The “Dazzle Factor”
In the wake of a several-years’ trend in declining
attendance, we were sitting in a Sunday school teachers’ meeting last week,
discussing in small groups why we thought people actually came to our Sunday
school classes as first-time visitors. I heard myself say, “the Dazzle Factor.”
This, of course, drew raised eyebrows. I realized that I had in mind the search
I see many making for the next new thing, being driven by a wanderlust, a willingness
to try the suggestion made by our church’s leadership that the Sunday
school classes offer community and connection. Once the newness of the visit experience
wears off, however, they are looking at a call for commitment and an invitation
to go to work on “getting into the Word.” The Word carries its own reward and
engagement, but it also requires skillful and artful handling on the front end,
from those who teach it.
Then there came in the mail this week a beautiful program
brochure/ chapbook from Beeson Divinity School for its Fall Community Worship
Program, entitled Tell It Slant. I, at first, thought I had misread the title.
Why would anyone want to intentionally distort the scriptures (Revelation 22:18—19)?
Closer inspection revealed that the title is an allusion to an Emily Dickenson
poem:
Tell all the
Truth but tell it slant—
Success in
Circuit lies
Too bright
for our infirm delight
The Truth’s
superb surprise
As
lightening to the Children eased
With
explanation kind
The Truth
must dazzle gradually
Or every man
be blind—
The program the seminary is offering is an examination of
the parables of Jesus in the Gospel of Luke. Jesus was masterfully “telling in
Circuit” the Truth in His parables. It is, indeed, the Truth, itself, which
ultimately “dazzles” to everyone’s satisfaction, not the packaging and handling
thereof. So, we as teachers must
redirect the seekers’ focus away from ourselves and toward the Truth. We are
only able to do that, however, by skillful packaging. Jesus, Himself, is our
example.
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