Reflections on spiritual themes (and a few other things).

Tag: Communication

Yes or No?

Why is it that weather forecasts and forecasters try to make you feel miserable?

In the summer, it’s the “heat index.” The forecaster can’t just say it’ll be hot. Or very hot. The forecaster must explain that the temperature will feel even worse than it is. In the winter, it’s the “wind chill factor.”  The forecaster can’t just say it’ll be cold. Or very cold. The forecaster must explain that the temperature will feel even worse than it is.

I’m sure they mean well. But sometimes I wish they’d just tell me the facts as accurately as possible and let me decide how I should act upon them. Instead, they try to sell me on the weather, tell me how I’m supposed to dress and behave, and how I’m supposed to feel. It’s less about weather forecasting and more about weather marketing.

In our media-saturated, consumer-oriented culture, much of everyday life is shaped by marketing. We must be sold on a concept. Someone wants to create a need in me that really isn’t a need, a need I didn’t realize I had until I saw a particular ad on TV or on social media (which involved tracking all my preferences and clicks). 

I can’t just buy toothpaste – my mouth, life, and relationships must be transformed. I can’t just buy breakfast cereal – I must buy something that’s kid-friendly, tasty, fun, has a toy, and provides 100% of my nutritional needs. I can’t just buy a new shirt – I should make a fashion statement. I can’t just buy a vehicle to get me to and fro – it must be sexy. I can’t just say that this product is good – I have to say it’s phat, dope, lit, sick, or (of course) awesome. 

Enough already!

It’s estimated that adults speak about 16,000 words per day (in Science, August 2007). If you translate that into a text document, that’s about 32 pages of text per day (letter-sized paper, one-inch margins, 12-point text). That’s about 500 pages in a two-week period. In other words, you speak enough to produce a novel every two weeks. 

Jesus once warned “that every careless word that people speak, they shall give an accounting for it in the day of judgment” (Matthew 12.36). How many of our 16,000 words per day (or 500 pages per fortnight) are worth remembering? Even more, were our words truthful? Clear? Direct? Loving? 

There’s a reason why Jesus said, “let your statement be, ‘Yes, yes’ or ‘No, no’; anything beyond these is of evil” (Matthew 5.37). How elegantly simple! Just say what needs to be said, nothing more, nothing less, no spin, no manipulation. Just truth. 

For today and every day say just exactly what needs to be said.

Seven Words

“Teach her as many of the 700,000 words of the English language as you have time to but be sure she knows that the greatest word is God; the longest word eternity; the swiftest word time; the nearest word now; the darkest word sin; the meanest word hypocrisy; and the deepest word soul.”

To Lt. Cdr. J. P. Carr, from his father, on the birth of the younger Carr’s daughter.

God. Eternity. Time. Now. Sin. Hypocrisy. Soul. 

These are more than words, they’re realities. They attempt to encapsulate the most profound and important concepts that we humans face during our earthly existence. They’re small words that describe great ideas.

The infinite God has communicated with finite humanity through the medium of language, by means of words. Jesus himself was “THE WORD”: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God” (John 1.1). He was God’s ultimate communication to us. 

In a similar way, the Bible is God’s word to man. “Sanctify them in the truth; your word is truth” (John 17.17). By means of these words, God has conveyed what’s truly important and valuable. Wrap your head around that. Eternal truth expressed in finite, human language. 

I’d like to challenge you to do two things. First, think about the seven words from our starting quotation: God, eternity, time, now, sin, hypocrisy, and soul. How have these words shaped your life? How do you use them as motivation for spiritual living? 

Second, make out a list of seven other words that challenge you, define you, inspire you, or even terrify you. What are the significant words in your life? Make your list and for the next week, think about one word each day. Consider how this word affects you. Look at how the Bible treats the word or concept. Think about what you can do with that word to change your life for the better.

George Herbert said, “Good words are worth much, and cost little.” For today, and every day, take time to think about the important words that shape your life.