
When accusers declared that the thoughts of Joan of Arc were figments of her imagination, she frequently answered them with this shrewd and sensible retort: âHow else would God speak to me?â
This is one of the BIG questions most of us have asked ourselves again and again: How does God speak to me?Â
And these big questions follow:
How will I know when it is God who is speaking?
Could this strong intuitive thought inside me be God speaking through my inner self?
Can God speak to me through other people?
How do I find God, hear God, feel God?
Richard Rohr, arguably one of the wisest thinkers of our time, wrote this in response to some of our big questions about God:
Intuitive truth, that inner whole-making instinct, just feels too much like our own thoughts and feelings, and most of us are not willing to call this âGod,â even when that voice prompts us toward compassion instead of hatred, forgiveness instead of resentment, generosity instead of stinginess, bigness instead of pettiness.
Rohr goes on to explain that mystics like Augustine, Teresa of Ăvila, Thomas Merton, Mechthild of Magdeburg, ThĂ©rĂšse of Lisieux, and so many others seem to equate the discovery of their own souls with the very discovery of God.
But to be honest, this post is more about me than it is about the people I admire as spiritual giants. This post is about me making hard life-altering decisions. I admit that making decisions frustrates me, especially at the most critical turning points in my life when I have felt most intensely the need for Godâs guidance in the decision. It was easy, as a younger minister, to be confident that whatever I was thinking was âGodâs will,â that God had complete control of my thoughts, decisions and actions, that every sermon I preached came âfrom Godâs own lips.â
The passing years brought doubts, questions and the determination to hear God ever more clearly. In the past few years, my most daunting decision was whether or not to have a kidney transplant. My thoughts fluctuated between deciding to leave well enough alone and live my remaining years on dialysis or taking a risk on transplant surgery that has the potential of either making me worse or making my life infinitely better. This has felt like a life or death decision, and I prayed many times, âGod, you have to tell me what to do this time. I donât trust my ability to make this decision.â
Which brings us back to the BIG question: How will I know when it is God who is speaking?
How will I know when âGod has spokenâ about this decision?Â
So let me go ahead and say this out loud in the vernacular of my Bible Belt inspired religious training . . . How will I know âGodâs will?â
Now itâs out there where I can really see it. I can theologically skirt around it, but the bottom line is about that errant teaching ingrained in me that if I try hard enough, I will know Godâs will about every important matter, and even about not-so-important matters, i.e., âWe both wore blue today. It must have been Godâs will.â And then thereâs the other faith statement declaring that one has (spiritually) reached some decision, a much better statement actually: âI have a peace about it.â
Running as fast as I could from such theological beliefs, I ran way past a simple, quiet faith in a God who wants only my best. I ran past the faith that once told me not to let my heart be troubled or afraid and that the grace-gift I had received was a Comforter who would be with me forever. I ran past the simple truth that I really can have peace about a decision. I ran past the promise of Jesus:
I will ask the Father, and he will give you another comforter . . . to be with you forever. You know him, for he lives with you and will be in you . . . You will realize that I am in my Father, and you are in me, and I am in you. Â (From John 14)
Iâm still not certain I have mastered all the questions on the matter of hearing God. And I definitely do not have all the answers. But relying on the promise of scripture is a start. And listening in on the experiences of holy people â people who seem to have a more direct line to God than I ever hope to have â is of immense value to me. The beautiful Carmelite saint, Teresa of Avila, is one of my go-to holy people. This is one of her thoughts that speaks to me powerfully in times of indecision and confusion, times when I doubt my ability to discern Godâs direction, times when I wonder if God even hears my prayers.
However quietly we speak, He is so near that He will hear us: we need no wings to go in search of Him but have only to find a place where we can be alone and look upon Him present within us. Â Â â St. Teresa of Avila
I need no wings to go in search of God. 
When I can sense God present within me, I can believe in my own decision about a transplant, and any other decision for that matter. But I know that it takes a lifetime, and a lot of life experience, to be able to trust in a spiritual â perhaps mystical â union with the mind of God. It takes a lifetime of relationship for most of us to trust our intentions and our purity of heart enough to believe that our thoughts are Godâs thoughts, that our decisions and actions are Godâs. But when that day comes, I have an idea that it will feel like a âpeace that passes understanding,â like a calm ability to quietly trust myself and trust God at the same time.Â
May Godâs Spirit make it so in me.
Amen






I was born and raised in the South and spent most of my life in the Bible Belt. In the Bible Belt, one can hear many sayings, expressions and idioms. One of the idioms I seemed to hear continually over the years was, âItâs the Gospel truth!â Always as an exclamation.
Yesterday was not my best day. All day long challenges got the best of me — health challenges, schedule challenges, even bad haircut challenges. My sister of the heart, Donna, said I was cranky. My husband, Fred, said I should chalk it up to Ash Wednesday. Martie, my dear Little Rock friend, said that yesterday was the first day of Mercury in retrograde and that I should do my
Itâs one of those Mondays again, those days that just weigh on you a bit too heavily. You have to push yourself to start a new week. You feel that deep-down tiredness that overcomes you and you donât even know why. Know the feeling?
I believe my friend who tells us that sunrises anoint our souls . . . like icons of Godâs presence.
I asked my husband a rather strange question last night. It was about my recent preaching at First Baptist Church of Christ in Macon. This was how I posed the question to him:
As I often do, I found today, in my lengthy list of unread emails, a plethora of pleas to do something. Save the bees. Save the libraries. Save the children. Save the political candidate . . . and several other things that someone wants to save. Â I care deeply about most of those things that need saving, like the libraries and the children and the bees. And I spend a fair amount of time worrying about them and praying for them to be saved.

So many people have been broken. I join them in their brokenness, for I, too, have been broken. Not just once, but again and again. So I know how it feels to look down in the dust at my feet and see the shards of a broken spirit. I know the emotional response I have when I sit on the ground examining the broken shards, and I know how I despair of the daunting
How do you see God? What images of God do you see? How do you find God? Where do you find God?
