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  <title>Discerning the Voice of the Holy Spirit</title>
  <description>  Have you ever felt confused when someone says, “God told me…” or “I’m just following the Spirit”? One moment it sounds spiritual, the next it feels emotional or even manipulative.&amp;amp;nbsp; Welcome back to Applied Christianity. This is Episode 13 in our 52-week journey to becoming true disciples of Christ.&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;   Last week we talked about the incredible promise of a new heart — not mere behavior modification, but real transformation from the inside out. But that raises a very practical question: If God gives us a new heart, how do we actually live it out day by day? How do we hear His voice and follow it without falling into vagueness, emotionalism, or self-deception?   Today we’re going to make this clear and practical.   There are three things people constantly mix up: Their own thoughts… Their conscience… And the actual voice of the Holy Spirit. If you don’t learn to distinguish between them, you’ll end up either ignoring God completely or following your own desires while calling it “God’s leading.” Both paths are dangerous.   God has given every person a conscience. Romans 2 tells us that even those who don’t have the written law still have a sense of right and wrong written on their hearts. Your conscience can warn you, accuse you, or affirm you. But it is not perfect. It can be misinformed by culture, hardened by repeated sin, or simply ignored. Conscience is a helpful signal — but it is not the final authority.   This is where the Holy Spirit comes in. Jesus said in John 16 that the Spirit convicts the world of sin, righteousness, and judgment. Conviction is different from guilt. Guilt pushes you away from God in shame. Conviction pulls you toward God in hope. True conviction is specific, clear, and personal. It doesn’t just say “You’re bad.” It says, “This attitude, this habit, this choice is wrong — turn from it and come back to truth.”   Many people expect the Holy Spirit to speak in dramatic, audible ways. But most of the time, He leads quietly through:&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp; The truth of Scripture--Gentle internal prompting--Alignment with what God has already revealed   This is not new revelation — it’s illumination of what God has already said. Jesus promised, “My sheep hear my voice… and they follow me” (John 10:27). The real question is not whether God speaks. The real question is: Are you listening… and are you willing to follow?   Here’s the uncomfortable truth: Most of us say we want to hear from God, but what we often want is confirmation of what we already desire — not actual direction. Because the moment God speaks clearly, you are faced with a decision: follow or resist.   C.S. Lewis captured this powerfully in Mere Christianity. He wrote: “Every time you make a choice you are turning the central part of you… into something a little different than it was before. And taking your life as a whole… you are slowly turning this central thing into a heavenly creature or a hellish creature.”   We think small decisions don’t matter — the movie we choose to watch, the music we fill our minds with, the friends we spend our time with, or the way we speak to our spouse when we’re tired. But every single one of those choices is quietly shaping who we are becoming.   You don’t learn to recognize God’s voice by sitting in theory. You learn it through obedience.&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp; Every time you respond to what you already know is right, your spiritual sensitivity increases. Every time you ignore or resist conviction, your heart grows a little harder.   This is why Scripture repeatedly warns us: “Do not harden your heart.” Your daily responses are training your heart — either toward greater sensitivity to the Spirit or away from Him.   This is not mystical — it’s intensely practical. And this is where the rubber meets the road. Every day the Holy Spirit is speaking, and every day you are answering with your choices.   Think about it: You sit down to watch a movie or TV show. You feel that quiet conviction — this content is filling your mind with impurity, violence, or cynicism that grieves the Spirit. Do you keep watching because “it’s just entertainment,” or do you turn it off and choose something better? You’re driving or working out and a song comes on — the lyrics are dripping with selfishness, lust, or rebellion against God. Do you let it play and let it shape your thoughts, or do you skip it and fill your mind with music that honors the Lord? You’re in Bible study with friends. Someone starts twisting Scripture to justify their lifestyle or gossiping under the guise of “prayer requests.” You feel the clear prompting of the Spirit: “This is not truth. Speak up or walk away.” Do you stay silent to keep the peace, or do you gently bring the conversation back to the Word of God?   These aren’t big dramatic moments. These are the small, everyday decisions that Lewis warned us about. Every choice is forming you — turning the central part of you into either a heavenly creature or a hellish one.   You feel conviction… you respond. You see truth in Scripture… you align your life with it. You sense quiet direction… you take a step of obedience.   Not perfectly. But consistently. That’s what it means to walk in the Spirit.   The earliest followers of Jesus weren’t first called Christians. They were called “The Way.” Because following Jesus is not a one-time decision. It’s a daily walk. God has given you a new heart. His Spirit is actively leading.   The question is not “Is He speaking?” The question is: Are you listening… and are you willing to follow?   John 10:1–5, 27  Read it twice.   What does Jesus say about His sheep and His voice?   How do they respond?     Romans 8:12–16  Pay attention to the phrase “led by the Spirit.”   What does it say about identity and direction?     Galatians 5:16–18, 25  What does it mean to “walk by the Spirit”?   What is the difference between walking and trying?     Hebrews 3:7–13  Focus on the warning.   What does it mean to harden your heart?   How does it happen over time?  &amp;amp;nbsp;   C. S. Lewis  Mere Christianity   Why this book: Lewis explains how small, daily decisions shape the direction of a person’s life. He shows that transformation is not sudden, but formed over time through repeated choices.   Dallas Willard  The Spirit of the Disciplines   Why this book: Willard connects spiritual formation to daily practice. He explains how obedience trains the heart and increases sensitivity to God’s leading.    Am I truly seeking direction from God… or just confirmation of what I already want?  Next week, we will go even deeper. Because as you begin to listen and respond to the Spirit, you will also face something else: Condemnation. And many people don’t know the difference between conviction and condemnation. So next week, we will walk through Romans 8 and understand what it really means to live free from condemnation…while still responding to the Spirit’s leading. &amp;amp;nbsp; </description>
  <author_name>Applied Christianity</author_name>
  <author_url>https://sites.libsyn.com/541162</author_url>
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