There is something deeply comforting about the way God communicates. He is not obscure, distant, or needlessly mysterious when He speaks to His people. From the earliest pages of Scripture to the final visions of Revelation, we find a consistent pattern: when God sends a message, it is clear, purposeful, and meant to be understood.
The material before us presses that truth upon the heart with unusual weight. It reminds us that throughout Scripture, whenever angels speak to human beings, they do so in intelligible language—words that can be understood, believed, and obeyed .
This should not surprise us. After all, revelation that cannot be understood is no revelation at all.
A God Who Speaks Clearly
At the end of this article I’ve provided a long list of proofs that angels have always spoken to people through plain spoken languages. Here are a few examples:
When Hagar fled into the wilderness, broken and alone, “the Angel of the LORD” found her and spoke words she could grasp (Genesis 16:7–12, BSB).
When Abraham stood trembling over Isaac, the voice from heaven was not a riddle but a rescue (Genesis 22:11–12, BSB).
When Moses approached the burning bush, the voice that called his name did not confuse him—it commissioned him (Exodus 3:4–10, BSB).
Again and again, the pattern holds. Gideon, Daniel, Zechariah, Mary, Joseph, the shepherds, Peter, Paul—each received messages that were plain enough to understand and weighty enough to obey.
Even in the glory of heaven, when angels speak, they do not descend into chaos or unintelligible sounds. They proclaim: “Holy, holy, holy is the LORD of Hosts” (Isaiah 6:3, BSB). They declare: “He is not here; He has risen” (Matthew 28:6, BSB). They instruct, warn, comfort, and guide.
God does not stammer. Heaven does not mumble.
The Purpose of Speech in Scripture
Why does this matter?
Because Scripture itself ties spiritual speech to edification—building up the people of God. The Apostle Paul makes this unmistakably clear:
“Unless you speak intelligible words with your tongue, how will anyone know what you are saying? You will just be speaking into the air” (1 Corinthians 14:9, BSB).
Words are not given merely to express emotion but to convey truth. They are bridges, not barriers.
This is why the early church understood “tongues” (glōssai) as real languages—means by which the gospel could cross boundaries and reach hearts. At Pentecost, the miracle was not confusion but clarity: “each one heard them speaking his own language” (Acts 2:6, BSB).
The Spirit of God was not producing noise; He was producing understanding.
A Needed Correction
In our time, it is sometimes suggested that spiritual speech may be unintelligible—something beyond comprehension, even in its very nature. Yet the testimony set before us challenges that idea directly. There is not a single instance in all of Scripture where a message from God—whether delivered by angel or apostle—comes as meaningless sound .
Even Paul’s phrase, “If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels…” (1 Corinthians 13:1, BSB), is best understood as a sweeping exaggeration to magnify love. He stretches language to its highest conceivable point, only to say that even then, without love, it amounts to nothing.
The emphasis is not on discovering a heavenly dialect but on recognizing the supremacy of love over every gift.
What This Means for Us
This truth quietly reshapes how we think about God and His Word.
First, it assures us that God desires to be known. He has not hidden Himself behind a veil of incomprehensible speech. He speaks so that we may hear, understand, and respond.
Second, it reminds us that clarity is not the enemy of spirituality. There is a kind of thinking that equates mystery with depth, as though what cannot be understood must be more spiritual. Scripture gently corrects that notion. What comes from God brings light, not confusion.
Third, it calls us to value words rightly. If God uses language to reveal truth, then we should handle it with care—seeking not to impress but to edify, not to obscure but to make plain.
In the end, this is not merely a discussion about tongues or angels. It is about the character of God.
He is a God who speaks—and when He speaks, He makes Himself understood.
And that should lead us to a simple but searching question:
Are we listening with the same clarity with which He has spoken?
The Final word is always God’s Word
The following is a comprehensive list of biblical accounts where angels speak to humans in intelligible speech—known human languages—not unintelligible utterances or “jibberish.”
Old Testament Accounts
1. Genesis 16:7–12 — The Angel of the LORD speaks to Hagar, instructing her to return to Sarai and prophesying about Ishmael.
2. Genesis 18:1–33 — Three “men” (angels) converse with Abraham about Sarah’s pregnancy and the judgment on Sodom.
3. Genesis 19:1–22 — Two angels speak to Lot, urging him to flee Sodom.
4. Genesis 21:17–18 — The Angel of God calls to Hagar from heaven, comforting her regarding Ishmael.
5. Genesis 22:11–18 — The Angel of the LORD calls to Abraham twice, stopping the sacrifice of Isaac and renewing the covenant promise.
6. Genesis 31:11–13 — The Angel of God speaks to Jacob in a dream, identifying Himself as the God of Bethel.
7. Exodus 3:2–4:17 — The Angel of the LORD appears in the burning bush and speaks to Moses at length.
8. Numbers 22:22–35 — The Angel of the LORD speaks to Balaam (and even to his donkey).
9. Judges 2:1–4 — The Angel of the LORD speaks to Israel at Bochim, rebuking them for disobedience.
10. Judges 6:11–24 — The Angel of the LORD speaks to Gideon, commissioning him.
11. Judges 13:3–21 — The Angel of the LORD appears to Manoah’s wife and then to Manoah, announcing Samson’s birth.
12. 1 Kings 19:5–7 — An angel touches Elijah and speaks to him twice, commanding him to eat.
13. 2 Kings 1:3, 15 — The Angel of the LORD speaks to Elijah about King Ahaziah’s messengers.
14. Isaiah 6:1–8 — The seraphim speak to Isaiah: “Holy, holy, holy is the LORD of hosts” and “Whom shall I send?”
15. Daniel 6:22 — An angel speaks to Daniel in the lions’ den: “My God sent his angel and shut the lions’ mouths.”
16. Daniel 8:16–26 — Gabriel speaks to Daniel, interpreting the vision of the ram and the goat.
17. Daniel 9:20–27 — Gabriel speaks to Daniel about the seventy weeks prophecy.
18. Daniel 10:5–21 — An angel (likely Gabriel) speaks to Daniel, revealing spiritual warfare behind the scenes.
19. Daniel 12:5–13 — Angels speak to Daniel about the time of the end.
20. Zechariah 1:9–21; 2:1–13; 3:1–10; 4:1–14; 5:1–11; 6:1–8 — An interpreting angel speaks to Zechariah throughout the night visions.
New Testament Accounts
21. Matthew 1:20–24 — An angel of the Lord speaks to Joseph in a dream, instructing him to take Mary as his wife.
22. Matthew 2:13, 19–20 — An angel of the Lord speaks to Joseph twice in dreams—first to flee to Egypt, then to return.
23. Matthew 28:2–7 — An angel speaks to the women at the tomb: “He is not here, for He has risen.”
24. Mark 16:5–7 — The young man (angel) at the tomb speaks to the women.
25. Luke 1:11–20 — Gabriel speaks to Zechariah, announcing the birth of John the Baptist.
26. Luke 1:26–38 — Gabriel speaks to Mary, announcing the birth of Jesus.
27. Luke 2:9–14 — The angel of the Lord and the heavenly host speak to the shepherds: “Fear not… Glory to God in the highest.”
28. Luke 24:4–7 — Two men (angels) speak to the women at the tomb, reminding them of Jesus’ words.
29. John 20:12–13 — Two angels speak to Mary Magdalene at the tomb.
30. Acts 1:10–11 — Two men (angels) speak to the disciples at the ascension: “Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking into heaven?”
31. Acts 5:19–20 — An angel opens the prison doors and speaks to the apostles: “Go and stand in the temple and speak to the people all the words of this Life.”
32. Acts 8:26 — An angel of the Lord speaks to Philip: “Rise and go toward the south to the road that goes down from Jerusalem to Gaza.”
33. Acts 10:3–6, 22 — An angel speaks to Cornelius, instructing him to send for Peter.
34. Acts 12:7–11 — An angel speaks to Peter in prison: “Rise quickly… Dress yourself and put on your sandals.”
35. Acts 27:23–24 — An angel speaks to Paul on the ship: “Do not be afraid, Paul; you must stand before Caesar.”
36. Revelation 1:1 — An angel communicates the revelation to John.
37. Revelation 5:2 — A strong angel proclaims with a loud voice: “Who is worthy to open the scroll?”
38. Revelation 7:2–3 — An angel ascending from the east cries out to the four angels: “Do not harm the earth or the sea or the trees…”
39. Revelation 10:1–11 — A mighty angel speaks to John with a loud voice like a lion roaring.
40. Revelation 14:6–7, 8, 9 — Three angels fly in midair, proclaiming the eternal gospel and warnings.
41. Revelation 17:1, 7; 19:9–10; 21:9, 15, 17; 22:1, 6, 8–9 — An angel speaks to John throughout the vision, interpreting and guiding him.
42. Revelation 18:1–2, 21–24 — Another angel announces the fall of Babylon.
43. Revelation 22:6–16 — The angel speaks to John, confirming the testimony of Jesus.
Conclusion
In every instance where angels communicate with humans in Scripture, they speak in intelligible human language—Hebrew, Aramaic, or Greek.
There is not a single example of an angel speaking in an unknown, unintelligible, or ecstatic utterance.
Paul’s phrase “languages of angels” in 1 Corinthians 13:1 is rhetorical hyperbole—a hypothetical extreme to make his point about the supremacy of love.
If angels do not actually speak in “jibberish” or unknown tongues, then Paul cannot be referring to a real, normative angelic language that believers might speak. He is saying, “Even if you could speak with the most elevated communication possible—human or heavenly—it would be nothing without love.”
May the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of Christ, lead you into all truth.

Leave a comment