COMPASSIONATE
LISTENING
There is
either too much or not enough, let alone none at all going on in this
world and even in this church of ours – talking, that is. On the one
hand, there seems to be too much talking going on. Everybody’s talking
at us. Everyone has an opinion and everyone seems willing and able to make
that opinion known and heard. It is almost a
Tower
of
Babel
out there and it is all dissonance.
Now talking in and of itself is not bad. That is often the best way
to communicate thoughts and ideas to others. When we speak, we use body
language and body language often conveys more than even profound words.
Talking becomes bad when it degenerates into pontificating. Give some of
us the opportunity to mount the pulpit and we will tell anyone who is
listening what is wrong with the world, wrong with him and how to fix it.
On the other hand, there is not enough talking going on. When we
are at odds with some one else, with another nation, with another belief,
we stand apart and glare at each other. We are unwilling to talk, for
whatever reasons we may have. And if we do give in and agree to sit across
the table with those with whom we disagree or whom we do not understand,
we have a penchant for pontificating.
What is even worse is that when we talk too much, we do not listen.
When we do not talk at all, no one is listening. When we do not listen
because we are drowning out the other with our words or when there is
nothing to listen for because there is no one to speak to us, we fail to
communicate. And the failure to communicate is the primary cause for so
many of the problems we have in our world today, the church included.
We must speak with one another, communicate with the other, no
matter who the other is, especially when we find ourselves at odds with
the other. But more importantly we must listen to the other, truly listen,
and listen compassionately. To listen with compassion we have to put aside
for the moment our beliefs, our prejudices, and our opinions and put
ourselves in the place of the speaker.
We cannot do that if we are listening sitting on the edge of our
seat ready to interrupt or interject our retort. That is not listening and
that prevents us from truly hearing what the other is saying. And so we
fail to communicate even as we think that is what we are doing. If we are
communicating anything, it is that we are not listening, certainly not
listening with any sense of compassion and willingness to understand.
Even if we are convinced of the correctness of our position and the
incorrectness of the other’s, we must listen with compassion. We must
try to understand why he believes or thinks or acts the way he does. When
it is our turn to speak, we simply do the same and trust the other will
listen with compassion to us. In the end we may continue to disagree with
the other, but at least we will have heard each other out and will
understand why we each believe the way we do.
Listening with compassion also enables us to hear what we may not
have heard before because we talked too much or talked too little or
talked not at all. Speaking and listening with compassion, with an open
heart and mind, enables communication to take place and will go a long way
in bringing peace to and helping mend broken relationships of any shape or
size or kind.
WJP
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