How to Contact God Directly: The Direct Channel of Monotheism
How to Contact God Directly: The Direct Channel of Monotheism
By Ronen Kolton Yehuda (MKR: Messiah King RKY)
I want to share here one of the central spiritual teachings of the Religion of God, also called God’s Religion. I share it kindly, openly, and with love for humanity. For me, this understanding is like a spiritual treasure, but I do not want to keep it only for myself. I believe that every person may benefit from it, use it, live with it, and enjoy the spiritual strength that can come from it. It does not threaten me if people communicate with God directly. On the contrary, this is exactly what I suggest people should do.
Although I am the spiritual leader of the Religion of God, I do not want people to depend on me in order to reach God. I do not want people to depend only on priests, religious institutions, spiritual authorities, or any human leader. A person can turn directly to God. A person can speak to God in the mind, through a direct inner channel, as if speaking by voice, but inwardly, by thought, by prayer, and by the focused mind. This is the direct channel of monotheism: the person standing before the one God, the Creator of life, without any human being standing between them.
When I speak about contacting God directly, I speak from my belief, my spiritual understanding, and my interpretation of the biblical tradition. I do not present this here as a scientific fact that I can prove to everyone. I present it as a sincere religious teaching. In my belief, a person may communicate with God through inner prayer, through thought, through conscience, through what may be called telepathy, and through the divine voice. This is not meant as fantasy or entertainment. It is meant as a serious spiritual practice: the human being turns toward God, asks, listens, examines, and continues life with greater moral awareness.
This teaching also comes from my understanding of the Hebrew Bible, especially the examples of Samuel the prophet and King David. Samuel received divine direction. David asked God what to do. David did not live with God only as a distant idea or as a ceremony. He lived with God as a guiding presence. This is one of the important foundations of my teaching: if David could ask God, seek divine guidance, and act according to God’s direction, then a person today may also try to speak to God directly and ask for guidance. This is part of the spiritual heritage that I understand and continue from my Jewish-Israeli identity and from the biblical tradition.
This teaching also connects strongly to the words of King David in Psalms:
קָרוֹב יְהוָה לְכָל־קֹרְאָיו, לְכֹל אֲשֶׁר יִקְרָאֻהוּ בֶאֱמֶת.רְצוֹן־יְרֵאָיו יַעֲשֶׂה, וְאֶת־שַׁוְעָתָם יִשְׁמַע וְיוֹשִׁיעֵם.תהילים קמ״ה, י״ח–י״ט“The Lord is near to all who call Him, to all who call Him in truth. He fulfills the will of those who fear Him; He hears their cry and saves them.”
For me, this verse expresses the heart of the direct channel to God. God is close to all who call Him sincerely. It does not say that God is close only to priests, only to prophets, only to institutions, or only to a chosen religious class. It says that God is near to all who call Him in truth. This supports the simple and serious teaching that every person may turn directly to God, call God sincerely, and seek guidance, help, truth, and salvation.
The Direct Channel to God
The direct channel to God is simple in its basic idea. A person may sit, focus, and speak to God in the mind. Just as a person can speak by voice and say, “God, please help me,” the person can also speak inwardly and say the same thing without sound. The communication is not necessarily with the mouth. It may be in thought, in the inner voice, in prayer, in silent speech, or in what I describe as telepathic contact with God.
A person may ask God direct questions. He may ask: “God, what should I do? God, help me understand the correct path. God, guide me. God, protect me from mistakes. God, help me live in truth, justice, morality, and self-fulfillment.” This is not complicated. It does not require a formal ritual. It does not require a religious building. It does not require another human being to approve it. The person turns inwardly toward God and speaks sincerely.
This does not mean that every thought that appears in the mind is automatically God. It does not mean that a person should blindly follow every inner feeling. The direct channel requires seriousness, humility, and moral testing. The person asks God, but he also examines the answer. He does not use the name of God to excuse ego, anger, cruelty, or confusion. The direct channel is not a license to act without responsibility. It is a spiritual path that should make the person more moral, more careful, more aware, and more connected to the good.
In my understanding, this is one of the most important gifts that a person can discover: the ability to live not as a spiritually abandoned creature, but as someone who may speak to the Creator directly. Instead of feeling that God is only far away, or that God belongs only to priests and religious systems, the person can understand that the direct relationship with God may be available to him. He can speak, ask, listen, and test. He can make God part of his daily moral life.
The God of Monotheism, Not a Human Figure
This teaching must be understood through monotheism. When I say that a person should contact God directly, I do not mean that he should search for the face of Jesus, the face of another human figure, or the face of any person presented as God. The person should search for God Himself, the God of monotheism, the Creator of life. This is a very important point because the direction of the mind matters. The person is not trying to worship a human being. He is trying to contact God.
A person may focus on the word “God,” on the letters of God, on the meaning of God, on the Creator, on the divine presence, or simply speak inwardly to God as the one God. The important thing is that the address is God. It is not a human face. It is not a physical image. It is not a person replacing God. This is not against the existence of spiritual imagination in general; it is a warning not to confuse God with a human figure. Monotheism means that God is above every human form.
This is also why I believe this teaching can speak to many people, including people who come from different religious backgrounds. A Christian, a Jew, a Muslim, or any other person may understand that the deepest spiritual address is the one God, not the external form. I am not writing this to insult anyone’s tradition. I am writing it to clarify the monotheistic direction: when you contact God, contact God. Do not replace God with a person. Do not search for a human face as God. Turn toward the Creator Himself.
The God of monotheism is not owned by a priest, a church, a synagogue, a mosque, a government, a nation, or a leader. God is God. Therefore, the person can speak to God directly. This does not cancel the value of study, community, tradition, or leadership, but it places them in the correct order. The highest address is God, and the human being may turn to God directly.
King David, Samuel, and Biblical Communication with God
The Hebrew Bible gives powerful examples of divine communication. Samuel the prophet receives divine direction and is guided in the process of choosing David. The choice of David is not only a political act. It is a spiritual event. Samuel does not merely look at human appearance, social status, or ordinary expectations. He follows divine instruction. This teaches that God may guide a person beyond what human beings immediately understand.
King David is also central to this teaching. David asks God. David inquires. David seeks direction before important actions. For me, this is not a small detail. It shows that David’s relationship with God was not only ceremonial. It was direct, living, and active. David did not simply believe that God existed somewhere far away. He lived with God as a guiding presence in life, leadership, danger, decision, and destiny.
This is one of the reasons I connect this teaching to King David. David’s greatness is not only military, political, poetic, or royal. It is also spiritual. He understands that a human being, even a king, must ask God. A king is not above God. A leader is not independent from the divine moral order. The stronger the person becomes, the more he must ask God what is correct. This is a major lesson for every person, and especially for anyone who sees himself as called to leadership, creativity, responsibility, or a mission.
I believe that people today can learn from this model. A person does not need to be David in order to ask God. A person does not need to be Samuel in order to seek divine direction. The point is not to pretend to be someone else. The point is to understand the principle: the human being may contact God, ask God, and seek guidance. This is part of the living monotheistic relationship between the person and the Creator.
The Divine Voice and the Voice of Conscience
The divine voice, as I understand it, is not necessarily a physical sound. It may be an inner voice, an inner knowing, a moral warning, a feeling of truth, a direction in the mind, or a conscience voice that tells the person to stop and think. Sometimes a person actively contacts God and asks for guidance. But sometimes the guidance comes first, as if the divine voice contacts the person, especially in a moment of danger, emergency, moral confusion, or serious decision.
This voice may say inwardly: “Stop. Think again. Is this correct? Is this moral? Will you regret this later? Are you acting from truth or from ego? Are you choosing what is good?” This is why I connect the divine voice to conscience. The conscience is not a small thing. It may be one of the ways through which God warns and directs the human being. A person may ignore conscience, but later he may regret it. Sometimes the regret appears immediately, and sometimes it appears after years. The fact that a person can silence the conscience for a time does not mean that the conscience is dead.
The divine voice may also alert a person in emergencies. A person may suddenly feel that he should not go somewhere, should not trust something, should leave, should wait, should think again, or should protect himself. In my belief, this can be part of divine guidance. God may direct a person to protect his life, to avoid danger, to continue despite pressure, or to survive a situation that he does not fully understand. Sometimes the guidance may feel unusual or radical because the person does not yet see the whole picture.
However, this must always be connected to morality. The divine voice cannot be separated from conscience, justice, law, and goodness. If an inner voice tells a person to do something cruel, evil, humiliating, or harmful to innocent people, he should not accept it as God. God is good. God created everyone. Therefore, divine guidance must take life seriously. It may be strong. It may be courageous. It may be urgent. It may even be against the odds. But it must not become evil.
How to Distinguish True Divine Guidance
The most important protection in this teaching is the moral test. A person may contact God directly, but he must also distinguish. He must ask himself whether the guidance is truly good, moral, lawful, just, and clean. He must ask whether it respects life, whether it respects innocent people, whether it comes from conscience, and whether it takes others into account. This is necessary because not every inner voice should be trusted. A thought may come from fear, ego, anger, imagination, confusion, or pressure.
In my belief, if there is a shared dimension of the mind, or if telepathy exists, then the need to distinguish becomes even more important. A person may believe he is receiving an answer, but he must still ask: is this God, or is this something else? Is this divine guidance, or is it fear? Is it truth, or is it ego? Is it conscience, or is it desire? This is why the voice must be tested by the good. The divine voice must lead toward justice, truth, survival, self-fulfillment, responsibility, and care for life.
This does not mean that divine guidance will always be easy. Sometimes the correct path may be difficult. Sometimes the person may be guided to continue when everyone else doubts him. Sometimes the person may be guided to act with courage, to protect himself, to build something, to leave a wrong situation, or to hold faith when the world does not understand. That can feel radical. But radical does not mean immoral. Radical does not mean violent. Radical does not mean unlawful harm. Radical does not mean cruelty. True divine guidance can be strong and still remain good.
The correct test is simple but serious: if the guidance removes conscience, it is not the correct path. If it destroys morality, it is not the correct path. If it tells the person to harm innocent people, it is not the correct path. If it is based on hatred and not justice, it is not the correct path. The true divine voice should lead a person toward what is good, naive in the pure sense, clean, correct, moral, and responsible.
Self-Fulfillment, Salvation, Humanity, and True Inner Essence Before God
I believe that direct communication with God can help a person reach self-fulfillment and self-essence by the name of God. A person may ask God about his life, his path, his mission, his future, his work, his relationships, his creativity, and his survival. He may ask God how to succeed in life without betraying morality, how to become who he is meant to become, and how to be protected from deception, failure, and wrong direction. This is part of living with God.
In this understanding, self-fulfillment is not only external success. It is also the discovery of the person’s true inner essence before God. Self-essence by the name of God means that the person seeks his real identity, moral direction, purpose, and spiritual truth under the guidance of the one God, not only through ego, pressure, or society.
But self-fulfillment is not only individual. Human beings are social creatures. We complete one another. A person’s life is connected to family, society, love, friendship, justice, culture, work, and humanity. Therefore, the self-fulfillment of one person should not be built on the destruction of another person. The salvation of one person should not require injustice toward innocent people. The divine path should help the person fulfill himself while also respecting the existence, dignity, and fulfillment of others.
This is why I believe that the divine voice must take everyone into account. God created everyone. Therefore, the divine path cannot be only selfish. It must be connected to the moral structure of life. A person may need to protect himself. A person may need to survive. A person may need to fight for his future in a lawful and moral way. But he should not lose the basic truth that other people also exist before God.
When a person contacts God directly, he may become more aware of his own life, but also more aware of the whole. He may understand that his life has meaning, but also that humanity has meaning. He may understand that his own self-fulfillment is part of a larger moral order. This is where personal salvation and human responsibility meet.
Conclusion: Contact God Directly
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