Continued from How to Have Gospel Conversations (Pt 1). I have adapted a mantra for gospel conversation and counseling from David Powlison which follows three movements: 1) Listen to Their Story 2) Discern Their Story 3) Redemptively Retell Their Story.
Discern Their Story
Good questions are not sufficient for substantive community. Knowledge about a person’s life circumstances doesn’t produce community. It is important that we also learn how to love and empathize with people when they share their heart. We can do this by striving to understand how they are responding to their circumstances. Are they doubting, depressed, encouraged, or bitter? It is important to respond by empathizing with their struggle, just as Jesus empathizes with us: “For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses” (Heb 4:15). Communicate your love and acceptance regardless of their struggle and make sure they know that you have heard their story.
Empathize with their Story
- Are you discouraged? Where are you doubting?
That is so difficult. Ugh!
Does anyone else struggle with that?
Can we pray for you right now?
Bring up the issue in the next meeting
What are some ways you do this?
Once you have empathized with someone’s story, you have embodied the gospel before speaking the gospel. It’s important that we follow Jesus example of gentle empathy with others instead of trying to “fix” people. Empathy alone, however, doesn’t offer hope. In order to lead people to hope in their situation, we need to be discerning, wise friends, to help them look into their own hearts. The heart is the seat of our longings and decsion-making. It governs our response to our circumstances. Therefore, what our heart believes, desires, trusts determines our response to a situation. To have good gospel conversations, we need to help people discern their heart in the mist of their life story.
Discern they Heart in their Story
- In that situation I would be tempted to blame my co-worker, what about you guys?
- Is there a subtle lie you might be believing here?
- What do you want most out of the situation? What are you longing for?
- Where do you feel like you were wronged?
- What is most important to you in that moment?
Additional Questions to Discern Idols of the Heart [1]
- Where are you spending your money?
Where does your imagination take you? What do you daydream about?
Where are your emotions uncontrollable? What do you find yourself longing for, angry over, fearful of? There is your idol.
How do you respond to unanswered prayers or dashed hopes?