When I'm with my Christian friends or people I meet at church, or strangers I meet around town, I have no problem initiating and carrying on conversations with them. But when my relatives get together occasionally, say at someone's house for lunch, I have a hard time entering the conversation, because it usually has to do with far-off travel destinations (which I don't do much), television programs (which I don't watch), or other topics I'm not familiar with or not interested in. I would admit that I tend to think mainly about religious and political topics, things that most people consider too controversial for social conversation over lunch, which is mainly for catching up with relatives you don't see that often, or just having a good time, or even purposely trying to avoid the serious issues that we stew about or bother us on a daily basis.
In general, I tend to do better with one-on-one conversations, because then I have the person's attention. We both need each other to keep the conversation going. The other person can't just immediately turn his attention elsewhere, so I can try out different topics of conversation with a little less risk, and then either drop it or keep going with it depending on how it's received. But in a larger group it feels more disruptive for me to just jump in and drastically change the subject with something controversial. It's even harder since my relatives and I are all Jewish and mostly liberal politically, so if I say anything positive about Jesus or conservative politics it brings up a lot of charged emotional reactions.
Does anyone have any suggestions for me on how I might approach this situation, so that I can find things to say and not feel so excluded, and can actually steer the conversation in a more meaningful and even God-honoring way without generating a negative backlash?
In general, I tend to do better with one-on-one conversations, because then I have the person's attention. We both need each other to keep the conversation going. The other person can't just immediately turn his attention elsewhere, so I can try out different topics of conversation with a little less risk, and then either drop it or keep going with it depending on how it's received. But in a larger group it feels more disruptive for me to just jump in and drastically change the subject with something controversial. It's even harder since my relatives and I are all Jewish and mostly liberal politically, so if I say anything positive about Jesus or conservative politics it brings up a lot of charged emotional reactions.
Does anyone have any suggestions for me on how I might approach this situation, so that I can find things to say and not feel so excluded, and can actually steer the conversation in a more meaningful and even God-honoring way without generating a negative backlash?