Topic: How To Stop an Argument Before It Starts – Daily Devotional by Proverbs 31 Ministries 20 February2024
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How To Stop an Argument Before It Starts
FEBRUARY 20, 2024
“Therefore each of you must put off falsehood and speak truthfully to your neighbor, for we are all members of one body.” Ephesians 4:25 (NIV)
During the first year of our marriage, my husband, JP, and I would often come home late from our jobs, put on our pajamas, and eat vanilla ice cream in front of the TV.
One evening, as we snuggled on our sofa, JP got up and headed for the kitchen. When he walked back into our family room with one bowl of ice cream, I was surprised.
“Where’s my bowl of ice cream?” I wondered aloud.
“What do you mean?” JP was genuinely confused.
“We always eat ice cream together. Didn’t you know I’d want ice cream too?”
“How could I know you wanted ice cream unless you told me?” JP said innocently. He was sure his logic was airtight.
News flash: Conflict is rarely logical.
I shot off the couch, stomped into the kitchen, and jerked open the freezer door. Maybe it was exhaustion or low blood sugar; I have no idea why a ridiculous episode over ice cream made my blood boil. But it did.
At this point, JP uttered a single phrase that changed our relationship forever: “Expectation without communication leads to frustration.”
Ephesians 4:25 says, “Therefore each of you must put off falsehood and speak truthfully to your neighbor, for we are all members of one body.” Most of us never consider a failure to communicate our needs, wants and expectations as a failure to speak the truth — but it is. As a result, we create conflict in scenarios where truthful communication could help us avoid conflict.
Of course, “put off falsehood and speak truthfully” (Ephesians 4:25) also means lies or speculations are off the table. Any word not rooted in truth is not from God and will damage a relationship. More subtle, though, are the words we don’t speak, like silent expectations, details we conveniently omit, secrets, or desires we hope our loved ones will “just know.” Perhaps this is why Ephesians 4:25 includes the words “each of you” and “must”: For the believer, truthful communication is not optional.
Admittedly, speaking the truth may feel uncomfortable if we’re unpracticed in expressing our expectations and desires. We’d rather drop hints like breadcrumbs and hope our family and friends figure out what we need. However, when we communicate our expectations on the front end, we eliminate exasperation on the back end. We trade relational problems for relational peace.
Expectation without communication will lead to frustration — if not immediately, then eventually.
The following night, JP and I sat snuggled on the couch. But this time, as he made his way to the kitchen, I called out, “I’d like some ice cream. Would you mind getting me a bowl too?”
Conflict averted and evening enjoyed!
Lord, make me aware of the unspoken expectations I place on others. Help me to forsake falsehood and communicate truthfully and graciously as Your Word instructs me to do. Give me calm where there is chaos, and help me obey You. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.
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