How are dreams and visions used in the Bible?

Quick answer

In the Bible, God used dreams and visions to guide His people, reveal His plans, and point to Christ. While He can still use them today, every dream or vision must be tested against the truths of Scripture.

WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY?

God used dreams and visions several times in the Bible to communicate with His followers and others. The visions and dreams the Lord sent to Old Testament figures were used to reveal and protect His plan as well as to put people in places of influence. Faithful worshipers like Abram, Jacob, Joseph, and Daniel received visions and dreams from the Lord. At times, to further His purposes, God gave dreams to unbelievers, like the Midianite and Amalekite armies (Judges 7:12-15), Pharaoh (Genesis 12:10-20), and Abimelech (Genesis 20:1-7).

Visions in the New Testament provided information that was unavailable elsewhere. Specifically, God used visions and dreams to identify Jesus and grow His church. John the Baptist’s birth was revealed in a vision, and Mary’s pregnancy by the Holy Spirit was revealed to Joseph in a dream. God sent visions and dreams to further the early church (Acts 9:10), such as when Paul received visions (Acts 16:9-10, 18:9-11; 2 Corinthians 12:1-6). Much of Revelation is a vision John had while exiled on the island of Patmos. Those visions further explain the future that God had shown Daniel. With the completion of the Bible, God does not need to use dreams and visions as much as He did before. However, God can communicate with us however He chooses. Even so, when we face a decision, our first stop should always be the Bible, not a dream.

FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT

FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT

IMPLICATIONS FOR TODAY

“I had the strangest dream last night.” If you’ve ever heard that (and who hasn’t?), no one could blame you for inwardly groaning. Few things fascinate the teller more and bore the listener as much as relating a dream. But the dreams and visions that God gave certain people in the Bible weren’t boring. In fact, they were miraculous means God used to further His purposes.

What about today? Should we believe people who say they received a vision or dream from the Lord? It depends. God can still give dreams and visions to people today. But we shouldn’t uncritically believe everyone who claims to have received such divine messages. Common sense and the Bible tell us that people can and do lie (Ezekiel 13:7; 1 John 4:1–6). False religions, such as Mormonism and Seventh-Day Adventists, were founded by those who claimed that God gave them a vision.

So how can we know whether the vision or dream someone claims is false? Any such claims must correspond to the truths as revealed in God’s Word. First Thessalonians 5:20-21 offers sage advice: “Do not despise prophecies, but test everything; hold fast what is good.” We should be so familiar with the truth that we know when we hear a lie. Scripture is the authoritative voice, not individual claims to visions and dreams.

UNDERSTAND

REFLECT

ENGAGE