This is part 8 of a series of 8 rounds of conversation with
ChatGPT that I had that began with the question of whether the phrase “turn
that frown upside down” was Biblical or not. While I normally won’t plan to
involve ChatGPT too much in my blog-writing, I felt that this was something for
which it was worth making an exception.
ChatGPT prompted:
If you’d like, I can also show you something very
practical: a few conversation patterns used by Jesus when interacting
with struggling people. They provide surprisingly clear examples of when He
listened, when He asked questions, when He comforted, and when He confronted.
I said:
Yes, please.
ChatGPT said:
Looking at how Jesus Christ interacted with people in
the Gospel of Matthew, Gospel of Mark, Gospel of Luke,
and Gospel of John is one of the best ways to understand how
to respond to people wisely.
One remarkable pattern emerges: Jesus rarely used
the same approach twice. Instead, He responded according to the
person’s heart, situation, and needs.
Below are several clear interaction patterns He used.
1. Jesus Often Started by Asking Questions
Instead of immediately giving answers, Jesus
frequently asked questions that helped people reflect on their
situation.
For example, when He encountered blind Bartimaeus, He
asked:
“What do you want me to do for you?” — Gospel of
Mark 10:51
This question seems obvious—Bartimaeus was blind—but it did
something important:
it invited the person to express their need.
Why this matters
Questions can:
- show
genuine interest
- avoid
assumptions
- help
people articulate what they are going through.
Often, wise conversation begins with curious
listening rather than immediate instruction.
2. Jesus Showed Compassion Before Instruction
When people were suffering physically or emotionally, Jesus
often responded with compassion first.
For example, when He encountered a grieving family after the
death of Lazarus, Scripture records:
“Jesus wept.” — Gospel of John 11:35
Even though He knew He would raise Lazarus, He still shared
their grief.
Lesson
Sometimes the most Christlike response is empathy
before explanation.
3. Jesus Encouraged the Fearful
When His disciples panicked during a storm on the sea, Jesus
responded with reassurance.
“Why are you afraid?” — Gospel of Matthew 8:26
He addressed their fear while also pointing them back toward
faith.
This shows a balance of:
- comfort
- gentle
challenge.
4. Jesus Spoke Gentle Truth to the Struggling
When encountering morally broken individuals, Jesus often
combined kindness with truth.
A famous example is His conversation with the Samaritan
woman at the well in the Samaria.
He gradually revealed that He knew about her complicated
past relationships, yet He did so in a way that invited transformation
rather than humiliation.
This story appears in the Gospel of John chapter
4.
The pattern there is striking:
- He
begins with conversation.
- He
builds trust.
- He
reveals truth gently.
- He
offers hope.
5. Jesus Was Direct With Hardened Hearts
When dealing with people who were proud or
hypocritical—especially certain religious leaders—Jesus could be extremely
direct.
For example, He rebuked the teachers of the law in
the Gospel of Matthew 23.
These strong rebukes were directed primarily at people
who resisted truth and harmed others spiritually.
Important pattern
Jesus reserved His harshest words for the
self-righteous, not for the broken.
6. Jesus Valued Presence
Sometimes Jesus simply spent time with people.
He ate meals with those considered social outcasts,
including tax collectors like Matthew the Apostle.
In that culture, sharing a meal communicated acceptance
and relational closeness.
Presence itself became a form of ministry.
7. Jesus Balanced Truth and Grace
A summary of His approach appears in this statement about
Him:
“Full of grace and truth.” — Gospel of John 1:14
Grace means compassion.
Truth means honesty.
Jesus embodied both simultaneously.
8. A Practical Pattern You Can Apply
If we translate Jesus’ patterns into something practical, a
helpful sequence might look like this:
1. Notice
Pay attention to the person’s emotional state.
2. Ask
Invite them to share what is going on.
3. Listen
Allow them to speak without interruption.
4. Discern
Consider whether they need:
- comfort
- encouragement
- help
- correction.
5. Respond
Speak truth gently, or offer encouragement, or provide
practical help.
9. Why Your Personality May Actually Be an Advantage
You mentioned that you tend to speak carefully to
avoid offending others.
While that can sometimes make difficult conversations
challenging, Scripture often praises thoughtful restraint in speech.
For example:
“A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in settings of
silver.” — Book of Proverbs 25:11
The idea is that the right word at the right time is
extremely valuable.
Your instinct to pause and consider before speaking is
actually consistent with biblical wisdom.
10. A Simple Guiding Principle
If you want a short biblical guideline for responding to
people, it might be this:
Care first.
Understand second.
Speak truth wisely.
Help where possible.
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