Many Christians believe that God can and does still speak through visions and dreams today, though views differ depending on denomination and theology. Here are the main perspectives:

1. Continuationist View (Yes, God still speaks this way)

  • Biblical Basis: Passages like Joel 2:28 (“your sons and daughters will prophesy, your old men will dream dreams, your young men will see visions”) and Acts 2:17 are often cited.
  • Practice Today: Many Pentecostal, Charismatic, and some evangelical Christians believe God still uses dreams, visions, and prophetic impressions to guide, warn, encourage, or call people.
  • Examples: Testimonies of Christians, especially in places with little access to the Bible or churches, often include accounts of people encountering Christ in dreams or visions.

2. Cessationist View (No, not in the same way as in the Bible)

  • Position: Some Christians, especially in Reformed and conservative evangelical traditions, believe that God no longer gives revelation through dreams or visions. They see those as limited to the apostolic era for confirming the gospel message.
  • Emphasis: They stress that God primarily speaks today through Scripture, which is considered sufficient and complete.

3. Middle View (Cautious openness)

  • Position: Some Christians believe God may occasionally speak through a dream or vision, but it should always be tested against Scripture.
  • Emphasis: The Bible is the final authority, so any dream or vision that contradicts it should be rejected.

In practice, many believers hold that if God does give a dream or vision today, its purpose is to:

  • Point people to Christ
  • Confirm what God has already revealed in Scripture
  • Encourage faith and obedience

Testimonies from the Mission Field

  • Middle East & North Africa: Many Muslims who later became Christians report first encountering Jesus in a dream or vision. In these dreams, they often describe a “man in white” who identifies himself as Jesus and invites them to follow Him. Mission organizations working in those regions have documented numerous such stories, especially in places where access to the Bible or church is limited.

Guidance in Personal Life

  • Calling to Ministry: Some pastors and missionaries share that they felt called into ministry after a vivid dream or vision that gave them clarity about God’s direction for their lives. For example, one missionary couple reported dreaming about a specific country repeatedly, which led them to pray and eventually move there to share the gospel.
  • Encouragement During Hardship: Believers under persecution sometimes describe visions of Christ or angels that gave them strength to endure imprisonment or trials.

Examples in the Modern Church

  • Charismatic & Pentecostal Churches: It’s common to hear testimonies of believers receiving dreams that gave them insight into how to pray for someone, warnings about dangers, or encouragement about God’s faithfulness.
  • Cautious Discernment: Leaders usually remind people that these experiences should always be tested by Scripture, prayer, and wise counsel, since not every dream is from God.

The Common Thread

  • The purpose of these dreams/visions is not to replace Scripture but to point people toward Christ, strengthen faith, or guide believers in unique circumstances.
  • Christians across different traditions often agree that if a vision or dream contradicts the Bible, it cannot be from God.

Why does God speak to people in visions and dreams in the Bible?

In the Bible, God often communicates through visions and dreams for several important reasons:

  1. Accessibility – Dreams and visions were a way God could reach people directly, even those who didn’t have the Scriptures (like Pharaoh in Genesis 41 or Nebuchadnezzar in Daniel 2).
  2. Revelation of His will – Dreams and visions often revealed God’s plans, warnings, or encouragement. For example, Joseph’s dreams (Genesis 37) foretold his future role, and Daniel’s visions revealed God’s unfolding plan for history.
  3. Confirmation and guidance – God gave visions and dreams to guide His people at critical times. Joseph (Mary’s husband) was warned in a dream to flee to Egypt with baby Jesus (Matthew 2:13). Paul was directed in a vision to go to Macedonia (Acts 16:9).
  4. Symbolic communication – Dreams and visions often carried symbolic imagery that required interpretation. This both concealed and revealed truth depending on the hearer’s openness to God (Daniel, Ezekiel, Revelation).
  5. Authority and validation – Prophets often received visions as proof of their calling and authority. For instance, Isaiah’s vision of God in the temple (Isaiah 6) confirmed his prophetic mission.
  6. God’s initiative – Dreams and visions emphasize that God is the one who initiates revelation. People can’t force God to speak, but He chooses to reveal Himself in these ways when it serves His purpose.

In short: God used visions and dreams as a supernatural channel to reveal His will, guide His people, warn of danger, and show glimpses of His larger plan.

Dreams in the Bible

  • Definition: Happen while a person is asleep.
  • Purpose: God sometimes spoke through dreams to reveal guidance, warnings, or future events.
  • Examples:
    • Jacob dreamed of a ladder reaching to heaven (Genesis 28:12).
    • Joseph (son of Jacob) had symbolic dreams of his family bowing down to him (Genesis 37:5–10).
    • Joseph (husband of Mary) was warned in a dream to take Jesus and flee to Egypt (Matthew 2:13).
    • Pharaoh and Nebuchadnezzar received dreams that needed interpretation by God’s servants.

Dreams are often more symbolic and require interpretation.

Visions in the Bible

  • Definition: Supernatural revelations received while awake, often in a trance-like state.
  • Purpose: To show God’s glory, reveal His plans, or commission someone for a task.
  • Examples:
    • Isaiah’s vision of the Lord on His throne (Isaiah 6:1–8).
    • Ezekiel’s visions of the heavenly throne and wheels within wheels (Ezekiel 1).
    • Daniel’s visions of future kingdoms (Daniel 7–8).
    • Paul’s vision of a man from Macedonia calling for help (Acts 16:9).
    • John’s visions in Revelation of heaven and the end times.

Visions are usually more direct and vivid, and often carry a strong sense of God’s presence and glory.

Key Difference

  • Dreams = While asleep. Often symbolic, requiring interpretation.
  • Visions = While awake (though sometimes in a trance). Often vivid and accompanied by God’s presence or angelic messengers.

Both are ways God revealed His will, guidance, and future plans when written Scripture was not yet complete.

Old Testament Examples

  1. Abraham – God appeared to him in a vision, promising descendants as numerous as the stars (Genesis 15:1–6).
  2. Abimelech – God warned him in a dream not to touch Sarah, Abraham’s wife (Genesis 20:3–7).
  3. Jacob – Saw a ladder reaching to heaven in a dream, with angels ascending and descending, and God reaffirmed His covenant (Genesis 28:10–17).
  4. Joseph (son of Jacob) – Had dreams that foretold his rise to power and his brothers bowing before him (Genesis 37:5–11).
  5. Pharaoh – Dreamed of seven fat cows and seven thin cows, and seven healthy heads of grain and seven scorched heads; Joseph interpreted it as a famine prophecy (Genesis 41:1–32).
  6. Samuel – As a boy, God called to him at night in the temple (1 Samuel 3:1–10).
  7. Nathan the Prophet – Received visions to counsel King David (2 Samuel 7:4–17).
  8. Solomon – God appeared to him in a dream, offering wisdom (1 Kings 3:5–15).
  9. Elijah – Had visions and encounters with God, including God speaking in a “gentle whisper” (1 Kings 19:9–18).
  10. Isaiah – Saw the Lord in a vision, high and exalted in the temple (Isaiah 6:1–8).
  11. Ezekiel – Saw visions of God, including the famous “wheel within a wheel” and God’s throne (Ezekiel 1).
  12. Daniel – Received and interpreted dreams and visions, including Nebuchadnezzar’s dreams and his own visions of future kingdoms (Daniel 2, 4, 7, 8, 10).

New Testament Examples

  1. Joseph (husband of Mary) – Received dreams guiding him to take Mary as his wife, flee to Egypt, and later return to Israel (Matthew 1:20–24; 2:13, 19, 22).
  2. Wise Men (Magi) – Warned in a dream not to return to Herod (Matthew 2:12).
  3. Pilate’s Wife – Warned in a dream about Jesus’ innocence during His trial (Matthew 27:19).
  4. Peter – Saw a vision of a sheet with unclean animals, teaching him that the gospel was for all nations (Acts 10:9–16).
  5. Paul – Had several visions:
    • The vision of Christ on the road to Damascus (Acts 9:3–6).
    • A vision of a man of Macedonia calling him to preach there (Acts 16:9).
    • The Lord encouraging him in Corinth (Acts 18:9–10).
    • A vision of heaven and “surpassing revelations” (2 Corinthians 12:1–4).
  6. John (the Apostle) – Received the Revelation (the entire Book of Revelation is a vision of future events, heaven, and Christ’s return).

Summary Verse on Dreams and Visions:

“In the last days, God says, I will pour out my Spirit on all people.
Your sons and daughters will prophesy, your young men will see visions,
your old men will dream dreams.”
(Acts 2:17, quoting Joel 2:28)

Dreams & Visions in the Bible

PersonReference(s)Summary of Dream/Vision
AbrahamGenesis 15:1–6God’s covenant promise in a vision.
AbimelechGenesis 20:3–7Warned in a dream not to take Sarah.
JacobGenesis 28:10–17Ladder reaching to heaven; covenant reaffirmed.
Joseph (Jacob’s son)Genesis 37:5–11Dreams foretelling his rise over his brothers.
PharaohGenesis 41:1–32Dreams of cows and grain; famine prophecy.
Samuel1 Samuel 3:1–10God calls him at night in the temple.
Nathan2 Samuel 7:4–17Vision giving David God’s covenant message.
Solomon1 Kings 3:5–15Dream at Gibeon, asks for wisdom.
Elijah1 Kings 19:9–18Vision at Mount Horeb; God speaks in a whisper.
IsaiahIsaiah 6:1–8Vision of God’s throne in the temple.
EzekielEzekiel 1Visions of God’s glory, “wheel within a wheel.”
DanielDaniel 2, 4, 7, 8, 10Dreams/visions of kingdoms, future events.
Joseph (Mary’s husband)Matthew 1:20–24; 2:13,19,22Dreams guiding him to protect Jesus.
Magi (Wise Men)Matthew 2:12Warned in a dream not to return to Herod.
Pilate’s WifeMatthew 27:19Dream about Jesus’ innocence.
PeterActs 10:9–16Vision of unclean animals; gospel for all nations.
PaulActs 9:3–6; 16:9; 18:9–10; 2 Cor. 12:1–4Damascus vision of Christ; Macedonian call; encouragement in Corinth; heavenly visions.
John (Apostle)Revelation 1–22Vision of Christ, heaven, and the end times.

Discover more from The Anchor Gospel Ministry

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a comment

Latest posts

Discover more from The Anchor Gospel Ministry

Receive articles in your inbox by subscribing below. Unsubscribe at any time.

Continue reading