God (John 17:3). 

Sunday, May 3, 2026

How Can I Better Hear God’s Voice?

When someone asks me how they can better hear God’s voice, I do not begin with technique. I begin with God Himself. We hear God rightly only when we know who He is, trust that He is there, believe that He is good, and submit ourselves to the Word He has already spoken. Scripture teaches that God is real, knowable, and not far from us. The heavens declare His glory, creation bears witness to His power, and in Him we live and move and have our being (Psalm 19:1; Romans 1:20; Acts 17:24–28). He is not silent by nature. He is the living God who has revealed Himself. 

That matters because many of us want guidance without surrender, comfort without repentance, and direction without relationship. But hearing God’s voice is not mainly about getting private messages for every decision. It is first about being reconciled to God through Jesus Christ and learning to walk with Him in humility. Jesus said, “My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me” (John 10:27). Notice the order. He knows His sheep, His sheep hear Him, and they follow Him. Hearing is tied to a relationship, and a relationship is tied to following. 

So if I want to hear God better, I need to ask a deeper question first: am I truly willing to listen to what He says? Sometimes we say we want guidance, but what we really want is confirmation of our own plans. Proverbs 3:5–6 tells us to trust in the Lord with all our heart and not lean on our own understanding. That means hearing God’s voice begins with laying down my demand to stay in control. It begins with a heart that can say, like Samuel, “Speak, Lord, for Your servant hears” (1 Samuel 3:9–10). 

God speaks primarily and authoritatively through Scripture. That must remain central. His Word is truth (John 17:17). It is living and powerful, discerning the thoughts and intents of the heart (Hebrews 4:12). It is a lamp to our feet and a light to our path (Psalm 119:105). So when I say I want to hear God’s voice, I should not first look for an impression, a sign, or a dramatic inner feeling. I should open the Bible with prayer, humility, and expectancy. The Spirit of God does guide us, but He never guides us contrary to the written Word He inspired (John 16:13; 2 Timothy 3:16–17). 

That is important because not every voice we hear inwardly is from God. Our feelings can mislead us. Our fears can speak loudly. Our desires can disguise themselves as spiritual impressions. Other people can influence us in unhealthy ways. That is why Scripture tells us to test what we hear (1 John 4:1). If what I believe I am hearing contradicts the character of God, the teaching of Scripture, the holiness of Christ, or the fruit of the Spirit, then I should not treat it as the voice of God. God’s leading will never require me to disobey His Word in order to fulfill His will. 

Hearing God also requires stillness. Psalm 46:10 says, “Be still, and know that I am God.” We live in a noisy world, and many of us carry a noisy heart. We rush. We scroll. We react. We stay mentally crowded. Then we wonder why we are not discerning God clearly. But hearing often grows in quiet submission. That does not mean every believer needs a mystical experience. It means we must learn to slow down enough to pray, read, meditate, confess, and wait before the Lord. Elijah learned that the Lord’s voice was not in the wind, earthquake, or fire, but in a still small voice (1 Kings 19:11–13). God is fully capable of getting our attention, but we should not assume that the loudest internal impression is the clearest word from Him. 

Prayer is another part of hearing. James says that if any of us lacks wisdom, we should ask God, who gives liberally and without reproach (James 1:5). Prayer is not forcing God to answer on our terms. It is bringing our need to Him honestly and waiting on Him in faith. Sometimes I need to stop asking only, “Lord, what do You want me to do next?” and also ask, “Lord, what are You showing me about my heart? What sin do I need to confess? What fear do I need to surrender? What truth have I been resisting?” Often, the problem is not that God has not spoken, but that I have not wanted to hear what He has already said. 

That brings us to surrender. We often hear God more clearly when we let go of what competes with Him. Jesus calls us to deny ourselves, take up our cross, and follow Him (Matthew 16:24). Hebrews 12:1 tells us to lay aside every weight and the sin which so easily ensnares us. Sometimes what God wants us to let go of is obvious sin. Sometimes it is bitterness, pride, self-reliance, worldly attachment, control, or anxiety. If I am clinging tightly to something God is exposing, my hearing will be clouded. Sin does not silence God, but it can harden me against what He is saying. 

This is where suffering and chaos enter the picture as well. Many people ask how to hear God because life feels confusing, painful, or unstable. They are not asking from a calm place. They are asking from the storm. Scripture does not pretend that suffering is small. It teaches that we live in a fallen world where sin, pain, and death are real. Yet God remains good, sovereign, and near. He is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble (Psalm 46:1). He is near to the brokenhearted (Psalm 34:18). He can work all things together for good to those who love Him and are called according to His purpose (Romans 8:28). Sometimes hearing God in suffering does not mean getting an explanation. It means receiving His presence, His promises, and His strength to endure.

We also hear God more clearly when our identity is settled in Christ. If I am looking to my performance, emotions, past failures, or other people’s opinions to tell me who I am, my soul will be unstable. But Scripture says I was made in the image of God, and in Christ I can become a new creation (Genesis 1:26–27; 2 Corinthians 5:17). Those who belong to Christ are adopted as children of God (Romans 8:14–17). That matters because the voice of condemnation, shame, and despair is not the same as the voice of the Shepherd. God convicts His children, but He does not crush them with hopelessness. He leads us in truth, repentance, cleansing, and grace. 

Purpose matters too. Many of us want to hear God’s voice because we are asking, “Why am I here?” Scripture answers that clearly. We are here to glorify God, love Him, love others, and walk in the good works He has prepared for us (Matthew 22:37–40; Ephesians 2:10; 1 Corinthians 10:31). That means I do not need to wait for a mystical sign before obeying what God has already made plain. If I am loving truth, pursuing holiness, serving faithfully, and honoring Christ in ordinary life, I am already walking in much of what God has called me to do. Often, guidance becomes clearer when we obey, not when we stand still, demanding certainty. 

Wise counsel matters as well. God does not intend for us to discern everything in isolation. Proverbs speaks of safety in a multitude of counselors. Acts 17:11 commends those who searched the Scriptures daily to test what they heard. Mature believers, faithful pastors, biblical counselors, and spiritually grounded friends can help us distinguish between God’s truth and our own impulses. That is not replacing the Lord’s voice with human voices. It is one way the Lord helps keep us grounded in truth. 

So how can I better hear God’s voice? I would answer this way: draw near to God through Christ, open His Word consistently, pray for wisdom, be still before Him, test everything by Scripture, seek wise counsel, and surrender whatever He is exposing. Hearing God is not about becoming more spiritual. It is about becoming more yielding. It is about learning to recognize the voice of the Shepherd in the place where He has already chosen to speak most clearly: His Word, illuminated by His Spirit, received by a humble and obedient heart. 

And I would add this personally: if you feel weak, confused, anxious, or spiritually dull, do not despair. Come to Christ. Jesus says, “Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest” (Matthew 11:28–30). Sometimes the first clear word we need from God is not a detailed answer about tomorrow. It is His invitation today: come to Me, trust Me, follow Me, and stay near to Me. As we do that, we learn over time that the God who saved us is not silent. He is faithful to lead us, His people. 

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Is The Past Important In Married Life, Especially As It Pertains To Transparency And Honesty During Pre-Marital Counseling, And Beyond?

Is The Past Important In Married Life? Yes—the past is important in married life, but how we handle it determines whether it strengthens our marriage or destabilizes it. Our past matters not because it must define our future, but because understanding it helps us build intentionally instead of repeating patterns unconsciously. 

In marriage, we are becoming “one flesh” (Gen 2:24–25). That kind of unity requires honesty, not secrecy. Scripture repeatedly calls us away from deception and toward truthfulness because lies corrode trust, while truth builds it (Eph 4:25; Col 3:9–10; Prov 12:22; Prov 11:3). When we cover our sin, we do not prosper; when we confess and forsake our sin, we find mercy (Prov 28:13). And when we keep silent, the inside of us does not heal; Psalm 32 shows that silence can intensify the burden, while confession opens the door to cleansing and relief (Ps 32:1–5; 1 John 1:9). In other words: the past matters because our unaddressed past issues tend to leak into our present life. 

That is why the past is especially important in premarital counseling and early marriage conversations. Some parts of our history directly affect our spouse and our future together; those areas can be our sexual history, substance use, abuse, both physical and sexual, repeated patterns of deception, financial chaos, and unresolved trauma. These issues often signal present vulnerabilities. If we hide them, we are not “protecting” our marriage; we are planting landmines inside it. A healthy marriage cannot be built on selective truth. 

At the same time, transparency does not mean we must give exhaustive detail about everything we have ever done. The goal is honest clarity, not graphic disclosure. We can share the truth in a way that is faithful and wise enough for our spouse to understand the reality, the risks, the triggers, and the growth God is doing in us, without forcing our spouse to carry unnecessary images or burdens. Truth spoken in love protects our unity; oversharing can sometimes injure it. We are aiming for honesty that builds trust. 

The past also matters because each of us brings family background into marriage. Many of us become so used to patterns of anger, depression, insecurity, avoidance, and people-pleasing that we stop noticing them. But a spouse entering our world will notice immediately what has become “normal” to us. That can create friction. Yet if we remain committed, patient, and humble, the past becomes a tool for understanding rather than a weapon for blame (1 Pet 3:7; 1 Cor 13:4–7). 

And here is the most important balance: in Christ, we are not trapped by the past. God makes people new (2 Cor 5:17). There is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus (Rom 8:1). God removes our transgressions “as far as the east is from the west” (Ps 103:12). Scripture even speaks of a “forgetting” that is not denial but direction, pressing forward in Christ rather than living in shame (Phil 3:13–14). God can do a new thing and reshape what our old life tried to define (Isa 43:18–19). 

So yes, the past is important, but it is important in two ways at once: First, we face it with truth so it cannot sabotage our marriage (Eph 4:25; James 5:16). Second, we place it under grace so it cannot rule our identity or our future (2 Cor 5:17; Rom 8:1). When we do that, our past becomes redemptive. Instead of repeating it unconsciously, we learn from it. Instead of hiding it, we confess what must be confessed and heal what must be healed. Instead of weaponizing it, we cover one another with love and build trust through integrity (1 Pet 4:8; Prov 17:9). And over time, our shared history of enduring and growing together becomes part of what strengthens our marriage. 

Does God Exist—And How Can We Know