📝 Worksheet 4.4: Listening and Presence Practice Plan
Worksheet 4.4: Listening and Presence Practice Plan
Private Worksheet Notice
This worksheet is for your personal reflection. You are not required to upload private answers. You may share selected insights with a trusted minister, chaplain, life coach, pastor, Soul Center leader, group leader, or mentor only if you choose.
Do not write down private trauma details, legal matters, medical information, workplace complaints, sexual history, screenshots, identifying details, or confidential information about another person.
Purpose
This worksheet helps you practice listening as agape love. Agape love seeks the true good of another person before God. Listening with presence helps you slow down, notice your inward conversation, honor another person as an organic human, and choose one faithful step.
Portfolio Asset
By the end of this worksheet, you will have a simple Listening and Presence Practice Plan and one real conversation reflection for your People Skill Confidence Portfolio.
Movement One: Pause and Pray
Begin by slowing down.
Take a breath.
Relax your shoulders if you can.
Notice your face, hands, posture, and pace.
Remember: you are an organic human before God. Your spiritual nature thinks, believes, trusts, hopes, fears, loves, discerns, and speaks inwardly. Your bodily nature also participates through your brain, nervous system, senses, memories, emotions, energy, posture, facial expression, tone, and spoken words.
Pray:
Lord Jesus, help me be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to anger. Teach me to listen with agape love. Help me seek the true good of the person in front of me before You. Calm my need to fix, impress, defend, interrupt, or rush. Help me be present with humility, wisdom, and care. Amen.
Scripture Anchor
James 1:19 says, “So, then, my beloved brothers, let every man be swift to hear, slow to speak, and slow to anger.”
Write a simple prayer from this verse:
Lord Jesus, help me be swift to hear by:
Help me be slow to speak by:
Help me be slow to anger by:
Movement Two: Notice and Name
Choose one ordinary setting where you want to practice listening and presence.
This week, I want to practice listening in this setting:
family conversation
marriage or close relationship
friendship
church lobby or small group
ministry conversation
workplace conversation
phone call or text exchange
conversation with someone who is discouraged
conversation with someone I tend to interrupt
conversation with someone I do not understand well
other:
Name the person or type of conversation in a general way. Do not include private details.
The conversation setting I am choosing is:
Now notice your usual listening pattern.
When this kind of conversation happens, I often:
interrupt too quickly
prepare my answer while the other person is speaking
give advice before understanding
quote Scripture too quickly
tell a similar story about myself
try to cheer the person up too fast
become defensive
withdraw or go quiet
look distracted
feel pressure to fix the problem
feel awkward during silence
ask too many questions
avoid asking any questions
change the subject
listen for what proves I am right
become emotionally overloaded
other:
The listening habit I most want to grow in is:
Notice your inward self-conversation.
Before or during this kind of conversation, I often say inwardly:
“I need to have the right answer.”
“This is taking too long.”
“I do not know what to say.”
“I need to fix this.”
“I hope they think I am helpful.”
“I feel accused.”
“I already know what they mean.”
“This is too heavy.”
“I want to talk about my experience.”
“I need to get out of this conversation.”
“If I stay quiet, I will look foolish.”
“If I listen, I am agreeing.”
other:
The inward sentence I most need to bring before Christ is:
How does this inward sentence affect your body or presence?
It affects my:
breathing
facial expression
tone
posture
eye contact
patience
timing
energy
emotions
ability to listen
ability to ask questions
ability to stay present
other:
I notice that my inward sentence affects me by:
Movement Three: Discern and Choose
Now ask what agape love may look like in this conversation.
Agape love asks:
What is truly good before God for this person, for me, for this relationship, and for this situation?
In this conversation, the true good may include:
listening quietly
asking one gentle question
letting the person finish
reflecting back what I heard
respecting privacy
not forcing disclosure
not making the conversation about myself
not rushing into advice
not quoting Scripture too quickly
speaking a short word of encouragement
setting a respectful boundary
suggesting pastoral or professional support
seeking appropriate help if safety is involved
other:
The most loving listening practice for this situation may be:
Choose one grace-shaped inward sentence.
Instead of saying inwardly:
I will practice saying before God:
Examples:
Instead of “I need to fix this,” I will say, “Jesus is the Savior. I can listen with love.”
Instead of “I need the perfect answer,” I will say, “I can be present and ask one humble question.”
Instead of “If I listen, I am agreeing,” I will say, “Listening gives me wisdom before I speak.”
Instead of “This is too awkward,” I will say, “Silence can be a place of love.”
My grace-shaped inward sentence will be:
Choose one listening question.
In this conversation, I could gently ask:
“Would you like to say more about that?”
“How has that been for you?”
“What has been the hardest part?”
“What has helped you keep going?”
“Would you like me mostly to listen, or would you like help thinking through a next step?”
“Do you want prayer, encouragement, or just someone to hear you?”
“Is there someone else supporting you in this?”
“Would it help to talk with a pastor, counselor, doctor, supervisor, or other appropriate support person?”
Other:
The listening question I may practice is:
Respect privacy.
A question I should not ask because it may be too private, too soon, or unnecessary is:
A sentence I can use to respect privacy is:
“You do not have to share more than you want to.”
“We can keep this general.”
“I do not need details to care and pray.”
“I want to honor your privacy.”
Other:
My privacy-honoring sentence is:
Discern boundaries and support.
Listening with agape love does not mean carrying everything alone. It does not mean listening to gossip, verbal abuse, manipulation, coercion, sexual misconduct, threats, or danger.
In this situation, do I need a boundary?
No, this appears to be an ordinary listening practice.
Maybe, I may need to limit time, topic, tone, or setting.
Yes, this situation may need support beyond me.
I am not sure, and I should seek wise counsel.
A possible boundary sentence is:
“I care about you, but I cannot continue if we are insulting each other.”
“I want to listen, but I only have a few minutes right now.”
“I am willing to talk about this, but not through gossip.”
“This sounds important, and I think we should involve someone who can help.”
“I cannot promise secrecy if someone may be in danger.”
Other:
My boundary or support sentence may be:
Safety Check
If this situation involves abuse, coercion, threats, violence, stalking, sexual misconduct, child or vulnerable-person harm, self-harm, danger to others, medical emergency, trafficking, court orders, or other serious risk, do not handle it privately. Seek appropriate help according to local law, ministry policy, mandatory-reporting responsibilities, and available emergency or professional support.
Does this situation involve serious safety concerns?
No.
I am not sure.
Yes.
If “I am not sure” or “Yes,” what appropriate support or safety step may be needed?
Movement Four: One Faithful Step
Choose one realistic listening practice for this week.
This week, with God’s help, I will practice:
listening without interrupting
putting away one distraction
pausing before I answer
asking one gentle follow-up question
reflecting back what I heard
letting silence breathe
not making the conversation about myself
not rushing to advice
respecting privacy
using a warm tone
noticing my posture and face
praying for the person afterward
setting a respectful boundary if needed
seeking help if the situation is beyond me
other:
My one faithful listening step is:
Before the conversation, I will pray or say inwardly:
During the conversation, I will try to:
After the conversation, I will review:
Conversation Reflection
After you practice, complete this section privately.
The conversation setting was:
The listening practice I chose was:
What helped me stay present?
What pulled me away from listening?
What inward sentence showed up?
What grace-shaped inward sentence helped or could help next time?
Did I interrupt, advise, fix, defend, or make the conversation about myself too quickly?
What did I hear that I might have missed before?
Did I respect privacy?
Was a boundary needed?
Was support or referral needed?
What is one thing I learned about listening as agape love?
What is one small practice I want to repeat?
Portfolio Summary
Write a short summary for your People Skill Confidence Portfolio.
My Listening and Presence Practice Plan
The setting where I want to grow:
The inward sentence I am bringing to Christ:
My grace-shaped replacement sentence:
My listening practice:
My gentle question:
My privacy or boundary reminder:
My one faithful step:
Closing Prayer
Lord Jesus, thank You for listening to me with mercy and truth. Teach me to listen to others with agape love. Help me slow down, notice my inward conversation, and become present with humility. Keep me from rushing to fix, advise, interrupt, defend, or control. Give me wisdom to respect privacy, set faithful boundaries, and seek help when a burden is beyond what I should carry alone. Make my listening a small witness of Your love. Amen.