Day 3 of Countdown to CHRISTmas-Selah’s Silent Night

Today’s video in the countdown is a one of the most beautiful I’ve seen.  A visual delight as well as a musical one.  This is a short ballet to the song Silent Night as sung by Selah.  Their rendition is extraordinaryily packed with the reverence for the Lord and the video is a sight to behold.

What a wonderous way to stop and think on the Lord and what He has done for us.  What He gave up for us.  And what He continues to do for us.

Enjoy this gorgeous video as you reflect on the Lord.  Tomorrow I’ll have another wonderful video that will help us all keep Christ in our CHRISTmas.  Until then…

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Do experts really have universal wisdom/knowledge?

Your English teacher always told you to study your vocabulary words because it was important.  Why?  Because the bigger our vocabulary, the stronger the likelihood that we will choose the correct word for the situation.  Mark Twain once said, “The difference between the right word and the almost right word is the difference between lightning and a lightning bug.”   The more words we have at our command, the more precise our description and the more effective our communication.

To that end, today’s Word of the Week is:

pansophy  \PAN-suh-fee\, noun:
Universal wisdom or knowledge.
From the Greek, pansophy is comprised of the root words pan meaning “all” and sophy meaning “wisdom.”

As I looked at this word, it reminded me of the number of times we find someone in our society claiming universal wisdom or knowledge-at least of one subject or another.  They host TV shows, do commercials, ask us to hire them and sell products.  They call themselves experts.  The ones who sell marketing products are called gurus.  I am often introduced as a Communication Expert and I’m always uncomfortable with this term.

An expert implies universal wisdom or knowledge of a subject and, while I have a degree in Speech Communication and over 25 years of experience, I still consider myself a student of communication.  As a human being, I’m always a work in progress.  I may know more about the topic than many, but an expert?  If anyone could have been called a Communication Expert, it was Ronald Reagan.  However, even Reagan was consistently honing his skills.

No, as I see it, the only one with pansophy is the Lord who possesses all the wisdom and knowledge of the universe.  Does it bother you when someone calls themselves an expert?  A guru?  What say you?

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NEW: Interview w/a Communicator

We have a new feature here on Communication FUNdamentals called Interview with a Communicator.  We all communicate every day of our lives and communication touches every aspect of it.  So…each week, I’m going to bring you a blog interview with someone in a different ministry, business or time of life to share with you.  Each will share the mission God has them on and how effective communication plays an important role.  We begin with a friend I met online.

BeckyJoie Thombs Oakes is a “multiple hat wearer” and a free-lance writer. She spends her time volunteering to work with youth as well as lay-counseling ministries at a local Christian counseling center.  She has three sons.   She lives with her husband, two of her sons and their Yorkshire terrier in Leesburg, FL.  Always uplifting and gracious, she puts a smile on the faces of those all around her.  I know you will enjoy her.  Here we go…

 

1. Please tell us a little about yourself.

I like to describe myself as a multiple hat wearer. I am first and foremost a wife and therapeutic mom. By that I mean that I help children from abusive and troubled backgrounds. My husband and I have adopted two teenage boys through foster care and have an older son who is in college preparing for a law career. In my spare time, I am a youth worker, middle school Sunday school teacher, lay-counselor, health consultant and a health food business person.  I never have time to be bored. I love helping people. It fuels me.

 

2. What is a typical day in the life of Becky Joie?

Currently, I homeschool my two boys, ages 15 and 17 but during the day, I run my health businesses from home and do therapeutic respite for whoever the Lord sends my way. This includes dealing with a great deal of behavior management in troubled children so we keep very occupied with outdoors activities and routine household chores. It requires a stable schedule with a tiny bit of flexibility so my day is often planned from 6am until 11pm or later, depending on issues that come up during the day.

 

3. I love hearing people’s testimony! Please share how you came to know the Lord and how important The Great Commission is to a believer.

I was raised in a Christian home. My family had an evangelistic ministry performing puppets, music, chalk drawing and preaching. I am told by my parents that I gave my life to the Lord as a 5 year old but I really did not remember it, although I remember being baptized. When I was in the 4th grade, our family settled in a church that was very strong on keeping God’s law but not especially skilled in grace. Through a series of events and time in a restrictive environment,  I became hurt and turned away from the Lord for a brief while in my adulthood. I had been in an abusive marriage where I had my oldest son. My ex-husband was a pastor.  We divorced to due his abuse and unfaithfulness.  Even after we had been separated for a few years, I was still not over it.  I was very angry about this and ran from the Lord for a while. Then, I was invited to a Calvary Chapel home bible study. It was there I felt God’s love and mercy but was also convicted for sin in my life so I re-committed my life to the Lord.  Then I learned that God really loved me, that I was definitely a sinner in need of a Savior. I learned that God was not a bully waiting for me to trip up so He could hit me with a club of punishment but that He really loved me, wanted to forgive me and give me a new life. I gave my heart to Him and turned away from the world. It was one of the toughest things I ever did but I’m so glad I did it. That was about 15 years ago. I’ve served the Lord gratefully ever since. A couple of years after splitting with my ex-husband, I met my husband, Doug, who is a wonderful, godly man.

 

4. How many years have you been married and how important has effective communication been in your marriage?

As of June 2011, we will have been married for 14 years. We were put together by “Godcident”, we like to say. Paired up in a Christian musical, we became very good friends. We didn’t even know that we liked each other more. Other people had to point it out.  At one point, he tried to tell me that he liked me and said, “I’m so glad we are friends.” I was DEVASTATED. I had begun to realize I liked him as more and thought he was saying he only like me as a friend.  He saw a man kind of following me around and thought I was taken already.  This also did not help. We didn’t communicate about it at all. It took a mutual friend of ours to mend the communication gap. Thank God for friends! I would hate to think I missed out on a wonderful husband because we did not communicate how we felt to each other.

 

5. Share with us your greatest blessings and challenges you have had as a parent.

My type of parenting is a cross between therapeutic parenting and the “Love and Logic” style. I need to be very careful to keep my tone of voice mild and cheerful even when disciplining as tenseness can trigger fears of abuse or anger in the children that I help. I also have to be very cautious with humor as the children are sensitive and might feel ridiculed. With my oldest son, it was different. He was a rascal but he had a great sense of humor. He had a knack for embarrassing me. One time he hid inside an old pulpit at the base of the stairs in an old church building and waited for ladies to come down the stairs. He would jump out and scare them. Screams would echo across the church. That would be when I would find out what he did and want to crawl under a rock. Another time, he told a sharp looking single man that I went to the doctor to get a shot in my rear end. Humiliating! Sometimes working with troubled teens can bring embarrassment as well. When a teen throws a tantrum ( throwing things, yelling, stomping feet, cussing) in public because they don’t get the yogurt they want in the store and they won’t wait to discuss it in private  OR else when one has wild behavior and climbs atop a grocery display and I have to talk to them in a sweet, calm voice, it can be quite unnerving to wonder what people think of our family. I overcome this by telling myself that it does not matter what others think and that I need to parent my children and my temporary charges the way that they need me to parent them because I answer to God and not strangers who don’t know the circumstances. Of course, we use discipline but it looks very different from what others use so there is no way between the behaviors and our discipline style that we are going to look normal to anyone who does not understand these things.  My biggest challenge is parenting against normal logic because this parenting style is unique to parents who do what I do.

 

6. What is your favorite scripture and share what God is communicating to you personally through it.

I love Ephesians 3:14-21 which talks about knowing the love of God and being stirred up in Him. I think that is the answer to healing any hurt and motivating all Christian service. Love is the key. That is my prayer—that all who come into my pathway will know God and His love.

 

7. You have a unique ministry/business.  How important is effective communication for you as you go about your daily activities?

Communication is  24/7 job here. I must communicate in a way that can be received by hurting children. I must teach them how to communicate through words instead of poor actions. I must teach them how to express emotion appropriately. Most important is the modeling of how we communicate with our Lord for every need, every fear, every want, every time we need forgiveness or to tell Him that we love Him. They will see what a true parent is like if they see me trusting God. He is the ultimate parent.  In our home, prayer is a communication about trust/faith as well as communication with God. I am so blessed when one of my kids “gets it” and sees me with a headache. He comes and lays hands on my head and asks God to heal me. Other times, one child will be frustrated with the behavior of another. They will mimic my quiet, under the breath prayer before responding to the child who is irritating them. Then I know I’ve communicated faith and trust well to them.

 

8. What forms of communication do you use in your ministry/business?  Which one is your favorite and why?
I use many forms of communication with my kids, from letters, to songs, to stories and even signs on the wall. Storytelling is very helpful to relay empathy. If they can see how they would feel in a given situation, then they can learn to empathize with others.

With my health business, I use social media such as Facebook and Twitter. I have used blogging but lately I’ve just been too busy for that. Facebook is most effective because you can communicate with many more people and interact much more quickly. You are not just putting your message/product out there but you also get to develop relationships with your customers and provide much better customer service.

 

9. What are the challenges in communicating in other ways?

I’m not a phone person really. I like to see people’s faces or see their words in front of me. This could be because I am a visual person and have some auditory processing issues with noise. I prefer in-person or in written and electronic communication. That way I can mull over what is said more before reacting and I won’t miss something important.

 

10. If you could go back in time and give yourself advice about a misunderstanding you had in the past, what would you tell yourself?

That is a tough one. I think that in my past, I would have communicated more rather than clamming up. I think I would have thought more before reacting. There are so many things we can improve in communication. We are all students with so much to learn.

 

11. How can we learn more about you and your business/ministry?

Right now, I am in the development stages of the therapeutic parenting fan page.  https://www.facebook.com/pages/Christian-Therapeutic-Parenting/193811603983441

My business page for health food is: http://www.beyondorganicinsider.com/becomeaninsider.aspx?enroller=4382 The company will open in October of 2011 but I’m beginning to build the business beforehand because I believe in Jordan Rubin, the creator, and his ideas for health and nutrition .

I also sell Nature’s Sunshine Products. You may contact me via email at rjeremiah2911@embarqmail.com for information on vitamins, supplements and natural health resources.

 

12. Any final thoughts you’d like to leave us with today?

I just want to thank you, JoJo, for working so hard to teach people about communication. I feel that what you are doing is one of the most important ministries that the church could have and it’s also a business that could help others in their own personal and professional lives. Communication is not just telling people everything. I’ve heard it said, “People don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care.”

Thanks so much for sharing with my readers, BeckyJoie!  You are a blessing and inspiration to so many!

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How do you tell God you’re frustrated?

I’m not even sure where to begin.  I think I’ve started this blog post about six times.  I’m not even sure I remember all the details of what happened.  I just felt the Lord leading me to share all that’s been going on here the past  month or so.  I feel like there’s someone out there who needs to know they are not alone.

Every once in a while stuff happens.  A mistake here.  A technical glitch there.  Just stuff.  Stuff that makes you cringe.  Stuff that makes you want to give up.  Stuff that makes you want to throw your computer out the window.  Stuff.  Frustrating stuff.

A little bit of frustration is just life.  A modest amount of frustration is just one of those things.  But the kind where you feel like there MUST be a big, red target painted on your back is…well, too much stuff!  You say, “Whoa Lord.  Arencha pilin’ that on just a little too high?”  But how do you tell God you’re frustrated?

Well, I think first you complain.

Lord, you know I’m not a techie with a money tree in the back yard.  The TV’s got a glitch, the fridge is making a funny noise, my computer’s power supply fan is humming like a drunken sailor, and don’t get me started on the car.

You try reminding God of your good intentions.

Lord, you know all I wanted to do was to offer one of our communication studies as a CHRISTmas gift for free to anyone who wanted to download it-just to bless them for CHRISTmas.  And my heart was in the right place for setting up a donations button for folks to donate toward the church’s Ridge Bridge Outreach if they felt You leading them to.

Then you tell God how hard you’ve worked.

It took me a week, one call to the church and 4 phone calls to PayPal to set up the donation button.  I told everyone I was doing this.  I spent an hour on the phone with PayPal, four hours writing up my letter of explanation and I had to ask the poor, overworked church personnel to fax a letter in stating that I was authorized to do a fundraiser for them.

Next you graduate to…”It’s not fair!”

Why should my business have to suffer?  I followed the rules.  I called PayPal 4x, explaining the entire situation and this is what they told me to do.  What triggered this anyway?  Why me?  Why didn’t they warn me I might need to give them all this documentation?  You know how busy I am since my editor had to leave due to family issues.  I got so behind in my writing. I was working from 3am to midnight most days without getting breakfast or even a shower some days.  And now, if I don’t give them the information they are asking for by Friday, they’ll take further action to limit my business account?  It’s not FAIR.  (You can’t put an exclamation point here and yell at God so you wine a little at the end.)

Then you graduate to asking everyone you know for prayer.

Would you all please check to see if there’s a big, red target on my back?  And while you’re looking, can you pray for me?  Stuff’s happening.  Bad stuff.  Frustrating stuff.  Stuff I can’t even remember because I’m too busy trying to get out of the stuff to be able to recall all the details of all this week’s stuff.

Then you forget half of the stuff you need to remember to get the stuff done to fix stuff!

Where is that invoice for the computer that tells me what kind of power supply I have so I can make sure the stuff I need to buy is the stuff that’ll fit in my computer so I don’t mess stuff up?

Then, I think, you finally get down to prayer.

Dear Lord, you know what I need even if I can’t remember all the stuff I need prayer for anymore.  My head is filled with stuff…fuzzy stuff by now, Lord, and I just don’t know what to do first.  Lead me, Lord.  Guide me God.  Help me find my way through all of this.  I’ll get out of the way now, Father, so You can take over.  I’ll listen for Your voice and I’ll do what I hear You say.

Stuff happened to put me behind.  Stuff continued to happen that made me want to give up, throw my computer out the window and even more stuff.  But God was faithful.  He listened to me complain.  He understood my intentions.  He knew how hard I worked.  He felt my frustration when it wasn’t fair.  He heard my friend’s prayers and He comforted me and guided me when I finally prayed.

He told me to take one thing at a time. He told me to keep plugging away and I’d eventually get done with all the stuff.  He told me to just wait it out.  Well, I did take things one at a time and stuff began to get done.  Other folks saw how frustrated I was and helped.  My dad is researching the power supply for me.  The office manager at church found the time in her already busy schedule to fax the letter PayPal wanted.  My friends emailed me notes of encouragement.  My mom asked if we could take an afternoon this week and get away for some fun time.

Most of my writing projects are done, even though I had problems with my hands and awful headaches.  They are almost done and mostly at deadline!  My last project is an ebook on debate.  I have all my info. I just have to write it all out.  I think, with God’s help and guidance, I can get it all done in time for my dd to come home from Russia.

And after my PayPal issue is resolved, I want to take three weeks off to spend with her for the CHRISTmas holiday.  No writing.  No homeschool.  Just family and praising God for getting me through such a frustrating several weeks.

Have you ever felt this?  How did you tell God you were frustrated?  And what did God tell you to do?

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UPDATE: After sending in my Letter of Explanation 4x and my church’s letter of authorization 3x, PayPal has seen fit to take me off their Most Wanted List and restore my business account standing. I’ve notified the Post Office to take my mug shot down, but do watch out for me. Us criminal types are notoriously devious. I just might “donate” again!

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On taking the 'God Parts' out

Art of Eloquence is fast approaching the completion of its eighth year in business this November.  It’s been a very interesting ride so far.  I’ve learned a great deal about business, about myself and my faith.

When I wrote my first study, Say What You Mean (for Teens), I really wasn’t thinking of this as a business or even a ministry. It was simply an answer to a homeschool friend’s need for a more comfortable way her shy daughter could learn to communicate more effectively.  It was important to me that the approach to overcoming shyness and strengthening communication skills be fun and reflect the teachings that are so prevalent in God’s Word.  I have literally found HUNDREDS of scriptures that pertain to communication and many of them contain lessons I studied in the pursuit of my secular degree.

However, as I began to form Art of Eloquence, I quickly learned that not everyone was happy with the ‘God parts.’  The woman in charge of a nearby YMCA said she would love me to come and teach there if only I’d ‘take the God parts out.’  A public school administrator informed me that she’d love to recommend that my studies be used in the district, if only I’d agree to ‘take the God parts out.’  My Dad shared with me that he felt that I’d get a lot more sales if only I’d ‘take the God parts out.’

Over the last eight years, I can’t count the number of times I’ve been offered contracts, money, sales, an enormous venue in which to display my articles if I’d only agree to ‘take the God parts out.’ I just could never bring myself to do it.  It felt like I’d be turning my back on the Lord after He had done so much for me.  It felt disrespectful, but more than that, it felt wrong.

When I got my degree from a secular university, I felt I had a firm grasp of the concepts I had studied.  After all, I had a degree from one of the top ten universities in the country for Speech Communication.  When I accepted Christ as my savior, I found greater meaning in the lessons He wrote for us in His Word.  It more than enhanced my understanding; it put a necessary perspective on every aspect of human communication.  I found that studying speech communication without mentioning what the Bible has to say about it, is like studying automobiles without mentioning Henry Ford.

As the years went by, I began writing more about being an effective witness for Christ both as an example and when discussing our faith with others.  That’s when I really had some challenges to my approach!  I’ve had people heckle me on internet radio shows and I’ve had some NastyGrams sent to my email.  I’ve had people disrupt my online events, send scathing remarks to online groups and one lady who chastised me during a presentation I was asked to give for a group of Christians.  I found out later that she was a member of one of my Christian Yahoo groups!  She wasn’t aware that I was asked to do this presentation nor was she aware that the presentation was to a group of Christians.  She simply felt it was ‘intolerant’ of me to quote scripture and talk about Jesus when there were people who didn’t believe in Him.  So she stood up in the virtual chatroom so to speak and told me off, left the room and took several people with her.

Many times what I write cannot be divorced from scripture without diminishing the value or losing the integrity of my message.  So, though I’ve been asked many times to ‘take the God parts out, for many reasons, I simply cannot do it and remain true to the voice inside me-the voice God gave me.

I can’t say that I haven’t been tempted.  I wish I could report to you that I’ve never once allowed it to cross my mind that I might have much more of a following or more sales if I did ‘take the God parts out.’  And I know that there must be others out there who struggle with this issue whether they are authors or not.  I’d like  to share a thinking process that I use whenever I am presented with a situation like this.  I hope it will help you.

  • If I were to take the scriptures out of my work, I might be able to reach a wider audience than just the percentage of Christians who feel it important to study communication from a Christian perspective.
  • If I were to reach a wider audience, I might be able to reach unbelievers and they may come to know Christ.
  • How many people, who are that uncomfortable with scripture, would actually be interested in these kinds of articles and studies which were written specifically for Christians?
  • How many of my articles and studies really speak to the unbeliever?
  • Wouldn’t I approach a nonChristian in a completely different way?
  • Isn’t there a reason God directs me to write this way?
  • So…shouldn’t I leave my writing the way I was directed to write it?

Some Christians are directed by God to write in order to reach unbelievers.  Some have missions that speak to the churched.  Each of us has to listen to the Lord to determine our own path and then ask ourselves questions periodically that will allow us to keep to the path the Lord has set before us.

What is your mission?  What questions do you ask yourself in order that you remain on the path God has for you?

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JoJo Tabares holds a degree in Speech Communication, but it is her humorous approach to communication skills which has made her a highly sought-after Christian speaker and writer.  Her articles appear in homeschool publications, such as Homeschool Enrichment Magazine and The Old Schoolhouse Magazine, which also endorses her Say What You Mean curricula, including Say What You Mean Defending the Faith.  You can also find JoJo on web sites such as Crosswalk.com and Dr.Laura.com.  For more information on communication FUNdamentals and Christian-based communication skills for the whole family, please visit http://www.ArtofEloquence.com

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