đ Reading 9.1: The Bible, the Holy Spirit, and Wise Testing
đ Reading 9.1: The Bible, the Holy Spirit, and Wise Testing
Course: Introduction to Spiritual Growth
Topic 9: Spiritual Discernment II â Scripture, the Holy Spirit, and Redemptive Wisdom
Reading Focus: Learning how Scripture, the Holy Spirit, prayer, wise counsel, and testing guide Christian discernment
Connection: This reading develops Topic 9âs focus on redemptive discernment after Topic 8âs focus on creational discernment and the 15 aspects of life.
Introduction: Discernment Needs Redemption
In Topic 8, we studied creational discernment.
Creational discernment helps us see the whole person and the whole situation. It helps us notice physical, emotional, relational, vocational, economic, moral, and faith-related realities.
But spiritual discernment needs more than careful observation.
We also need redemptive discernment.
Redemptive discernment asks:
What has God revealed?
What does Scripture teach?
How is the Holy Spirit leading?
What needs repentance, healing, wisdom, courage, patience, or obedience?
How does this situation fit within the gospel of Jesus Christ?
Creational discernment helps us see Godâs created world.
Redemptive discernment helps us walk with the God who saves, speaks, corrects, comforts, and restores.
Both matter.
Without creational discernment, we may become shallow and ignore the whole person.
Without redemptive discernment, we may become merely practical and forget that every person stands before God.
1. The Bible Is the Foundation for Discernment
Christian discernment begins with Godâs Word.
The Bible is not one voice among many equal voices. Scripture is the primary written authority for faith, obedience, wisdom, correction, hope, and spiritual formation.
Psalm 119 says:
Your word is a lamp to my feet,
and a light for my path.
â Psalm 119:105, WEB
This verse is important.
A lamp does not always show the entire road. It gives enough light for the next faithful step.
Many Christians want God to show the whole future at once.
Which career?
Which ministry?
Which relationship?
Which location?
Which calling?
Which opportunity?
Which decision?
Sometimes God gives unusual clarity. But often, he gives enough light to walk faithfully today.
Scripture teaches us who God is, who we are, what sin does, what Christ has done, how the Spirit forms us, how love acts, how wisdom speaks, and how Godâs people walk.
When a person says, âI feel led,â the first question is not, âHow strong is the feeling?â
The first question is:
Is this consistent with Scripture?
God will not lead someone to violate his Word.
The Holy Spirit will not guide a person into rebellion against the character of Christ.
2. The Holy Spirit Leads Godâs People
The Bible is your infallible authority. Christian discernment is not merely reading information.
The Holy Spirit makes Godâs Word living and active in us.
The Spirit convicts.
The Spirit comforts.
The Spirit reminds.
The Spirit teaches.
The Spirit produces fruit.
The Spirit gives courage.
The Spirit helps us pray.
The Spirit points us to Christ.
Jesus told his disciples:
However when he, the Spirit of truth, has come, he will guide you into all truth, for he will not speak from himself; but whatever he hears, he will speak. He will declare to you things that are coming.
â John 16:13, WEB
The Holy Spirit is called the Spirit of truth.
That matters.
The Spirit does not lead through deception, manipulation, pride, cruelty, lust, selfish ambition, or confusion that contradicts Godâs Word.
The Spirit leads in ways that align with the truth of Christ.
This does not mean discernment is always easy. Sometimes we are confused. Sometimes our motives are mixed. Sometimes fear speaks loudly. Sometimes desire sounds spiritual. Sometimes grief, exhaustion, or shame distorts what we hear.
That is why the Spiritâs leading must be tested wisely.
3. Wise Testing Is Faithful, Not Faithless
Some people think testing an impression means lacking faith.
But Scripture commands testing.
John writes:
Beloved, donât believe every spirit, but test the spirits, whether they are of God, because many false prophets have gone out into the world.
â 1 John 4:1, WEB
Paul also writes:
Test all things, and hold firmly that which is good.
â 1 Thessalonians 5:21, WEB
Testing is not unbelief.
Testing is obedience.
A person who refuses to test may not be spiritually bold. They may simply be careless.
Wise testing protects the soul.
It protects relationships.
It protects ministry.
It protects the church.
It protects the witness of the gospel.
Testing matters because not every strong feeling comes from God. Not every open door is Godâs approval. Not every burden is a calling. Not every dream is revelation. Not every urgent thought is wisdom. Not every opportunity is obedience.
A mature believer learns to say:
Lord, I bring this before you. Search me. Correct me. Confirm what is from you. Remove what is from fear, pride, impulse, or confusion.
4. Test by Scripture
The first test is Scripture.
Ask:
Does this agree with Godâs Word?
Does this honor the character of Christ?
Does this align with biblical holiness, love, truth, justice, mercy, and wisdom?
Would this require me to sin?
Would this lead me to violate a clear command of God?
For example, a person may say, âGod told me to begin a romantic relationship with someone who is married.â
That is not Godâs voice.
A person may say, âGod told me I do not need to forgive.â
That is not Godâs voice, though forgiveness may require time, truth, safety, and wise care.
A person may say, âGod told me to lie so I can protect my ministry.â
That is not Godâs voice.
A person may say, âGod told me to humiliate that person publicly.â
That should be tested carefully against the way of Christ, the fruit of the Spirit, and biblical teaching on correction.
God may lead us into difficult obedience, but he does not lead us into sin.
Scripture guards discernment.
5. Test by the Fruit of the Spirit
Topic 7 taught the fruit of the Spirit:
Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.
These fruit help test discernment.
Ask:
Does this impression grow love or selfishness?
Does it grow peace or anxious control?
Does it grow patience or impulsive pressure?
Does it grow kindness or cruelty?
Does it grow goodness or compromise?
Does it grow faithfulness or irresponsibility?
Does it grow gentleness or domination?
Does it grow self-control or indulgence?
This test is especially important when someone uses spiritual language to justify immature behavior.
A person may say, âGod told me to confront them,â but the tone is harsh, impatient, and proud.
A person may say, âGod gave me peace,â but what they call peace may actually be avoidance.
A person may say, âGod told me to move quickly,â but what is really driving them may be anxiety.
A person may say, âGod gave me freedom,â but what they call freedom may be lack of self-control.
The fruit of the Spirit helps us examine not only the decision but the spirit in which the decision is being carried.
6. Test by Humility
True discernment produces humility.
A person who is truly listening to God should be willing to be corrected by God.
Humility asks:
Could I be wrong?
Am I open to correction?
Am I willing to slow down?
Am I willing to listen to Scripture, counsel, and the Spirit?
Am I using âGod told meâ to avoid accountability?
This matters deeply in ministry.
Spiritual language can become a shield against correction.
Someone says:
âGod told me.â
Then no one is allowed to question them.
But that is dangerous.
A humble believer can say:
âI sense this may be from the Lord, but I am testing it.â
That sentence is often healthier than:
âGod told me, and no one can challenge it.â
Humility does not mean weakness. It means surrender before God.
7. Test by Wise Counsel
God often uses other believers to help us discern.
Proverbs says:
Where there is no wise guidance, the nation falls,
but in the multitude of counselors there is victory.
â Proverbs 11:14, WEB
Wise counsel does not mean asking everyone.
It means seeking mature, prayerful, Scripture-shaped people who know Godâs Word, demonstrate spiritual fruit, and care about truth more than flattery.
Good counsel may come from:
A pastor.
A mentor.
A mature Christian friend.
A spouse.
A ministry leader.
A small group leader.
A chaplain.
A Christian coach.
A trusted elder.
A qualified counselor when needed.
Wise counsel is especially important when emotions are strong.
When someone is angry, lonely, infatuated, afraid, ashamed, grieving, or ambitious, they may not see clearly.
A wise counselor can ask:
What does Scripture say?
What fruit is visible?
What are you avoiding?
What are you rushing?
What responsibility already belongs to you?
What would love require here?
Counsel does not replace personal obedience. But it helps us discern with humility.
8. Test by Timing
Timing is part of wisdom.
Some decisions may be right but not yet.
Some opportunities may be good but not assigned to you.
Some convictions need immediate obedience.
Some impressions need waiting.
Some conflicts need a cooling-off period before conversation.
Some ministry callings need formation before launch.
Some relationships need time for fruit to become visible.
Testing by timing asks:
Is this urgent because God is leading, or because anxiety is driving me?
Am I rushing because I want relief?
Am I delaying because I fear obedience?
What would patient faithfulness look like?
Is there a next small step instead of a dramatic leap?
Timing requires both patience and courage.
Waiting is not always fear.
Acting is not always faith.
Discernment asks which one is faithful before God.
9. Test by Responsibility
A common mistake in discernment is chasing a new âcallingâ while avoiding a current responsibility.
A person may say, âGod is calling me to a public ministry,â but they are neglecting their family.
A person may say, âGod is calling me to leadership,â but they refuse to serve faithfully in small roles.
A person may say, âGod is calling me to confront others,â but they are avoiding their own repentance.
A person may say, âGod is calling me to move on,â but they have not done the hard work of reconciliation, accountability, or truthful conversation.
God may indeed call people into new seasons. But discernment must ask:
What responsibility has God already placed before me?
What obedience is already clear?
Am I using a future calling to avoid present faithfulness?
Am I seeking a title before serving?
Am I asking God for guidance while ignoring what he has already revealed?
Faithfulness in small things often prepares the soul for larger responsibilities.
10. Test by Peace, But Understand Peace Wisely
Christians often say, âI have peace about it.â
Peace matters. The Holy Spirit can give peace.
But peace must be understood wisely.
Sometimes peace means God is confirming a step.
Sometimes what we call peace is actually relief because we avoided something hard.
Sometimes anxiety remains because obedience is difficult, not because the decision is wrong.
Jesus obeyed the Father perfectly, yet he experienced deep anguish in Gethsemane.
So peace is important, but peace is not the only test.
Ask:
Is this peace consistent with Scripture?
Is this peace joined with humility?
Is this peace producing the fruit of the Spirit?
Is this peace confirmed by wise counsel?
Is this peace leading toward faithful responsibility?
Biblical peace is not shallow comfort. It is settled trust under God.
11. Redemptive Discernment and the Organic Human
From an Organic Human perspective, discernment involves the whole embodied soul.
We do not discern only with the mind.
We discern with our whole life before God.
Our bodies may reveal exhaustion.
Our emotions may reveal fear or grief.
Our thoughts may reveal false beliefs.
Our habits may reveal formation.
Our relationships may reveal fruit or immaturity.
Our desires may reveal longing or disorder.
Our worship may reveal what we trust most.
This is why redemptive discernment must include Scripture and the Holy Spirit.
We need more than self-awareness.
We need redemption.
We need Christ to restore what sin has disordered.
We need the Spirit to form what human effort cannot manufacture.
We need Scripture to correct what our feelings cannot see clearly.
We need the body of Christ to help us walk in truth.
12. A Simple Discernment Practice
When you are discerning a decision, impression, calling, or next step, use these questions.
Scripture
What does Scripture clearly teach about this?
Does this violate Godâs Word?
Does this honor Christ?
Spirit
What fruit is being produced?
Do I sense conviction, comfort, caution, or courage from the Holy Spirit?
Am I willing to be corrected?
Prayer
Have I prayed honestly?
Have I asked God to search my motives?
Have I surrendered the outcome?
Wisdom
What do mature believers say?
Have I listened to counsel?
Have I considered timing and responsibility?
Whole-Person Awareness
What is happening in my body, emotions, relationships, habits, and responsibilities?
Am I exhausted, afraid, pressured, ashamed, or impulsive?
Next Faithful Step
What is clear now?
What can wait?
What should be tested further?
What obedience is already known?
13. Ministry Application
For Christian Leaders Institute students, Christian Leaders Alliance candidates, ministers, chaplains, coaches, officiants, Soul Center leaders, and mentors, this topic matters deeply.
People will come to you with spiritual language.
They may say:
âGod told me.â
âI feel led.â
âI have peace.â
âThe Spirit is moving me.â
âI know this is my calling.â
Do not mock spiritual language. God really does guide his people.
But do not accept every claim without wisdom.
A spiritual leader can respond warmly:
âLetâs test this together.â
âWhat does Scripture say?â
âWhat fruit do you see?â
âWho has helped you discern this?â
âWhat responsibility is already clear?â
âIs there a next faithful step?â
This keeps discernment from becoming either cynical or gullible.
We want to be open to the Spirit and anchored in Scripture.
We want to honor calling and test motives.
We want to encourage courage and preserve humility.
Common Misunderstandings
Misunderstanding 1: Testing means I lack faith.
Testing is not unbelief. Scripture commands testing.
Misunderstanding 2: A strong feeling must be God.
Strong feelings may matter, but they are not final authority.
Misunderstanding 3: Peace is the only test.
Peace matters, but it must be tested with Scripture, fruit, humility, counsel, timing, and responsibility.
Misunderstanding 4: Wise counsel means asking people who already agree with me.
Wise counsel may challenge you. Flattery is not discernment.
Misunderstanding 5: The Holy Spirit leads apart from Scripture.
The Spirit of truth does not contradict the Word of God.
Misunderstanding 6: Discernment means knowing the entire future.
Often discernment means seeing the next faithful step.
Reflection Questions
Where do you most need discernment right now?
What does Scripture clearly say about this area?
What fruit of the Spirit is being produced by your current direction?
Are you willing to be corrected?
Have you sought wise counsel from mature believers?
Are you rushing because of anxiety or delaying because of fear?
What responsibility has God already made clear?
What is the next faithful step?
Practice Prompt
Choose one decision, impression, calling, or concern you are discerning.
Do not write details that should remain confidential.
Complete the following:
The situation I am discerning is:
What Scripture may speak to this?
What fruit is being produced?
What motives need to be searched?
What wise counsel should I seek?
What timing questions should I ask?
What responsibility is already clear?
What is one next faithful step?
Closing Prayer
Holy Spirit, guide me into truth.
Open my heart to Scripture.
Correct what is false.
Confirm what is from you.
Remove what is driven by fear, pride, impulse, selfish desire, or confusion.
Grow the fruit of the Spirit in me.
Make me humble enough to be corrected.
Make me courageous enough to obey.
Surround me with wise counsel.
Teach me to test faithfully.
Show me the next faithful step.
Let my discernment honor Jesus Christ in my whole embodied soul, my relationships, my calling, and my witness.
Amen.