"A friend loves at
all times. . ." (Proverbs 17:17, NIV).
Years
ago a friend was
talking to me about some people being "cursed with the affliction to
give advice." At the time I had no idea what he was talking about. Sure
sounded
strange to me. Now I understand.
According
to Webster's
Dictionary, people "offering. . .unwanted advice" are officious. They
can also be obnoxious. Such advice can be and often is a thinly veiled
criticism.
I'm
not talking about going
to a lawyer or an accountant or a car mechanic or whatever where we need
and are asking for professional advice. What I'm talking about is when
we
share our struggles and feelings with a friend and they have a
compulsion to tell us what we should or shouldn't be doing, or to "fix"
us. They are in
fact putting us down in that they are assuming that they know our needs
better than we know them ourselves.
Even
when some people want us
to tell them what to do, it is a much greater help not to tell them what
we think they should do, but to help THEM come up with their own
options and
solutions. This is what a good counselor does. He helps clients see what
their options are and decide for themselves what they need to do.
What
I want from a friend
when I am feeling in the pits is someone to listen to me with their
heart, give me their presence, and accept me as I am—and let me know
they
care—without giving any kind of advice or trying to fix me.
These friends can be rare.
Even rarer is the friend who knows how to weep with those who weep.
In
his book, Out of Solitude,
Henri Nouwen wrote, "When we honestly ask ourselves which persons in our
lives mean the most to us, we often find that it is those who, instead
of
giving advice, solutions, or cures, have chosen rather to share our pain
and touch our wounds with a warm and tender hand. The friend who can be
silent with us in a moment of despair or confusion, who can stay with us
in an hour of grief and bereavement, who can tolerate not knowing, not
curing, not healing and face with us the reality of our powerlessness,
that is a friend who cares."
May God help us all to be
this kind of a friend.
SAY THIS:
"Almighty God, please give me an understanding, caring, and
compassionate heart and help me to learn how to listen to my friends'
pain, to accept them
as they are, to communicate to them that I truly care— without having a
compulsion to give unsolicited advice or try to fix them. To my friends
in need please help me to be a friend indeed. Thank you for hearing and
answering my prayer. Gratefully, In Jesus loving Name I Pray, Amen."
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