I’d like to, once again, share one of the more
valuable lessons I learned from my mentor, Fred Bishop of No Greater Love
Ministries (www.nogreaterlove.org). This
one relates to the creative process I use in most every part of my service with
the people of sport. Whether writing, creating a ministry event, preparing for
a talk, or long range planning, I use this model to shape my thought.
Preparation
–
Most
of the time this involves lots of reading, observation, research, and
investigation. Prepare by asking questions and learning all you can about a
subject. One of the best ways to improve one’s writing is to read good authors.
To improve one’s speaking skills, listen to effective communicators. To improve
one’s design abilities, observe skillful designers. To improve one’s
musicianship, listen to great musicians. You get the idea. Prepare by watching,
listening, reading, and observing with all your senses.
Incubation –
As
you prepare and as the process continues, incubation takes place. This is
meditation, rumination, contemplation, doodling thoughts, sketching, day
dreaming, lying awake at night, and other methods for developing thoughts into
actions. One must allow this process to take place. Don’t rush it. To proceed
without fully incubating a thought or project usually results in terrible
failure. This part of the process may take a few minutes, a few hours, a few
days, weeks, or years. It depends upon your project. Aleksandr
Solzhenitsyn’s The Gulag Archipelago was incubated across the years of his
imprisonment, entirely in his head. Most of us can’t do it that way, but we do incubate,
stew on, and contemplate thought until it’s ready to pop.
Illumination
–
This
is the “Aha!” moment. This is the clicking on of the light bulb above your
head. This is the moment that it all becomes clear. Your preparation and
incubation of an idea has led to the moment of illumination. You suddenly see
the idea clearly and know exactly what to do. One should never proceed to the
next step in the process until this occurs. Lots of ideas go out into the world
“half baked” simply because the incubation process was abbreviated and
illumination never occurred. For us who serve Christ Jesus, the exciting thing
is that it’s the Lord’s Spirit who illuminates our minds and reveals wisdom and
insight for us to apply.
Application –
Finally,
the process of preparation, incubation and illumination is ready to find
concrete form by applying the illuminated thought to action. We are now set to
turn our ideas into text, into music, into an agenda, into a game plan, into a
sculpture, into a plan of action, or any other expression of creativity. This
is what others consume, read, hear, observe, or the events in which they
participate. It may seem simple to the consumer, but it has been born of a simple
but wise creative process.
Please join me, one not naturally creative,
irretrievably left brain thinking, but teachable, in working this process to
serve the men and women of sport. Let’s take the pains to prepare well. Let’s
take the time to incubate thought. Let’s take the risk to patiently await
illumination. Let’s make wise application and thereby create the resources,
plans, strategies, art, and processes that lead to Christ-honoring ministry.
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