Be an Active Listener

I am absolutely the world’s worst at listening, but God is prodding me to work on that skill, so I will share with you what I am learning so far. First, in order to actively listen, you have to really pay attention to what the other person is saying and look at their facial expressions. I have found myself frequently doing other things when someone (especially my husband) thinks that I am listening, and I really am not. I read, fidget, look at texts, check my calendar, etc. I do a lot of other things instead of listening actively and I need to stop that. Second, I need to practice not interrupting. Who knows what the other person might have said if I had not decided to put in my two cents before it was time? I will never know because I interrupted. I think part of that is because as I age, my thoughts are fleeting and I want to say them before they go away permanently. God is reminding me that if it is important enough for me to say, it can wait and He will remind me of it if I forget. The third thing is to respond appropriately. That is much easier to do if you are being an active listener. I have found myself responding to a question that wasn’t even asked because it was what was in my mind to say, regardless of whether it made sense in the conversation. The respectful thing to do is to listen actively, respond appropriately and don’t interrupt. The whole kindness thing that God tells us to practice in the Bible can be applied to listening, too. I am getting better, but I am not there yet. Stop…look…listen. That’s a good thing to remember, not just for crossing the street, but for being an active listener. Stop whatever you are doing. Look at the person talking. And listen…really listen. You might hear something important to you, to the other person and to God.

The Road We Want

Look at the action verbs in this Scripture: Stop, Look, Ask, Walk, Travel, and Find. There is a progression here in making wise choices. First, we have to stop, pause long enough to hear the voice of the Lord and not the clamor of the world all around us. Look around—examine the choices before you. Ask—the Bible says that we don’t have because we don’t ask. Before you make a choice, ask what the way that God wants you to take is. Then, walk that path. God doesn’t promise that it will be easy or without some challenges along the way, but he does tell us to travel along that path and there our souls will be able to rest. Why? Because we are following the purpose, the plan, the path that God established for us. Unfortunately, too many of us turn the wrong way, saying that the road we want is different than the one God has set up for us to take. God will allow us to make our own choices, but then we will suffer the consequences of traveling the wrong way. Like a good GPS system, God will look at the road we are on, the one where we took the wrong turn, and He will recalculate a new path for us. It may take us longer to get to where He wants us to be and we may miss some blessings along the way, but God will not give up on us. His purpose and plan will still be fulfilled, often in spite of us because we didn’t carefully stop, look, ask walk, travel and find. God wants us to find that rest that He has promised, both here on earth and in eternity with Him.