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Discover how to distinguish between your born-again spirit and your soul, and learn to be genuinely led by the Holy Spirit through God’s Word.
In this third installment of his series on being led by the Spirit of God, the pastor of New Testament Church delivers a foundational teaching on understanding the tripartite nature of man as spirit, soul, and body. Drawing primarily from 1 Thessalonians 5:23, Proverbs 3:5-6, Romans 8:14, and James 1:21, the message challenges believers to stop assuming that every thought or emotion they experience originates from God. A central distinction is made between the born-again spirit, which is instantly perfected at salvation, and the soul, which encompasses the mind, will, and emotions, and must undergo a continual process of renewal and transformation. The pastor illustrates this truth through a powerful personal testimony of being led by the Holy Spirit to reconcile with a minister who had spoken against him, demonstrating how genuine Spirit-led guidance aligns with Scripture rather than emotion or impulse. Believers are urged to receive the engrafted Word with meekness, allowing it to heal, deliver, and strengthen the soul over time. The saving of the soul is presented not as a one-time event but as an ongoing, intentional process requiring humility, obedience, and consistent engagement with God’s Word.
Proverbs 3:5-6, 1 Thessalonians 5:23, Romans 8:14, Philippians 1:23-24, 2 Corinthians 4:17, 1 Peter 3:4, Proverbs 20:27, James 1:18-21, Matthew 5:23-24, 2 Timothy 2:15, Philippians 2:5, 3 John 1:2, Psalm 23:3
One of the foundational pillars of this message is the biblical teaching that every human being is composed of three distinct parts: spirit, soul, and body. The pastor draws from 1 Thessalonians 5:23 to establish that these are not interchangeable terms but three separate aspects of a person’s existence. The spirit is the real you, the eternal inner man that is recreated at the new birth. The body is a temporary vessel destined for resurrection. The soul, encompassing the mind, will, and emotions, sits between the two and must be intentionally brought into alignment with God’s Word.
A critical and often overlooked truth this message confronts is the unreliability of an unrenewed soul. Because the soul was not instantly perfected at the moment of salvation as the spirit was, it retains patterns of thinking, feeling, and deciding that are shaped by the world, past experiences, and fleshly inclinations. The pastor warns against the common error of assuming that because a person is born again, every thought that enters their mind is a divine directive. This confusion has led many sincere believers and even ministers into error, acting on soulish impulses and calling it the voice of God.
Perhaps the most memorable moment in this message is the pastor’s personal account of being prompted by the Holy Spirit to visit a minister who had spoken poorly of him. Every natural emotion said no: fear, pride, and inconvenience all resisted. Yet when God confirmed the leading through Matthew 5:23-24, the pastor obeyed. The result was mutual forgiveness, genuine restoration, and supernatural provision of funds he had been believing God for. This story stands as a powerful illustration that Spirit-led obedience, though often uncomfortable to the soul, produces outcomes the soul alone could never engineer.
James 1:21 becomes a key anchor for the practical teaching in this message. The pastor explains that the Greek word translated saved in this verse carries a rich cluster of meanings: to be healed, delivered, supported, strengthened, and made whole. When a believer receives the Word of God with meekness and teachability, it does not merely inform the mind but actually begins to transform the inner life at the level of thought patterns, emotional responses, and volitional choices. This is why consistent attendance at church, personal Bible study, and submission to biblical teaching are not optional additions to the Christian life but essential instruments of soul transformation.
Running through the entire message is an insistence that humility is not a personality trait but a spiritual posture that makes divine guidance possible. The pastor connects Proverbs 3:5-6 with the New Testament call to submit to the fivefold ministry, arguing that those who refuse correction and operate solely on personal revelation are, in practice, ministering out of their own corrupt soul rather than from the Spirit of God. Humbling oneself under the Word, under pastoral oversight, and under the discipline of biblical community is presented as the very mechanism by which God straightens and directs a believer’s path.
The pastor closes with a clear and actionable exhortation: the renewal of the soul is achievable, but it demands intentional effort. Believers are called to lay aside the whirlpool of ungodly thinking, described vividly through the Greek term perisseia kakias, and to engage consistently with the implanted Word. Regular participation in church life, openness to biblical instruction, willingness to act on Scripture even against emotional resistance, and a commitment to measure every leading by the written Word are the practical disciplines that progressively save, heal, and prosper the soul, bringing every dimension of a person’s life into alignment with God’s best.
To be led by the Spirit of God means allowing the Holy Spirit to guide your decisions, responses, and direction in life through the Word of God rather than through emotions, personal reasoning, or impulse. Romans 8:14 declares that as many as are led by the Spirit of God, these are the sons of God. Genuine Spirit-led guidance will always be consistent with Scripture and will produce fruit that glorifies God.
The Bible presents the spirit and the soul as two distinct aspects of a person’s inner being. The spirit is the part of a person that is born again and recreated at salvation, described by Peter as the hidden man of the heart in 1 Peter 3:4. The soul encompasses the mind, will, and emotions, and unlike the spirit, it must undergo a continual process of renewal and transformation through the Word of God, as James 1:21 makes clear.
Yes, and this message specifically addresses that danger. Because the soul, which includes the mind and emotions, is not instantly perfected at salvation, a believer can easily confuse soulish desires or emotional reactions with divine guidance. The biblical safeguard is to test every impression against Scripture, as 2 Timothy 2:15 instructs believers to rightly divide the word of truth, ensuring that what they believe God is saying aligns with what He has already said in His Word.
James 1:21 instructs believers to receive with meekness the engrafted word, which is able to save their souls. The Greek word for save here carries the meaning of being healed, delivered, strengthened, and made whole. This verse is addressed to Christians, not unbelievers, making clear that the saving of the soul is an ongoing process of transformation distinct from the one-time salvation of the spirit that occurs at the new birth.
The primary test for any spiritual prompting is whether it aligns with the written Word of God. The Holy Spirit will never lead a believer in a direction that contradicts Scripture. Additional indicators include a sense of peace that persists despite personal discomfort, confirmation through biblical passages, and outcomes that glorify God rather than serve self. Proverbs 3:5-6 calls believers to trust in the Lord rather than lean on their own understanding as the foundational posture for discerning His direction.
Humility positions a believer to receive both the Word of God and correction from biblical community, both of which are essential channels through which the Holy Spirit guides. Pride causes a person to rely on personal impressions and resist instruction, which effectively closes them off from the transformative work of the engrafted Word. The pastor connects this to Proverbs 3:5-6, noting that acknowledging God in all our ways, which requires humility, is the condition under which He promises to direct our paths.
Third John 1:2 states that God desires for believers to prosper and be in health even as their soul prospers, establishing a direct connection between the condition of the soul and the quality of life a believer experiences. When the soul remains unrenewed, dominated by fear, pride, or worldly thinking, it creates a barrier to receiving God’s best. As the soul is progressively transformed through the Word, the believer becomes increasingly capable of receiving and stewarding the fullness of God’s provision and blessing.
The pastor emphasizes that consistent participation in church life and engagement with biblical teaching are not optional for spiritual growth but are the primary instruments God uses to renew the soul. The fivefold ministry of apostle, prophet, evangelist, pastor, and teacher exists specifically to bring believers to maturity and unity in the faith. Submitting to sound biblical instruction with teachability and humility allows the engrafted Word to do its transforming work in the mind, will, and emotions of every believer.
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