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ood morning! Before the Covid-19 pandemic, I had the
privilege of working with 250 other French teachers as we graded some 23,000
Advanced Placement (AP) French Exams in Cincinnati, Ohio. For the past two years,
we’ve worked online from home. Now you may be thinking that this doesn’t
sound like a swell time, but I assure you, that although challenging, the work
was both satisfying and rewarding.
The exam has both written and speaking components. I
worked on the speaking portion this year which required me to sit in front of a
computer and listen to recordings of students speaking French in an attempt to
successfully describe situations placed before them. Some of the exams
were outstanding, representing the culmination of years of hard work and
practice. Others were good and some needed work; but they all had one
thing in common, all of them required our team to listen to what they were
saying.
There is a great difference between hearing and listening. Anyone
could have put on a headset and “heard” French, but only by “listening” could s/he discern
what was being said and to what level of success. It is not enough to hear; you
must listen and listen closely to what is being said. Hearing means your
ears are working; listening means your brain is engaged and you actually
understand the sounds flowing into your ears.
This is the message Moses wanted the Children of Israel to
grasp before entering the Promised Land. In Deuteronomy
30:19-20 we read
his solemn admonishment and warning to the people to “listen” to what God’s
voice was saying to them. “This
day I call heaven and earth as witnesses against you that I have set before you
life and death, blessings and curses. Now choose life, so that you and your
children may live and that you may love the LORD your God, listen to his voice,
and hold fast to him. For the LORD is your life, and he will give you many
years in the land he swore to give to your fathers, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.”
Notice the choice Moses sets before the people. It is
literally a choice between life and death. Life meant the people would
remember the Lord their God and listen to his voice. They would not only
hear his words, but they would also understand them and obey them. This
is what it means to listen. The people had heard God’s word since leaving Egypt,
they had seen his wondrous works, and received protection and guidance from his
hand. Now, they were to take what they heard, digest it, think on it,
understand it, and obey it.
We are no different today. This morning you may be
sitting in front of your screen reading this with an open Bible. Perhaps you
have read your daily devotion from the Scriptures or perhaps you will do that
after you read this. Reading,
however, is only half the process. Are you taking God’s word into your
mind and heart? Are you drinking it in? Are you listening to what God is
saying? His words are life. His way is perfect. His truths
are sure. His love is everlasting. Listen and hold fast to
him. Are you hearing or listening today?
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