HomeIgnatian PrayerHow Do I Know It’s God?

How Do I Know It’s God?

Bible, glasses, and notebook - photo by Tara Winstead on Pexels

As a spiritual director I often hear, “How do I know it’s God?” Like amateur sleuths, we search for clues, and soon it’s clear that God communicates to people in myriad ways.

Tears are a clear sign for one directee that God is behind a certain awareness. Another person notices a deep desire to be like that holy friend who is kindness personified. In a split-second some people get detailed pictures in their heads. It’s marvelous to watch people discover amazing gems from God.

“I cannot visualize God,” another directee says as if that’s a personal failure, “but I sense a hand on my shoulder.” I ask if this hand could be God communicating peace. Yes, we discern, this seeker could feel God.

It takes courage and a trusted listener to discuss messages from God. People discount or dismiss clues such as bodily perceptions. “Could God really be reaching me using my body?”

I listened to another person describe life so overwhelming that she felt helpless:

When I finally surrendered and prayed, “OK, God, here it is. Everything. That’s all I’ve got,” something physical happened. A pressure lifted off my body. It was the same feeling I had decades earlier when I prayed, admitting my powerlessness, and I felt a weight lift from my chest. I was able to forgive a deep, long-held hurt.

This retreatant had “heard” from God via physical sensation.

God also uses disturbing awarenesses that feel like a fire alarm going off in my stomach. I’ve had a nauseous feeling when considering a choice that isn’t wise. I remember taking a job despite that warning. It ended poorly. But how could I know the warning was from God?

One helpful tool when I’m unsure is Scripture. For example, I measure emotions against my recollection of Jeremiah 29:11, which teaches me that God has great plans for me. God wants to give me (and all of us) a hope-filled future. That’s God’s will for us. An icky feeling could be a clue to spend more time in prayer to discern whether something is from God or elsewhere. What other emotions are surfacing? Has some image or idea surprisingly surfaced?

Increases in hope, faith, or peace—despite adversity—indicate a right path. Just because God is leading doesn’t mean the road will be trouble-free.

Habakkuk 2:2–3 also gives me direction while bolstering my faith. It talks about a vision God is giving me for a future time, a vision that I should write down to help me remember it. This journaling helps me focus my antenna for hearing God. Although God’s vision may seem slow in coming, God urges me to wait, because the vision will surely will come to pass.

Habakkuk writes as if God is speaking: “Trust me, even if this vision delays. Keep waiting; it will happen!” I experience God working in small increments, lifting the fog a few steps at a time. And God is unpredictable.

How do I know something is from God? It may take time to figure it out. Retrospection may be the only way to be sure.

If I hear nothing from God, I must rely on my God-given powers of reason to choose. God can surely intervene if necessary. Once when I chose poorly, a person interrupted my actions. In retrospect, I realized that God used that person.

The best way I know to determine if something is from God involves two things: a consistent foundation of daily prayer and an honest discussion with my spiritual director, who prays with me every month. We expect God to communicate, and God always does, in one way or another.

Photo by Tara Winstead on Pexels.

Loretta Pehanich
Loretta Pehanich
Loretta Pehanich is a Catholic freelance writer and the author of Loyola Kids Book of Jesus, His Family, and His Friends, 2022: A Book of Grace-Filled Days, Women in Conversation: Stand Up!, and Fleeting Moments: Praying When You Are Too Busy. A spiritual director since 2012, Loretta is trained in giving the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius. Her involvement in ministry and parish life includes 20 years in small faith-sharing groups and Christian Life Community. Loretta gives retreats and presentations on prayer and women’s spirituality and is commissioned as an extraordinary minister of the Eucharist. She and her husband Steve have four children and 11 grandchildren.

7 COMMENTS

  1. Very insightful. Thanks Loretta. “God can surely intervene if necessary” – Well said. God’s ways of intervention are mind-boggling.

  2. That sounds like a beautiful gift from God, Kevin. Saint Catherine of Siena heard in her Dialogue that tears are God’s way of cleansing the soul, among other things.
    Thank you for writing.

  3. God communicates with us in the quiet moments and the silences that we take the time for in our lives. Finding those times can be difficult in our hyper-connected, busy world. But there is a great reward if we do slow down and listen for God to speak to us. Thanks for this reflection, Loretta.

  4. Thank you Loretta for reminding me of all the little ways that God communicates with us when we slow down and listen with our heart mind and soul.

  5. Another insightful reflection Loretta – Thanks. In the last couple of years, tears have come unexpectedly to me at a variety of situations and events – quite often thru music. But also on a quiet walk or bike ride or walking up to receive communion. What do they say . . . that we can’t manufacture tears on our own . . . they have to come from external (or interior) sources.

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