Two
questions to ask
a fellow Christian
There are two key questions to ask fellow-believers when we meet:
1. What part of Scripture
did
you
read
today?
2. How was your prayer life today?
Prayer and Bible reading are habits that sustain and deepen our following of Christ. Scripture reading makes us attentive to God’s voice to shape our attitudes, words thoughts and deeds. Prayer is to our relationship with God what talking is to a close friendship. Without prayer and Bible, it is hard to imagine a Christian staying close to Christ let alone growing in him.
Notice the word ‘today’ in the questions. Yesterday’s prayer and Bible reading are like yesterday’s lunch. They were great at the time but are of diminishing value as
the hours pass. Plans for tomorrow’s prayer and Bible reading are also great … but they are as useless as tomorrow’s dinner plans in fulfilling
today’s appetite.
These two questions can be asked in an ugly way that embodies legalism and which exalts the asker and debases the asked. However, they can also be asked in a way that is gracious and encouraging. That is to ask them in a way that honours an honest negative answer and opens the way for renewed encouragement rather than scolding.
Imagine how we can encourage one another if this became a standard part of our conversation. It can be asked up and down the generational gap and across levels of ability. The
questions are a great leveller among the people of God.
I’ve started building these questions into my conversations with believers that I am close to, whether it be my pastor, my boss, my peers or the people that I serve. No Christian is too ‘senior’ for these questions and none is too ‘junior’.
So how about it? Why not start asking these questions in safe zones and then make them a faith-sustaining habit in your daily conversation
with the people of God?
David Burke
Ps: thanks for
asking. I
read Ezekiel
Chapter 5 today
and was
struck by
the awfulness
of sin
among the
people who used
to be at the
centre of
God’s
plans. I
prayed for
those near
and dear
to me,
for believers
in a
persecuted zone, for
a church
plant that
I know of and
for my
own activities
today. How
about you?
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