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We are surrounded by many voices. There’s rarely a
moment within our waking lives that someone or something
isn’t calling out to us and, even in our sleep,
dreams and nightmares ask for our attention. And each
voice has its own particular cadence and message. Some
voices invite us in, promising us life if we do this or
that or buy a certain product or idea; others threaten us.
Some voices beckon us towards hated, bitterness, and
anger, while others challenge is towards love,
graciousness, and forgiveness. Some voices tell us that
they are playful and humorous, not to be taken seriously,
even as others trumpet that they are urgent and weighty,
the voice of non-negotiable truth, God’s voice.
Within all of these: Which is the voice of God? How do we
recognize God’s voice among and within all of these
voices?
That’s not easy to answer. God, as the scriptures
tell us, is the author of everything that’s good,
whether it bears a religious label or not. Hence,
God’s voice is inside of many things that are not
explicitly connected to faith and religion, just as
God’s voice is also not in everything that
masquerades as religious. But how do we discern that?
Jesus leaves us a wonderful metaphor to work with, but
it’s precisely only a metaphor: He tells us that he
is the “Good Shepherd” and that his sheep will
recognize his voice among all other voices. In sharing
this metaphor, he is drawing upon a practice that was
common among shepherds at the time: At night, for
protection and companionship, shepherds would put their
flocks together into a common enclosure. They would then
separate the sheep in the morning by using their voices.
Each shepherd had trained his sheep to be attuned to his
voice and his voice only. The shepherd would walk away
from the enclosure calling his sheep, often times by their
individual names, and they would follow him. His sheep
were so attuned to his voice that they would not follow
the voice of another shepherd, even if that shepherd tried
to trick them (shepherds often did this to try to steal
someone else’s sheep) by imitating the voice of
their own shepherd. Like a baby who, at a point, will no
longer be cuddled by the voice of a babysitter, but wants
and needs the voice of the mother, each sheep recognized
intimately the voice that was safeguarding them and would
not follow another voice.
So too with us: among all the voices that surround and
beckon us, how do we discern the unique cadence of
God’s voice? Which is the voice of the Good
Shepherd?
There’s no easy answer and sometimes the best we can
do is to trust our gut-feeling about right and wrong. But
we have a number of principles that come to us from Jesus,
from scripture, and from the deep wells of our Christian
tradition that can help us.
What follows is a series of principles to help us discern
God’s voice among the multitude of voices that
beckon us. What is the unique cadence of the voice of the
Good Shepherd?
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The voice of God is recognized both in whispers and in
soft tones, even as it is recognized in thunder and in
storm.
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The voice of God is recognized wherever one sees life,
joy, health, color, and humor, even as it is recognized
wherever one sees dying, suffering, conscriptive
poverty, and a beaten-down spirit.
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The voice of God is recognized in what calls us to
what’s higher, sets us apart, and invites us to
holiness, even as it is recognized in what calls us to
humility, submergence into humanity, and in that which
refuses to denigrate our humanity.
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The voice of God is recognized in what appears in our
lives as “foreign,” as other, as
“stranger,” even as it is recognized in the
voice that beckons us home.
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The voice of God is the one that most challenges and
stretches us, even as it the only voice that ultimately
soothes and comforts us.
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The voice of God enters our lives as the greatest of all
powers, even as it forever lies in vulnerability, like a
helpless baby in the straw.
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The voice of God is always heard in privileged way in
the poor, even as it beckons us through the voice of the
artist and the intellectual.
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The voice of God always invites us to live beyond all
fear, even as it inspires holy fear.
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The voice of is heard inside the gifts of the Holy
Spirit, even as it invites us never to deny the
complexities of our world and our own lives.
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The voice of God is always heard wherever there is
genuine enjoyment and gratitude, even as it asks us to
deny ourselves, die to ourselves, and freely relativize
all the things of this world.
The voice of God, it would seem, is forever found in
paradox.
Ron Rolheiser
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