Devotion 6 — Sh’ma and Conscience

When the Inner Voice Speaks

“Be still, and know that I am God.”— Psalm 46:10

Most people do not ignore their conscience all at once.They learn to quiet it—slowly, over time.

Listening is not only outward. It is also inward.

Within each person there exists a quiet moral awareness—a voice that signals when something is right or wrong.This voice is often called conscience.

Conscience is not the same as emotion, preference, or social conditioning.It is the place where we recognize truth—even when it costs us.

Conscience does not shout.It unsettles.It interrupts.It refuses to disappear.

In the practice of sh’ma, listening to this inner voice is essential.In the biblical tradition, sh’ma is not passive hearing—it is responsive obedience.To hear is to act.

Conscience is where truth becomes personal—where what we hear is no longer abstract, but demands a response.

Yet conscience must also be examined carefully.

Conscience can guide—but it can also be distorted.Without formation, we risk mistaking comfort for truth and preference for conviction.What feels right is not always what is right.

Sh’ma therefore invites a deeper form of listening: one that tests the inner voice alongside the wisdom of community and the call of God.A conscience that is ignored is not merely silenced—it is disobeyed.

Over time, what we refuse to hear, we lose the ability to recognize.

When conscience, community, and divine guidance converge, discernment becomes possible.

Listening inwardly requires courage.But ignoring conscience slowly erodes the soul.

What is my conscience asking of me that I have been avoiding?

Where have I renamed compromise as “wisdom”?

What would obedience look like if I stopped negotiating with what I know is right?

God of truth,quiet the noise within us.

Help us hear the voice of consciencewith clarity and honesty.

Give us courage not only to listen,but to act—especially when it costs us.

Teach us to test what we hearwith wisdom, humility, and faithfulness,

and guide our hearts toward what is right.


© The Times of Israel (Blogs)