My wife has taken up the palette and easel to become a painter. She is doing pretty well! In fact, I encouraged her to send her finished art to our adult children to hang on their refrigerators.
I’m funnin’ ya’ of course, but that is certainly one way they could encourage her artistic endeavors.
Encouragement can come in the form of pictures on the ice box and other helpful activities, but let’s focus on verbal encouragement for now.
Hebrews 3:13 tells us we all need a daily dose of it. It says, “But encourage one another daily, as long as it is called today, so that none of you may be hardened by sin’s deceitfulness.”
This is a command directed to us and it is something that we should offer to those around us on a daily basis.
Most encouragement is kind of like milk. It has a short shelf life. It expires and then we have to run to the store to get more. So, we need to encourage each other regularly.
The author tells us why. He says, “so that none of you may be hardened by sin’s deceitfulness.” There is a sin principle which is at work in this world. Think of it as the sun at work on your skin. The UV rays penetrate and damage your skin. Get enough of it over time and you’ll end up with a leathery look.
Likewise, we are bombarded by the destructive lies and the lusts of this world. It erodes our ego. Over time it harms our souls and causes us to become insensitive and indifferent to spiritual things.
Encouragement is like sun block. It keeps the UV rays of sin from penetrating and protects us from damage.
To experience encouragement, we need to be together. Hebrews 10:25 says, “Let us not give up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but let us encourage one another…”
The author spoke of people who gave up the habit of church. He pleads – don’t do that because being with other Christians is where encouragement is found.
Sunday worship lifts us up, the message challenges us, the classes provide personal interaction and the casual conversation at the coffee table is sweet (especially if your church serves donuts as mine does).
But Sunday worship is not enough. We need to be in relationship with people whom we know, love and trust. I have a friend who was chronically depressed. He told me that he would often go to small group discouraged but leave feeling great.
So how do we speak encouragement to one another?
– Make it positive. Sarcasm and encouragement do not get along. A compliment bathed in sarcasm, is like a chocolate covered olive.
– Make sure what you say is true. Flattery falls flat. Don’t tell her she looks like a model when she doesn’t. When we lie, we imply that the truth may be painful for them to handle – and they sense it.
– Our words should have substance. To say you look nice – is nice, but insufficient. Focus on issues of character and virtue and service. Tell her that you are proud of the way she handled her surly boss. Tell him that he did well when he shared his faith with his uncle.
It would be nice if we all lived home on the range where seldom is heard a discouraging word. Ah, but we do not.
But we can change that. We can start by being the first and most frequent to encourage others. It’s crazy how the encouraged, will reciprocate.
My grandson was in the midst of potty training. He would occassionally fail to succeed, but he always ended those sessions by saying out loud, “Good try.”
I suppose that we could encourage ourselves, as he did – but it is so much more meaningful and powerful when it comes from someone else.
A PRAYER: Lord my own soul feels a little leathery, help me to create an encouraging community.
This has been Jim Johnson and pickleheavenpress.com
May the grace of our Lord Jesus be with you!
Scripture references are from the New International Version.
