For some time I have struggled with my aversion to the
term “strategic planning” and the idea of a “strategic planning process.” Part
of my discomfort has come from being exposed by Alan Roxburgh to the idea of
“discontinuous change.” I don’t think that I do any harm to Roxburgh’s
presentation to summarize it as “everything tied down is coming loose.” Where
we once thought linearly, assuming that the future would be like the past, and
planned accordingly, reality has shown us that this is not the way things are.
The unexpected happens (the Internet, 9/11, the Iraqi war, financial chaos) and
all our great plans go out the window.
So what are we to do? In an article in Christian Century, writer Jason Byassee refers
to something Sam Wells wrote in Improvisation.
Byassee writes, “Sam Wells takes this metaphor further . . . [when] he argues
that Christian living is like improvisational acting rather than script-based
acting. Players practice intensely to be able to react to the unexpected on
stage. No two acts of improvisation are ever alike, just as no two acts of
Christian faithfulness are. Preparation allows for improvisation, and so for
faithfulness.”[1]
Whether we are living the Christian life or leading a
Christian organization, we are really improvising. None of us knows what
tomorrow (or this afternoon) holds. Does this give us permission to be sloppy
and just take what comes our way? No. Actually it demands that we strengthen
our relationship to God, recognize and hone our strengths, and be prepared for
the unexpected. I have heard some people talk about a person who “just had dumb
luck” and stumbled into something good. If we examine the situation closer, we
often discover that the good fortune was more than happenstance. The person
involved was ready to seize the opportunity that came his or her way, much like
the actor who said it took him twenty years to become an “overnight success.”
Wells’ observation encourages us to be prepared by
knowing who we are and understanding our relationship to God. The unexpected
will certainly happen! God calls us to faithfulness in such times of
uncertainty.
(Excerpted from For Such a Time as This: Aligning Church and Leadership for Missional Ministry by Ircel Harrison available on Kindle and in paperback from Amazon)
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