Dear Church: Restoring True Discernment

Dear Church,

Not every strong voice is a sound voice. There are times when discussions arise among God’s people over judgment matters, convictions, interpretations, methods, or even serious doctrinal concerns. In those moments, it can be tempting to assume that the most forceful speaker must also be the most faithful one. Volume is not evidence, intensity is not proof, and sharpness is not the same thing as clarity. A person may speak loudly, confidently, and passionately, yet still be mistaken.

Scripture repeatedly calls God’s people to something deeper than reactionary speech. We are told, “Let every person be quick to hear, slow to speak and slow to anger” (James 1:19). That command alone reminds us that hearing must come before answering, and patience must come before outrage. True discernment is not measured by how quickly we react, but by how carefully we listen and judge matters righteously.

Far too many conversations fail because people are not listening to understand. They are listening only long enough to respond. Their conclusion was formed before the discussion ever began. Their mind is settled, not because the matter has been carefully examined, but because pride refuses to consider any other possibility.

This spirit can appear in many forms: speaking over others rather than hearing them, assuming bad motives without evidence, treating conviction as if it were identical to revealed truth, using tone and pressure where reasoning is weak, becoming suspicious of anyone who asks sincere questions, and refusing to admit the possibility of personal error. We must do better.

Conviction, courage, and earnestness all have their place, but none of those virtues cancel the need for humility and respect. In fact, true conviction should make us more careful, not less careful. If we love truth, then we must also love honesty, fairness, and self-examination. Restoring true discernment begins when we care more about being right before God than appearing right before men.

It is possible to be sincere and wrong. It is possible to be passionate and wrong. It is possible to defend a position so aggressively that we never notice our own blind spots.

The wise disciple understands this and leaves room for correction.

Proverbs 18:13 says, “He who gives an answer before he hears, It is folly and shame to him.” Proverbs 15:1 says, “A gentle answer turns away wrath, But a harsh word stirs up anger.” Those passages are not personality suggestions. They are wisdom from God for preserving righteousness in our speech. The way we talk to one another matters.

This does not mean every disagreement is equal, or that truth should be watered down to keep peace. It does mean that how we handle disagreement matters. A harsh spirit can damage the very cause a person claims to defend.

When someone says, “I will always be suspicious,” they may still raise legitimate concerns. But such a posture also reveals a settled bias. Suspicion as a starting point makes trust difficult and meaningful dialogue nearly impossible. God’s people should strive to be discerning, not cynical. True discernment tests matters honestly, while false discernment assumes conclusions before the evidence is heard.

Dear Church, let us be people who pursue truth, understanding, and faithfulness more than personal preference or having things done our way, and who remember that the way we communicate about these things matters deeply.

The loudest voice in the room is not always the wisest one. In fact, it may simply be the loudest voice masking a weak position. We need to be humble enough to recognize this reality. Sometimes the clearest evidence of spiritual maturity is not found in who speaks the loudest, harshest of terms, but in who listens the best.

And let us remember that the Lord has already shown us the proper spirit for handling disagreement. “The Lord’s bond-servant must not be quarrelsome, but be kind to all, able to teach, patient when wronged, with gentleness correcting those who are in opposition” (2 Timothy 2:24-25). Notice the contrast. God does not call His servants to win by intimidation, outshout opponents, or silence questions through pressure. He calls us to kindness, patience, and gentle correction rooted in truth. Such a spirit does not weaken conviction, it proves maturity. It shows confidence that truth does not need anger to defend it. This is how true discernment is restored among God’s people.

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