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Feb 6, 2015

The Power of Words

I really want to be a good communicator. I think it’s important. I teach students during Awana (A Wednesday Night event for students 6th and under) teach our youth group Sunday School on Sunday Mornings, I teach our youth group during Sunday Evenings, I preach about once every four months, and I coach wrestling. Those are the direct ways I communicate to others but I also communicate indirectly. In fact, my com101 professor Rich Noble, taught us that most of our communication is non-verbal (how we act: like smiling, the tone of your voice, and stuff like that). I also communicate in how I live my life. And you do too!

You communicate directly (through your words) and indirectly (through your actions) every moment of every day, even when you are a sleep (Psychoanalysis anyone? Haha). 

All of this “communicating” talk comes from a study I am doing with a few local pastors. We took an assessment that evaluated our motivation. You know like why I do what I do? This study isn’t to help us solve our deep psychological issues but certainty can be a starting point in figuring out why certain people are motivated to do certain things. The test gives you certain results and correlates them with colors. You are a complex person and so am I; therefore we have a blend of motivations but this test told us which motivational strategy we would most likely employ. The colors are red, blue, and green. 

“Red people” tend to be more vision oriented. We do things and communicate to the end that people are moving in a certain direction. They want to see people understand a concept and they see that as a “win.”  “Blue people” tend to be more people oriented. They are motivated by wanting people to be in harmony and see growth on a personal level. “Green people” tend to be more detailed-oriented. These are your accountants and treasurers. They are motivated not by people or the vision but my making sure all the ducks are in a row and that all the possibilities have been considered before moving on. There is also the “hub.” These are people that scored similar scores in red, blue, and green. They tend to be motivated by all three factors and hearing input from all angles and P.O.V.

Which color am I? What do you think? Which color are you? What do you think? Of course, all this talk about colors and motivation must led us somewhere and to someone. We need to know individuals motivational behaviors in a deeper way for a variety of reasons. 1) They can help us see the blind spots we are missing. Isn’t that true? A person that is motivated by vision and direction could easily overlook the practical needs that a detailed oriented person could see.  2) They help us see the full picture of God. All people were created in the image in likeness of God. That’s the coolest thing ever, i.mo. When we hang out with people that aren’t like us we get to see more of what God is like through these individuals. 3) We can communicate well to them! Saint Paul told the Church in Corinth that “he has become all things for all people, so that some might be saved.” He is telling us that the Gospel doesn’t change but how he needed to present it to certain individuals needed to in order for them to hear it.

The wonderful thing about God is he already knows how to communicate. In fact, he is the best communicator ever. I mean He did create it, after all.  So, I am interested in how God communicates to us. This list is not all the ways that God can speak to us. I believe he can use any way that he pleases. Who am I to limit what God can do? I have just notice a few that have to do with the word “Word.”

1) We can speak God’s word

Saint James, the half-brother of our Lord Jesus, wrote a letter in the Scriptures. He talks about how good and evil can both come from your tongue. He says it shouldn’t be but it does. We have the power to speak life into other people. How empowering is it to receive an encouraging word from another person when you are having a crappy day? We can also speak revelation. We can see things and have experienced things that others haven’t. We have the ability to speak truth into a situation trusting that God will use it to strengthen that individual. It is important to remember which “color” you are talking to when you speak these words of truth.  For it is our job to communicate well to the other based on how they can receive it best.

2) We can read God’s word

Many times in my life I don’t have the words to say. But I know that God has written (not literally but through chosen individuals) in the collection of books we call the Bible. Need an encouragement for a time of despair? There’s a verse for that. Need the words to praise God? There’s a verse for that. Need a challenge in times of pride? There’s a verse for that. 

The wonderful thing about God’s written word is you don’t need a Master’s in Biblical studies to read it. Studying about the Bible and reading commentaries are incredibly helpful to understand the background of the historical situation but we can trust that God can also speak to us through his Spirit into his written Word.

3) We can remember God’s word

One thing (among many) that I have appreciated about the Alliance (the demo I am serving) is this idea of remembering. What I grew up calling “Sacraments” they call “Ordinances.” This is referring to Holy Baptism and Holy Communion.  The idea of an ordinance is to perform a certain act out of obedience to the One who has commanded it and out of remembrance of Him.  So, they remember Jesus’ death and resurrection through Baptism (dying of one’s sins as they are washed away) and through the elements of bread and wine (replaced by grape juice) remind us that Jesus body and blood was broken and shed for us.

 God’s word is Jesus. In fact that is what Saint John calls him to begin his Gospel. What the Greeks called “logos” The way, the understanding of the universe, the way things work: John calls Jesus that. And is translated into our Bibles as “Word.” He shocks the Greek world when he says, “the Word (I.E. this Jesus who has always been and always will be, the way we understand the universe) became flesh and dwelt among us.

God speaks to us through Jesus. Through his birth, life, death, and resurrection. Jesus spoke parables (stories about people who embraced this “heavenly mindset.”) His life, his sacrifice, his example, his power over demons and death itself, is a testimony of God speaking to us.

4) We can experience God’s word

 The God who spoke many years ago through creating the earth, who spoke to us through Jesus, who speaks to us through the Scriptures, speaks to us today. His Spirit is alive and draws us to Himself. The Father who desires more than anything an intimate relationship with His children chooses to do so in the present age through the Spirit of Jesus that lives in and among God’s chosen people.

We can hear him speak to us. Through dreams. Through visions. Through the whispers of his voice.  This is where many Christians tend to check out because it is unsafe and uncontrollable but where we should want to sign-up! It takes faith to listen and trust that the God who knows you best will speak to you.

I have encountered God speak to me through all of these ways. Sometimes it is more evident than other times but as I learn to hear from Him I realize it’s a process. There are certain ways in different seasons of my life that I have heard God speak in different ways.  Currently, I am seeing certain words jump off the pages of Scripture as I follow the church calendar through the Bible readings.


The Spirit and the Word always work together.  May we not have a limited view of the “Word of God.” For the Word is Jesus himself. The Father, who sent his Son, sends his Spirit to reveal all truth in and through us and for us, who believe in the One and Only Triune God. This is awesome. And to this regard, I proclaim, “HECK YEA!” Come Lord Jesus, Come. 

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