Telling Your Story

About ten years ago in New Zealand we updated our student evangelism training. One of the updates was a renaming of the testimony workshop to “Telling Your Story“. I think it is a great name, as it encapsulates what we want our testimonies to do.

However, the actual content of the training hardly changed, and if you are familiar with Campus Crusade for Christ, you will know the pattern:

  • What was my life like before I met Christ
  • How did I meet Christ
  • How did my life change after I met Christ

At the most rudimentary level this is a good start, but this pattern often doesn’t help us or our students to be able to tell their story well, which, after all, is what we want.

Two years ago I went on a training course in making short films and a large part of that course was devoted to the concept of story and how to write a good story (A good story is essential for a good film.) This training understandably borrowed a lot from film school understanding of story and scriptwriting. In it, there were five elements to a story that were identified:

  • A character
  • Who has a desire
  • Who encounters conflict
  • Building to a climax
  • And a resolution

When I encountered this idea of story I immediately thought of the application to testimonies (telling our stories). Some of the advantages to this approach to a story are:

  • It creates drama in the story

The current pattern for writing a testimony lends itself to a primary school style of story writing. If you have read a story by a primary school child you will see lots of “and then” which lets people know in what order things happened but it doesn’t help to create the drama that engages an audience.

  • It helps us to find a theme to our story

A lot of testimonies can end up as a disconnected series of events where even at the end we don’t know how some of them fit in. Looking at this structure for telling our stories can help us decide which events are really relevant to the story. It can also help when choosing a testimony to go with an evangelistic event because we can know how the events fit in to the story and whether they connect with the theme of the event.

  • It works for everyone’s stories

A lot of the time the focus of our testimonies is on the point of time when we receive Christ which can make things difficult for someone who became a Christian at a young age. “How exactly did God turn my life around at age seven?” Using the second pattern gives these people the freedom to focus on the story that God is working in their lives, the desires, problems and difficulties they have experienced.

So, what do you think? Can you see any advantages or disadvantages to telling our stories in this way?

The 7 Best Podcasts for Life and Ministry

Well, of course, this is only my opinion, but these are the podcasts that I find really useful in my life.

Deovox (Latin: Voice of God) is a devotional podcast produced by the good people at Damaris. They work through a book of the Bible giving insights into the Biblical and cultural backgorund of the text and connecting it to culture through placing relevant snippets from current movies, TV programs or songs. I find it works very well as a complement to what I’m studying in Scripture. They do two series a year, and each series has weekly podcasts.

Culturewatch is another podcast from Damaris. This one is a recording of Tony Watkins’ weekly interviews on UBC radio giving his views on new and upcoming films and DVDs. A good way to get an insight into what films are coming that have stories that connect with faith.

This is one of two monthly podcasts by The Evangelical Alliance and with the tagline of “exploring starting points for the Good News in today’s world” has lots of good ideas of how to connect the gospel to young people today. The three most recent podcasts have been focused on the “cluster” or “mid-sized missional grouping” strategy of evangelism and has a lot of relevance to how we can be effective in evangelism on university campuses.

The second of The Evangelical Alliance’s monthly podcasts. This one is more aimed at helping leaders grow. They have recently quite a bit from the Digimission conference and using the internet in ministry.

This is a recording of Premier Christian Radio’s  Unbelievable segment. Every week they invite a Christian and non-Christian to discuss an different issue from abortion to intelligent design to the problem of evil. The discussions are usually very civil and both sides are able to get their points across. It is a great way to get to hear both sides of these issues to help us in our conversations on campus.

This is a Campus Crusade for Christ produced podcast with five-minute nuggets on sharing your faith. Each podcast will take an idea from a significant book on evangelism and explain how you can apply it in your daily life and witness.

Not quite so ministry related, but this podcast is treasure for any Tolkien fan. Professor Corey Olsen from Washington University is podcasting all of his lectures from his Tolkien course, as well as some more in-depth podcasts on Tolkien’s works. He is currently working through a series on The Hobbit, and his Tolkien course has just begun a week or so ago, so if you love Tolkien then this is a podcast you will not want to miss.
So what do you think? What are the podcasts that you find really useful in your life and ministry?