A person on the phone in the moment of recognizing a familiar voice.

Do You Know the Voice?

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You can recognize someone you love in a single syllable on the phone. Before they have said anything that means anything — before there are any words to weigh — you already recognize who it is. The same sentence, from two different people, can mean opposite things — the words identical, the tone and intent behind them entirely different. So whatever you were recognizing, it was never only the words.

We tend to think that hearing is the same as taking in the words. It isn’t. There is the voice — the tone, the intent, the spirit behind what is said — and there are the words, and they are not the same thing.

Scripture says so plainly.

My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me.— John 10:27 ESV

Not “my sheep memorize my words.” His voice.

The sheep follow him, for they know his voice. A stranger they will not follow, but they will flee from him, for they do not know the voice of strangers.— John 10:4-5 ESV

The stranger can call them with the very same word — come — and they will not move. Not because they weighed the word and found something wrong with it. Because they are listening to what is behind it, and they recognize the one who calls — this stranger is not him.

This is not new to the New Testament. It runs back through the entire Scriptures. When Elijah went looking for God, God was not in the loud and obvious things — not the wind, not the earthquake, not the fire — but in something else:

And after the earthquake a fire, but the LORD was not in the fire; and after the fire a still small voice.— 1 Kings 19:12 NKJV

The quiet thing behind the noise. It has always been there to be heard.

And it matters, because anyone can learn to say the right words. A stranger can have every one of them. The people who knew the words best are the very ones Scripture shows missing the voice altogether:

You search the Scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life; and it is they that bear witness about me, yet you refuse to come to me that you may have life.— John 5:39-40 ESV

Every word. The voice missed.

So the words alone were never going to be enough — and Scripture says as much:

The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God… and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned.— 1 Corinthians 2:14 ESV

Discerned. Not decoded. There is a faculty for it, and like any faculty, it grows with use:

Solid food is for the mature, for those who have their powers of discernment trained by constant practice to distinguish good from evil.— Hebrews 5:14 ESV

For much of my life I could only sense that something was there in these pages — long before I could have told you what it was. I have learned not to distrust that sense. It came with, but not in, the words.

You already know how to do this. You did it on the phone this morning. The only question the Bible keeps putting to us is whether we will do it here too — whether, behind the words we can read and weigh and argue over, we have begun to hear a voice.

Oh, taste and see that the LORD is good.— Psalm 34:8 ESV

When we read the scriptures with a mind tuned to hear the voice, not just the words, how does that affect us?

Do you recognize the voice?

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