Updated 12:47 pm.EST, Sun November 22, 2009

Ministries|Wed, Nov. 07 2007 08:30 AM EST

Four Ways to Be a Better Listener

By Rick Warren|Christian Post Guest Columnist

Good leaders are good listeners. If you want to be effective in ministry, you’ll need to be a good listener first. Probably the greatest reason people fail in ministry is not immorality, a lack of intelligence, or poor planning. It’s insensitivity.

Most of us simply talk too much. James 1:19 (NIV) says, “Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to become angry.”

You may think you’re already a good listener. But there’s a big difference between hearing and listening. Hearing is simply the vibrations that take place in your ear. Listening is how you decode those vibrations in your brain. Many times I’ve heard my wife, my kids, or someone at the church say something – but I didn’t listen.

Listening is a skill. And if you’re going to be in ministry, you better develop it. It’s developed through practice, desire, attention, and by simply wanting to become a good listener. Here are four tips to becoming a better listener.

1. Withhold judgment and criticism from the start.

Don’t evaluate until you’ve heard and comprehended it all. I’ll admit that this isn’t natural. When someone else is talking and you hear something you disagree with, you’re tempted to say, “Time out! Stop right there! Let’s deal with this.” And you never get any further. But you need to hear the person out.

Many times people come to you as a pastor and just need to unload. Take the time to understand what they’re saying first.

Proverbs 18:13 (NIV) says, “He who answers before listening – that is his folly and his shame.” When we answer before listening, we’re usually basing our answer on faulty assumptions.

Don’t be distracted by mannerisms or personality. Whenever we listen to somebody who is not presenting what they’re sharing very well, it’s our responsibility to decode what they’re saying. Stop and say, “What’s the content and what can I learn from this?”

2. Keep calm.

Don’t become defensive. As a pastor, it’s inevitable you’ll be criticized. The only way not to be criticized is to do nothing, say nothing, and be nothing. The moment you hang your shingle out, somebody’s going to throw rocks at it.

Proverbs 19:11 (NIV) says, “A man's wisdom gives him patience; it is to his glory to overlook an offense.” If you’re patient, you’re wise. As a pastor, you need to be patient with people who are less mature and those who misjudge. You need to keep calm.

3. Be an active listener.

You become a good listener by asking creative questions. Proverbs 20:5 says, “The purposes of a man's heart are deep waters, but a man of understanding draws them out.” This verse says the real meaning of people is down inside of them. A man of understanding will be able to draw others out with questions.

How do you do that? Ask clarifying questions, such as: Who? What? When? How? Questions like that will draw out those you are listening to and let them know you have their attention.

4. Paraphrase and summarize.

To be a good listener you must be able to tell a person what they’ve just told you before you talk about what you need to talk about. Before you share your side of the story, you need to let the other person know you understand where he or she is coming from. Paraphrase what they’ve said back to them. That skill can be very helpful in committee meetings or group meetings in particular.

If you want to be effective in ministry, you’ve got to be a good listener. For more tips on becoming a better listener, listen to my Leadership Lifter on Improving Your Listening Skills.

_______________________________________________

Rick Warren is the founding pastor of Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, Calif., one of America's largest and best-known churches. In addition, Rick is author of the New York Times bestseller The Purpose-Driven Life and The Purpose-Driven Church, which was named one of the 100 Christian books that changed the 20th Century. He is also founder of Pastors.com, a global Internet community for ministers. Copyright 2005 Pastors.com, Inc. Used with permission. All rights reserved.

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  • Sun Nov 11, 2007 12:33 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    Rick Warren: “Good leaders are good listeners. If you want to be effective in ministry, you’ll need to be a good listener first.”

    Regardless of any good found in Mr. Warren’s article, we really need to examine his belief concerning what makes a ministry effective. We do not want impressionable ministries to believe that the foundation they must build upon first, in order to be effective, is “good listening” if it is not.

    Here is the question: Is “good listening” the foundation we build upon for effective ministry or does “good listening” develop through the building upon a different foundation. In our search, will we find that Mr. Warren’s statement was Business 101, Psychology 101, or Bible 101?

  • Fri Nov 09, 2007 4:51 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    Mr Warren, have you listened to these audio broadcasts examining your purpose driven movement?:

    Redefining Christianity

    Pastor Bob DeWaay and Brian Flynn discussed Pastor DeWaay's book Redefining Christianity—Understanding the Purpose Driven Movement in a 15-part CIC Radio Broadcast. The radio broadcasts are archived on the Radio Series page:

    http://cicministry.org/radio_series.php?series=redefining

    Does Bob DeWaay speak the truth, does he speak the truth with concern, does he speak the truth in love, biblical love? Is Mr. DeWaay correct?

    Do you ever use http://www.monergism.com/ as a resource tool for your studies? It is the best on the Internet. True. It is a treasure trove of full-orbed, doctrinally sound, Reformed Theology. One would never have to spend another penny on Christian literature or audios or videos because of what is available through monergism.com if they did not want to, there is so much free study material there. If one wants to purchase materials, they are free to do so too.

    "It is no novelty, then, that I am preaching; no new doctrine. I love to proclaim these strong old doctrines that are called by nickname Calvinism, but which are truly and verily the revealed truth of God as it is in Christ Jesus. By this truth I make my pilgrimage into the past, and as I go, I see father after father, confessor after confessor, martyr after martyr, standing up to shake hands with me . . . Taking these things to be the standard of my faith, I see the land of the ancients peopled with my brethren; I behold multitudes who confess the same as I do, and acknowledge that this is the religion of God's own church." - (Spurgeon's Sovereign Grace Sermons, Still Waters Revival Books, p. 170)

  • Fri Nov 09, 2007 4:28 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 1

    Mr. Warren, can you hear what is being said in this article?:

    The Gospel According to Warren
    (July 2005 - Volume 11, Issue 7)

    "No one has exemplified the market-driven approach better than Rick Warren, pastor of the huge Saddleback Church in southern California and author of The Purpose-Driven Church and The Purpose-Driven Life. While Warren is open and up-front about his philosophy, strategy and methods, nevertheless things are not always as they appear. For example, “purpose-driven” sounds better than “market-driven” but it is basically the same thing. In his book The Purpose-Driven Life, his opening statement is, “It is not about you,” then turns around and writes a whole book about “you.” He belittles pop-psychology then repeatedly promotes it by simply calling it something else. He publicly cuts ties with Robert Schuller, then regurgitates some of the most odious things that Schuller has been teaching for thirty years. He claims commitment to the Scriptures then undermines them at almost every turn. He will tell his followers that he is not tampering with the message but only reengineering the methods, when in fact he has so altered the message as to make it all but unrecognizable.

    This brings us to his most disturbing alteration, the gospel itself. To charge Warren with modification of the gospel is an ugly accusation, one that should not be made lightly. What is the evidence for such an indictment? Consider the following:

    In the video that accompanies the “40 Days of Purpose,” Warren leads his listeners in prayer at the end of the first session. The prayer goes like this:

    "Dear God, I want to know your purpose for my life. I don't want to base the rest of my life on wrong things. I want to take the first step in preparing for eternity by getting to know you. Jesus Christ, I don't understand how but as much as I know how I want to open up my life to you. Make yourself real to me. And use this series in my life to help me know what you made me for." Warren goes on to say: "Now if you've just prayed that prayer for the very first time I want to congratulate you. You've just become a part of the family of God."

    Warren would be hard-pressed to find biblical backing for this presentation of the gospel. We find nothing here about sin, grace, repentance, the person of Christ, Calvary, faith, judgment, or the resurrection. This is the ultimate in a mutilated, seeker-sensitive gospel: the seeker comes to Christ in order to find his purpose in life, not to receive forgiveness from sin and the righteousness of God. Then, to pronounce someone a full-fledged member of the family of God because he has prayed such a prayer (based on minimal, if any, understanding of the person and work of Christ), is beyond tragic."
    Continued here:

    http://www.svchapel.org/Resources/Articles/read_articles.asp?ID=112

    Is this article true? Is Mr. Gilley correct?

  • Thu Nov 08, 2007 4:28 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    Rick Warren attracts followers in the same way candy attracts children. I thought this website would be a great site, and it is for news, but when it comes to articles and spiritual leadership; it seems to depend on all the spiritually weak, "break through geniuses" instead of the spirit filled, spirit lead pastors like David Wilkerson and Mark Cahill.

  • RBB »
    Wed Nov 07, 2007 8:52 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 1

    Reading this I couldn't help but think of all the members of my old church, who went to the pastors and spiritual leaders of the church and begged them not to abandon them in forcing the church into the seeker sensitive mold, basically taking the church they had toiled in for decades away from them. They were all told after being listened to politely that "this is the direction the spiritual leadership of the church has decided to go" you can either stay and get with the program or don't let the screen door hit you on the way out. It is one thing to listen, it's another to act on what you've heard.

    Who is the shepherd supposed to be shepherding, the people in his care, who have depended on him for years to care for them, or the "numbers" that they believe will make their churches bigger if they just follow the seeker sensitive path.

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