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Turn Your (Small) Church's Limitations Into (Huge) Advantages
By SermonCentral .com on May 27, 2020
Karl Vaters reminds us of the power that flows from leveraging our strengths.
Why bother?
Small churches almost never have enough money, people or facilities to be innovative, right?
That’s precisely the reason we must be innovative.
Some of the world’s greatest ideas, products and revolutions came about, not because someone had unlimited money and resources, but precisely because they did not.
Lack of resources is what spurs most innovators to think differently. This can be true for small churches, too.
When you have plenty of money, people and other resources, you can do church in the normal way. Elevated, even excellently, but normal. You go to the regular conferences, read the usual books, hire a consultant and follow the latest trend.
Good things can be done that way. Big things can be done that way. But innovative things are never done in normal ways.
Innovation, by its very nature, is new, different and bold.
People (and churches) with money, time and resources can study and follow the latest methods, ideas and trends. But the fact that it is being studied, followed and adopted by others, means it’s no longer innovative. Cutting edge, maybe. But no longer truly innovative.
Innovation can’t really be studied and adopted because, by the time it gets to the latest seminar where someone can teach others how to do it, the true innovator has moved on.
We usually stumble onto innovation, not by choice, but after being forced into a corner by the limitations of our circumstances.
The Cool Kids Don’t Start Revolutions
Our current, mind-numbingly fast electronic revolution is a great example of this. Today, it’s fueled by multi-billion dollar corporations, but that’s not where its true innovations started.
Apple, Google and Microsoft weren’t birthed in the R & D departments of the world’s big companies (at the time, those were GM, IBM, Sears and other companies that are now referred to, not coincidentally, as dinosaurs).
The digital revolution was begun in suburban garages of cities like Seattle and San Jose (aka Silicon Valley), by teens and 20-somethings who were outsiders, geeks and nerds. They were tinkering with electronics in their parents’ garages on the weekend, instead of playing football or on the cheerleading squad, precisely because they were outsiders, geeks and nerds.
Today, those nerds run the world.
Their lack of money, resources and “cool” didn’t stop them from being innovative. It fueled it.
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