|
Articles
Organize if you want to evangelize
Everyonje trying to build a church should pay cloes attention to this article. Dr Harris
Principle-Centered Planning
by Dr. John C. Maxwell
If you've ever gone whitewater rafting, then you know the importance of planning. Whenever the raft approaches rapids, the guide has to plan the best route to navigate safely through them. If the guide fails to plan, then the raft can easily smash into a rock or capsize.
There are primarily four types of planning...
Passive planning happens when leadership allows the raft to travel downstream at the mercy of the current rather than steering, rowing, and turning. This kind of non-planning eventually leaves you unprepared to face whitewater rapids. Worse yet, in the absence of a plan, the current may take the raft over the edge of a dreaded waterfall.
Panic planning happens only after the raft is in trouble. At this point, all of the organization's resources are scrambled in a reactionary pattern in an attempt to solve the problem. With panic planning, you may or may not come out alive and well, but you are guaranteed some bumps and bruises.
Scientific planning is viable, but can be laborious, mechanical, and often ends up abandoned in the process. Imagine if a raft guide constantly tried to measure the depth of the water, the distance between rocks, the wind speed, and the water current. Although the information might be helpful, oftentimes the water would be moving too swiftly to take the measurements. In a like manner, leaders often have to respond to change in an instant. There's no time to collect scientific data on all of the variables before deciding which course of action is best.
Principle-centered planning is the key to effectiveness. It is the artistic or leadership approach. Principle-centered planning recognizes that life in general (and people in particular) can't be graphed on a chart, but sees that planning still remains essential.
Communication - The Life Blood of the Church
I have been to churches that had important things going on in the church and it seemed that only a small handful knew anything about it.
Bringing a church into one accord is essential to the life of a church. This is a very important role of the Pastor.
Communicate - Communicate - Communicate
1- Before you plan anything, make sure the leadership sees your vision.
2- Then communicate your vision, with the help of the leaders (be a leader of leaders) to the remainder of the church.
3- Staff meetings are a must. I think they have to be weekly and in some situations, daily.
4- Officers meetings. Should be regularly held.
5- Advertise in your church .
Banners - Posters - Hand-outs, etc.
6- Preach on it - Announce it - Get testimonies.
7- Letters should be mailed often. Good, well-written, well thought out ones.
This is brief, but communicate if you don’t want to stagnate.
This is brief, but communicate if you don’t want to stagnate.
|