
Change: When It Helps and When It Hurts Your Church
At the close of every season, wise leaders pause to reflect. They celebrate what’s been accomplished, identify what worked well,
We’ve seen this statement. We chuckle over it and nod in agreement. But ministry staff doesn’t seem to get it.
I talk to Church Communicators regularly and they often have complaints like “I’d love to do more to communicate the great stuff happening at my church but there’s never enough time to do it all!”
It seems that senior leadership, other staff, and parishioners want everything fast. Because they put it off; you have to prioritize to get it done fast.
Quickest is rarely the best choice.
Oh, it can be done. It’ll require a scramble where you risk burning out your staff or volunteers in order to create something that seems to work. But it’s not the best choice.
Can I get a quick communication’s plan? Or a quick social media post? Or a quick idea for the next sermon series? A quick SEO result? A quick bulletin change? And the list goes on and on.
No. No. No. No. No. Quickest is rarely the best choice.
If you keep doing everything in a quick time frame, you’ll end up creating monsters. Everyone always expecting something from you quickly. And then more and more, things will pile up.
Here are 3 ways to stop the madness:
Keep in mind that all ministry is about empowering people and getting projects to be done. Be careful in your process that you don’t become the person that only says no. Instead say, “let’s figure out how we can get more time to do an even better job the next time”. Quickest rarely gets the job done best.
At the close of every season, wise leaders pause to reflect. They celebrate what’s been accomplished, identify what worked well,
Every week families arrive at church. They walk through the main doors and head down familiar paths toward “their” seat.
When a legal expert asked Jesus, “Who is my neighbor?” it followed the command to “love your neighbor as yourself.”
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