Hearing God was never meant to be difficult, mysterious, or reserved for a spiritual elite.
From a first-century Hebraic perspective, hearing God was not a technique to master, but a relational awareness rooted in identity and union. Jesus did not teach His disciples how to strain to hear heaven-He revealed who they were, and hearing became natural.
In Hearing God, Cary Salinger dismantles the performance-based beliefs and religious assumptions that have silenced the voice of God in the hearts of believers. Rather than offering formulas, steps, or spiritual disciplines, this book restores the original design of sonship, where God's voice flows effortlessly from love, belonging, and rest.
Through a deep exploration of Scripture as it would have been understood in the first century, this book reveals:
Why hearing God is an identity issue, not a spiritual skill
How performance-based religion creates inner noise and confusion
What Jesus meant when He said the Spirit would dwell in you
How the Father's voice forms identity rather than corrects behavior
Why sons and daughters hear differently than servants and slaves
Drawing from the life and teachings of Jesus, the Hebraic understanding of righteousness, and the restoration of the new creation reality, Hearing God invites readers to stop striving and start listening-from within.
This book is not about trying harder to hear God.
It is about awakening to the truth that He has never stopped speaking.
If you have ever wondered why God feels distant, why His voice seems unclear, or why hearing Him feels inconsistent, this book will gently lead you back to the simplicity of union-where hearing is no longer effort, but communion.
Hearing God is an invitation to rest, remember, and rediscover the voice that has been with you all along.