James 1:19 (NIV)
My dear brothers
and sisters, take note of this: Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to
speak and slow to become anger.
The other day I read about a college professor who was
leaving the office for several days. The man normally received a great deal of
e-mail, and so he arranged for his e-mail program to automatically send a
simple reply to anyone who sent him a message. Then he left.
The professor's plan was great, except for one small
thing he forgot: the dozen or so automated mailing lists he was on. This meant
that whenever an automated e-mail was sent to his account, the account sent
back the professor's “out of town” message. Unfortunately, the automated system
was not set up to handle this reply, which caused it to send the professor
another message telling him so...which caused his account to respond with
another message, and so on and so on....
E-mail traffic began to climb, until eventually the
school’s e-mail system was handling more than 800 messages every five minutes,
and crashed. System managers had to break into the professor’s account to fix
the problem. The machines were so busy talking to one another they don’t even
have time to listen anymore!
We have more ways to communicate today than ever before.
We can communicate with the other side of the world as quickly as we can walk
across the street. We can send a message to millions of people with the touch
of a single button. We have pagers, cell-phones, modems, and e-mail, all
designed to help us communicate.
But sometimes I wonder if, in spite of all our
communication tools, we have lost the skill of communicating. Loneliness
doesn’t seem to have abated. Despair seems to be at its usual levels. I heard
recently about a woman who ran an ad in the newspaper offering to sit and
listen to phone callers’ talk for 30 minutes for $5.00. Are we that desperate
for someone to listen? Amazingly, the answer seems to be “yes.”
How are your listening skills? Are you too busy to
listen, or do you make time for this most simple of loving gestures. Take a few
minutes to listen to someone today. You will do somebody a world of good.
Dear Lord, Help us to take the time to listen today. WE
know that there are many out there that need someone to be there for them. Help
us be that person today. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.
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