Monday, September 20, 2004

Questions

So, I was watching the TN FL football game Saturday night and all I can see are those ugly orange shoes that the TN players are wearing. But that isn’t the point of this post.

Anyway, right before the second half starts, the sideline reporter says to Zooke, the head coach of the Gators (paraphrased with my own sarcasm added), “So, your quarterback is playing well. Are you going to run the ball at all in the second half?” What is the coach supposed to say? “No, we are going to pass on every down. We only gained 54 yards on the ground in the 1st half. The running back had his chance. Too bad.” Of course not. Even if they were going to pass on every down, they wouldn’t tell the sideline reporter.

It leads me to a pet peeve of mine. Stupid questions.

You hear them on the sidelines of sporting events—“Coach why did you lose by 45 points tonight?” The answer is usually obvious—the other team is way better than us, and we can’t play offense or defense.

You hear them in the Miss America pageants—“If you could wish for one thing for the world, what would it be and why?” The answer is always world peace.

You hear them during interviews—“So, are you for the war in Iraq or not? If you say “yes” you are a warmonger, if you say “no” you think it is great to have a homicidal maniac in power.

You hear them from people you know—“How are you doing?” They don’t really want to know; they’re just being cordial.

Stupid questions lead to stupid answers and stupid conversations.

What happened to good questions? Questions that make you think; questions that don’t have pat answers; questions that actually mean something. A good lesson writer can ask those questions that get the people thinking and responding. But those questions are hard to come by.

I see that Jesus was always asking good questions. Normally when people posed questions to him, he answered in kind. Their questions were meant to trap Jesus or paint him in a doctrinal corner. But Jesus made them do the thinking. He asked the good questions. Socrates asked some good questions and made people think about their own presuppositions before he tipped his hand.

Imagine, someone making a statement, say on a forum or blog, that you disagree with and instead of reacting, you asked some insightful questions to mine out some more of their thinking and the things that lie behind their beliefs.

Imagine, someone is caught in a sin and instead of running to an indictment first asking how something might have happened, or perhaps what you could do for the injured party or to restore the offending party.

Imagine someone complaining about some arbitrary thing in the church, and instead of taking sides asking questions to see what lies behind their complaint.

As one who is quick to give his opinion about things, I would like to see myself and others around me ask good questions first, and then respond second. It is a call to humility, a call to understanding, and a call to patience.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

sam that made me think more than I have in a long time,
thank you. what you say would improve conditions in the world drastically. on a side note have you heard about the kid from chippewa valley schools? it makes life so tough when evil is just so right in your face. it reminds of the lord of the rings ( the two towers)
when the king of rohan is sitting on the balcony of his stronghold and sees 10 million orucui waiting 2 attack . . . he says "how can men defeat such hatred"
thats how i feel right now.
Rob

Regan Clem said...

I'm still waiting for an answer to my question on the GLCC Forum Pacifism discussion, but that is besides the point.

I wanted to share one of the most common stupid questions I receive. We sell autographs in our store. People ask, "Are those autographs for real?"

I want to say that they aren't and we just like to fake signatures and sell photos for 8x what they should go for.

Instead I just tell them the truth. They are real, and each one comes with a certificate of authenticity.

Sam said...

Rob - No I don't know about what happened at Chippewa Valley. Fill me in.

Regan - What question? Did I miss it somehow? I'll give you an answer. Oh wait, didn't I just say to ask questions first. Anyway, refresh my memory.

Anonymous said...

they found some kid with mountains of automatic fire arms , bombs and videotapes of him making threats and practicing shooting , basically he was trying to re-create the horrors of columbine , on these tapes this kid was even rehearsing what he was gonna say after he shot kids. i guess they found similar tapes at columbine and thats why they are comparing the 2. but him and his father and his neigbor all are under arrest and under investigation. sam this is 3 miles away from my mothers house, ryan taylor went to school there!

rob

Regan Clem said...

The question was "Are we supposed to hate people as God hates people?"

shannoncaroland said...

The question posed by Regan, Tom, Marcus and me still seems to allude an answer. How do you determine what in Scripture is from God? Or what method of interpretting the Bible leads you to accept "God is love", but reject the commands to kill the Canaanites? Is there a guiding rule beyond your favored view of God?

This leads to another question (especially after reading some of your remarks on glccalumni), are you just trying to "get our goat"?