Great Discussions
Lessons I Learned From A Puzzle

Dear Nieces & Nephews,
I shopped Black Friday this year for our Christmas gifts, and couldn’t pass up Menards’ $10 9-pack of jigsaw puzzles. I thought it would make a good gift for Sanae, but puzzling became my own Christmas pastime, keeping me up hours past my bedtime for 5 days in a row. Wrestling down guilt over “wasted time,” I convinced myself instead that I was getting a good education.
Tomorrow, 3-6 pm, we're hosting #4 of our "Wildfire" events for teens and young adults. Grandpa Dave will teach and lead a discussion on evangelism, and we will enjoy worship, dinner and fellowship. Here are some lessons from all my puzzling that we'll put into practice in our discussion:
- We need to hear what's on your heart to complete the picture of what God is saying. What's more disappointing than a puzzle with a missing piece?
- Don’t expect your piece to finish the puzzle, or be bigger than the other pieces. Just share your experience and let the next person build on that. "Stand up, speak up, shut up," Grandpa Clark used to say. Only we won't make you stand up. And we would never use such disrespectful words, Grandpa Clark.
- Affirm what a person says as you add to it. It’s so satisfying to affirm a fit piece with a “snap” and a flourish of the hand before moving on. In our discussion, it might sound like, “I agree, and …”
- Go ahead and laugh! Be funny if you want, with tact. When a puzzle piece falls to the floor, humor keeps things fun as long as it doesn’t replace the goal of completion or insult the clumsy one.
- Keep stepping back to see what God is saying and doing. He’s the Master Painter. Looking at the puzzle box leads from slump to triumph.







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