I decide to use the plus-minus exercise. You know, a line down the middle
of the sheet—the advantages on one side of the page, the disadvantages on
the other.
I start asking questions. There are plenty of advantages. The salary, the
manse, a congregation four times our size, a full-time business manager,
and a ministerial staff of seven.
On the other side of the ledger, the entries are even longer. To begin with,
Nancy's feelings about staying. The two oldest children are in high school
—Ted plays varsity basketball and Fran is class president. It turns out, also,
that Tom doesn't particularly like New York.
The list goes on. He would be spending all his time preaching. He'd lose
all of the personal contacts and relationships with his members.
If he moves, he would be the face of the church, but not its soul and spirit.
On top of all that, our church is just launching a capital campaign. Tom
worries about leaving at this critical time. The list of concerns is very long.
I listen to him for several hours.
At last there is a long silence. A total silence. A Benedictine silence.
Finally, I quietly ask, “So Tom, on the basis of all you've said, what do you
feel is the right decision for you?”
Tom jumps from his chair and gives me a big bear hug. “You gave me the
answer. It's so clear. I'm staying.”
Actually, I hadn't given him an answer at all. He found his own solution.
Somewhere in the background, I hear the theme from
Rocky.
That was three years ago. Tom never looked back and I've never known a
happier person. The congregation continues to grow, the sermons are more
inspiring and motivating than ever, and he is going to officiate at marriages
of some of the kids who have gone through his Sunday school. He's one
happy, fulfilled guy.
There are times when you don't have to give advice. In fact, in some
situations you mustn't. If you allow the person to answer their own
question, there can be the clarity of light that author Virginia Woolf saw “as
moments of being and illumination, those privileged times when truth is
perceived in a flash of intuition.”
When the choice is deeply personal, ask:
“What do you feel is the
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