Can Christians within the Reformed tradition confess that God still speaks? In terms of past activities, reflection on few other types of divine action have generated more fruit than God’s speech; in at least one theologian’s estimation, “it is God’s mouth and vocal cords that have had a preeminent hold on Christian theology.” Accordingly, within the tradition formal affirmations of God’s ongoing speech abound, but these affirmations manifest mixed dogmatic implications. This paper will survey Reformed theological diversity regarding God’s ongoing speech by focusing especially on the writings of Herman Bavinck, Karl Barth, John Webster, and Kevin Vanhoozer before arguing for an account of God’s ongoing speech which coordinates the doctrines of Scripture, effectual calling, and illumination.