<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br><p>Listening is an essential skill for healthy relationships, both with God and with other people. But it is more than that: listening is a way of life. Adam McHugh places listening at the heart of our spirituality, our relationships and our mission. Heed the call to the listening life, and hear what God is doing in you and the world.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><ul> <li>Christianity Today's 2017 Book of the Year Award - Spiritual Formation</li> <li>Logos Association Bookstore Award, Best Christian Living Book for 2016</li> <li>Bookwi.se's Favorite Books of the Year, Non-Fiction</li> <li>14th Annual Outreach Magazine Resource of the Year, Christian Living</li> </ul><p>Be quick to listen, slow to speak. --James 1:19 How would our lives change if we approached every experience with the intention of listening first? In this noisy, distracting world, it is difficult to truly hear. People talk past each other, eager to be heard but somehow deaf to what is being said. Listening is an essential skill for healthy relationships, both with God and with other people. But it is more than that: listening is a way of life. Adam McHugh places listening at the heart of our spirituality, our relationships and our mission in the world. God himself is the God who hears, and we too can learn to hear what God may be saying through creation, through Scripture, through people. By cultivating a posture of listening, we become more attentive and engaged with those around us. Listening shapes us and equips us to be more attuned to people in pain and more able to minister to those in distress. Our lives are qualitatively different--indeed, better--when we become listeners. Heed the call to the listening life, and hear what God is doing in you and the world.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>Adam McHugh helps his readers to see that the skill of listening well begins with the heart, silent and open first to God for His word, then ready to hear others before speaking.</p>--Michele Morin, Living Our Days, January 1, 2016<br><br><p>At a time when we are drowning in words--both digital and spoken--this quiet little book throws us a life preserver. <em>The Listening Life</em> is gentle, thoughtful, biblical, and eminently practical. It outlines a broad theology of listening alongside specific and clear practices that teach the reader to listen in a new way. Whether you are a loud lover of words or a shy lover of solitude, this book will likely convict you.</p>--Tish Harrison Warren, Christianity Today, The 2017 Book Awards<br><br><p>Hearing is the first sense we develop and the last to go in death. But listening is not a natural capacity. The Bible is clear on this point. We do not automatically listen to God, others, or even ourselves. McHugh's book can change the way you approach your daily conversations. It may even change your life. You should listen.</p>--John Koessler, Christianity Today, November 2015<br><br><p>I say this more often than I actually do it, but this is a book that I will read again. It is easier to read about listening than actually listen, as McHugh says, but this was a very good reminder of why listening is important, and how we can better listen to God, those around us, and ourselves.</p>--Adam Shields, Bookwi.se, December 15, 2015<br><br><p>Like many introverts, I can be vain about my listening skills, but reading McHugh's book forced me to reconsider my self-perception. It's true that being more quiet than talkative means that I am more available to hear, but do I really listen? Or do I only half listen to the person talking while the rest of me is listening to my own brain chatter? . . . . McHugh writes with considerable charm and a great deal of wisdom and he gave me lots to think about. . . . <em>The Listening Life</em> was not written for me. But it had something to say to me anyway. So I listened.</p>--Sophia Dembling, Psychology Today, January 26, 2016<br><br><p>McHugh is the author of <em>The Listening Life: Embracing Attentiveness in a World of Distraction</em>, in which he outlines a dozen traps people can fall into if they don't approach listening in the right way. . . . Good listeners are patient and unselfish, and they can recognize when it's their turn to speak. When they do so, they provide reassuring commentary or ask gentle, probing questions. <em>That</em> is the express lane to conflict resolution.</p>--Chris Weller, Tech Insider, December 12, 2015<br><br><p>Perhaps there's not another gift, art or skill so in need of resurgent development today than the discipline of listening. Yes, words matter--today, they're abundant. Yet the need and the ability to discern what's behind them matters even more for those who would be peacemakers in a painfully polarized society. To hear is to heal; to listen is to love. In <em>The Listening Life</em>, Adam McHugh invites us not only to imagine ourselves 'quick to hear and slow to speak, ' but to embrace listening as a way of life in order to diffuse divisions and discern the divine.</p>--Mark and Linda DeYmaz, 14th Annual Outreach Resources of the Year, March/April 2017<br><br><p>This book is an essential antidote and a welcome aid to listen well--to God and to one another.</p>--Roy Howard, The Presbyterian Outlook, April 5, 2016<br><br><p>Throughout his wise and witty work, McHugh (<em>Introverts in the Church</em>) lobbies readers to prick up their ears. 'Listening, ' he writes, 'comes first.' McHugh predicates this marvelous book on what lousy listeners we are, then proceeds to offer means for changing our habits. . . . McHugh writes humbly about learning to hear deeply, because 'the beginning of discipleship is listening.' He writes intimately, telling his own stories in the same tone as he retells tales from the Bible. McHugh mixes more formal writing with conversational sections, liberally quoting colleagues and resources (from John Coltrane to Homer Simpson) and including personal anecdotes, aphorisms, and loving admonishments tied together with keen humor. This is a persuasive book for those with ears ready to listen to what McHugh has to say.</p>--Publishers Weekly, October 12, 2015<br>
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