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Tuesday, September 29, 2009

#628. The church flavored Q&A.

A few weeks ago I spoke to a singles group about honesty in dating relationships. The talk was called "The Biggest Gift" and focused on the idea that in order to have honesty in a dating relationship you need to give the person you're dating the gift of going second. I spoke for about 30 minutes and then was supposed to take 15 minutes of questions. I expected maybe two or three questions and then we'd call it a morning.

I was wrong.

Before I had even finished saying, "thank you for having me," a guy in the front row had his arm up. And then a lady in the back row starting waving her hand and then like popcorn, hands started going up in the air and I started getting sweaty.

Without realizing it, I was suddenly thrown into an "Instant Sermon Feedback" situation. Never experienced an ISF? Allow me to explain.

An ISF is a quick Q&A session that immediately follows a message. It could be at a conference, in a Sunday School class, at an all members church meeting, etc. It's simply your chance to respond with no wait to what you've just heard. And they can be tricky.

Usually in those situations, I bite my tongue because my first desire is to ask a fake question whose goal is only to get my across my own point and make me look smart. Basically I make a statement, instead of asking a question and essentially say, "Hey everyone in this room, I want you to think I'm smart and all bibley, so I'm going to pretend I have a question but really I'm just adding my own P.S. to this sermon."

That's ridunkulous, (a phrase I would say constantly if I could actually dunk which is why God cursed me with a low vertical leap, it's my thorn in the flesh) but I do it. And chances are I'm not the only one who could use a little refresher in popular Instant Sermon Feedback.

So here are the three most common ways people respond when given a Q&A moment with a speaker:

1. Yeah, but.
If you're a speaker and you hear this phrase, "Yeah but," get ready for a wild ride my friend. No one ever starts a sentence with "Yeah but," and then ends it with "you're really awesome and a great communicator.” During my Biggest Gift ISF a woman asked me to "define intimacy." I replied, "Intimacy is the ability to be emotionally naked and vulnerable without fear of consequence." She immediately said, "Yeah but, I'm not talking about being all naked under the sheets." Thrown into a weird tailspin by the “yeah, but” I had no other choice but to respond, "Neither am I, but I am a big fan of naked under the sheets." I think I even gave naked under the sheets the double thumbs up as I said it. I’m such a smooth operator.

2. The Challenge
This one is fun to experience when it's not you on the stage. Jumping right over "yeah, but," someone in the crowd just busts out a question that lets you know they disagree. This happened to me, when a woman asked, "What would have been a gracious way to handle that situation you described?" What she meant was, "The way you handled it wasn't gracious, can you please give us an example where the main character in the story, in this case you, isn’t a jerk?" Touché. She was referring to a story I told to illustrate what happens when you over share on a date. Once on a first date in college, I went to a girl's apartment. She went back into her bedroom and emerged with a pillow case full of journals and diaries she had written over the years. She then proceeded to read them to me. In that moment I started to calculate how many of my keys I didn't need and which ones I could throw into the kitchen to make a shiny, loud distraction so that I could sneak out a window. On a first date, the answer to the question, "Do you like living in Atlanta?" is never "My dad didn't hug me enough or ever throw the baseball with me." But the woman in the crowd was right, I could have handled that situation with more grace. So she got me, and you'll have the chance as a crowd member to get a speaker with your own challenge during an ISF. I highly recommend it.

3. The curveball
Another great approach is to throw out a curveball, some completely unforeseen sentence of awesomeness that reduces both the speaker and the crowd to fits of laughter. That happened to me at the Christian Web Conference a few weeks ago. During the Q&A session I told the crowd, “humor is a gift from God and when we refuse to accept it, it makes him want to take it back, like the unicorns.” Minutes later, a very serious looking, bearded gentleman raised his hand. I called on him and he said, “Sure, but why did God take away the unicorns?” I loved that and responded with something like, “Because we took their beauty for granted and did not respect their ‘stabbing horns.’” He responded, “Well I think you’re disrespecting unicorns. I have a site called stuff unicorns don’t like.com and you just made that list.” I thought that was hilarious and chased that guy down later to ask him to guest post on Stuff Christians Like. Few things are as delightful as a perfectly thrown curveball.

Those are the three options I see most often, but what about you?

Have you ever experienced one of these three Instant Sermon Feedback moments?

What's the funniest or weirdest or most awkward thing you’ve experienced during a church flavored Q&A?

35 comments:

  1. Man I just choked laughing at the unicorn story...aceness.

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  2. Great post, and the unicorn story was enough to make me come out of lurkdom to give you the double thumbs up! !

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  3. Church-flavored or not, the most annoying thing I see in a Q&A is when someone from the audience gets up, rambles for a good five minutes (losing the attention of everyone in the first 10 seconds) and then asks the speaker to "respond" to the disjointed nonsense they have just spewed. Drives me insane.

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  4. i wonder how many people are going to TRY to visit stuffunicornsdon'tlike.com
    today. HA!!!!
    THAT was good :)

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  5. we had a genius of a senior adults pastor and while our church was doing some Q&A he stopped everyone, starting twisting his ear (in an effort to turn back time) and told us all that we did not hear his last statement. He was in his late 80's at this point.

    What about when they do the Q&A in order to address a direct topic. They allow everyone to ask questions, but the "prearranged ringers" share a question and the panel just happen to have a presentation ready to address hot button issues like: kullots, 86ing glitter, and that one guy who wears spandex...hes icky

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  6. I've encountered situations like this leading a small group.

    One gentleman (whose attendance I less than passionately pursued after this event) decided to use our discussion time to elaborate for 15 minutes (with at least 3 separate points) on my my exegesis on Romans 7 was not sufficient or Catholicy enough. (he was Catholic)

    Fortunately I was able to just wait it out and not take personal offense.

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  7. I'm right with the others - my personal favorite in the Q&A is when someone gets up and takes the place hostage - verbally. They have a basic three point outline that makes NO SENSE whatsoever, and manage to say, in every other statement, something that discredits you. Best part is, 99.9% of the church is rolling their eyes wishing they'd shut up and go home. It's that 0.01% you gotta worry about who will come see you after church ...

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  8. I remember the unicorn guest post but love getting more back story on it.

    I like turning things back on the questioners, especially when they are trying to mess with me. My first day in Youth was a QA so they could get to know me. I had been in communication with the person leading the group in the interim and had her warn everyone to have questions.

    One boy came up with his question and told people about it so it made it's way to me before the questions. The questions was "when was your last bowel movement?" He made a point to be the first with his hand in the air and I innocently picked him. Then proceeded to pretend I didn't understand the question and made this young man explain over and over until I felt he was sufficiently embarrassed.

    Ahhh, good times.

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  9. What about the Screwball question?

    This entails a statement or question that has nothing to do with anything. Most of the time it ends up with a debate of predestination versus freewill thereby hijacking the study.

    The best way I've learned to give me more time to answer their yeah buts, challenges, curveballs, and screwballs is to tell them, "That's a great question, what do you think?" This helps narrow down where they are going with their thinking.

    But I'm all for ISF. It helps me dig deeper when studying, presenting, or teaching and keeps me from strictly giving my opinions

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  10. Our Sunday School class is primarily in this format, which I love because it's very interactive. However, the teacher doesn't do too well with it. If anyone says anything even remotely off topic (even though it's usually related and a very good and relevant point) he gets flustered and just goes back to the text. It's kind of frustrating, but really funny at the same time!

    Maybe this week, I'll mention something about unicorns just to see him turn purple and stutter a bit.

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  11. Having graduated from the Institute for Spiritual Formation, I did a bit of a double-take when you referred to this situation as "ISF". "Wait, what about ISF?" my brain throws out.

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  12. I never used this format when I was a pastor since I was appointed to a traditional church with a lot of things that were unchangeable less it brings the 4 riders of the apocalypse upon us all.
    But I did have one "dear" saint who would email me after every (if you didn't catch that I said every) sermon listing everything I said wrong. Of course, he wasn't looking for an answer to his challenge, he just wanted to show he was right and I was wrong.
    I tolerated this for awhile but when he started challenging the rest of our people, from the teens to the little old prayer warriors with little seminarian education, I decided enough was enough and I "accidentaly" offended him and he left our church.
    If I remember right I think it was the sermon I preached about Jesus riding into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday on the back of a baby unicorn. I think his issue was that I was being "pro-Harry Potter" or something like that. I told him that Harry never rode a unicorn but he did ride a dragon in the seventh book. That put a nail in that coffin.

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  13. Three words:

    Off the Blogs.

    I heart awkward silences...(and shameless self promotion)

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  14. I love Q&A time when I speak. Love the spontaneity and potential for humor, but also love how it can open doors for God to move. Once, after a 45 minute talk, I had a Q&A exchange that probably meant more to everyone present than anything I'd said during the "official" message time. But that can only happen when someone asks a real question and not during an ISF. I've also had people who simply wanted the floor to tell their own story of heartache and woe. They weren't necessarily challenging anything I'd said--just starved for some attention and thrilled to find a captive audience. That's when you need someone from stuff unicorns don't like.com to pipe up and redirect the conversation to topics of interest to whole crowd. Is your bearded guy for hire?

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  15. I had to go back and re-read Katdish's blog again about her time with you and Steph at the conference. Awesomeness.

    I have two instances of awkwardness at Q&A's. One is church flavored, the other is not.

    The first one was in a Colleged-aged small group my hubs and I lead. We had a young woman in class who was battling her second round of ovarian cancer. We were taking prayer requests and she asked for prayers for some upcoming scans to make sure the tumor wasn't growing. We are all in tears and lifting up heartfelt prayers. When we were done, another girl lays out a prayer request in such a tormented and painful sounding voice, I thought maybe she was sick as well. Nope. She told us she'd developed an allergy to her favorite makeup and could we please pray for God to help her find some that "wouldn't break her out". I just looked at her. Good times.

    The second awkward moment is a fun little story the Smarty Panters like to tease me about...(which is why I love them so).

    My daughter was a former Make A Wish child. I became a Make A Wish ambassador and went on some speaking engagements to promote the organization. I was speaking at a rather large event and giveing my daughter's story and telling the crowd what Make A Wish did for us and how supporting them makes such a huge difference to sick kids. Lots of the tears in the room. At the end, a lady raises her had and says..."Who did your lips?" I'm all "wha....?" Turns out, she thought I had collegen lips and wanted to know who did them. I gather my wits and said "God 'did' my lips. Any other questions?"

    I love awkward times. Keeps ya humble.

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  16. Try being the wife of the speaker and getting verbally assaulted by those questioners afterwards. As if I wrote and delivered the class/sermon myself. It's like when someone asks me what my husband's social security number is. I don't know, it's his number not mine.

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  17. I hate being in the Q&A/ISF part at the end of a preach or lecture when people misuse that opportunity to basically say...

    "If I was doing this talk I would have added this..."

    Well you're not, the other guy is because someone thought they were worth the money not you :)

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  18. Most awkward Q&A story--- a dude raised his hand and asked for a detailed description of "how far is too far" so very awkward for the crowd.

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  19. Unicorn humor
    Mythes the mark don't you think?
    That's your PUNishment
    http://ChristianHaiku.com

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  20. That first date story sounds like it should be on a sitcom. What a nut!

    My favorite Q&A response is:

    #4. The Stealth Sermon - This happens when a retired pastor in the crowd thinks he can deliver your message better than you can. I saw this when a crowd member asked the speaker where he did his research for the sermon. Harmless, right? Wrong! Before we knew it, we were hurled into another sermon and the guy actually started walking toward the stage to take over! I'm just surprised he wasn't handing out church pamphlets at the door from his own congregation.

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  21. Any way you could share that "The Biggest Gift" talk? Or at least the main points you wanted to get across? I would love to read it. Thanks.

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  22. My favorite is "The Hypothetickler". This is when someone takes the story, illustration, etc. and puts a little twist on it. Trying to tweak the logic a bit, as it were.

    For example, if you were speaking on the Prodigal Son, The Hypothetickler might raise his hand and say, "I see what you're saying, but what if after the Prodigal Son repented, what if he died of starvation in the pig sty before he could return home and ask forgiveness? Has he been forgiven?"

    Or maybe you're preaching on Jim Eliot and the Auca Indians. The Hypothetickler will pop up and say, "Yes, well, what if God told Jim Eliot and his missionary buddies NOT to go down there? Are their deaths still part of God's plan?"

    Or maybe you're preaching about a story in your own life where you made a bad decision. The Hypothetickler will raise his or her hand and go, "Well, what if you had done X, Y, or Z instead?"

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  23. Another common ISF, at least when I am in attendance (because it is usually me) is the "Ooh Ooh Ooh Me Me Me." We are the first ones with our hands up with a really good question because we want to impress the teacher and the rest of the class. Because even though I am 31 years old and have a J.D., and they do not give grades out in Sunday School, I can't resist the impuls to try and get as much extra credit as possible while impressing as many people as possible.

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  24. Three More:

    The Idiot Check - the person who tuned out the whole time but because there is an opportunity to ask questions hops up anyway and somehow manages to ask that same question that is the title for your fill-in the blanks notesheet

    The Multiple Questionioner - the person who has 3 or more questions and won't give up the spotlight until they're all answered

    The Confessor - the person who ignores the questions and decides it's time for a public confessional of 1)the most insignificant of sins (I didn't stop completely at the stop sign), 2) the most publicly awkward of sins (I can stop lusting after that lady over there, etc.), or 3) someone else's sins (I think we need to pray for Brother Bob over there who is still getting drunk every night)

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  25. Oh, nearly every Christian-themed Q&A I go to makes me ralph. For the reasons you mentioned and so many more. There's the know-it-all, the I'm-more-spiritual-than-you, the rambler, the this-totally-bizarre-situation-is-specific-to-me-and-my-church-only.

    Which is why the unicorn guy is fab. We all enjoy a good laugh.

    I will say, though, that a well-planned Q&A (usually where questions are fielded in advance--on paper--and then the irrelevant ones are filtered out) is something worthy of the audience's time. Mostly, I feel bad for the speaker being put on the spot to manage all the oddballs (and their complex problems) in the crowd.

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  26. I once referenced the movie Gladiator in a sermon. I was suprised to see a hand pop up about seven rows back. The man looked as though he might explode if I didn't call on him. Not knowing what else to do, I stopped the sermon and said, "Do you have a question?"

    He asked me if the movie Gladiator was real. I responded that it is fictional and thought that would be in the end of it; but his hand shot up again with a follow up question asking me to clarify what was fictional and what was historical. I was completely unprepared for this and actually spent time answering him.

    Then came another question, another response, and another question. Finally, five minutes into the conversation I came to my senses and moved forward. It was weird.

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  27. Love the Screwball, Stealth Sermon, and especially the Hypothetickler. Others I've noticed:

    The Repeat Offender: the guy that asks the same question at every Q&A even if (especially if!) it has nothing to do with the current topic. Especially fun if the question is about a talk that a different speaker gave -- asking you to comment on an unfamiliar topic and speaker. (RO: "Last week the speaker said that Augustian Christology is no longer relevant is light of the New Atheism Movement. What do you think?")

    The Late Comer: Asks questions that were covered clearly in the first part of the talk which they missed -- forcing the rest of the audience to have to sit through those points a second time.

    Or my favorite:

    The Heckler: Doesn't wait until the q&a to shout out questions -- usually ones that would have been answered by the speaker if they only waited for the speaker to finish their point.

    Speaker: And then Jesus went down to-
    Heckler: Excuse me, but didn't Jesus go to Jerusalem next?
    Speaker: -Jerusalem.

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  28. This is too funny, cause I was at the CWC and in the "Unicorn" breakout -- and it was even funnier in person!

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  29. I dont have anything to contribute, but i just wanted to let you know that was my most favorite entry youve done yet. That ive read.

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  30. Haha! I loved the whole "naked under the sheets" with two thumbs up comment! That's hilarious! I could only imagine what the elderly lady sitting in the front row thought...had there been one!

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  31. We know a pastor who takes two or three questions at the end of each of the three Sunday morning services at his church, and he always begins his response with, "That's a great question."

    Of course, if you heard some of the questions, you would recognize immediately that, "That's a great question;" is a great act of grace on his part.

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  32. Are these talks some where on the interwebs? I would go look for myself, but the internets is big.

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  33. At my former job, I was part of a team that would teach staging scripture. We were brought to a conference by a respected university to teach staged scripture and speak on a panel about scripture in worship. They lined up several "experts" (I use the parentheses on experts, because I was up there and am definitely NOT an expert!) The weird and amazing thing is that Eugene Peterson was also on that panel. The crazy/awful thing is that when the audience asked questions, they asked us to go from left to right. I was on the far left and Mr. Peterson was on the far right. So I had to answer questions about scripture in worship on a panel with Eugene Peterson and had to answer them BEFORE him. I mostly started all of my answers with "well, I'm no bible scholar or translator but..." For the record Eugene Peterson is a wonderful Godly and humble man. So, that was my super weirdest church Q/A moment.

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  34. I can't wait for the unicorn guy's guest post!

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  35. Our youth pastor was out of town a while back and one of the sponsor's got up to speak to the middle school kids in his place. He gave a message on standing up for God in your schools, etc. He ended up finishing 15 minutes early so he asked the one question you never ask a group of middle schoolers: "Any questions?"

    As soon as he said that, a 6th grade girl's hand shot up and she proceeded to tell a story about when she was traveling with her family and she saw a billboard of a girl in a bikini next to a car and how it was really inappropriate and she wanted to know why sex is in the media and why it sells.

    The speaker stood there in shock, looked at me, I gestured that we should pray and he replie to the girl, "You're right, it's not a good thing and it's something we should probably pray about. Right now." And he closed in prayer.

    I thought it was hilarious -- he was still pretty embarrassed.

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