Innovate or Die: More Missional
Nuggets from “On The Verge” by Alan Hirsch and Dave Ferguson—
1. Crises create innovations so don’t
respond with a shrinking scarcity reflex during a crisis but respond with
abundance response: when Christian Community Church in Chicago went $500,000
below projections on its budget during the economic crisis a few years ago they
laid off some staff and met to decide on more drastic measures, but decided
instead to be drastic in a different way; they focused for the first time on
the 20 percent of the population in extreme poverty, in real dire straits,
putting their issues in perspective, and started their response by launching a
fund drive for the world’s poor and raised $250,000 the first year and doubled
the next year and kept growing. It gave them a real story of church for people to
be generous about as well.
2.
Innovation is the least rather than
the most risky thing you can do, says Peter Drucker. And innovation is driven
more by implementation than by imagination though it takes both. All the
imagination in the world results in nothing without commitment and risk of
implementation. Use a math equation where Imagination is the first number and
Implementation is the second number and multiplied together they equal the
degree of innovation. 10 times 0 is 0; 100 times 0 is 0; 3 times 2 is six. Even
the smallest implementation focus; the acting, and doing; results in more innovation
than focusing all on the imagination and creativity.
3.
Keep innovating. Fifty years ago a
church could have one great innovation and live on and off it for decades; now
churches need to be more like surfers than battleships and catch many waves of
innovation every six months to a year. Always be looking for the new things God
is doing in and around you.[The new thing can be a very old thing old practices
etc. that has been forgotten].
4.
If your church closed today would the
community notice, and care? If you don’t like change, you are going to like
irrelevance even less.
5.
Innovative missional Leaders are out
front, as role models, being the change they wish to see, relocating, acting
missionally personally; leaders grow curiosity not certainty; leaders let
unexpected successes open up their paths to innovation, not planned endeavors,
and know that the past success is what will blind them to necessary innovation;
leaders are aware of places of incrongruity, where reality is subverting
preconceived notions of what will happen, for these are where innovation will
emerge; leaders know the needs of their community; leaders partner with others
for mutual opportunities (one church connected with a local apartment complex,
knowing they need renters to remain in order to be most successful, and that
they have some apartments always vacant so they got an apt donated and in
return located a community life coordinator there to build relationships which
helped people stay in the apartment complex longer renewing leases and it
connected the people with the church.) Demographics changing around you are
opportunities to go deeper into community mission, not reasons to move out or
close. Leaders look for ways to change and broaden their perceptions and
default modes. Leaders say Yes and then ask How. Don’t be afraid to be a fool.
Saying yes creates a permission giving culture; you don’t always act and fund
what you say yes to, but it gives opportunity to explore and try; it
democratizes innovation, making innovation the responsibility and gift of all.
6.
What got us here is unlikely to get
us there.