Devotion 14 — Living the Practice of Sh’ma
“Teach us to number our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom.”— Psalm 90:12
By this point in the journey, something begins to shift.Sh’ma is no longer just something we understand—it is something we are called to live.
Sh’ma is not a single moment of attention. It is a way of life.
The psalmist’s prayer—“Teach us to number our days”—is a reminder that time is not unlimited. To number our days is to live with awareness: that how we spend our attention matters, that what we listen to shapes who we become, and that each day offers an opportunity we do not get back.
Listening, then, is not optional. It is essential.
But a life of listening does not come naturally. We live in a world that rewards speed, reaction, and constant noise. To practice sh’ma requires something different. It requires slowing down when everything around us urges us to move faster. It asks us to give attention where we might prefer distraction.
There is a cost to this kind of listening.
And we will not practice it perfectly.
Some days we will rush past what matters.Some days we will hear but not respond.Some days we will simply miss what is right in front of us.
The practice of sh’ma is not about getting it right once. It is about returning—again and again—to a posture of attention. Over time, through small and repeated acts of listening, something begins to change. Listening moves from something we do occasionally to something that shapes how we live, how we respond, and who we are becoming.
A life of listening is built one moment at a time.
This kind of listening takes concrete form in daily life. It may begin with something as simple as a pause—a moment before speaking, reacting, or deciding. It may take shape in how we engage Scripture, not quickly for information, but slowly for formation. It may appear in our willingness to hear voices we would normally overlook, especially when those voices challenge our assumptions.
Listening draws us not only closer to God, but deeper into the lives of others. If we are truly listening, we cannot ignore what calls for justice. We begin to notice what we once overlooked. We begin to hear what we once dismissed.
And what we hear begins to change us.
Sometimes listening will confront us with injustice we would rather avoid.Sometimes it will reveal where we need to change.Sometimes it will quiet our pride.Sometimes it will restore hope we thought we had lost.
Without practice, listening remains an idea. With practice, it becomes a way of life.
Communities that practice sh’ma grow more honest and more just.Leaders who practice sh’ma become more accountable and less reactive.Individuals who practice sh’ma become more attentive—to God, to others, and to what is unfolding around them.
Hearing the call to sh’ma is not the end of the journey. It is the beginning of a daily practice that shapes who we become.
Each day offers another opportunity to listen.
Where in my daily routine am I moving too quickly to truly listen?What would change if I treated listening as a daily discipline rather than an occasional act?Where in my life am I reacting instead of listening?What is one specific way I can practice intentional listening today?
God who calls us to listen,slow us down enough to hear what we usually miss.Interrupt our habits when we move too quickly to attend to Your voice.Teach us to listen—not only in moments of quiet,but in the midst of daily life.Open our ears to Your truth,to the wisdom of others,and to the needs that call for justice.Shape us through the practice of sh’ma,that our listening may lead to faithful actionand our lives may reflect Your mercy, wisdom, and love.
A life of faith is formed one act of listening at a time.
