In a world where (aggressively shifting) vocabularies rule
our comprehension and communication is often compressed into a “tweet” or a “text”,
the elegant structure of grammar as an aid in clearly passing thoughts and
information from one person to another may be a lost art. How can we withstand it? Maybe language ought to be more poetic, about
the images it gives us, the feelings with which we respond, the ways we wish to
interpret what we hear. In which case,
all those little in-between words aren’t so necessary anymore…
I once had an experience with a young woman who believed God
wished all people to be vegetarians. We
read together from Genesis 9: “Every moving thing that lives shall be food for
you. I have given you all things, even as the green herbs. But you shall not
eat flesh with its life, [that is], its blood.”
She picked out a few words on which to base her application: “not eat
flesh” and she said this was because of the “blood” and respect for “life”.
This girl had a subjective interpretation that served her
preconceptions. The last words had more
impact on her, too, I believe, because she remembered them better than the
first sentence. She seemed unable to
grasp the relationship between one thought and the next, though she used cause
and effect words (not rationale, only the vocabulary) in defense of her own
position. People like her know what
words sound persuasive, what words make people feel good. I wonder how often more intelligent speakers
are condemned for being judgmental simply because our vocabulary made people
feel bad, made them feel that we were dealing in stark absolutes.
And I am encountering this phenomenon in lesser degrees more
and more. A word in a sentence might
just as easily suggest its opposite as its traditional meaning. A word may or may not be modified by other
words in context. My interpretation of
what you say or write is just as valid, just as likely to guide my decisions,
as the interpretation you intended.
Ideas cannot be comprehended if they take more than three sentences to
build and capstone.
What is our obligation to combat these trends? How much are we the communicators responsible
to mind our audience and deliver our messages in ways that will have the effect
we desire?
These are the questions I wish to explore with my new blog, “Retold
for the Modern Reader”.
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