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The God Who Speaks Series
Contributed by Todd Catteau on Mar 11, 2026 (message contributor)
Summary: Today, we turn our attention to another stunning display of God's greatness: His clear communication with us through Scripture.
**The God Who Speaks**
*A Sermon on God's Greatness Revealed in Scripture*
Over the past few weeks, we've been contemplating the greatness of God together. We've seen His greatness displayed in multiple ways.
We saw His greatness in His eternal nature — God who exists outside of time, who was there at the beginning and will be there at the end. Before the mountains were born, from everlasting to everlasting, He is God.
We saw His greatness in His creative power — God who spoke the universe into existence from absolutely nothing. The God who said "Let there be light," and light appeared. The God who commanded galaxies into being with just a word.
And we saw His greatness in His goodness — God who didn't create a bland, utilitarian world but lavished beauty and flavor upon us. Trees pleasing to the eye and good for food. Sunsets that take our breath away. Relationships that fill our hearts. A God who is not only great, but profoundly good.
Today, we turn our attention to another stunning display of God's greatness: His clear communication with us through Scripture.
Here's what I want to remind you of today: a God who speaks is a great God — and our God speaks.
Now, I'm not a trained counselor — I've had some seminary training in counseling and have done some counseling work as a minister — but even with my limited expertise, I can tell you this: no counselor worth their salt would ever encourage someone to give another person the silent treatment. No counselor would say, "Make them guess how you are feeling." Or "Punish them by being silent, that will make things better." Why? Because every counselor knows that healthy relationships require communication. In fact, one of the first things a counselor will tell a struggling couple is this: "You have to talk to each other." Silence doesn't solve problems — it creates them.
Think about what happens when communication breaks down in human relationships. Parents who won't talk to their children — the teenager desperately trying to understand what they did wrong, but met with cold silence. Spouses giving each other the cold shoulder — days or even weeks go by without meaningful conversation. Friends who ghost each other — text messages left on read, phone calls ignored, explanations never given.
Silence in relationships creates isolation. It breeds misunderstanding. It leaves us wondering, guessing, making assumptions that are often wrong. Silence can feel like rejection, like abandonment, like we don't matter enough to deserve an explanation.
But you know what really gets to me? When powerful, influential people treat regular people this way.
Now imagine if God treated us that way. Imagine if He created us and then gave us the silent treatment.
No explanation of who He is. No clarity about what He expects. No answers to our deepest questions. No comfort in our darkest moments. Just cosmic silence from a distant, uncaring deity.
That would be terrifying, wouldn't it?
But here's something absolutely remarkable about our God: He refuses to give us the silent treatment.
In fact, He's the complete opposite. He has gone to extraordinary lengths — lengths we can barely comprehend — to communicate clearly with us. And the way He has done so reveals His greatness in stunning ways.
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**I. God's Greatness in Refusing Silence**
Think about this for a moment: God didn't have to explain Himself to us.
He's God. He's the Creator. He's infinite and eternal and all-powerful. We're finite creatures, dust and breath, here today and gone tomorrow. He could have created us and left us to figure things out on our own. He owed us nothing.
Many ancient religions portrayed their gods exactly this way — distant, uncommunicating, unknowable. Mysterious deities who remained shrouded in silence, requiring priests and elaborate rituals just to get their attention, and even then offering no guarantees they would respond.
But our God chose differently.
Our God speaks. And He speaks because He loves.
Think about it in human terms. Why do parents talk to their children? Because they care. Because they want relationship. Because silence between parent and child creates distance, but communication creates intimacy and understanding.
God does the same with us. He speaks to us because we matter to Him. He communicates because He wants relationship, not just obedience. He reveals Himself because love refuses to remain hidden.
And here's what's remarkable: God's communication isn't vague or confusing. It's not cryptic riddles or mysterious hints. Granted, there are some mysteries about who God is and there are some portions of the Bible that may be hard to understand. But when it comes down to the things that matter most, He is clear and intentional.
He is clear about His holiness. We're not left guessing about who God is. Throughout Scripture, He reveals His character — His justice, His mercy, His faithfulness, His power.
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