Video Transcript: Relational Discerment
Welcome back to the Christian discernment class. And last time I was interested in worldview discernment. Today, we talk about relationship. So, how do we do that? What are the process? Well, we all relate to a lot of people. And a lot of this is first, second nature, you know, we're, you're in a process, you automatically are doing the things, we're talking about records. So sometimes when discernment comes you really want to know, the process of maybe you want to marry somebody, maybe you would like to you maybe there's a conflict, you want to kind of say, you know, what's going on here, I feel like there's something there's just disquieted within me about a relationship. So then there's a process that you can say, I can go to this process, and try to figure out some things to come to some conclusions through prayer, and the guidance of the Holy Spirit. So first of all, we identified the relationship issue. Is this a problem? Is this a conflict? Is this sometimes husband and wife giving each other the silent treatment, because it's something or as a conflict at your workplace or maybe a misunderstanding, or maybe it's a new friendship that you want to make, right, or child connection, where the decision about elderly parents, I mean, there's so many issues, a lot of times I find that one of the triggers to know when there is a relational issue, I haven't find this, like, you grind up on something, and you can't go to sleep, or you wake up at three in the morning. And all of a sudden, you're thinking about something. Or you're anxious, depressed, you're angry. I mean, a lot of times, just check your emotions, and you will see that there's some thing going on, right? So we're gonna talk about now is a process. And I would even suggest, to, like you get a little whiteboard out or piece of paper, and take these points, and write them out again, and then take the issue and see if you can answer some of the questions, and maybe try it out. Try it out with a relationship. So let's look at so we talked about identify the issue, at least the best ask the Holy Spirit to help you. Then identify the people involved. Is it just between me and my wife, or there's some other factor other people that they need to first think about, but they're often surprised from that, how if you don't ask that question, you might miss the real issue or the room. There may be there's an instigator like Jonadab in the Bible that's involved in it. It's not clear at first. But if you really think about it, when there might be somebody else involved. Identify your own motivation. Why do you think that's important? I think this is one of yours. too, I put that down. Because sometimes when you're not clear about your own motivation, it will shift the whole discernment process. Like, like you might be, here's an example is like, let's say I want to go golfing. And then I have an issue with my wife. You know, I don't know why we're sort of struggling about something. Right? It's also really is it your I really want to go golfing. And you know what I find that Pam, I'll say, I think I want to go golfing. She said, Well, you know what I first let's go to the store at this time. But if I don't identify that, there's like a little bit of a thing. Unaware. That's a factor in the discussion. But I didn't identify it or, you know, I
think it's easy in a relationship conflict, to identify their motivation. They're trying to hurt. Yeah, they're trying to take advantage right of me. They're trying to ignore me. Right? And so we're consumed with the other person's motivation, right? Not realizing our own right, you know, in what you're saying, I think, start with your own because you might be the source, you might be the problem. What's interesting too, is the self interest and selfishness. God wants us to love God and neighbor as ourselves. So there is like to be self interested is itself is not wrong but selfishness, if all I ever want to do is go golfing and forget you Pam. You know, now that now my interest has moved on to a place and that needs to be checked. Right? So there's selfishness where you're like, I'm going to do this for me, and I know I'm doing it, right. And then there's the more subtle one called self absorbedness. And that's where I am absorbed with myself. And I'm not trying to hurt anybody, because I'm not aware of anyone else. I'm not thinking of your needs, or your situation. So there's assumed selfish, self interest selfish, and self absorbed. They're all important and where you start to identify your own motive, because I think selfishness, you're aware of why you're being selfish, but self absorbed are often not aware unless we pause and ask this question. So write down the history now, again, in some levels, when they get deeper, you would probably do this write down the history factors, possibilities, the really serious, we've been whiteboarding and family systems and now right, where you're writing every motivation down, but in some ways, in your mind, if it's a small issue, you know, the history of the situation. I mean, you could be having an issue with your son. But it's because you had an issue with your father. Yeah. And now you're transferred some of those same things to your son. So understanding where all this is coming from, right, just how it's like, take a broader look, right, rather than just get lost in what's in front of, and we've often seen as pastors and we'vwe talked about this in the past, where, if you don't know where you're coming from, people just start reacting in the moment. And you miss out on the discernment process, because of it. Identifying bitterness, in all of the parties involved, just sort of a past little bit, the same type of thing, but it's really drilling down. And I think that bitterness is that's a good word, because it's someone who coined the phrase of bitter roots, like a tree, in the root, the root goes really deep. And so the longer you have an issue with someone, you know, you have an issue with somebody did something, you're kind of angry, and then you solve it, and it's done. Right. But when there's an issue, and then it festers, as long as that that root, grows deeper and stronger. And now it's not so easy to take, right? And to so to understand whether this is just a temporary conflict that we can get over, or is is a bitter root, that it's going to take some effort to get past it, right. I mean, we could solve our little problem here. But I still have this bitterness that has been built up over the years. And that's the problem, a lot of times in a marriage, or in the family system, where things have not been dealt with, right. And then over time, this better root takes hold. And
when there's a bitter root, everything they do is annoying, right? Everything they say is, you see it from the most negative point of view that you can possibly remember this lady in my church, who was angry at one of the other board person. And finally she confessed it. She said, even when I come into the parking lot, and I see your car, I get all tensed up just at your car, right? So imagine that he says or does anything, right? It's just gonna keep so I find it fascinating in our kind of conflicting role right now, if you watch the news, like anything that politician has done, is wrong. You know, so use either the political discernment in that theater. commit these things to prayer. And notice if any spiritual warfare issues. You know a lot of times, behind the scenes, there are warfare issues. And I know that when I pray about something to I will ask, Lord, show me if there's any principality or power involved in this, and I'm surprised sometimes the Lord does really let's pray about that. A lot of times, the resolution of it is through the Holy Spirit. Right, somehow we've had this conflict, and then in the middle of the process, all of a sudden, there's a breakdown, right? And it's like, something that was not on the table, is put on the table and in some kind of incredible resolution. Identify scripture that will shed light on issues. So I think people don't often a lot of times we study the Bible, (unintelligible). But are we good at taking a problem or a situation and going, is there anything in the Bible that can help me. Right. Like in Galatians 6, those who are spiritual should restore them gently but be careful that you don't fall. Right. That's the interesting way to think about that. But that's an example of scripture or it's amazing how scripture applies to so many things, it will actually give a treasure chest of relational discernment. Now, there's I think a lot of Christians, especially new Christians, just don't know how to do they don't know how to identify a Scripture. They don't know where to even begin to learn. Right, right. How do you find these things? So you know, one way is to memorize scripture, and then you have a bunch of them right there. And they're all you study. And the more you learn, the more it's available to you. But the other way, is, you can just look up words, right? You can go to these online Bible apps, and you can search a word, bitterness, and you will find, you know, 50 the verses, and you can quickly within five minutes, go through the entire Bible. Answers. As pastors, we over time, memorize, obviously, just come out of our head as many of you are studying for ministry or growing the ministry, you will actually you'll find passages come there, if you memorize them search for them, write a sermon about one them. Ask the opinions of trustworthy Christian friends, who are ministers or life coaches, and counselors, you know, that cannot be said enough. I know like when I have a relational issue, or Steve does, we really we're longtime friends, and we've been around ministry together since 1990 and one of my first phone calls to Steve about a relational issue. Right away, think to myself, you know, I wonder what Steve thinks about this, or Brian DeCook again, first, my wife, you see your process that and then you have this whole
network of people that help you with discernment, right? Because a lot of times in our relationship issue, we're blind, right? We just don't see what the issue is, people around us, it's obvious to them. And so why not take advantage of the collective wisdom, right. And that's really what the church is. A church is a group of people with different gifts and abilities for the benefit and building up of one another. And that doesn't mean you have to take someone's advice, or even understand that, but why not have that ability to discern with others a snapshot input into a discernment that you're trying to make. Develop some conclusions and action plans remembering the prayer of serenity. Remember, in the prayer of serenity, you know, you've done a class on the prayer of serenity, and a mini class, and, you know, the prayer of serenity that one place, help me to change what I can change are sort of like them. And to leave what I can't, and to know the difference between what I can do something about and what I can't do something about, and leaving something who can do something about it, and you do it, some things you can't and you leave it to God, right? But the hard part is to know when you do what, when do I just give it to God? When do I do something about it? Sometimes that isn't very easy. So the rule of thumb is you do what you can. And then But then God can, can come to you and let you know, one way or another. So a lot of times the added prayer that I would make to the prayer serenity is, Lord, I'm gonna go in this direction. If it's not the right direction, please let me know. I know there's a powerful story of family who was struggling with a bitterness about an elderly parent, and a brother and the sister were in conflict over each other and, and that Christian brother has struggled greatly over this and sought my advice and input. And there's a moment near the death of that Father, that the sister came to visit out of town and there's so much conflict. And it was while he was there, he actually lost his contenance. And then the sister who wasn't used to taking care of called the brother to come over. The brother came over and, and change the diaper, so to speak, of our old father. And the father was complaining and and the brother had to get his clothes down to almost nothing. Well, they were in a shower and there was excrement all over. And when the brother came out of the bathroom, there was a miracle occurred, you know, and this prayer serenity where God shows up. This brother could not do anything. But that moment the scales fall off. And healing occurs, right. And I happen to know that, that brother and sister are now close to one another again, because it was about put into prayer. And sometimes that's what happens in life isn't it? That the resolution is some incredible thing that no one could have predicted, right. No one could have predicted and that's where. Prayer is Lord, I don't have it all figured out. And I don't have it all figured out. So we invite you to intervene, right? And help us get through this. Now ask yourself how you can bless others and yourself in the issue. So, you know, one of the best ways to heal relationships is to share the healing with others. Right? And you just gave an example. That example inspires other people to do likewise
with one another. So, right. And really, sometimes in the sharing, you get healed, too, right. So now, what types of things might you do to find out in the discerning process? So we discern the relationship, the issue, the conflict, whatever it might be, but then what might we learn? Well, in many cases, we might learn that you know, what, you're incompatible things are not gonna work, right. So you're asking about whether you should keep dating someone but you just find out, you know, what we've gone through that process is not clear. It's not compatible. For a friend, you know, you had something and now it's broken, sometimes, friendships fall apart, or that friend, you're a new believer, and that friend is going away from you. And you have to figure this out, like let the unbeliever go, right. It is what it is. Number two, you may identify some issues to address. Conflict here, just preferences, you like this. I like that. And now what are we gonna do about it right, right? Is it cultural? Sometimes things are so cultural, that it's like you you might be able to address it and be able to really have a meaningful relationship. Right? Cultural like, I think marriage a lot of times, marriages have a lot of conflict, because you come from different cultures. Every family cultures, right? If you don't quite understand, you know, my wife came to a party, once a Christmas party with all my relatives, my cousins, my aunts and uncles. And when we left, my wife is in tears. She was in tears because my family is so loud, right. And she thought some people were even angry at one another, and she's telling me all this and I'm going. What? What are you talking about? We just love to have a good time. Well, her, her family culture was quiet. I remember meeting her father, one of those quiet men. But I remember your family is loud. Elephant in the room, you know, sometimes those are the things that are difficult. And you know, when I was younger, I would say that I was one more to let the elephant in the room just be there in there sort of like they're there. No one talks about them. So you address these sides flavor and passive aggressive in and that's true for you, too. You and I have turned to be pretty blunt old men. You know, we got here honestly, the bible talks about the real thing, because otherwise it keeps festering, right. A lot of times when people use sarcasm, they're not they're just going around the edge. They're not getting they're not telling you what they really think they're trying to soften it a little bit. Just kidding. No, you're not. You mean what you say but you didn't want to get right into it. And so sometimes it's sarcasm, there's possibly an elephant in the room. No. What else are things that tells you they're passive aggressive? Which is sort of like sarcasm. They're very much related. Sort of. Yeah, I like it when people start talking behind back. There's gossip Yeah, gossip. There's a elephant in the room. You met with the person. You didn't talk about it so you talk about it with someone else, right? Or you walk into a room, and all of a sudden everybody goes silent, right? And then there, everyone is talking about there is an elephant in the room. What is it that phrase, maybe some, some of you listening, have never heard of the elephant in
the room, the elephant in the room? I don't really know, well if an elephant was in this room, and it would like dominate the whole thing, right, but this phrase has come to mean, there's this thing that dominates this whole culture here in this room. But we don't talk about it. And it's sitting right there. It's filling half the room. Right. But we don't talk about it. Right. Right. And I know, just knowing Steve and I over the years, I can assure you, and again, when you say this, and you'll leave the elephant in the room. That's how it goes sometimes. But where sometimes, Why will old people get grumpy. And I've analyzed, like my father, you know, he died at 99. And sometimes my kids will, they will grampa's a little grumpy today or something. And I was thinking about it. And I never really noticed it. And the reason I didn't notice it is, as I get older, I appreciated, called elephants in the room. I almost went too far. Like there's only to me when these are little elephants, little elephants. But you can see how you can get like that. If you're running a or leading a church or running a business. And there are some things that are happening that are hurting ministry or productivity. Eventually you become like, you know what, we just got to get everyone together to talk about this. I don't know if I right now we're talking about right now is almost no one wants to deal with that elephant, right? It's easier, just forget it. Even in marriage, I mean, think about, like, you know, we've been married, you've been married how many years now? 40 something. (mumbling) I said 38. I just had my anniversary so I remember it. But the point is, is I know like, we're much more we have the skill more now to deal with elephants in the room now more than the early days, or how do we bring in dealing with relationship is hard, right? Most people don't want to go into the hard. So let's kind of wrap this up with discernment model with Christians. So first person discernment model always look where you are on first. So this is coming up a lot of the stuff you guys got earlier. This is the hard part because it's easier to blame. Right? It's everybody else's fault , your wife's fault, your kids fault, the work fault, the political fault, the church's fault, the pastor's fault. But but in the beginning, you should start out with where's my role in this? I mean, others might be at fault too. But start with your role in this issue. And confidentially meeting to identify the issues in some ways, this sounds like a formal thing very applies. So you can whenever there's an issue it always should be directly, Matthew 18, go directly to the person, and then don't talk behind anyone's back. Do the discernment process with them? The little things we have talked to earlier? What's involved who said what, look at them before concluding and trying to resolve that to at least spend a little time together? What is the thing? Right? Can we talk about the thing? The elephant in the room. with permissions of all parties, if needed, including trusted and confidential personnel this is like that. Matthew 18, if you cannot resolve a go to the owner of a church, but again, with permission. With permission includes those who really directly from Matthew 18, leaders from the church. Now really, by this time, you're mostly resolved. Things can be resolved.
If you just go directly to the person. There's a conflict. Someone's offended you said something you did something right didn't do something. Generally, most conflict is based on a misunderstanding, right? Most of it. Not always, but most of the time. And if we go with humble attitude, you know, what's my part in it? Generally, if you go with a humble attitude, and you listen to their side and try to understand them before giving your side generally I have found that that issue goes away. I've many times I've gone into a church member who's upset with the church or upset with me, and I'll take an elder with me And before we walk into the house, I'd say, Okay, we're going to listen for one hour before we say anything, that's really, I tell you, probably eight out of 10 times when we would do that, and do it religiously. By the time that half an hour is done, the person has gone. I guess I'm not that I wasn't mad at you, I was mad at this, and this and that. And they started explaining their own situation and their own issue and their own problems. Right. And it's amazing. You just standing there watching it happen. They go from blaming you to either blaming themselves, or the real thing. I often find too, if you listen long enough, whatever they accuse you of, they themselves have a whole life filled with that, right. So if they're really critical, that's how they treat their spouse, right. But they're critical of you as a ministry leader, right? And you listen long enough, and you'll come in where you'll hear that I told Esther that she needs and if you listen long enough. And then finally, that truth comes out. And what I mean by listening, you're listening to such a degree, that they have a sense that you understand hear them, that you heard everything that Speaker 1 26:18 I'm repeating. Okay, here's what I hear you saying, is this what you're saying? And then they go, no, no, no, I need to know more. Because I really want to understand you. I'm not trying to correct you. Right? I'm not trying to enlighten you, I am trying to just understand you to the point where you believe I understand you. You know, I think that when you bring if it gets to the point where you bring another elder of the church or a leader, this is especially true where you listen, to be heard, you know, I brought George here because we really want to know how you're feeling? Okay, now,i 's not just me, Pastor, it's with George or Sarah or whatever, and now you're there, and you're listening. But it's really hard because they say some things that are false. Yes. And you want to defend yourself, you want to correct them. But remember, you're just trying to even if they said something false. Well, why did they say something false? Right? I'm curious as to why you said that, you know, I really want to know, okay, now, you'll get your turn after listening long enough that it's like, Okay, I've tried to understand you and do you think that I understand you? I think you I think you're? Now, could I share my side of the story? Would you try to understand my side of the thing? And then if that person can do that, then we go, okay, we both listen to each other, we have identified the issues in remember when you share your side do not be defensive. Right? You know, you know, I saw how you looked at that? No, no, it's just like, you
know, to see how to share how you feel without attacking or defending, you know, try to identify the issues, don't try to defend your position, right? And then when all said and done, okay, we listened to each other. What can we do? Right? What do you want from me? What can I do for you? How can we fix this? One more here with unbelievers lower, lower, lower, lower expectations. I mean, you really do see in I've seen to the difference in you know, being a believer makes a huge difference in the whole discernment process. To understand that, you know, when you're talking to someone, they may not share your worldview. Right. Right. What is the goal with the relational discernment process? Ultimately, therefore, if anyone is in Christ is a new creation, the old is gone, the new has come. All of this was from God who reconciled us to Himself through Christ, and gave us the ministry of reconciliation, that Christ was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, that God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting him in sins against them. And he has committed to us the message of reconciliation, right so reconciliation is the goal and notice it only happens when men's sins are not counted against them, right grace, again without without grace, relationships fall apart, right love if you cannot love your brother, who you've seen how can you love God who you have not seen. Love, grace, love your neighbor, I mean relationship, you know, for what motivates relational discernment, there's love and reconciliation and bringing people together. You know, right, relational discernment is not necessarily easy to do. But the benefits of actually, you know, knowing, like I remember I had a lot of conflict with my father. As a strong, you're always writing the kind of person. And so the oldest is a we would always end up in some kind of conflict. And I've never seen him cry in my life. He was a strong fireman, fireman. And, you know, so there was a lot of conflict there. But I remember one day we were fighting about something in the kitchen. I remember I was on the farm in the kitchen, and we were fighting. And my dad was six foot four 250 pounds, I'm five foot eight. Huge guy, what happened to you? I don't know. But I remember all of a sudden, he just broke down and cried. I've never seen him cry ever in my life. And then he started telling me about his father. And, you know, really explaining why he was the way he was right? Because of a relational issue that he had with his father. And he didn't want to be his father. He didn't want to be like his father, but he didn't know how to do it any differently. Right. So, you know, he didn't change a lot after that. But I did, because I now discerned what was behind what he did, right. So the more you know about people and who they are, and why they do what they do. It doesn't necessarily take all the issues away. But it definitely helps you deal with it in a different way. I saw things in a different light. And that's true about most every relationship. If you really understood someone where they're coming from, how they were raised, what kind of parents they had, that the difficulties they've been through. I can, I can deal with you. Right, I can handle this dysfunction, right? Because I understand where it's coming. It's
coming from hurt. There's a phrase that says hurt people hurt people, right? So if you understood their hurt, you'd be able to deal with it. So discernment is a critical piece in the relationship. So I'm so glad you're able to join with us and we pray that God will bring more love into all your relationships as you are relationally discerning things.