Below is a sermon I wrote for a Sermon Series at my school. It is a reflection of where I find myself in my relationship with God and others.
Learning to
listen.
When engaging in
conversation with someone who speaks a different language, you have to learn
how to listen intently to his or her words.
As an English speaker, I can slightly listen to another English speaker
and am still able to understand what they are saying. However, when I am listening to a Spanish
speaker, I have to focus. I cannot ‘fake
listen’. As I learn Spanish, I pick out
certain words or phrases, pick up on context clues, and am able to broadly
understand what is being said.
However, I want
to know exactly what is being said so I can train myself to hear it and then
eventually speak it. I narrow in on the
shapes their mouths make. I watch their
hand gestures. I listen very intently to
the intonation and volume of their speech.
I physically lean my body into the conversation and make eye contact to
let others know I am paying close attention and that I am interested in what
they are saying. I want to make sure I understand
them correctly while learning new words. Once I learn these new words or
phrases, I try to practice them and begin to use them in my everyday speech.
Sometimes I need
to listen more closely to God’s speech so that I can begin to speak his
language.
I want to focus
on the shape God’s mouth makes when He speaks to us. I want to zero in on the hand gestures He
uses in order to get a point across to us.
I want to listen very intently to the tone of God’s voice when He speaks
to us. I want to lean so far into the
conversation that I begin to reflect God’s speech.
I become more
and more keenly aware of this need as I approach important life decisions. I would like to think that I know enough of
God’s language to be able to get myself out of trouble and answer some
theological questions. Yet, the more I
grow as a Christ follower, the more I realize I have so much more listening to
do.
With our walks
with Christ, I think it becomes more realistic that listening is linked with
humility. When in college and my first
years at seminary, I had opportunities to enroll in classes that engaged my
mentality in a groundbreaking way. So
with this new knowledge, I forced my way into conversations that displayed my
new knowledge in a way that I expected to receive a gold star in return. However, I realized that whatever I learned
in college or in seminary was just lofty words until I began to understand
humility. Humility is that act of
lessening yourself for the sake of others.
In conversations
where I thought I knew more than the other participants, I was barely listening
to their point of view while I prepared my response in advance. I was too focused on what I would say back to
them, that I barely understood their perspective. I was ‘fake listening’. I had a prerogative, which was to show-off,
and I had to be on my game. I could not
stop my wheels from turning just to listen to what the other person had to say,
even if I was the one to ask the question in the first place. I had the conversation set up so I could look
like the genius. I actually looked very
poorly in others’ eyes and eventually in my own.
Here lately, I
have realized that what reveals the most honest humility is someone who is
willing to listen intently rather than being intently listened to. This past week I had asked a few pastors
about their approach to people who have very different opinions on
theology. They all said the same
thing. You need to listen to them. Listen intently to their words, where they
are coming from. It is not your job to
fix everyone and make them think like you.
You see where they are at in their journey and you help guide them with
God’s grace and truth.
So, I need to
really try to understand what others are saying. If their speech is hard to understand
sometimes, I need to dismiss my quick responses and take the time to listen to
their brokenness, their joy, their frustrations, their victories, their
failures, their passions. Maybe I need
to examine the way their mouths move to hear words I have not heard
before. Maybe I need to pay attention to
what their body movement is saying.
Maybe I need to keep my ears open to how quietly or loudly their voices
carry. Maybe I need to lean into their
words instead of folding my arms and avoiding eye contact. Maybe I just need to open up my mind and
listen.
Author Stephen
R. Covey wrote a book called The 7 Habits
of Highly Effective People. It has
been used and referenced by businesses, churches, and various workplaces. It focuses on human behavior and how to
better oneself in different aspects of communication. He dedicates an entire chapter to
listening. His main point is “Seek first
to understand, then to be understood.”
He says, “We have such a tendency to rush in, to fix things up with good
advice. But we often fail to take the
time to diagnose, to really, deeply understand the problem first” (Covey,
237).
Basically, when
we are engaged in conversation, we typically barely listen to what the person
is actually saying and are jumping at the chance to say what we really want to
say. Covey suggests that one of the best
communication tools is to honestly listen to what the other person is
saying. Listen not only to their words,
but their emotions. What are they
feeling? What is the background to their
words? What provoked them to talk? Get in their head. Listen for the sake of discovering more about
that person. Once you start listening
and understanding more, the conversation will get better, easier, and you’ll be
able to speak and be understood yourself.
Let’s be
clear. When we read Scripture and talk
to God, sometimes we take a similar stance. We stumble through the quiet
moments of prayer and jump right into what we want to say to God. Sometimes, we don’t create the time and space
for God to speak to us. Sometimes we are
just ‘fake listening’. What if we
applied Covey’s suggestion, not only with others, but also with God? What if we sought first to understand
God? What is God really trying to tell
us?
Today, we are
looking at the book of James. This is
one of my favorite books of the Bible because James is so blunt and honest
about what it means to be a follower of Christ.
I pray that God will speak to us through these words and transform us to
be more like Him.
Read James
1:19-22.
As James says to
be quick to listen and slow to speak and become angry, we may put up our walls
and argue how it benefits us to do exactly the opposite. However, James’ hearers may not have been so
astounded by this statement. Actually, it was probably very much accepted. Both Proverbs and Ecclesiastes are filled
with statements on controlling one’s speech.
But no matter how many times you are told, it can still be pretty
difficult.
Controlling our
anger is difficult. Normally, if we hear
something that goes against everything we believe or think, we tend to feel
uncomfortable, get offended, and even try to fight back. Fighting back happens because we are angry. Maybe we are angry because what that person
just said made absolutely no sense.
Maybe we are angry because the other person is angry. Maybe we are angry because no one is
listening to us. Maybe we are angry at
God because he just pointed out something we struggle with.
Clearly, anger
gets us sidetracked. We forget about who
is involved in the conversation, we ignore what the other person is
experiencing, we ignore what God expects from us, and we become solely focused
on ourselves. That is dangerous
territory.
Most of us need
to learn what it means to listen because maybe we haven’t listened very
well. Some of us listen with the intent
to overrun the conversation with our opinions.
Some of us listen with the intent to pick apart others’ speech just to
make them look bad. Some of us barely
listen then quickly respond with a snarky comment that just leads to
anger. This is not just what we do in
conversation with others; we do this with God.
However, what
some may think, by listening to others we are dismissing what we think and
believe. Listening does not mean you
must abandon your whole belief system.
It means that your belief system does not stand in the way of loving
others. Your relationship with God does
not stand in the way of loving others; it shows you HOW to love others.
While you
honestly listen, you can still be yourself.
God does not want you to abandon who and whose you are in an effort to
listen to others. For instance, I can
still like eating barbeque even if my friend just explained to me why she is a
vegetarian. I can still listen to my
favorite kind of music even when my coworker just explained why he only listens
to a Christian radio station. I can
still believe what Christ has taught me even when my friend just explained why
she is an atheist. I can still be a
follower of Christ as I listen to the lives of others.
Our listening
does not have to get in the way of what Christ has taught us. As Christians, we are responsible for doing
what God wants us to do. While we are
called to a specific standard of living, that standard does not give us the
permission to belittle others. While we
are striving to follow the footsteps of Christ and rid ourselves of evil
desires, we are called to “humbly accept the word planted in us.”
There’s the
catch. Humility. It always sneaks up on us when we least
expect it. Now that we understand how
important listening is and that we can still be the people of God we are called
to be, we have to learn how to balance it all out by being humble.
Christ is the
ultimate example of humility. He was a
human walking the earth. He understood
those temptations to want to get his point across before listening to
others. He understood how frustrating it
was to listen. He understood how easy it
could be to go against what God wanted and get sucked into what the world said
was ok behavior.
But Christ
humbled himself before God. He humbled
himself before others. He listened
intently. He loved others even though
they went against God. He relied on God
throughout it all. He did not just
listen to God, but He did what God wanted.
We can
listen. We can control ourselves. Yet, we rely on God to keep us humble. We are called to not only listen, but to do
something about it. We listen to God’s
Word and we are called to follow Christ’s footsteps.
As we listen to
God’s Word, we cannot stop there. Our
listening must become doing. We cannot
be idle. This Word of God is powerful
and we have a responsibility to share God’s grace and love. Perhaps, our doing will look differently. It may require us to seek God’s grace and forgiveness,
which humbles us. It may cause us to
take the time to honestly listen to others’ perspectives so that we can better
understand who they are and what they have experienced. Our doing may be in how we respond to them. Maybe we can respond in prayer, or by setting
up a weekly meeting, or by doing something nice for them. Maybe our response will be creating a healthy
friendship that reflects our relationship with God.
As I prepare for
pastoral ministry, this is my prayer. I
am called to serve God and others. I am
called to listen intently. I am called
to humility.
This call is not
permission for me to display my knowledge.
It is not an excuse to tell people what to do. It is not a free pass to show people how wrong
they are in comparison to myself.
This call
beckons me to learn true humility. It
gets inside my head and makes me rethink my motives. It keeps me on my toes. Just when I think I get it, I realize I have
a lot more listening to do.
I would like to
close with a story. When I stumbled across
this, I struggled with whether or not to include it in this sermon. Yet, the more I thought about it, the more I
realized how beautiful it was. It is a
very real and honest reflection of what it means to listen, to understand, and
to love others with God’s grace.
Last year, you
may recall the statements and actions that Chick-fil-A president and COO, Dan
Cathy, made in regards to his disapproval of marriage equality due to his
religious convictions. But what we
didn’t hear was the story of an unlikely friendship between him and Shane
Windmeyer.
Shane is the
founder and executive director for Campus Pride which empowers the LGBT
community (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender) and is gay himself. Chick-fil-A and Campus Pride pitted
themselves against one another. With no
warning, Dan contacted Shane in order to hear him out and find out more about
his life. They began engaging in
conversations that probably neither of them ever anticipated. Soon, their relationship grew to the point
where they were so influenced by one another.
It was less about their non-negotiables and more about learning how to
treat the other with respect.
Shane said, “Dan,
in his heart, is driven by his desire to minister to others and had to choose
to continue our relationship throughout this controversy. He had to both hold
to his beliefs and welcome me into them. He had to face the issue of respecting
my viewpoints and life even while not being able to reconcile them with his
belief system. He defined this to me as "the blessing of growth." He
expanded his world without abandoning it. I did, as well…Now it is all about
the future, one defined, let's hope, by continued mutual respect. I will not
change my views, and Dan will likely not change his, but we can continue to
listen, learn and appreciate "the blessing of growth" that happens
when we know each other better.”
As we follow
Christ, perhaps our first step is to seek first to understand. Understand what God is saying to us. Understand what Jesus is teaching us. Understand that sometimes listening can do
more than our words ever could.
Link to Shane's article: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/shane-l-windmeyer/dan-cathy-chick-fil-a_b_2564379.html
Beautiful sermon Melissa! Thanks for sharing. I pray that we can all listen a little better in the days to come. You are a blessing.
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