Five
Uninterrupted Minutes
The Simple Spirituality Approach
By Barb Henderson
The
group was working on Practice 6: "I am blessed with this good
news. I will practice being thankful and celebrating moments."
The clock was ticking, Nora began to share "I'm thankful for
this group. I have never had the opportunity before to talk about
my spiritual ideas for five uninterrupted minutes." Later Frank
would echo her feelings, "Most of the time people finish my
sentences for me. I'm not used to being able to talk without having
to be defensive."
Simple Spirituality
groups use a simple kitchen timer. Each person gets 5 uninterrupted
minutes to talk about how they are practicing the practices. When
the timer goes off, they finish. People may ask a clarifying question
or simply say thank you and go to the next person.
Recently I heard
Tom Friedman, the well-known New York Times Journalist say, "One
thing I've discovered (researching the causes of terrorism) is that
those who have power never think about it; those who don't think
about it all the time." Small groups are a lot like that. A
few people use them as "preaching platforms" while most
of the others (appear) to listen.
There are more
introverts than extroverts in our churches. How do we structure
groups so that the introverts get a chance to talk? Why don't the
people in our churches know how to talk with each other about their
spiritual lives and questions?
Simple Spirituality
began in part to try and address those questions. We also wanted
to know "What gets you through the day spiritually?" or
"What do you know for sure about God?" We wanted to provide
a group experience where non- Christians had spiritual equal opportunities
afforded them.
It's amazing
what a simple kitchen timer can do to move people closer to God.