“Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.” — Martin Luther King Jr.
I write from experience in church life and small groups. I set a clear purpose for every word I speak. My aim is encouragement, edification, and comfort as Scripture teaches.
I keep my voice calm and humble. I ask God for guidance before I speak. I seek consent and pray for timing so the message serves people and not my agenda.
I teach teams simple habits: record words for clarity, invite counsel, and use phrases like “I think the Lord may be saying” when the word feels uncertain. These steps protect faith and guard truth.
Use this guide as a practical way to serve in any place, any time, and in everyday ministry. Read, apply, and post these practices in your groups so people leave with hope, not fear.
Key Takeaways
- Set a clear purpose for every message you give.
- Focus on encouragement, edification, and comfort.
- Ask God and ask consent before speaking.
- Use brief, humble language and safe team habits.
- Record words and seek counsel for accountability.
- Apply the process in daily life and ministry posts.
Set your aim: encouragement, edification, and comfort
Before I speak, I decide my purpose is to lift the person and bless their life. I name that aim in my heart so every word points to hope and God’s word.
I remember we know only in part. That truth keeps my speech humble. It helps me hold the gift with open hands while God confirms things over time.
I choose short words that fit real life in the church. I watch my tone so love leads the delivery and the person feels safe to weigh the word.

- Set the aim before you speak so the word serves the person.
- Point people back to Scripture and not to my personality.
- Measure every phrase by its fruit—does it bring strength or fear?
| Aim | Sample brief word | Expected fruit |
|---|---|---|
| Encouragement | “You have hope in this season.” | Renewed faith and confidence |
| Edification | “Keep serving; God is building you.” | Strength for daily life |
| Comfort | “God sees your heart in this pain.” | Peace and relief |
Prepare in prayer and timing with the Holy Spirit
I begin every word by kneeling in prayer and listening for calm. This clears my mind and sharpens my aim. It helps me hear the holy spirit and a steady inner voice.

Ask God for permission before you speak
I ask God for permission and wait. Leaders advise this so we do not move ahead of God’s timing.
Discern if the word is for now or later
I check timing and decide if the word belongs in this time. If it is later, I hold it in prayer and note it for review.
Weigh pictures, dreams, and words against Scripture
I test each picture and every dream against Scripture. I record short notes or audio so the person can confirm the message. I speak with humble phrases like, “I think the Lord may be saying…”
- I watch for peace and pause if I sense a check.
- I refuse to rush and let silence give clarity.
- I end with prayer when the person agrees.
| Step | Action | Benefit |
|---|---|---|
| Quiet heart | Begin in prayer | Hears God’s voice clearly |
| Ask permission | Seek God’s yes | Respects timing and person |
| Test | Compare with Scripture | Ensures truth and trust |
Share with humility, clarity, and love
I always ask permission before offering a brief word that might touch the heart. That small step honors the person and keeps the church safe. It gives space for consent and calm in the moment.
Use gentle language when you speak. Begin with the phrase “I think the Lord may be saying…” so your words remain humble. Keep each word short and clear so people can test it by Scripture and counsel.
Gain consent
Ask, “Is it alright if I share this?” This simple permission shows respect and protects timing. It lets the person accept or decline without pressure.
Use gentle phrases
Say the phrase above before you add a picture or detail. Speak one line at a time. Pause and watch the person. Let them ask for prayer or more time.
Deliver hard words with care
When a warning is needed, frame it with love and a redemptive way forward. Offer steps the person can take. Avoid labels and do not claim final authority.
- Start with consent so people feel safe.
- Keep the word short so it can be tested.
- Close in prayer and ask if the word someone heard made sense.
Practice in team settings for depth and accountability
I prefer a couple or trio when we gather so the gift can come part by part.
Teams often add depth by giving short, clear pieces. Each person speaks one line and then yields. This helps the person test the picture and rest in God’s word.
Flow and timing: add only what serves the person
Honor flow and timing. Speak only when your piece adds value. Keep your lines short and pause so the person can respond.
Record prophetic words and keep eyes open
Record each prophetic word on a phone for accountability. Keep your eyes open to see how God is touching the person. Yield time when another team member has a part to add.
- Prefer a couple or small team so the combined picture serves the person.
- Speak only what you receive and avoid forced interpretation.
- Balance time so one voice does not take the whole session.
- End by blessing and point the person back to Scripture for daily life.
| Practice | Action | Benefit |
|---|---|---|
| Team flow | Keep lines short; pause | Clearer picture; safer process |
| Record | Save prophetic words on phone | Review with Scripture and counsel |
| Watch | Keep eyes open; yield time | Respect timing; build accuracy |
How to share prophecy with others with wisdom and safety
I give clear safeguards that protect people and help truth stand firm.
I keep each step brief and practical so the process honors Scripture and dignity. This approach helps people test a word and keep faith healthy.
Test by Scripture, inner witness, and trusted leaders
I test every word against Scripture first. That check guards against error and points all things back to God’s truth.
I then listen for the inner witness of the holy spirit and note if my voice brings peace. Finally, I invite trusted leaders to weigh in for accountability.
Seek two or more confirmations before major steps
I do not act on one directive alone. Major life or ministry moves need at least two confirmations from prophets or leaders.
Record prophetic words, dates, place, and any dreams so you can track time and how God confirms the message.
Pray through resistance and partner with the process
Expect resistance and pray through it. I often ask god to expose anything that does not align with Scripture.
Wait for peace. Let the person rest in prayer and in the process so life change rests on truth, not impulse.
- Test Scripture first, then the inner witness, then counsel.
- Seek two confirmations before major steps in life or ministry.
- Record dates and dreams so confirmations are clear over time.
| Step | Action | Benefit |
|---|---|---|
| Test | Compare word with Scripture | Guards truth and faith |
| Confirm | Seek two witnesses | Reduces error in ministry |
| Wait | Pray through resistance | Builds character and peace |
“Pray, record, and seek counsel so each prophetic word can stand the test of time.”
Walk it out over time with patience, hope, and community
I walk alongside people over years as we test a word, pray, and wait for signs of fruit. Keep a simple journal so you can see how life moves and how God confirms things across time.
Invite elders and a couple of trusted friends to read notes and review dreams. Let family and the church pray and help carry the process when waiting grows heavy.
Hold hope, not haste. Some words given years ago found full meaning much later. Practice steady prayer, ask God, honor leaders, and use the gift with humility so love and truth grow in each person and place.

