Common advice to new chaplains is, "Don't be awkward!" or "Don't be weird!" I asked a senior chaplain recently to elaborate on that statement and the consensus seems to be: don't assume your hobbies are your ministry. Specific examples were chaplains that talked about sci-fi at every opportunity and dressed up in cosplay for squadron parties. In that sense, don't be awkward!
But in a godly sense, ministry requires awkward conversations. Herod Antipas, Tetrarch (sort of a king, sort of a governor, sort of a councilman) of Judea in the early First Century, had married the wife of his brother: open adultery. John the Baptist continuously rebuked Herod, and made Herod's wife exceedingly angry. Herod, to his credit, did listen to John, but did not act on the righteous and holy things being said. Herod, in another act of lust, ultimately had John the Baptist executed. (Read Mark 6:17-29)
It is awkward to rebuke a king, and while we know Herod's final state, his eternity and progeny was almost changed because John was not afraid to bring tension into their relationship, nor risk to his own life. Multitudes have been encouraged (a word which literally means to put-courage-in) by John's example, and many many lives have been changed.
As a chaplain sometimes you have to knock on a door or walk into a room where people don't want to hear the truth or what you have to say. Do it anyways. Make calls that say, "You know what you're supposed to do, why aren't you doing it?" Did you hear a rumor that might not be true? Run it to ground; people appreciate when you help the truth come out and that you cared enough about them to try. See sin in someone that they can't see? Call it out!
I was mentored early in my career on how to take unnecessary awkwardness out of mandatory conversations. In that instance we needed to talk to one person in a cubicle farm; instead of walking directly to their desk and confronting them we talked to every cubicle on the way to their desk, then asked important questions that seemed like just a normal unit engagement. It removed embarrassment that would not have helped the situation; but we have to be cognizant that difficult discussions require risk of embarrassment.
A common counseling question that cuts straight to the heart is, "What don't you want me to know that I need to know?" AWKWARD! But I shudder at how many counseling sessions I've wasted talking about symptoms when the heart issues were much deeper. How much time and pain could have been saved if I'd asked, "Are you telling me the truth?" "Did you hit your spouse?" or "Why aren't you obeying God?" "What sort of fruit would an unbeliever be producing in this situation?"
Make it awkward, for Jesus' sake.
More:
1. How many times did Jesus escalate the drama in situations by saying things that inflamed his audience? Is Proverbs 15:1, "A soft answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger" a command or a principle? How Christlike can you be if no-one has ever tried to crucify you?
2. Paul is recorded as opposing Peter to his face. Was the truth helped or hindered by Paul's boldness? Was the friendship and brotherhood between Paul and Peter helped or hindered?
3. No-one wants to have awkward conversations, but they often end with great results. Memorize, "For the moment all discipline seems painful rather than pleasant, but later it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who have been trained by it." (Hebrews 12:11)
4. Resources:
York, Hershael and Bert Decker. Preaching With Bold Assurance: A Solid and Enduring Approach to Engaging Exposition. Nashville: B&H Publishing, 2003.
Dallimore, Arnold. George Whitefield: The Life and Times of the Great Evangelist of the Eighteenth-Century Revival - Volume 2. Carlisle, PA: Banner of Truth Trust, 1980.
Adams, Jay. How to Help People Change: The Four-Step Biblical Process. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1986.
The "Awkward Turtle" hand-gesture from so many youth groups |