The Art of Storytelling - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

The Art of Storytelling

Description:

The Art of Storytelling Connecting God s Story to the context of your audience People of all cultures learn first thru story-telling! The oral stories of our ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:560
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 39
Provided by: Brya158
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Art of Storytelling


1
The Art of Storytelling
  • Connecting Gods Story to the context of your
    audience

2
People of all cultures learn first thru
story-telling!
  • The oral stories of our ancestors an family
    history
  • Bedtime stories we loved our parents to tell us
  • We learned our language thru story-telling
  • The context of our culture was transmitted thru
    storytelling

3
Informal learning is primary to all cultures
  • You learned your language from your family in
    your home
  • You learned your culture from your family in your
    home
  • You listened to your ancestral stories in your
    home

4
Stories give meaning to our communication
  • The stories of our culture give meaning to
    metaphors, stereotypes, relationships, slang,
    assumptions, humour, prejudices, and our ideas
    of who God is.
  • Conclusion Narrative theology is more
    significant in understanding God than
    propositional theology.

5
Ancient oral cultures have proven their ability
to accurately pass their stories from generation
to generation.
6
Is the concept of eternity in their hearts?
  • Missiologist Don Richardson
  • thinks so. His book Eternity in their hearts
    based on Ecclesiastes 3 verses 11-14, gives us
    evidence of so many cultures having creation, sin
    and flood stories.
  • Scholars have puzzled over why stories in
    extemely diverse times and places on the earth
    are so alike

7
Our stories reveal our common humanity
  • The stories of our race show a common interest
    and inquisitiveness about
  • - creation
  • - good and evil
  • - the origin of mankind
  • - eternity and our future destiny
  • - God, gods, angels and demons

8
Stories activate our right brain imagination..
  • They help us think with our hearts rather than
    our heads
  • They create a tenderness in our spirits
  • They lead us to view the world holistically and
    therefore to healing and wholeness
  • They help us remember what God has done
  • We would be an ungrateful, hard-hearted people
    without the stories of Gods provision for His
    people

9
Stories provide hope for humanity
  • Every human faces death
  • This is a paradox we are given life only to one
    day face death
  • The best stories help us understand the paradoxes
    of life
  • They can give hope and teach morality and social
    responsibility
  • They provide a basis for grace, compassion and
    Christian ministry

10
The paradoxes of life can be learned thru
stories
  • Spirituality is rooted in our earthly experience
  • Suffering produces godly character
  • Freedom is discovered in obedience
  • The greatest leader is the servant of all

11
Factors in story telling
  • Anthropology the cultural setting of our race
    or tribe
  • Pedagogical the context of the informal
    learning of the generations in the home and
    community
  • Theological Our stories develop our
    understanding of God, eg O.T.
  • Communication commonness creates mutual
    understanding and provides a basis for new
    understanding

12
Storytellers must create context-specific stories.
  • That appeal to the culture of the listeners
  • That are best delivered in an informal setting of
    the listeners
  • That shape the listeners understanding of God
  • That communicate with the listeners in a language
    and medium they understand

13
The contexts a storyteller must consider
  • The contexts of the Bible, Hebrew, Roman and
    Greek
  • The messengers context
  • The listeners context

14
The process of contextualization
  • Understand the contexts of Biblical stories and
    their meaning
  • Decode the filters created by the storytellers
    context. Try to eliminate cultural bias and
    prejudice.
  • Encode the story into the listeners context

15
Story telling as a means of conveying truth
  • Narrative theology enables truth to be presented
    in an informal way
  • An informal setting allows greater reflection on
    the truth
  • The setting should reflect the context of the
    listener
  • Subliminal (hidden) meaning is inoffensively
    communicated
  • Transformation of mind, heart, emotions, and
    action is the goal

16
A modern version of the Good Samaritan story.
  • The people of Aceh experienced a great disaster
    from a tsunami
  • They lay dying in disease infested swamps created
    by the tsunami
  • Their own countrymen did not help them
  • Their Muslim clerics did not help them
  • The Americans who they despised came in their
    helicopters and helped them with food, medical
    supplies and shelter.
  • Who were the brothers and sisters of the people
    of Aceh?
  • Truth God loves all people regardless of their
    race or religion

17
The storytellers kit bag
  • Collect the proverbs of the listeners. They
    reveal the values of the culture
  • Collect the life-stories of the listeners.
  • Observe the pastimes of the listeners.
  • Participate in their social gatherings.

18
Respond to the social environment
  • Decide which of the five ways of life are
    practiced by the listeners
  • - Individualistic, collectivist,
  • corporate, bureaucratic, hermit
  • Determine the method of storytelling appropriate
    to the group or individual.

19
The Indonesian example
  • Storytelling has been practiced for generations
    in village groups of men, women and children
    together.
  • The Ramayana story has been told over and over
    again in a shadow puppet play for generations. A
    light behind a sheet with stick figures as
    puppets.
  • People say they love this story the most, even
    though they have heard it hundreds of times, and
    it conveys life as full of tragedy.
  • The story matches their fatalistic view of God.
    Allah wills. You cannot change things Allah
    doesnt want changed.

20
Developing the storyline of truth..
  • The storyteller will want to
  • develop a curriculum of truth
  • so the listeners will grow in their
    relationship with God
  • Jesus commanded us the make disciples.
    Storytellers take their listeners from enemies of
    God, to babes in the faith, to maturity.

21
Jesus developed his storyline in three years
with his disciples
  • They changed their religious mindset
  • They came to know God in a new way
  • They experienced the presence and the power of
    God
  • They became strong in character and faith
  • They remembered his stories

22
Jesus revealed his storyline on the road to
Emmaus
  • Read Luke 24 verses 25-32
  • Jesus summarised the whole storyline in one
    meeting
  • They now understood the truth of the curriculum
    behind all the stories he had told them

23
Jesus used parables
  • Parables are stories with
  • hidden meanings that make
  • people want to come back for more
  • Parables are stories that make the listeners want
    to come back for more.
  • They created more questions than they answered.

24
Follow the pattern of story-telling Jesus used
  • Dont expect to reveal the whole storyline in one
    story
  • Court the listener as in a love story
  • Create a paradox central to lifes experiences
  • Leave several questions unanswered so the
    listener or listeners will want to come back for
    more

25
How to help listeners respond
  • Study how the listeners
  • make decisions
  • Evaluate what the listener understands about the
    truths of the storyline thru questions
  • Help the listeners affirm the truths they
    understand by a response appropriate to their
    context

26
Make arrangements for ongoing storytelling.
  • Assure the listeners that this
  • is one of many stories you
  • have that will interest them
  • Arrange a venue and time for another storytelling
    session
  • Ask them what stories they are interested in?

27
Deal with your own ethnocentrism.
  • Dont despise the way the
  • listeners culture responds or
  • makes decisions
  • Always take responsibility for the inadequate
    response as a result of your poor communication
  • Acts 1034-35 reminds us that God accepts people
    from every nation who fear Him and do what is
    right.

28
The power of the Story
  • Stories connect with our imagination
  • Listeners enjoy having their imaginations
    activated
  • The art of storytelling is the pictures that the
    mind invents while listening
  • Imagination activates our emotions
  • Listeners see themselves in the scenes with the
    characters and feel their life experiences

29
People appreciate stories because they
  • Mirror their lives of fact and feeling
  • Interweave reason, mystery, and reactions
  • Cause listeners to reflect on deep issues in life
  • Make learning exciting and holistic

30
Every major religion uses stories
  • To socialize its young
  • To convert potential followers
  • To indoctrinate followers
  • To develop values appropriate to the religions
    teachings
  • To differentiate true members from false
  • To formulate right behaviours

31
Select a story from your culture?
  • Tell the person sitting next to you the story?
    (Allow 3minutes maximum)
  • Take the sheet of paper provided for this
    workshop and write down an outline of the story
  • What is the goal of your story?

32
Evaluate your selected story from your culture?
  • Does it convey a truth?
  • What is the truth?
  • How can you make the story exciting for the
    listeners?
  • Will the listeners imagination and emotions be
    activated?
  • What values will be conveyed by this story?
  • Where does the story fit in the continuum of your
    storyline?

33
How do people in your culture make decisions?
  • What decision can your listeners make as a result
    of your story?
  • Is the decision making mechanism appropriate or
    foreign to your people?
  • Did you create one, two, or three unanswered
    questions in the minds of your audience?

34
What do you think?
  • Would your story help people
  • in your culture know God?
  • Would people in your culture be interested in
    this story?
  • What else would they need to know about God to be
    able to pray to him in a personal way?

35
Do you know people of another culture? Yes!
  • Think of a story that you could tell them?
  • Tell the person sitting next to you the culture
    and the story (allow 10 minutes)
  • Take the piece of paper provided and summarise
    the story. Please write down the target culture
    as well!
  • What is the goal of your story?

36
Evaluate your story for another culture?
  • Does it convey a truth?
  • What is the truth?
  • How can you make the story exciting for the
    listeners?
  • Will the listeners imagination and emotions be
    activated?
  • What values will be conveyed by this story?
  • Where does the story fit in the continuum of your
    storyline?

37
How do people in this culture make decisions?
  • What decision can your listeners make as a result
    of your story?
  • Is the decision making mechanism appropriate or
    foreign to the people of this culture?
  • Did you create one, two, or three unanswered
    questions in the minds of your audience?

38
Acknowledgements
  • The producer of this presentation is
  • indebted to the following authors and their
    publishers
  • William J Bausch 23rd Publications
  • Dr Paul Hiebert Baker Books
  • Karen Lee-Thorp Navpress
  • Dr Louis Luzebetak -
  • John Pilch and Bruce Malina Hendrickson
  • Don Richardson Regal Books
  • Tom A Steffen Biola University
  • Walter Wink Galilee Books
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com