Can We Talk? - Mary
Beth Bonacci
Everyone's Entitled to an Opinion: Mine
Talk, talk, talk all you want.
You'll get nowhere without charity.
I attended a meeting yesterday where we were kicking around slogans for
a series of classes on the Catholic Faith. Among our more off-the-wall
ideas:
"Catholicism: We're Right and Everyone Else is Wrong;" and,
"The Catholic Church: We've Got the Keys; What Have You Got?"
Of course, we wouldn't actually use slogans like that. Not only does
that kind of uncharitable approach rarely work, it's not my style.
The way I see it, there are two ways to attempt to persuade someone. One
is to stay on your "side" and shout, "I'm right and
you're wrong! Walk over here into the light!"
I see this a lot. Speakers stand on podiums and announce that they're
going to, essentially, rip the audience's beliefs to shreds. Arguments
are frequently punctuated by, "That's the stupidest thing I've ever
heard," and, "How could you believe something so
ridiculous?"
Believe me, there's no way that kind of approach would work in my
apostolate, especially on a subject like chastity. If I stood up in
front of several thousand teenagers and said, "I don't believe in
sex outside of marriage," they'd look at me as if I were some kind
of freak from a galaxy far, far away. And if I said, "I'm gonna
make you believe the same thing," they'd conclude that I'm trying
to make them freaks and take them back to my freaky galaxy. This is not
a good start.
I've found a different approach. Instead of shouting at them from where
I am, I come to over their side. I say, "Hey, nice side. Kind of
like mine. I like what you've done with the walls. But have you ever
noticed how tough it is to read in here, what with it being so dark and
everything? How could we get some light in here?"
If they don't believe that I honestly understand their experience and
their point of view, I might as well stay home and watch Seinfeld. My
motto, therefore, is, "Keep them nodding." I focus on the
areas where we agree. I start with, "Dating sure stinks
sometimes," and, "It's sure tough to find real love in this
world." Then I move on through, "Here's why sexual activity
forms an incredibly strong bond," and, "This is why the
breakup of a sexual relationship is extremely painful." All the
while they're still nodding, and before they know it, I'm saying,
"Sex outside marriage doesn't lead to love," and they're still
nodding. I didn't cram the conclusion down their throats. I just led
them to it.
I'm not a belief-changer. I'm simply an information-giver. My job is to
show them (whoever "they" happen to be at any given time), in
the nicest way possible, what I've learned and why I think it's cool.
Then I let them make up their own minds. And, as a result, they often do
change their minds — not because I've done anything extraordinary, but
because the information is good, and I gave it to them in a respectful
way. Effective evangelization is precisely that: sharing the good news
respectfully.
Of course, the main reason that works is because what I share is God's
truth, and "the truth shall make them free." God works on
their hearts. He causes the change. But He wants us to bring them the
truth in love and in sincere enthusiasm, not in righteous indignation.
Our egos only get in His way.
So I think I have a new slogan for the series: "I'm Catholic and
You're Not: And I'd Love to Discuss Your Reasons."
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