Friday, August 25, 2017

Metrics in Ministry: Small Churches with BIG Impact

We have a “Butts and Bucks” problem: our B and B anxiety often leads us to a B and B theology, which devolves into a B and B idolatry. Too often we worship at the altar of big dollars, filled pews, and the alleged security these things bring.
I can almost hear some of the internal debates swirling around the presbytery as these words are read: “Yes, didn’t Jesus say, ‘Where two or three are gathered, there I am present also’?” “What are you talking about, Brad? In Acts, God ‘added to their number daily those who were being saved.’”
This past week, in the midst of the swirl of the national news frenzy (I’m still against white supremacy, by the way) and the swirl of hurricane images heading for Texas (I’m still concerned about my son, in-laws and all other Texans, by the way), I have been blessed to encounter Camille Josey of the Presbyterian Outreach Foundation. Camille organizes the POF Small Church Initiative and got me to join POF’s Small Church Initiative Facebook page. What a blessing!
On the Outreach Foundation Small Church Initiative Facebook page (you can join, too, by the way), I read stories of small churches making big impacts in their communities. I read stories of one church creating a brew pub that invites patrons to fund community ministry (now that’s a church I want to attend), another church replacing Christmas poinsettias with a butterfly garden, and still another church creating a public park. In my own travels, I have noticed the far more intimate expressions of connection that occur in small church worship versus large church worship.
In Gil Rendle’s book, Doing the Math of Mission, he talks about helpful and unhelpful ways churches monitor metrics. As noted above, our prevailing anxiety leads toward the metrics of Butts and Bucks. But is there another way? Rendle believes there is. He suggests a distinction between metrics that matter and metrics that don’t. Metrics that we measure don’t tend to tell us much: inputs (the resources we put in: money, staff time, etc.), throughputs (the things we do: worship, Bible study, mission project), and outputs (the numbers: people who attend). The metric that matters is outcomes: what change is affected by our inputs, throughputs, and outputs? How are our people different? What impact is made on the community?
I will talk more next week about the distinctions between these different metrics, but for this missive it strikes me that the outcomes in small churches suggest a prophetic challenge to our prevailing B and B anxiety. There is a place for the kind of fellowship where one cannot hide in anonymity, where “anonymous Christian” is the oxymoron it is. There is a place for the kind of church where “everyone knows your name,” where care is extended in personal and relational ways. There is a place for the kind of Christian faith nurtured by communities where accountability is not really optional.
Some of you from larger churches who are reading this missive may be thinking to yourselves, “But, Brad, large churches can create small group opportunities, too, you know!” Point taken. But what all y’all from larger churches have to create, small churches already are: let’s honor, affirm, and celebrate them for all they do for the sake of Jesus and the people Jesus’ loves.
Not being ornery, just sayin’,

Brad Munroe   

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