Digging Deeper: Go Where You Hear Him
Curt Bowen
on
June 19, 2026

27 And he said to them, “The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.”
Mark 2:27 (ESV)
GO WHERE YOU HEAR HIM
In a windowless room in the basement of a church, an older man taught a Sunday school class. I had my suit and tie on and had arrived just in time, having traveled specifically to hear this particular person teach. He was considered one of the leading defenders of Christianity and, without question, the smartest person I have ever personally met.
I asked a question so obscure that I was almost embarrassed to bring it up. I wanted to know whether we were warranted in praying for events in the past. Not only did he understand my question, but he had actually written about it in a professional journal and even had a name for it: retrospective prayer.
I’m not a Taylor Swift fan, but I think I know how one feels. I had been following this philosopher and theologian for years and was an unabashed theological “Swiftie.”
After class, I ended up going to lunch with a group of regular attendees. I sat next to a younger gentleman and got to know him. He shared my passion for theology, apologetics, and philosophy.
At one point, he opened his backpack and pulled out N.T. Wright’s monumental book The Resurrection of the Son of God. This is not light reading. In fact, it’s 817 pages of some of the finest modern scholarship on the historical facts surrounding the death and resurrection of Christ.
When my new friend informed me that he had read the entire book over the weekend, I was stunned.
I reflected on something during the drive home that day.
The way that young man interacted with God was through his mind.
There are all sorts of ways to connect with God. Some people have a passion for music and experience God through lyrics, chords, and melodies. Others worship God through study. Personally, I find that I connect with God when I travel to remote places, hike through nature, and simply listen.
God spoke to people in Scripture through dreams, the testimony of others, and even burning bushes. It occurs to me that if God spoke through only one means, we might be tempted to worship the vehicle of the message rather than the Messenger Himself.
And so, God may speak in many different ways to different people.
Here’s the key takeaway:
- Where do you hear God the loudest?
- Wherever that is, go there—and go there during this newly allotted time we call the Sabbath.
We started this week with a simple premise: if you’re not observing the Sabbath, you’re missing out.
Not on a rule.
On something God designed specifically for you.
We put it on the calendar first. We asked what would make it feel genuinely different from the other six days. We gave ourselves permission to stop debating what counts as work and start asking what actually depletes us versus what fills us up.
And now we arrive at the most personal question of all:
Where do you hear God the loudest?
For one man, it’s 817 pages of dense theology. For another, it’s boots on a trail with nothing but wind and altitude. A chord progression. A quiet porch. A crowded room full of people who need help.
The Sabbath isn’t just a day off. It’s a standing appointment.
God has been showing up every single week.
The only question is whether you do too.
You’ve blocked the day. You’ve set it apart. Now do one final thing with that time:
Go where you hear Him.
And listen.
Ask Yourself:
• Where is the place or activity where God feels most present and real to you?
• Is that thing currently part of your Sabbath, or is it buried beneath everything that needs to stop?

Curt Bowen is a husband, father, and group leader who loves engaging in apologetics, theology, and good BBQ. A thrill-seeker at heart, he enjoys roller coasters and has an appreciation for snakes—just not the conversational type.

