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Speaking Their Language PDF Print E-mail
Written by Rey   
Monday, 18 April 2005

“Habona-Grits Habona-Hits”. Not Hebrew. My son's name for this large pipe-like contraption which is nestled in the corner of our co-op’s garage. For the longest I didn’t have the foggiest clue why he would start singing those words when we went down there but when I finally figured out what Ha-BAH-na GRITS – Ha-BAH-na-HITS was I was still puzzled.

I’ve stricken the possibility that he’s referring to something on tv. The rhyming of Grits and Hits is just way too intelligent (and odd) for anything on tv. The usual suspects came to my mind, and I’m thinking Dr. Seuss has some funky contraptions with rhyming names and since he likes Grits and Hitting, he might’ve decided to dub the contraption a Dr. Seuss creation. It really does look like a funky mix of Sylvester McMonkey McBean’s fix-it machine (for the Sneetches who wanted stars upon thars) and the Audio-Telly-o-Tally-o Count (which plops and drops little balls in a cup so that we can know who is asleep and who is still up).

It got me thinking about language again. In that post I was talking about the importance in speaking the tongue of the audience—but now I want to focus on how language is more than just tongues. You married folk know what I’m talking about.

There you are, your wife says “I’m so tired of dishes” and you grunt in acknowledgment. She said words that you can hear and understand linguistically, but you didn’t get what she was saying at all. Or a kid says “I’m so bored” when he has a room full of toys and things….Mom looks at him and starts asking him which toy should he play with. Same words—way different language.

Anytime we have discussion with other people, we find out how different their language is. Ideas clashing, concepts crossing over, jokes flying right over a head—it happens all the time. Sometimes there are people who have such a unique personal language that common things go right by them because they’re analyzing it.

I gotta admit, that I play around with this stuff. I often say things to my friends in different ways trying to find out what exactly is the way they hear what I’m saying better. It’s interesting that an open homosexual pseudo-Christian co-worker friend of mine easily grasps what I’m saying while actual professing believers might miss the point completely. It’s not that the concept is hard, it’s that somewhere along the line (maybe it’s where we’ve grown up and stuff) language diverged.

As a person responsible for teaching others the Scriptures, I often need an in-road into the audience’s language. This becomes all the harder when the audience is older. Older folk don’t speak my language and have a hard time coming to terms with it. I have to speak to them with respect and with extreme patience (very, very difficult for me). The younger folk don’t mind playful disrespect but if they feel that disrespect crossover into actual disrespect, they feel marginalized and squashed—very tough line to walk if one dares to walk it.

Paul’s God given wisdom comes to the fore again. Don’t rebuke older men—appeal to them like fathers. Speak to older women as mothers. Speak to the younger men as brothers—you can joke around with some of them, but realize you guys are basically siblings. Speak to the younger women as sisters with respect and purity (1 Tim 5:1-2).

Timothy had a tough job and most of the time he wouldn’t be able to mold the audience to be able-bodied listeners and students. So much so, that he didn’t much enjoy those encounters—feeling those stomach acids start up again.

Paul’s words were sound: In any given situation when an encounter between yourself and another person is going to occur, throw out all that thinking of how They should respond. Instead, focus on how you present and teach. It’s probably easier to mold yourself than the other person—so do it. In so doing, you work towards becoming a (wo) Man of God (2 Tim 3:10-17). You take responsibility for what you’re saying, and how you present it, because as a teacher your judgment is stricter (James 3:1).

So in your teaching, or exhortations, or personal discipleship or conversations of correction or with your spouses—remember that they speak another language even though they speak your tongue. Habona Grits, Habona Hits means nothing until you dig in and try to figure it out. Learn that language…not to manipulate…but to constantly act out in love towards each other.

-r-


Comments (2)Add Comment
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written by Grant, June 25, 2005
Nice work, Rey! Thanks for the reminder!
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written by Rey, June 25, 2005
Thank you brother Grant.
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