Commune with Each Other

From YouVersion Bible App Devotional, “Reconnected”

Day 5: Community

I talk to a lot of very connected people—people who, from a distance, look like they have more friends than they know what to do with. But most of them tell me they are actually lonely and wish they had more friends. We are the most digitally connected generation in the history of planet Earth and it would not be a stretch to say that we are also the loneliest.

Watching groups of friends choose to stare at their phones rather than engaging with each other when they are together is, if you think about it, insane. If you had beamed into our current reality from 1980 and saw friends doing that, you would think they were avoiding each other because they didn’t want to be together. This is a problem.

The Amish will never have this problem because they won’t allow themselves to. They aren’t anti-technology; they are pro-community. So they weigh the potential value of every piece of new technology before allowing it.

We don’t have to give up technology to have community, but we can be more intentional about the limits we place on technology that may be hindering us in finding true community. [Emphasis added by me] If you don’t have a thriving community where you live, I have good news—you can find one. If you do have a thriving community, I have good news for you too—you can make it better.

Prayer

Lord, please give me guidance and wisdom as I seek to have community with those around me, and please help me wisely place limits on the technology I allow to come into my life. Amen.

My Thoughts

One of my pet peeves is going into a restaurant and looking around at all of the people having a meal together, but they aren’t really together. They each have a device in their hands and are communicating with online friends, or maybe even strangers, instead of those sitting with them. I like the restaurants that have a “no cell phone” rule during meals rule. They are few and far between, but I think it’s a great idea since people won’t govern themselves.

Our lives on earth are so brief; the Bible says it’s a vapor, a vanishing mist. And yet we while away the hours we have on devices that have no emotions and no real connection to us. I understand that technology has some good uses, like being able to communicate via a blog or a text message. But, for the most part, I think technology controls parts of our lives that need to be tuned into people and not an inanimate object.

When my husband and I go out to eat, rare in these days of tight finances, we each put our phones away and talk to each other. It’s not important what we say, as long as we are taking the time to look at each other and really talk. If we had our phones on the table as so many do, that would be a distraction to having our attention focused on each other as it should be.

I am sad for the current generation of young people because their parents are showing them by example that it’s okay to make the device a priority instead of the people around you. I like what the author said about the Amish. They wisely choose what technology to allow into their community, not just accepting all of it as “progress” and “good.” We would do well to follow their example.

Praise and Relationship

Remember the first time you started a relationship with someone? If the relationship is going to last, the two of you need to communicate with each other and trust each other. One of the ways to build that open communication is to honestly say kind words of appreciation to each other. Gary Smalley calls it “The Love Language.” The Bible tells us to build each other up, to encourage each other. Some days, after my husband has done one irritating thing after another, it’s hard to find something kind to say, but I look and there it is! Kindness leads to communication which leads to more kindness, appreciation and love.

Did you know that God desires us to worship Him? Not because He needs our worship but because our praise opens the doors of communication with Him. After all, our relationships on earth are a small mirror to what our relationship is supposed to be with God. So, praise should be a natural outpouring of our love for Him. We show our appreciation to the Lord for all He has done and our love for Him in our words of adoration and praise.

If you can’t find your own words to praise God, read the Word. It is filled with praise for our Mighty Creator. No one is like Him and no one deserves the praise that is His just because of Who He is.

A creature is a created being, one created by God. The creatures in Revelation know to praise God, the One who was in the time of creation and all of the patriarchs, the One who is fully present in our lives today and the One who is coming again to rule and reign forever.

Holy, Holy, Holy-Audrey Assad