Why I Tell Stories When I Preach

2015_03_17-Storytelling-For-Startups

“Profound truth, like the vocabulary of virtue, eludes formulation. It quickly becomes rigid, gives way to abstraction or cliche. But put a spiritual insight to a story, an experience, a face; describe where it anchors in the ground of your being; and it will change you in the telling and others in the listening.” – Krista Trippett, Becoming Wise

If you’ve heard me preach, you’ve probably heard me tell a few stories. Some of them are funny, some of them are personal and vulnerable, and some of them are drawn from history or current events. If you’ve heard me preach at a larger retreat or conference, you’ve likely heard a collection of my very best stories – narratives that I have told hundreds of times and customized in millions of ways until the story is exactly as funny and useful as needed.

At my last retreat, I was getting mic’ed up in the back of the worship hall before the third session began and a group of students walked up to me asking me what fun stories I would be telling that night. I gave them a grin and simply said, “I don’t know, I might have a couple good ones.” Far from feeling like I was just entertaining a few hundred young people with funny stories, that experience affirmed for me that I was connecting with the audience and that as a result I would be able to drive home powerful truths with even more effectiveness.

I believe firmly that the art of story-telling is a crucial skill to learn and practice for the purpose of preaching more powerful sermons. I believe this so strongly that I listen to a new stand-up comedian (I prefer narrative comedians over those who specialize in one-liners) in the car or airplane as I head to my next speaking gig. I do this for many reasons. It’s an entertaining way to pass the time, it builds a fire in me about how powerful the spoken word can be, and it’s a great way to develop speaking skills of timing, tone, and story-telling. Good comedians are experts at these skills and I’ve found that great preachers often have similarly developed instincts for public speaking.

So why do I tell stories?

1) Stories capture attention. 

What I’ve found as a public speaker is that a story doesn’t even have to be all that funny or presented in an organized way to captivate an audience. Those things certainly help, but there is something deeply human about our love for stories. It’s not just children who crave to hear a good story, either. When I’m weaving a good story together I’ve seen hundreds of adults listen with mouths agape, just as entranced as any child has ever been reading a children’s book at night. Stories capture attention, and as a speaker, once I have a group’s attention it is that much easier to drive home transformative truths.

2) Stories build empathy.

Stories connect a speaker far away on big a stage under bright lights – often unknown to the listeners – to the audience in an intimate way in just a manner of minutes. Speaking truth into people’s lives requires that they trust you. Identifying with the audience with a funny or relatable story allows people to tune-in not only to your presentation but also to you as a person. A good story, told correctly, will connect something I have experienced or learned in my life and allow me to pass on that wisdom in the role of a trusted friend, not a irrelevant stranger, boring lecturer, or a heavy-handed moralist. In this way, audiences are able to more deeply receive words of encouragement and challenge.

3) Jesus told stories.

I think it’s a remarkably over-looked fact that the majority of Jesus’ teaching consisted of parables. These powerful narratives were easily relatable, often funny (Jesus is quite the comedian in the Gospels, for those with eyes to see and ears to hear), and consistently challenging and subversive. These stories changed lives. They convinced people to leave their homes and follow Jesus on his path throughout Galilee and towards Jerusalem. We often whitewash the counter-cultural messages in many of Jesus’ parables, but I find it likely that his story-telling was a key contributor to his eventually crucifixion. Jesus told stories because he knew they were powerful and transformative ways to communicate the good news of the arrival of the Father’s loving Kingdom. I’m more that happy to humbly follow in his footsteps.

Mike Skinner
http://www.mikeskinner.org

If you’d like to inquire about booking me for an upcoming speaking event, please email me at booking@mikeskinner.org. I’m currently focusing my speaking events around the following three topics: Christianity, Mental Health, and Education. These topics can easily be combined as well to serve the needs of your group! I look forward to speaking with you about how I can help you and your organization make a greater impact in our world.

Karl Barth’s Ideal Church Service

“Would the sermon not be delivered and listened to quite differently if everything outwardly and visibly began with the baptism and moved towards the Lord’s Supper? Why do numerous attempts to bring church liturgy up to date prove without exception so unfruitful? Is it not because they do not fix their attention on this fundamental defect, the incompleteness of our usual service, i.e. its lack of sacraments? 
– Karl Barth

I agree with Barth – one of the largest problems with many churches is the lack of attention or effort given to the sacraments of baptism and the Lord’s Supper.

Ideal church service: baptism -> sermon -> Lord’s Supper.

Agree or disagree?

Warp and Woof (9.28.2012)

What is preaching? – Ed Stetzer has great article on preaching. Now I do not preach much, but I do listen to a lot of preaching…and Ed’s advice is spot on. It also speaks to those of who teach the Bible. Here is a sample (click above for whole article)…

I love all kinds of preaching–thematic, topical, verse-by-verse, creative, filled with meaningful illustrations and well-delivered–as long as it communicates God’s Word given to us. Anything else is not preaching. It’s just an airing of opinion that evaporates or a dissemination of advice for people to take or leave.

 

‘Does Digital Distraction Stunt Your Creativity?’ – We live on the internet. This may seem a bit of an exaggeration, but not really. Most have multiple places on the web where we interact everyday (most likely multiple times a day) – twitter, facebook, blogs, etc. And this is not even considering that the internet is where we get the news, do research, shop, find somewhere to eat, etc.

This article in the Telegraph talks about the dangers of the internet and this follow up article by Simon Bailey does a nice job of discussing its dangers for writers especially.

How big of a distraction is it for you? What ways to do monitor your usage?

 

Distracted Students – On a similar note, as a parent and a teacher I wonder about the effects of 24/7 connection on my boys and students. This a great article about how one professor challenged students to disconnect. Definitely worth the read.

 

Internet Manners – Finally, as we all learn how to engage with a world that is being lived on-line, this post on how to be good commenters should be required reading!

 

It has been a wild few weeks in our house…accidents everywhere. Started two weeks ago with me slamming my fingers in car door…then last week I tripped heading out the door to take boys to school and kneecap landed on root in yard (it hurt!)…oldest hit by middle with baseball bat…middle hit by youngest with golf club…and so on. Each accident was caused by divided attention. I know it is all part of life in a house with three young boys, but has made me reflect on paying attention.

My prayer is that I remember to focus on those closest to me, give them full attention when we are together. To look in their eyes when we talk, not a some screen. In a world so full of distractions, attention – full attention – is needed more than ever.

O Lord, make me know my end and what is the measure of my days; let me know how fleeting I am! – Ps. 39:4