Archive - January 28, 2009

How To Help a Relationship Die

coffee32.jpgSometimes relationships start and then quickly end.  Sometimes relationships exist and then gradually erode, perhaps after many, many years.  What happens quite often with some people is that the relationship finally dies a slow, lingering death.  

I am thinking this morning about a certain kind behavior that contributes to the death of a relationship. 

Passivity

Have you known passive people?  The exist in their recliner, passing the time away.  They seem content to watch life happen from a distance while they refuse to initiate, risk, or make any overture toward investing in someones life.  They seem to wait for someone else to initiate, someone else to risk, and someone else to invest. 

  • Why doesn’t anyone call me?
  • Why doesn’t anyone come see me?
  • Why doesn’t anyone ask me to help?

I remember once seeing a man visit with a few distant relatives who he had not seen in almost twenty years.  He was visiting with these relatives because they had driven many hours to see his mother, their aunt.  Knowing that these relatives were coming to her home, she invited her son to join them for dinner.  They all visited that evening, shared some memories and then prepared to part.  The son turned to his relatives and said, "You all need to come see us more!  Come back sooner!  Don’t stay away so long"  Hmmm.  He had not sent a card, note, e-mail, or made a phone call to them in almost twenty years.  In fact he has shown complete passivity toward these people for many years.  He now, however, speaks to these people as if they are the ones who need to make this trip more often.

Passivity will kill relationships.  

Perhaps you have been to a dinner, where a family went on an on about life in their community, their children, their problems, etc. and never once asked you about your own life.   Perhaps you go home from such a dinner feeling as if you never really connected with these people.  Why?  There was not the healthy give and take of mutual interest and concern.  Passive people often talk as if their world, their city, their church is the center of life and express little interest in anyone else’s life.

Something I’ve noticed.  Passive people ask very few questions.  They ask very, very few probing questions or follow-up questions.  They don’t typically respond to another person by saying: "Say more about this, please."  Instead, they will often shift the focus of the conversation to themselves. 

Eventually, after years of family members, friends, church members, etc. showing little interest in one another, the relationship dies emotionally.  No, I don’t mean that it formally ends.  Rather, we just finally lose interest and disconnect emotionally from one another.

As I write this, I am thinking about some of my own relationships that need attention.  No, I cannot control the response or lack of response from others.  However, I can make sure that these relationships do not suffer from my own neglect.

Question: In what ways have you seen passivity erode relationships?  In contrast, how would you describe the behaviors that show interest, enrich, and deepen relationships?

As You Consider Your Place in the World…

earth_1_apollo17.gifEvery day, each one of us as Christ-followers steps into the world having been called to participate in the ministry of Jesus.  We meet challenges both within and without as we endeavor to be faithful to our calling.  One of the challenges that I face each day is not allowing the mundane, the boring, and the trivial things of life to cause me to think that my life really isn’t making a difference. 

When my thinking is straight, I realize that even these moments count for something when God is at work.  Yet, I may not see how they count.  I may never see the results of what God is doing in these moments.  

The following are some quotations from Norman Shawchurch and Robert Heuser in their book Leading the Congregation.  These quotes remind me of what really counts as I interact with others in this world.

Therein lies the secret of the easy yoke, according to Dallas Willard.  In order to effectively follow Jesus into public ministry, we must also follow Jesus into the lonely desert and mountains to be alone with God.  It is true that "a successful performance at a moment of crisis rests largely and essentially upon the depths of a self wisely and rigorously prepared in the totality of its being."  In other words, "We who are appointed by God to heal others, need the physician ourselves."  This necessary relationship between the leader’s private solitude and public ministry, according to Nouwen, can only be nourished "when we have met our Lord in the silent intimacy of our prayer" which will enable us also to "meet him in the camp, in the market, and in the town square.  But when we have not met him in the center of our hearts, we cannot expect to meet him in the busyness of our daily lives." (p. 42)

We serve a church that honors frenzied activity and long hours.  We are recognized and rewarded for our doing, and not for our being.  (p. 40)

"Ministry is service in the name of the Lord.  It is bringing the good news to the poor, proclaiming liberty to captives and new sight to the blind, setting the downtrodden free and announcing the Lord’s year of favor (Luke 4:18).  Spirituality is paying attention to the life of the Spirit in us; it is going out to the desert or up to the mountain to pray; it is standing before the Lord with open heart and open mind; it is crying out, ‘Abba, Father;’ it is contemplating the unspeakable beauty of our loving God."  Henri Nouwen (cited in Shawchuck and Heuser, Leading the Congregation, p. 39)