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Discover how to be led by the Holy Spirit through the inner witness, renewing your soul with the Word and walking in God’s abundant life.
In this fifth installment of his series on being led by the Holy Spirit, Dr. William Holman of New Testament Church unpacks one of the most foundational yet misunderstood dimensions of the Christian life: the inner witness of the Spirit. Drawing from Proverbs 3:5-6, Romans 8:14-16, and James 1:18-21, he establishes that God leads His children not through outward signs or emotional impulses, but through the spirit of the reborn believer. Dr. Holman carefully distinguishes between the spirit, soul, and body as outlined in 1 Thessalonians 5:23, showing how an unrenewed soul can block the abundant life Jesus purchased for every believer. Using the story of Elijah’s collapse under the juniper tree in 1 Kings 19, he illustrates how even a mighty man of God can be derailed when the soul takes over. The message calls believers to wash their souls with the Word of God, guard their associations, and cultivate daily fellowship with the Father so that the inner witness of the Holy Spirit can freely guide them into the paths of righteousness and increase.
Proverbs 3:5-6, 1 Thessalonians 5:23, Proverbs 20:27, James 1:18-21, Romans 8:14-16, 3 John 2, Psalm 23:3, 2 Peter 1:16-19, John 10:27, 1 Kings 19:1-12, Philippians 2
Dr. Holman teaches that among all the ways God leads His people, the inner witness of the Holy Spirit is one of the most consistent and reliable. Romans 8:16 declares that the Spirit Himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God. This is not a feeling in the emotions or a thought in the mind but a deep, settled knowing in the born-again spirit. As believers grow in their walk with God, this inner witness becomes clearer and stronger, guiding decisions, confirming direction, and providing assurance that cannot be shaken by outward circumstances or the opinions of others.
A central pillar of this message is the distinction between spirit, soul, and body drawn from 1 Thessalonians 5:23. Many traditions treat the soul and spirit as interchangeable, but Dr. Holman argues this misunderstanding causes believers to live from the wrong place. The spirit of a born-again Christian has been made new and is the residence of the Holy Spirit. The soul, comprising the mind, will, and emotions, must be renewed through the Word. If the soul remains unrenewed it will dominate and filter out the leading of the Spirit, resulting in a Christian who knows the truth mentally but cannot access the transformed life God intends.
One of the most gripping illustrations in this sermon comes from 1 Kings 19, where Elijah, fresh from the dramatic victory on Mount Carmel, flees in terror at Jezebel’s threat. Dr. Holman uses this account to show how a spiritual attack can cause even a seasoned believer to shift from walking in the Spirit to operating out of a frightened, self-preserving soul. Elijah becomes suicidal, convinced he is the last faithful man alive. This is not the voice of God but the voice of an unrenewed soul under demonic pressure. God’s response is not rebuke but nourishment and rest, followed by a gentle question: what are you doing here?
From James 1:18-21, Dr. Holman presents the implanted Word of God as the key that turns the tumblers of the soul. Just as a lock opens only when the correct key engages every tumbler, the soul is unlocked for salvation, healing, and prosperity when it is consistently washed with the Word. He urges believers to lay aside the overflow of wickedness, turn off news and negativity that pollute the soul, and receive the Word with meekness. This is not passive listening but active implantation that transforms the mind and allows the life already present in the spirit to flow outward into relationships, health, and finances.
Dr. Holman points to Adam’s unbroken communion with God in the garden as the model for hearing the inner witness clearly. Adam did not pray anxious petitions about food or shelter because walking with God was a constant, natural reality. In the same way, believers who begin each morning by simply opening up to the Father and listening will find that God begins to speak, direct, and share insights throughout the day. Christians who say they never hear God have simply not cultivated this practice. John 10:27 confirms that His sheep hear His voice, but training yourself to recognize it requires consistent, unhurried time in His presence.
Practical and direct, Dr. Holman warns that the company believers keep has a direct impact on the health of their soul and their ability to be led by the Spirit. He cites the principle that evil communications corrupt good manners, applying it to friendships, workplace dynamics, and even media consumption. People who continually grumble, operate in fear, or are indifferent to God’s best will drag a believer’s soul back toward the earth-curse system it was rescued from. Moving forward into the new seasons God has ordained sometimes requires walking a different path, not in pride, but in the stewardship of what God has placed inside every believer.
The inner witness of the Holy Spirit is the Spirit of God bearing witness with a believer’s reborn spirit, as described in Romans 8:16. It is a deep, internal knowing and confirmation that comes from within the spirit of a born-again Christian. It is distinct from emotions, intellectual reasoning, or outward signs, and it grows clearer as the believer renews the soul with the Word of God.
First Thessalonians 5:23 identifies three distinct parts of a human being: spirit, soul, and body. The spirit is the innermost part, the residence of the Holy Spirit in a born-again believer. The soul encompasses the mind, will, and emotions, and must be renewed through the Word of God. Confusing the two can cause believers to follow emotional or mental impulses and mistake them for the leading of God.
James 1:18-21 teaches that the implanted Word of God is able to save the soul, meaning it delivers, heals, and transforms the inner life of the mind and emotions. As believers consistently read, meditate on, and apply Scripture, the Word washes away worldly thinking and allows the life of God in the spirit to flow into the soul and body. This process is also described as the renewing of the mind in Romans 12:2.
After his miraculous victory over the prophets of Baal in 1 Kings 18, Elijah received a death threat from Jezebel and immediately fled in fear. Dr. Holman explains this as a soulish reaction under intense spiritual attack, where the self-preservation instinct of the unrenewed soul overpowered Elijah’s faith. God did not rebuke him but instead provided food, rest, and a gentle encounter, showing that the path back from a soulish collapse is nourishment, rest, and renewed communion with God.
John 10:27 promises that the sheep of Jesus hear His voice. The path to hearing clearly involves consistently washing the soul with the Word, removing ungodly influences from your life, and developing a daily habit of quiet fellowship with the Father. Dr. Holman teaches that just as a child learns to recognize a parent’s voice through constant interaction, believers train their spirits to recognize the inner witness through unhurried, daily communion with God.
The company you keep directly shapes the state of your soul, which in turn affects your ability to hear and follow the Spirit. Proverbs and the New Testament both warn that corrupting communication damages good character. Surrounding yourself with people who grumble, doubt, or are indifferent to God’s word introduces noise that drowns out the inner witness. Believers are encouraged to build relationships with those who want to see them grow, be blessed, and increase in the things of God.
Proverbs 3:5-6 is the foundation text for this sermon series: trust in the Lord with all your heart, lean not on your own understanding, acknowledge Him in all your ways, and He will direct your paths. Dr. Holman emphasizes that the word heart here refers to the spirit and inner man, not the intellect. Leaning on one’s own understanding means trying to navigate life through mental reasoning alone, which leads away from God’s direction and the abundant life He promises.
Dr. Holman teaches that water baptism is an important and biblical public declaration of a believer’s commitment to Jesus Christ. He distinguishes it from infant dedication, noting that baptism requires a conscious, personal decision to be submerged as a symbol of dying to the old life and rising in the new. Jesus Himself was baptized by John the Baptist, setting the example for all believers to follow in obedience and public testimony of their faith.
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