Are you able to let go of traditions?
“There’s nothing wrong with a plan, but remember Von Moltke’s famous dictum that no plan survives first contact with the enemy. The danger is a plan that seduces us into thinking failure is impossible and adaptation is unnecessary – a kind of ‘Titanic’ plan, unsinkable (until it hits the iceberg).” –Tim Harford from Adapt: Why Success Always Starts With Failure
In the Church, we tend to start new programs, but it’s very difficult for us to end programs. Ministries and events become traditions. We worship the traditions. We’re unable to stop anything because at least one person may be helped by what we’re doing. We’re unable to stop anything because at least one person loves doing the ministry or event.
What would happen if the Church started doing less, but we encouraged people to do more outside the Church? What would happen if churches focused on what God called them to do, and empowered people to do what God calls them to do?
The challenge, of course, is that people hear God telling them to do something and they assume their church should also embrace that vision. We need to get in the practice of encouraging people to obey God’s prompting in their lives. They need to be challenged to go do it. Feed the hungry. Provide the place to sleep. Give the money. Serve those that need help. Counsel your neighbor. If we wait for that to become a church ministry or event, it may not get done. And, more important, people may be missing out on the life change that God was hoping would happen.
At the same time, churches need to stay focused on their vision–that includes ending traditions that may be failures or need adaptation. What would happen if we begin to narrow down the ministries of the church to what can only happen corporately? What if we focused on what God is really blessing?
It’s entirely possible that the ministries and events of the church are getting in the way of teaching people how to obey God’s prompting to be the Church in our communities.
Are you able to let go of traditions to help people become more like Jesus?












I agree Tony. I talked about this concept of “tradition vs. truth” on my Google+ stream the other day, and it sparked some great discussion. It was a different type of discussion, but the core concept still remains– do we cling to traditions or do we cling to the truth of what God has called us to?
Great post tony!
P.S. It might be a good idea to add a “Subscribe to comments” option. It’s pretty easy to do with Standard Theme & the “Subscirbe to comments ReLoaded” plugin. ;)
Dustin, thanks. I’ll check out that plugin.
Great reminder for the church to realize it’s more than it’s programs. Be the church, stay organic and sometimes programs will have to die so new life can be born. Excellent post Tony!
I agree 100%.
However, how do we insure that people will actually do this? If the church does less, will people actually begin to do those things that they can do? We have a hard enough time insuring that people will even come to church on Sunday morning! Our pastor tells us (the staff) to “call them,” “chase them,” “go get ‘em,” and so on when people are absent, or to insure a large attendance on a special day.
If we can’t even get people to come to a weekly worship service, how will we ever be confident that they, apart from the church, will actually feed the hungry or help the poor? It’s not happening now, how can we change that?
great post. totally agree. this concept is foreign to traditional pastors. You’ve got to create missional church and not buffet church. you’ve got to CUT AND CREATE, not just CREATE new ministries. if the men’s ministry just does fish fry’s but doesn’t make disciples… get rid of it. If you have 4 children’s ministries (yes, our church of 200 did) but they are all medicore and barely surviving. cut em’.
Bottom Line: if you’re not making disciples you are making a mess.