While serving
in Tierra del Fuego Argentina as a missionary, my mission president's speaking ability made a
lasting impact on me. His Spanish wasn't the best. He often struggled
with grammar, pronunciation, and fluidity as a speaker. Despite
imperfections, he showed his sincerity and love for the listener by sharing
personal and honest experiences. He shared his experience of losing a
son to suicide and his testimony of the Savior's ability to forgive and to save.
Although I have
never gone through an experience like that, the story that he shared created a
feeling of validity to the principles that he taught. Because what he shared
was so close to him, I felt close to him. Sharing such an emotional and
personal experience created an atmosphere of love and compassion throughout the
whole room.
It is not the self-aggrandizing
story or the travel log that has made impressions on me as a listener. They are the
stories that show sincerity, growth, and spiritual application. The hard story.
That's true!
ReplyDeleteBeing sincere while talking might help your audience to obtain the Spirit`s influence, while establishing a bound between you and the congregation. I think people might be able to perceive whenever you are teaching a principle that you are not living.
I relate with your idea of the filler story in the first paragraph. That's definitely a device many Mormon orators use, especially at the sacrament level (makes me think of Dr. Burton's comment in class about the "footsteps in the sand" poem). It was cool to read how your mission president's sincerity/pathos connected with you, and how it gave his oratory literary form.
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