In Good to Great, Jim Collins and his team sought out
companies that moved from being good at what they were doing to becoming truly
great. They pointed out that “Good is
the enemy of the great.” In other words,
people will praise your organization for providing quality but not exceptional
products (or programs or services), and most will be satisfied with that
status. Why take the risk to move to the
next level when you already have acceptable results?
I have thought recently about how many good churches
there are. These congregations provide solid
preaching, well-planned worship, comprehensive Christian education, competent pastoral
care, and helpful ministries, but they are not exceptional. They are shackled by their own expectations of
what church ought to be and limited in their Kingdom vision. What keeps them from being great?
Good churches are satisfied with the acceptable rather
than the exceptional. They do what is necessary to “cover all the bases” so
that the community will think well of them but they rarely are willing to go to
the next level and provide something that is truly exceptional.
Good churches tend to major on minor issues. They are
very concerned that things be done correctly whether those things are important
or not.
Good churches value security over service. They have a low level of risk tolerance, so
they are unwilling to try anything that may result in criticism from within the
congregation or from the outside community.
Good churches are more concerned about maintenance than mission. They would rather take care of what they
already have than reach out to embrace the unfamiliar, fearing embarrassment or
uncertainty.
Good churches would rather invest in programs than in
people. They have the mindset that the
right program will answer all their problems, so they sell their members on
programs rather than asking members what they need in order to fulfill God’s
calling in their lives.
Good churches prefer to stay with the familiar rather
than embrace innovation. When one is
innovative, there is always the possibility of failure and good churches cannot
tolerate failure.
My friend Bo Prosser has noted, “Very few churches will
thrive in the 21st century because we are too nice to sweat, too
proud to cry, too stubborn to change, too sophisticated to laugh, and too busy
to celebrate.” Unless we loosen up a
bit and respond to the leadership of the Spirit of God, we will always be good
churches but never great ones.
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