Chris Folmsbee


Story is everything when we share our faith. After all, what is the gospel but the story of God’s will, way, and work of providing salvation and justice for all of humanity through the gift of God’s son, Jesus Christ?

Here are 10 ways that story plays into faith sharing:

Story makes things personal. It makes a personal God and a personal relationship with God comprehendible.

Story provides meaning. What else makes sense of this world and our place in this world but the story of God, self, others, and the world?

Story connects to community. It helps people connect to a people, a history, or a greater context.

Story connects people with people. While story connects people to a broader people, it also connects individuals to others with like affinities.

Story evokes the imagination. While history (in the classic sense) can feel stale to many, story can open up new possibilities. Story can help people visualize how their lives might be different.

Story provides purpose. Connection to a people, particularly the people of God, links not-yet believers to a grand mission in which to engage and to live out.

Story provides explanation. For many, story helps them make sense of their inner selves in light of the outer world.

Story produces forward thinking. Story has a way of making people who engage the story focus in on its ending. Story helps people make sense of the redemptive plan of God.

Story imparts compassion. On a personal level, understanding one another in light of others’ experiences and situations builds within each of us compassion to see with new, soft eyes of grace.

Story constructs a unique expression. Each of us has our own way of responding to the will, way, and work of God. Story helps not-yet believers find their place in God’s epic story.




 





Brooklyn Lindsey


Before I suggest how story fits in sharing our faith I think it’s important to think about the goal of our faith. Take a look at 1 Peter 1:8-9. Though you have not seen him, you love him; and even though you do not see him now, you believe in him and are filled with an inexpressible and glorious joy, for you are receiving the goal of your faith, the salvation of your souls.

The goal of our faith is the salvation of our souls—not just mine but yours too. We’re all in the same boat when it comes to where we start on the path to redemption. And it’s in that redemption, through Christ, that God is making all things new—restoring the imago Dei, or image of God, in the things that have been created for God’s glory.

For everyone has sinned; we all fall short of God’s glorious standard. Yet God, with undeserved kindness, declares that we are righteous. He did this through Christ Jesus when he freed us from the penalty for our sins. Romans 3:23-24.

Donald Miller has a great understanding of story and how it helps us reach our goals—ours being the salvation of our souls, through the work of Christ. Miller writes in his blog why many goals don’t get met. “It’s because their goals aren’t embedded in the context of a narrative.”

In his book, A Million Miles in a Thousand Years, you would see that he has reorganized his life into stories rather than goals. He mentions that he likes goals and sets them but notes this: “Without an overarching plot, goals don’t make sense and are hard to achieve. A story gives a goal a narrative context that forces you to engage and follow through.”

For example, I could set a goal to go without coffee and soda for a year. It’s a good goal. My blood sugar would love me for it, but knowing me, I would fail superbly. But if I put my goal into the context of a story, I might be able to do it. Let’s say giving up caffeine consumption for a year would save me around $500 a year—$500 is about half the money it takes to give $50 a month to the International Justice Mission (lawyers and caregivers who fight for the cause of the oppressed) for a yearly commitment to being a freedom partner. Let’s say I found a friend who also had this same passion. We decide, together, to save every penny we would spend on beverages for this cause in 2011 to raise the $1,000 to be partners in rescuing the oppressed. In this context, I wouldn’t fail—because the story gives life and meaning to the goal.

God knew we needed a story. God knew the importance of inspiring the writers of the Bible to preserve the details—we needed to know. Why? Because we needed to know reason we need redemption in the first place; we needed to know the depth of God’s love and sacrifice so we could then live in response to it. It changes the way we look at our goals.

When Jesus responded to the learners’ question about the most important way to live, he ranked loving God with our entire beings and loving our neighbors together as number one. He set a goal. He was telling his disciples the way to follow him. But he also gave them a great story to live in—sharing in his glorious riches through trials and temptations. He gave them the big picture.

Sharing our personal stories with others is the natural extension of the story Jesus told with his life. It’s easier to tell others how much God loves them when we give them the context of how God has loved us. The journey we’ve experienced with God foreshadows what could happen in someone else’s life. The story gives meaning to the sharing of our faith.

Jesus left his earthly story here with us when he gave us the gift of the Spirit. The story of redemption is alive and being played out in our journey. Sharing our stories not only plays a part in sharing our faith; it is how we impart the gospel to others. The Israelites looked back to the Exodus. We look back to the resurrection of Jesus and are able to say he has rescued us from sin and so many other things. Those “things” are our stories—the context of our being rescued—and those stories are compelling and rich and personal. At the same time, those personal stories are collective in the body and useful for the edification and encouragement of the people.

Most people want to be free. Most people want to be forgiven. Most people want to know what it feels like to experience unconditional love. Hearing how you’ve experienced all of these things may just be the bridge to their own stirring and curiosity for God. And in the midst of the telling, we find the gentle and prevenient grace of God doing the important work of love in our hearts.




















Helpful Resources:

Story, Signs, and Sacred Rhythms
by Chris Folmsbee



Mike King


“You have yet to understand that the shortest distance between a human being and Truth is a story.”* -Anthony de Mello

Without story it is impossible to share our faith. Furthermore, it is not possible to even have a faith to share without a story. As Christians, our story begins with these words: “In the beginning God created.” This story unfolds through the creation narratives, the exodus, the priestly accounts, the exile, the coming of Messiah, the gospels, and the church and ends with a glimpse into our future, thus becoming a story that gloriously has no ending. This overarching story of God at work in the world, of humanity’s role in that story, and of Jesus Christ, who is God for us, is a story that is actually alive and still unfolding. It is a true story that gives human beings real life and meaning.

Theologian Harvey Cox, in his book The Seduction of the Spirit wrote, “All human beings have an innate need to hear and tell stories and to have a story to live by… Religion, whatever else it has done, has provided one of the main ways of meeting this abiding need.”*

For us to even have Christian faith means that we have found our story as persons embedded in God’s story. There is a proverb from an anonymous Siberian elder that declares, “If you don’t know the trees you may be lost in the forest, but if you don’t know the stories you may be lost in life.”1

Sharing our faith should not be reduced to a formula focusing on rational arguments and systematic reasoning. Author Madeleine L’Engle weighs in on the role of story and faith. “The language of logical arguments, of proofs, is the language of the limited self we know and can manipulate. But the language of parable and poetry, of storytelling, moves from the imprisoned language of the provable into the freed language of what I must, for lack of another word, continue to call faith.”*

The story of my salvation and faith journey is still being formed. I find my story intertwined with the story found in Scripture. I know that my very life is miraculous. I’m alive. I was created in God’s image. I find myself in the creation story. I also know that I am broken and the image of God in me has been altered by sinfulness. I find my story in God’s movement toward restoration.

At times, it feels like my life resembles the exodus and God’s Spirit is leading me out of bondage. I find the possibility of salvation through the priestly story found in the Old Testament and fulfilled through Jesus Christ, our great High Priest. At other times, my faith story reminds me of the story of exile, and I feel distant from God, longing for restoration.

I am passionate about sharing my faith. I love to stir people’s imaginations to grasp the beginning of our story when God created all human beings in the image of God. Let’s start there. Let’s help the young people in our churches understand that they, along with their friends and all humanity, were created imago Dei. I found that you don’t have to convince people that they are broken and sinful.

Danish author Isak Dinesen declared, “To be a person is to have a story to tell.”* Our story is a wonderful story. It’s a story of creation and beauty. It’s a story of despair because of our brokenness and feeble but tragic attempts to circumvent God’s story. It’s a story that reveals a God who becomes most known to us through Jesus Christ, who makes restoration and new creation possible.

In the gospel of John, chapter one, are these profound words, which tell an amazing story: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing came into being. What has come into being in him was life, and the life was the light of all people. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it… And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father’s only son, full of grace and truth.”

These words make sense because of story—a story that took centuries to develop. Right now, our Youthfront staff is reading the book What Is the Point of Being a Christian?, by Timothy Radcliffe. Last week we read, “It needed thousands of years before there was a language in which God’s word could be spoken in the form of Jesus. We needed all those experiences of liberation and exile, of the building and demolition of kingdoms. We needed innumerable prophets and scribes, poets and parents, struggling to find words before Jesus could be born as the Word.”2

Yes, a good story takes time to unfold. I believe the Christian story is true, and I find my story—the story of my life—in the story of God at work in the world. I can’t help but share it.
1 All quotes marked with * from www.storyteller.net - Quotes about Story and Storytelling, compiled by Patti J. Christensen
2 Radcliffe, Timothy. What is the Point of Being a Christian?, Burns & Oates, New York, 2005, pg. 79



What is narrative theology, and how does the narrative of God shape our lives today?

Sarah Arthur


In the beginning was story: God (the main character) created (plot) the heavens and the earth (setting). Out of that story and its unfolding, the people of God began to articulate various principles, precepts, ideas, and doctrines that summarized the nature of God and God’s purposes with humankind.

First, story; then, systematics. Welcome to narrative theology.

Theologians identify different ways of talking to and about God by making a distinction between “first-order” and “second-order” discourse. Worship is first-order discourse. Hearing or telling biblical narratives, saying prayers, singing liturgies or psalms, reciting creeds, celebrating sacraments—anything that is spoken or sung by the faith community in worship—this is first-order discourse. That’s because encountering the Word is the community’s primary mode and vocation.

By contrast, talking about or reflecting on the Word is second-order discourse. Doctrines, principles, statements of faith (not to be confused with creeds like the Nicene, which, in Kathleen Norris’s words, are “admirably compact forms of storytelling”), theological dissertations, shorthand vocabulary like soteriology and ecclesiology: these come second—not because they aren’t important but because, without the communal narrative at play in worship, doctrines have nothing to talk about. But we need second-order discourse to help us clarify the internal logic of the faith we claim. And occasionally that logic can be made intelligible to outsiders through apologetics.

Unfortunately, too often we boil Christianity down to second-order discourse. We give the impression that faith is a bunch of principles that intellectually must be affirmed rather than a person whose body and way of life must be embraced. Narrative theology is an attempt to reclaim first-order discourse (particularly the narratives of Scripture as enacted in the worshiping community), not only as a valid way of talking to/about God but as the first and most vital mode of faith. Even more, narrative theology claims that first-order encounters with the story of God actually shape our character over time, shape us to become more and more like the story’s main character, Jesus.

So what does any of this have to do with youth ministry? Well, it means that we can’t neglect to engage youth in first-order discourse. This takes place best within the faith community as it gathers for its main worship service, but elements of it can be present at youth events too. Worship, prayer, hearing or telling biblical narratives, testimony, creeds—all constitute a deep well that nurtures the human heart and imagination with meanings that may not be intellectually graspable. After all, the mentally handicapped kid in the front row can encounter Jesus while taking communion even if he can’t string together the words to tell you who Jesus is or what Jesus has done for us. The characters of the young are shaped by the story.

Alongside engaging youth in first-order discourse is the important task of second-order discourse. We can’t neglect to talk with youth about the Bible, about worship, about the key doctrines of faith as a way to help them articulate who God is and what God is up to. Unfortunately, it is far too easy to jump to second-order discourse—say, three points about the parable of the lost son—without letting youth really encounter the story, really pause and wonder about it, perhaps even hear it in the context of the other parables in Luke 15.

If we must extract three points from the parable, let’s at least refrain from saying, “What Jesus really means here is…” Really? We can say this better than he did? Rather, the story is what Jesus really means. The form of narrative carries the point and cannot be divorced from it. Any abstract theologizing about it is second-order stuff.

Keeping these two levels of discourse in creative tension is not easy. Part of the trick of being a youth minister who helps youth engage in first-order discourse involves (1) trusting the Holy Spirit to work through the main worship service of your church; and (2) trusting the Holy Spirit to speak through biblical narratives. No, really: If I hear one more youth worker say that we need to make the Bible “come alive” for our kids, I just might throw something.

Meanwhile, part of the trick of second-order discourse involves (1) doing your biblical and theological homework (no more half-baked, fly-by-the-seat-of-your-pants lessons that you planned at the stoplight on the way to church); and (2) letting youth do some of the talking.

Not easy. But worth it.




Chris Folmsbee


Narrative theology, like any other genre of theology, is a conversation about God. However, unlike most other conversations about God, narrative theology is a conversation about God in the setting of story.  

For some, narrative theology is often understood as a rejection of propositional truths. However, I think narrative theology is best understood as having the essential responsibility of informing our systematic theology. Resulting from our systematic theology, therefore, we understand consistent relationships of theology. These consistent relationships that form help us understand God more profoundly. So, in other words, a full-bodied narrative theology provides the basis for a healthy systematic theology.

If we begin with systematic theology to have conversations about God, which many people do, we neglect to discover God in the setting of story. When we neglect to discover God through the story—the Bible—we can overlook the context and meaning of the micro-stories found within the meta-story. A story without context and meaning is an incoherent, disjointed, and aimless story—a story without a plot. God certainly has a plot! God’s plot is to restore the world to its intended wholeness. When we have no overarching storyline or plot, we have a collection of stories about God, all of which can be abandoned outside the narrative of God.  

The narrative of God ought to shape our lives in many ways. Here are a just a few ways in which God’s story shapes or transforms our lives.

·    Conversion- The story of God and its redemptive message reveal God’s passionate pursuit to have a whole relationship with all of humanity. The redemptive message is one of grace, mercy, forgiveness, and hope. It is the story of God’s will, way, and work of providing salvation and justice through his Son, Jesus Christ, for all of humanity. God provides life transformation for all those who believe (in word and deed) in the gospel story.

·    Conformity- The story of God not only reveals God’s passionate pursuit of a whole relationship with all of humanity; it reveals the intended ways of God. God intends for his people to live lives that reflect the very nature of God. We conform to the intended ways of God when we embrace the image of God in which we’ve been created and live as exact representations of our loving God.

·    Community- The story of God reveals God’s passionate pursuit, intended ways, and his special people—the church. The story of God helps faith communities know what it means to be a blessed people who seek to bless others. Christian communities of faith are guided by the story of God and are held to a high responsibility of being of one heart and authentic fellowship.

·    Calling- The story of God reveals God’s passionate pursuit of humanity, his intended ways, his special people, and their calling. The story of God shapes the church as it carries out the work of God’s mission, which is to restore the world to its intended wholeness. The story of God provides the purpose of our communities, our conformity, and our conversion in order that the church might join in the restorative activity of God through holy living, embodied practice, and trusted guidance of the Holy Spirit.

Narrative theology is a conversation about God in the setting of a story. That very story is what shapes our lives. We know God in part through his story. As Christians, we know ourselves in whole (imago Dei) through his story of salvation, justice, peace, and hope.



           

Claire Smith


Let me tell you a story. It was a dark and cloudy day. The rain had stopped falling, but the skies remained gray, and the wind was chilly. Margaret looked outside and suddenly saw the first flowers of the season, pink and blue. She remembered God’s promise in Genesis 8:22: “As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night shall not cease.”

At its most basic level, narrative theology is doing theology through storytelling. A narrative is a story. People tell their faith stories as opposed to studying or discussing theology from an abstract, philosophical basis. Moreover, narrative theology recognizes that the Bible comprises people’s stories about God from which we learn about God. I began with a story that demonstrates a recognition of God powerfully at work in creation and nature. I suspect that you would have reacted differently if I had simply said, “God is at work in nature and creation” as opposed to, “Let me tell you a story” followed by one. Which grips you more? Which captures your imagination more? Which one leaves greater room for you to enter in and share? What did this true story say to you about God?

Stories are pretty basic to who we are. They have endured over time. They surround us and help to shape us, knowingly and unknowingly. Moreover, stories are basic to who we are as Christians. Where would we be without the witness/stories of God’s people of God at work in the world and their response to God as found in the Scriptures? A question for us, therefore, is how do we create space to tell our faith stories and learn more about how God has been and continues to be at work in the lives of God’s people? How do we enrich and encourage each other and our students through stories or testimonies? Importantly, how do we bring our stories into the light of God’s story in the Bible so that they are more than a collection of interesting stories?

We are all storytellers as we seek to understand and bring order to our world. However, we often create, tell, and repeat stories without thinking about them and what's behind them. As we make space for stories and narrative in our ministries, let us consider the view of the world they present. We need to pause and reflect. When we hear a story, what are we really hearing? When we tell a story, what are we really saying? In both cases, whose view are we getting and sharing, and whose are we not receiving and bringing to the light? Then, as we examine these stories that we hear and share, which often underlie our actions, how can we do so in light of God’s story? How does God’s story of outreaching love shape and alter our stories?

Sadly, I’m not always sure how and if the narrative of God really shapes our lives as God’s people today. At times, it seems as if we are more bent on shaping it than on being shaped by it. Part of this may be that we don’t really know and understand it. One of the challenges in lifting up narratives and stories is that we may stop at narrating what is happening to us and living out of our perspective and how we find God in our stories. However, may we continually in community read and understand God’s narrative as it is mediated through the many stories comprising the Bible, using the tools available to us. As we do this, if we could hold the stories of our day up to its light and see where we’re faithful and unfaithful, we may be shaped by God’s story, and that story may continue to be lived out and renewed in our day.






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