How Do We Test The Spirits?
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A confident voice, a dramatic prophecy, a powerful feeling, none of that proves the source is God. We sit with the hard question Scripture itself raises: how do we test the spirit behind what someone says without shutting down the Holy Spirit or sliding into constant suspicion?
We work through three connected but distinct “tests” the Bible gives us. From 1 Thessalonians 5, we put “test everything” back in context: Paul is not giving permission to sample every religion for hidden truth, he is telling the church not to despise prophecy but to weigh it and hold fast to what is good. From 2 Corinthians 13, we take seriously Paul’s pushback: if we’re demanding proof that Christ is speaking through someone, we also need the humility to examine ourselves and our motives.
Then we slow down in 1 John 4, where the first and clearest test is a confession, Jesus Christ has come in the flesh. We connect that to John’s “water and blood,” Leviticus’ claim that life is in the blood, and Luke 24’s anchor that the risen Messiah is flesh and bone. Along the way we clarify why angelic appearances are not the same as incarnation, and why Matthew 12’s “dry places” language reinforces the Bible’s focus on embodiment.
If you want biblical discernment that avoids both gullibility and blanket rejection, press play, then share this with a friend and leave a review so more listeners can find it. What’s the biggest mistake you’ve seen people make when they “test” spiritual claims?
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