“If you need wisdom, ask our generous God, and He will give it to you. He will not rebuke you for asking.”
Have you ever been in a meeting where the leader or the facilitator  says, “There are no silly questions” to get the group to speak up? Of  course, there are no silly questions if we are all committed to learning  and there is no one in the room evaluating the knowledge level of  people. But, how often is that? There is always someone of a higher  level or someone who is sitting in the room leaned back in their chair  watching and listening to who says what. So what happens is that we  don’t ask the silly questions. We leave the fundamental questions like,  “Why do we do it this way?”, “Isn’t there a better way?”, “Who does it  better than us so we can learn from them?”, “What does all of this  mean?”, or “I just don’t understand what you said, can you please  explain it again?”. These are the “silly questions” that don’t get asked  but need to be asked, however because of fear of retribution,  evaluation or embarrassment we just don’t ask even when we know we  should. Work is just not set up right for that so we walk around in the  dark or acting like we know the answers to things we don’t. One place I  worked, the CFO was very focused on increasing cash flow so he was  putting in systems, reporting, measures and incentives to increase cash  flow. He was so conversant and knowledgeable on the levers that drove  cash flow in the business that he would get going fast and there were  others (myself included) who couldn’t keep up. I remember a meeting  where a whole bunch of senior people from many functions were there and  the CFO was going on and on about what we were going to do to meet our  cash flow objectives and in the middle of the meeting he was called out  for a moment. As soon as he left the room, someone asked the group, “Do  you all understand what he is talking about?”. And to my relief, almost  the entire room chimed in with, “I don’t have a clue”. When the CFO came  back in the room, the courageous person in the room asked the silly  question, “Can you explain this again to us, because we just don’t get  it”. After the CFO took a deep breath, and likely made a mental note, he  started over and most of us got it the second time around. So, while  there are no silly questions, we can feel like there are certainly silly  questions that we just don’t ask. 
It’s interesting that in work and  life we are seeking knowledge and wisdom and we don’t know where to go  to ask. God tells us that He is one who we can reach to for these  answers. In James 1:5 we read; “If you need wisdom, ask our generous  God, and He will give it to you. He will not rebuke you for asking.”  Today, you may need to ask the silly question and don’t know how to do  it for fear of retribution or evaluation. Try going to God first for the  wisdom needed on how to get the answers you need. We know that He will  not rebuke us and that in the answers we get we will receive the wisdom  we so need. To God, there are certainly no silly questions.
							Reference: James 1:5 (New Living Testament)
