The idea that people want deep conversations (read yesterday’s post) speaks to man’s universal need to relate to others with meaning and purpose. As Christians, our conversations ought to be meaningful, purposeful, stimulating, encouraging, and refreshing. When Paul wrote to Timothy, he said he had been “refreshed” by Onesiphorus (1 Tim.1:16). Later he commended certain other brethren who had “refreshed my spirit” (1 Cor. 16:18). Do you refresh others?
The word “refresh” originates from the word “breath,” implying a “breath of fresh air.” In conversation, it means to breathe life into the exchange. Jesus must have been very “refreshing” because “The very words I have spoken to you are spirit and life” (John 6:63).
Are your conversations full of “spirit and life?” After you have spent an hour with a friend, will he say he has been refreshed by you? Do your conversations stimulate others to love and good deeds, or encourage them to outbursts of love? (Heb. 10:24 NASB, NLT).
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