by Peter W. Marty
Humpback whales sing to communicate.
Birds chirp with their friends when they
discover a birdfeeder. Honeybees dance to
tell their hive mates about the latest cache
of pollen found. But human beings use
words when it comes to conversing with
one another. Words are how we get along in
life. The way we put them together is how we
make a new world every day for one another.
Money may enable us to exist, but it is
words that are more valuable than money.
Words allow us to live and flourish. They
are inextricably involved with life.
Child–development researchers know that
infants need people talking to them from the
moment they are born. Without this
conversation lavished on them, babies do not
grow and develop as normal human beings with
full social potential. This is why neonatal
nurses can be found whispering frequently to
even the tiniest of the tiny. These
caregivers know that there is more than
holding and touching involved, if one is to
nurture another human being into a robust
life.
Dangerous speech
Words do more than nurture; they also can
deceive. They are slippery and capable of
distorting an otherwise beautiful
relationship. Sometimes we use good and
sturdy words to conceal or mislead. In the
Garden of Eden everything was fine until the
serpent began raising the prospect that
maybe some words are not all they appear to
be. "Did God really say you will die if you
eat from any tree in the garden?" "No," the
serpent continued, "you certainly will not
die." Ever since that troubling moment, it
seems that we have struggled to trust what
rests behind the words that other people
speak to us.
If a person says to you, "I give you my
word," what they are really saying is that
they can be trusted. But we know that
politicians can disappoint as easily as
home-improvement contractors who do shoddy
work after a great sales pitch. We know that
relatives can break our trust in them as
readily as friends can break our hearts.
Some days it seems like words of honor
are broken so casually that they never meant
anything in the first place. This is why so
many people have trouble trusting God when
God says, "I give you my Word." God repeats
this idea over and over again, finally
wrapping it up in flesh and blood and
setting it gently down in a manger. Yet the
world still treats this Word as shaky or
suspicious.
All of us are guilty of misusing our mouths
and uttering words that perform like
poisonous darts. We live as descendants of
Isaiah, who said: "Woe is me! For I am lost;
I am a man of unclean lips and I dwell in
the midst of a people of unclean lips"
(Isaiah 6:5). We victimize other people
through words that are not spoken carefully
or thoughtfully. Others hurt us by slinging
words our way that reek of disregard. But
there is a better way to co-exist. It comes
when we realize how holy our everyday
conversation can be.
Words truly matter
If we ever doubt that simple words carry
great weight, all we have to do is remember
a time when someone said, "I love you." Or
"I can’t stand you." The difference is huge.
Defendants live or die when a judge says,
"Guilty" or "Not guilty." Just think of the
power and possibility contained in words
spoken from one human being to another. No
one ever forgets those eight words that open
up a new world for us, if we are lucky
enough to hear them even once in life: "We
would like to offer you a position."
Words spoken to others are the currency
of life. They are how we give shape to our
aspirations, and how we give flight to the
dreams of others. In a very real sense, our
words contain what matter most to us. They
reveal our deepest passions and preferences.
More often than not, they prove to be more
important to our relationships than the ways
we touch, hold, or even look upon another.
Apostle Paul knew how important truthful
words are for sustaining a relationship.
When he was jailed and struggling to
preserve a buoyant spirit in his fledgling
congregations, "Words were all he had to
fight back with," writes Barbara Brown
Taylor. "Words were the only strength he had
left, so he made piles and piles of them,
rolling them up and pressing them through
the bars of his cell like pieces of his own
heart. On the one hand it was absurd...What
were words? Black marks on sheets of paper?
Letters strung together across a page?"
Brown Taylor goes on: "On the other hand
[these words] were truth, and Paul knew it."
If people were going to take Jesus Christ
seriously, Paul believed he was going to
have to find words that they could take
seriously. This was his project. It is also
his legacy that aids us in our relationship
with Jesus Christ.
Precious words
Not all words carry the same value. The
Lord’s Prayer is 66 words long. The
Gettysburg Address is 286 words. There are
1,322 words in the Declaration of
Independence. Yet government regulations on
the sale of cabbage contain 26,911 words.
Why the disparity? Well, there are different
kinds of words we use for different
situations. Whether or not we need 26,911 to
regulate the sale of cabbage is anyone’s
guess. Those would certainly not be words we
use to create friendship or to express deep
love.
Eugene Peterson, one of the great
wordsmiths of our day, offered an
interesting suggestion one time. He said
that if we were to take all of the words
known to humankind and toss them up into the
sky, they would settle back down into
essentially two piles.
One pile would consist of those words
that help us know things like the price of
cabbage, or what level of octane fuel our
car engine needs, or which parent is picking
up Johnny from soccer. These would be words
for communication. They are necessary
and helpful–one might even say great. But
they are not everything.
The other pile of words that would stack
up are what Peterson calls words for
communion. These are words that nurture
intimacies, reveal beauty, develop trust,
and share love. Words of communion are
indispensable for our relationships. Without
them, we live dull, flat lives. Our
friendships go nowhere. Our conversations
become full of uninteresting information.
Many individuals who are struggling in a
relationship or who find their marriage "on
the rocks," will often say (and believe)
that they are not communicating well. This
is partly true. In turn, they seek out a
counselor to help them figure out where the
communication lines have broken down. What
is interesting is that, more often than not,
the missing piece in the couple’s
conversation is not words of communication.
They are communicating quite well. They know
and talk about who will pay the bills and
where the house thermostat needs to be set.
What they lack are words of communion. They
have fallen out of the practice of
conversing with one another through the use
of words that display love, trust, beauty,
or intimacy. This is a far greater problem
than some inability of theirs to merely
communicate.
We often think communication is little
more than transferring information from one
mind to another. This is certainly the
modern understanding. But the very essence
of communication, according to its root
meaning–communicare–is to share, to
make common. What is common can no longer be
just mine. It now belongs also to someone
else. Conversation that communicates well
acknowledges this shared dimension.
Practice is required
Using words in conversation that express
the deep realities of which Eugene Peterson
speaks takes practice. One does not fall
automatically into a mode of speech that is
packed with words of communion. This takes
time; it takes a lifetime of habit. When two
people say repeatedly to one another, "I
love you," they do so not because this is
somehow unapparent to them. Whether their
hearts are bursting with sudden passion or
they are stuck in a rut of mutual neglect,
they still know of their abiding love for
one another. Yet uttering this simple phrase
reminds them of the value of new discovery
ahead. By putting their love into these
three words, a couple is suggesting that
there is more to the concept of love than
they have already come to know. There is
potentiality and refinement to their
practice of love that present joy and
happiness have not yet revealed. There is
more goodness to come.
Holy conversation
So what makes for holy conversation? In a
world where nasty speech often gets the
upper hand, what is it that will elevate our
words to a level befitting the highest
aspirations of the Christian life? Four
special qualities come to mind.
First, we should remember the
primary difference between an argument and a
conversation. An argument always rests on
having the answer. A conversation is
grounded in the question.
Think of those times when you have been
embroiled in an argument. The heat rises
precisely because both sides believe they
have the answer. A conversation is
different. It is more open–ended, full of
the spirit of inquiry. Have you ever noticed
how many questions Jesus would ask in the
course of a simple conversation? A good
conversation partner does not act like a
know–it–all who has the world figured out.
He or she shares in a way that invites
others to be full players in the
conversation.
Second, we should never
underestimate the value of restraint in our
speech. Less is usually more when it comes
to the marketplace of conversation. Even
though we often believe that piling on more
words will make us more interesting or our
ideas more compelling, this is rarely the
case. Jesus of Nazareth was a master at
restraint. Sometimes the absence of more
words from him frustrates us. We wish he had
told us more so that we would know the full
and plain truth. But more often than not,
his restraint in speaking holds the
conversation open for our full
participation, still to this day.
Third, holy conversation happens
when people listen well. When Mary pondered
the words of Jesus and treasured them in her
heart, she was displaying what all of us
could afford to do better–listen well. Few
things frustrate the beauty of conversation
quite like someone who will not listen, who
only wants to talk. Not only is such
behavior rude, it is self-centered in
nature. If our communication–communicare–is
to be shared and truly common, we must
practice our listening skills.
Fourth, kindness makes for holy
conversation. If we want to get anywhere in
life, we are often told to be tough and cold
in our dealings. This works to a point. But
it certainly doesn’t open up the world of
give and take in which conversation makes
its home. Being tough is relatively simple;
showing kindness takes far more courage.
When I was a child, I thought people with
money were something special. Later in life,
I came to admire those who were really
bright. Today, I cherish those who have
kindness in their voice as they speak with
others. I want to be more like them.
Holy conversation is not out of reach for
any of us. It may be as close as the next
words that come out of your mouth.
Peter W. Marty is senior pastor of St.
Paul Lutheran Church, Davenport, Iowa, and
host of Grace Matters, the radio ministry of
the ELCA. To learn more about the program
and to hear Pastor Marty’s holy
conversations on-line, go to
www.gracematters.org.
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