When Faith Means Listening
Most of us are great at talking to God, but terrible at waiting for His answer.
You’ve been praying about it for months. The decision. The next step. The thing keeping you up at 2 a.m. You’ve asked God for clarity, for wisdom, for a sign. But here’s the honest truth — you’ve been doing all the talking and none of the listening.
Most men I know are good at prayer in the traditional sense. We can rattle off requests. We can intercede for our families. We can confess our failures. But when it comes to actually sitting still long enough to hear God’s voice — to let Him interrupt our plans, challenge our assumptions, or redirect our steps — we go quiet. Not humble quiet. Impatient quiet. The kind of quiet that sounds like, “Okay, God, I gave You five minutes. Now I’ll handle it from here.”
We treat prayer like a transaction instead of a conversation. We dump our needs at God’s feet and walk away before He has a chance to respond. And then we wonder why we feel spiritually stuck.
But faith isn’t just believing God can do something. Faith is trusting Him enough to stop talking, sit down, and actually listen for what He wants to say. That’s where the real movement happens. Not in your ability to ask better questions, but in your willingness to hear answers you didn’t script yourself.
“Be still, and know that I am God. I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth!”
Here’s what listening looks like in real life. It’s not mystical or complicated. It’s you, a Bible, maybe a journal, and the discipline to sit there until God meets you. Sometimes He speaks through Scripture that jumps off the page. Sometimes through the conviction of the Holy Spirit that won’t let you move forward until you deal with what He’s showing you. Sometimes through a still, small voice that redirects your next step in a way you’d never have thought of on your own.
But you’ll miss all of it if you’re too busy filling the silence with your own voice.
The truth is, most of us don’t struggle with prayer. We struggle with faith. We struggle with trusting that God actually has something to say — and that what He says might be better than what we’ve already decided. We’re afraid that if we really listen, He’ll ask us to do something hard. Or wait longer than we want to. Or let go of something we’re holding too tightly.
So we keep talking. We keep asking. We keep moving. And we stay stuck in the same cycles, wondering why nothing ever changes.
A next step for this week
Stay hopeful. Take the next step. — Roy
royduffey.com — Clarity for Today. Hope for Tomorrow.
