Hearing Voices

“Hearing Voices” was the title of lesson 4 in the 1 Samuel study I am leading on Wednesday evenings at Deer Run.

Have you ever answered a phone call where the caller immediately launches into a full-speed conversation assuming you know who they are — and you don’t?  You listen intently for clues to the caller’s identity.  There’s a familiarity to it but you just can’t place it.  Your mind races through a mental checklist of the people you know.  The name . . . the name is on the tip of your tongue but it just won’t quite come out of your mouth.  And then it happens.  The pause.  The awkward silence just before the inevitable statement/question that you know is coming, “You don’t know who this is, do you?”.

“Wow!  I should have known.”  “How did I not know?”  “I’m so embarrassed.”  “How could I have not known?”

Granted, sometimes it is all about the phone connection and poor acoustics which make the person not really sound like themself . . . sometimes.  More often than not, we must admit that we were not as familiar with the person as we thought.  Regardless of the amount of time spent together, we’ve not really listened to them.  We’re not used to the sound of the voice.  The words spoken do not flow in a manner that we recognize.  The “voiceprint” is strange and unrecognizable to us.

While this can be mildly embarrassing and somewhat awkward when it takes place between friends, what about when we don’t recognize God’s voice?  This was the case with Samuel as he came to serve God as he lives with Eli the priest.  We read that “the word of the LORD was rare” in those days.  It is in that setting that God calls to Samuel with a message.  As God calls Samuel’s name, he does not recognize the voice and assumes that it must be Eli calling him.  It took three attempts before even Eli surmised that it must be God calling to Samuel so on the fourth call Samuel finally acknowledges God and listens to what He has to say.

Before we come down too hard on Samuel, what about us?  How often do we miss the message God is trying to speak into our life?  How often do we struggle with the questions of life and how God should be involved in each aspect of it?  We have the advantage of God’s Word and His Spirit to lead us and teach us about the very nature of God.  Yet still we wonder, we question, we even doubt if God has anything to say at all.  

We hear many voices in our life but struggle to recognize which belongs to God.  So many of them sound reasonable, but which one sounds most like God?  Which one really is God?  If we’re trying to figure it out with our own reasoning or intellect, we will likely fail every time.  The way we know isn’t that complicated.  We spend time with God.  We read His Word.  We listen to what He says to us through it.  We allow His Spirit to fill us and continually remind us of the nature of God revealed through His Word and the life of His Son, Jesus.  The more we know God, the easier it becomes to recognize His voice.  In John 10, Jesus calls himself the “good shepherd”.  He says that the sheep will follow the shepherd that they belong to, and that cares for them, because they recognize his voice.  It is time with the shepherd, and the shepherd with the sheep, that makes this recognition automatic and without question.

As you consider the direction of your life, are you hearing voices?  Are you spending deliberate time with God with the purpose of knowing Him?  I pray that you and I are “sheep” that hear His voice, recognizing and obeying it because it is a voice we are very familiar with.

1 Samuel: Lesson 4 — Hearing Voices

The following are discussion questions from a weekly study I am leading through the book of 1 Samuel.  We meet each Wednesday evening at the Deer Run Church of Christ.

 

Here Comes A King:
A Study of the Book of 1 Samuel

Lesson 4 (Hearing Voices)
1 Samuel 3:1-21

The Text:

  1. How does the Bible describe the frequency of God’s communication with His people?  Why do you think this was?
     
  2. Where was Samuel?  What was he doing?  Why was he there?
     
  3. Who did Samuel think was calling him?  Why do you think it took so long for Eli to realize who was really calling Samuel?  What instruction did Eli finally give Samuel about the voice?
     
  4. What message did God have for Samuel?  What was his reaction?  How did Eli respond to the message of God? 
     
  5. How is Samuel’s growing up years described?  Has the frequency of the Lord’s communication changed from the beginning of chapter 3 to the end of the chapter?  Why might that be?

The Application:

  1. Are there times in your life when it appears, or feels, like the Lord is silent?  What might be some reasons for that?
     
  2. When it comes to serving God, what has He called you to do to honor Him?   How easy/hard is it to stay in God’s presence when He seems silent?
     
  3. How do you distinguish between God’s voice and the voice of someone else?  Do you try harder to get people to listen to you or to God?
     
  4. Are there times that God still gives bad or negative messages?  How do you react to news that is not positive?
     
  5. What changes can you make that would increase your connection with God?  What importance is there to you about the way the Lord revealed Himself to Samuel? 

 

Next week: 1 Samuel 4:1-22
What Is In Your Box?