Several years ago I endured one of the worst Bible studies ever.
I wasn’t in the audience.
The musicians concluded the worship service, and I stepped onto the stage alone. As I adjusted the podium and laid out my notes, I heard the familiar rustling of Bibles, pens, and notebooks.
After a brief introduction, I delved into my message. Suddenly, though my lips were moving and words were sounding forth, my neatly typed notes blurred into classical Greek. My carefully planned message had no energy. The audience drooped.
My points, while true and biblical, had the impact of a Hush-Puppy tiptoeing on carpet. Before long I’d lost the entire congregation to purse-fishing, watch-peeking, heavy eyelids, and blue-sky daydreaming.
Though the dead of winter, I was sweating profusely. I wanted to die!
When it was over, I was so embarrassed I quickly slipped out of the building-and into depression. I didn’t want to show my face at the church office the next day. I had bombed, and I feared I had raised serious questions about my teaching ability.
Finally I shared my grief with a fellow pastor. He listened empathetically and offered consolation: “That happens to all of us.”
It didn’t help. I had long been a believer that anything worth saying is worth saying well. I hadn’t done well, and that, in my mind, was inexcusable.
Where had I gone wrong?
Getting real
The problem with that message, I’ve since discovered, was not that I hadn’t prepared enough; rather, I had neglected preparation in a vital area.
Over the past fourteen years, I’ve been fascinated with how a spoken message touches a listener’s heart and, as a result, changes lives. What is it that distinguishes memorable preaching from a forgettable collection of words? I’ve often wondered. How can one message stir the listeners’ souls while another leaves them stirring restlessly in their seats? How can I become consistently persuasive for Jesus Christ?
A strong case for any number of factors could be made: adequate preparation of both my heart and the audience’s hearts by the Holy Spirit, my daily walk with the Lord, the amount of time spent in study and preparation.
One additional factor, however, has made the difference for me. Lives change only when hearts have been affected, and hearts are most deeply affected when the speaker exposes his own.
In other words, what people want and need most from a communicator is authenticity. This wasn’t a new revelation to me. I had read and heard much about “being real.” But I discovered it was one thing to know I should be authentic and quite another to know how to be authentic.
Authenticity seemed to be a mysterious and elusive quality with a will of its own. When absent, people would offer polite comments: “I enjoyed your message.”
But when authenticity appeared, they would say, “God spoke to my heart this morning.” Wow!
I liked the effects of authenticity, but I had no idea how to express it. Then one speaking opportunity turned out to be a watershed moment.
Heart exposure
In 1986 I spoke at a conference for young people. I had prepared for months and was delivering my message with great passion. They were listening attentively and taking notes, but their eyes and posture told me I hadn’t really connected.
Then I paused for a moment and considered the importance the subject had for their lives. Suddenly I was completely overcome with emotion. Unbidden tears welled up and overflowed the banks of my eyes. It took me by surprise (I don’t cry often), and for a few minutes I stood there silently, head bowed.
When I regained my composure, I looked up, surprised to find many tissues and handkerchiefs drying tearful eyes.
Afterward I mused about what had happened. I’d been speaking for hours trying to affect those people, and they were moved most when I was unable to speak at all.
What touched hearts was not my tears per se but my giving people the opportunity to peer into the window of my heart. They not only heard what I thought, they experienced what I felt. Sometimes emotions are more persuasive than eloquence. And sincere emotions expressed with eloquence make for honest persuasion.
People want to know not only what I think about the subject, but also how I feel about it. That’s why I now use the phrase heart exposure rather than authenticity. Authenticity seems passive; heart exposure suggests an active choice on my part to disclose. Heart exposure reminds me of my goal each time I speak: I want to reveal not only my thought and theology, but my heart and soul as well.
The power of story
I accomplish heart exposure primarily through storytelling. God gives all his leaders many stories, and he wants us to share them with the flock. Not from a heart of pride but from a genuine desire to model how one responds to the promises and mandates of God. Peter exhorts elders about “being examples to the flock,” and stories allow me to do that.
Whenever I stand before a group, I assume their implicit question is, How has this truth touched your heart and life, Dan? I ensure that I am answering that question when I DARE myself.
DARE preaching
To DARE means that I describe the story with sensory detail, attach specific emotions, reveal why I feel as I do, and explain what it means.
Describing the story with sensory detail. Because we experience the world through our five senses, when I tell a story I try to let my audience see, hear, smell, touch, or taste what’s in the story scene. Even weak stories are greatly strengthened when I provide such details.
I employed all four DARE components at the beginning of this article. In the opening story, I described the scene, letting you hear the “rustling and bustling of people retrieving their Bibles, pens, and notebooks.” These details aren’t trivial. By them I transport my audience into the physical environs of the story. You don’t have to use many, but a few choice details enliven your stories.
Attaching a specific emotion. In my story I said, “I wanted to die,” and I was so embarrassed “I didn’t even want to show my face at the church office the next day.”
Feelings are the common denominator of us all. I strive not only to offer relevant subject matter, but to be emotionally relevant.
It is often much easier for me to report the facts of a matter than to disclose how the matter affected my heart. But as the acronym DARE implies, all true heart exposure involves daring to take a risk. Time and again I’ve found that I connect with my audience’s hearts to the degree that I am willing to expose my own. Emotional honesty usually evokes strong listener identification. To remind myself of that, I coined a phrase: “No risk on my part, no affecting their hearts.”
Revealing why I feel this way. This is the most critical element for connecting with the audience emotionally. Simply saying, “I was embarrassed” wouldn’t provide enough basis for my audience to share my feelings. For their hearts to be affected, they must see and identify with what caused me to feel embarrassed.
“I had bombed … and I wondered if my failure had raised serious questions about my teaching ability.”
I give my audience enough specific information to understand the depth of my feelings so they can experience the emotion with me.
When I’m not the subject of my stories, I still concentrate on how I feel about the people and events in the story. In effect the story becomes my own.
Explaining what it means. This final component is the “therefore,” the connection, the point. Here people pick up their pens and write. I tell them how they can respond in their own way to the truth in the story.
The message of my opening story was “The problem with that message, I’ve since discovered, was not that I hadn’t prepared enough; rather, I had neglected preparation in a vital area. … Lives change only when hearts have been affected, and hearts are most deeply affected when the speaker exposes his own.”
I painstakingly check my stories against the DARE components. It’s worth the time. The amount of preparation determines my story’s emotional reach. This wasn’t easy at first, but this practice has now become a habitual part of my preparation.
Is this manipulation? I consider it thorough and effective preparation. I’m getting in touch with my own sincere emotions, not performing or selfishly manipulating the emotions of others. It’s my best safeguard against “lording it over” the flock. Heart exposure helps me walk among the people instead of floating out of reach above them. I show them the Christian life in action as one who experiences it with them.
The DARE components can be used with stories of different intensity and length. Sometimes they involve serious themes such as envy or anger, but many times they are on the lighter side, funny comments and awkward situations. I don’t make every story one of earth-shattering impact. My goal is simply to let the stories humanize me.
And the story is not always a long one. Sometimes it’s a mere paragraph. If I DARE, the story will be effective. Whatever my message, I usually have a story because I always have feelings about my topic. If I don’t feel something about a subject, I won’t speak on it! In fact, many times, by asking myself what I really feel about a portion of Scripture and why, I find the nucleus of my story.
Caverns of fear
You’re lost and alone in a dark cavern. It’s damp and chilly, and you’re surrounded by shadowy forms and the sound of dripping water.
From the darkness behind you a faraway voice calls, “Let me tell you how to get out of there.”
“Yes, please, help me!” you cry.
Elaborate directions are given, but the forbidding darkness is so ominous-the thought of bats and unseen drop-offs and even blacker nothingness-that you’re frozen in fear. You can’t understand the directions. Even if you did, you’re not sure you have the nerve to move even one muscle.
Then, the inky distance softens. A flashlight’s beam pierces the darkness. You stumble towards the light. “Over here!” you shout.
The veteran spelunker spots you. In the flashlight’s glow, you glimpse the outline of a friendly face. “Come on,” he drawls. “I’ll show you the way out. I’ve been here before.”
Soon you return to warm sunshine.
All of us have “caverns.” Dark places that God wants to lead us out of. Yet, despite the Lord’s clear directions, fear of the unknown can immobilize us.
Stories, like a friendly face in a black cavern, can lead people out of the dark and into the light.
-Dan S. Baty
Valley Brook Community Church
Columbia, Maryland
LEADERSHIP SPRING/93 p. 61
Copyright © 1993 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal. Click here for reprint information on Leadership Journal.