Pink Elephant
Understanding how God speaks to us
Just because your eyes saw the letters—p i n k e l e p h a n t—a picture likely appeared in your mind. You didn’t try to summon it. It simply arrived even though you may also have seen a blue one because of the image to this post.
That tells you something: the space between what is seen and what is imagined is incredibly thin. A word becomes an image. An image becomes emotion. And before long, what was external is shaping the internal world. Now pause, because this matters: the same space where that pink elephant landed is often the very space where God speaks.
Not out loud. Not always with sentences. But through thought, image, memory, conviction, insight. God speaks to the mind and heart not in contradiction to Scripture, but in full continuity with it. His voice did not fall silent after the final verse was written. He is still the God who speaks—and not just to ancient prophets, but to ordinary people who are willing to pay attention.
Jesus said, “My sheep hear My voice.” That wasn’t a poetic flourish. It was a present reality. His voice is not a metaphor—it’s a promise.
But most people don’t miss God’s voice because He isn’t speaking. They miss it because they don’t recognize it. And they don’t recognize it because their minds are too full, too distracted, too trained to expect only natural things.
God’s Spirit speaks in the inner places. Through a verse that suddenly lights up. Through a thought that didn’t come from you but won’t leave you alone. Through a mental image that lands with weight. Through dreams that stir something deeper than emotion. Through clarity that brings peace, even when circumstances remain uncertain.
Isaiah said he “saw the word of the Lord.” Not heard—saw (Isaiah 1:1). God’s word isn’t always audible. It’s often visual. Tangible. Deeply felt. It reaches not only the ears but the imagination, the memory, the very spirit.
This is why God constantly calls His people to remember. To treasure what He says. Because His words are not disposable. They are eternal. When God speaks—whether through Scripture, or a Spirit-breathed impression—it’s not casual. It’s holy.
But you can’t remember what you never received. And you can’t receive what you weren’t paying attention to.
So let this be an invitation:
Pay attention.
Make space for silence. Turn your mind toward God, not with strain but with trust. Read the Bible slowly. Ask the Spirit to make it alive. Let your imagination be sanctified, not shut down. God doesn’t bypass your humanity. He speaks through it.
And He also speaks in the middle of the ordinary. In the conversation that unexpectedly carries truth. In the beauty of creation that suddenly feels personal. In the quiet check in your conscience before a decision. In the kindness of a stranger, or the phrase that echoes long after you heard it. God’s voice doesn’t only reach to the sacred space of prayer or the pages of Scripture; it moves through the flow of daily life. The difference lies in whether you notice. Pay Him attention, even in the mundane, and you will find the extraordinary presence of God woven into your everyday.
And when He does—remember.
Write it down. Carry it with you. Share it when the moment comes. Let it change how you live. Let it build your history with Him.
Because those who remember what God has said will recognize Him when He speaks again.
And He will speak again.
PS - the lack of a pink elephant image on this post was deliberate.
We are bulding the doxa app to better remember what God has promised (prophecies) and what he has done (testimonies) so we can fight the good fight (and win).


