Beyond What People Are Saying: Moving from Rumor to Revelation

One of the most penetrating questions Jesus ever asked was directed not at the crowds, but at the people closest to Him. In Matthew 16:13, He asked His disciples: “Who do men say that I, the Son of man, am?” The answers that came back were all wrong — not because the people were evil, but because they were working from the wrong source. They knew Jesus by rumor. But Peter answered from an entirely different level: “Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God.” And Jesus replied that flesh and blood had not revealed that to him, but the Father in heaven. In one exchange, Jesus illustrated the three levels through which people come to know anyone — or anything: rumor, relationship, and revelation.

Rumor: The Most Dangerous Way to Know

A rumor is never neutral. It carries the bias, the fears, the theology, and the agenda of whoever is spreading it. The religious crowd in Jesus’ day was generating religious rumors, comparing Him to Elijah, John the Baptist, or another prophet, because that was the framework their environment had given them. They could not see beyond what their tradition had conditioned them to expect. And here is the danger: words create images in people’s minds. A false image, once planted, can cause someone to reject the very person God has sent to help them. Many believers have missed God’s answer not because God was silent, but because they rejected the package God chose to use. Proverbs 18:8 says that the words of a gossip go down into the deep places of the belly. Rumors settle in. They shape perception. They must be recognized and rejected in favor of a higher way of knowing.

Relationship: Better, but Not Enough

The second level, relationship, is far better than rumor. Spending time with someone, observing their character, experiencing their consistency over time builds real knowledge. There is value in that. The disciples knew things about Jesus that the crowds never knew. But even relationship has its limits. We interpret people we are close to through the filters of our own emotions, expectations, and personal history. We see what we want to see. We hear what we fear hearing. Even the disciples who walked with Jesus daily were sometimes completely wrong about what He was doing and where He was going. Relationship gives knowledge, but it can still be tinted by human bias, familiarity, and unspoken conditions.

Revelation: The Highest Form of Knowing

Revelation is knowledge that originates from God. It is not contaminated by rumor or emotional bias. It is insight given by the Spirit of God that goes beyond what observation and relationship alone can produce. Peter did not figure out who Jesus was through careful analysis. The Father revealed it to him. And Jesus immediately declared that on this kind of rock, God-revealed truth, He would build His church, and the gates of hell would not prevail against it (Matthew 16:18). This is the level every believer is called to operate from. Proverbs 29:18 says, “Where there is no vision, the people perish.” The word translated vision is prophetic revelation, God-given sight. Without it, people are left to navigate life on rumor and limited experience, and they suffer for it.

Seek God’s perspective today above public opinion, above what you have heard from others, and even beyond what your experience has shown you. Obedience often unlocks the next level of revelation, just as it did for Abraham when he left his country not knowing where he was going, and for Jeremiah when God sent him to the potter’s house to hear a word he could not have received anywhere else. The clearer your revelation, the more protected and directed your steps will be. Stop living by rumor. Start living by what your Father has revealed.

-Terrence Burton

You Were Not Built for Isolation

You were not created to do this alone.

We live in a culture that celebrates the lone wolf. The self-made man. The person who needs nobody and answers to no one. Independence is glorified, vulnerability is weakness, and asking for help is somehow a sign that you didn’t work hard enough.

But that’s not how God designed us.

Ecclesiastes 4:9-10 says, “Two are better than one, because they have a good return for their labor: If either of them falls down, one can help the other up. But pity anyone who falls and has no one to help them up.”

God wired us for community. For real relationship. For people in our lives who will tell us the truth, pick us up when we fall, and push us toward who God called us to be. Not surface-level connections — but iron-sharpening-iron relationships that actually cost something.

Jesus Himself didn’t do ministry alone. He had twelve disciples around Him constantly. And within that group, He had three — Peter, James, and John — who were in the closest circle. Even the Son of God valued community.

So who’s in your circle? And more importantly — is it the right circle?

The people around you have more influence on your life than you probably realize. They shape your thinking, your habits, your faith, and your future. You cannot afford to build deep roots with people who are pulling you away from your purpose.

Find people who are going where God is taking you. People who pray. People who push. People who pour in and let you pour back.

Isolation is one of the enemy’s favorite tools. Community is one of God’s greatest gifts.

Don’t do life alone. You were never meant to.

-Terrence Burton