A friend of mine sent me this quote today. Such a good reminder, based on 1 Corinthians 1:18, to trust God's power and wisdom over our own:
"At the moment, books are pouring
off the presses telling us how to plan for success, how
'vision' consists in clearly articulated 'ministry goals,' how
the knowledge of detailed profiles of our communities
constitutes the key to successful outreach. I am not for
a moment suggesting that there is nothing to be learned
from such studies. But after a while one may perhaps be excused
for marveling how many churches were planted by
Paul and Whitefield and Wesley and Stanway and Judson without
enjoying these advantages. Of course all of us
need to understand the people to whom we minister, and
all of us can benefit from small doses of such literature.
But massive doses sooner or later dilute the gospel. Ever so
subtly, we start to think that success more critically depends
on thoughtful sociological analysis than on the gospel;
Barna becomes more important than the Bible. We depend on
plans, programs, vision statements—but somewhere along
the way we have succumbed to the temptation to
displace the foolishness of the cross with the wisdom of
strategic planning. Again, I insist, my position is not a
thinly veiled plea for obscurantism, for
seat-of-the-pants ministry that plans nothing. Rather, I fear that the
cross, without ever being disowned, is constantly in danger
of being dismissed from the central place it must enjoy,
by relatively peripheral insights that take on far too
much weight. Whenever the periphery is in danger of
displacing the center, we are not far removed from idolatry." (D.A. Carson in The Cross and Christian Ministry, p.26)
This may seem to be lifting up a false dichotomy between gospel ministry and strategic planning. I don't think that's what D.A. Carson is doing. This is obviously a quote out of a book, from a publisher, and marketed to consumers. There was certainly some strategy in there. But I think the operative words are trust and depend. We should use the wisdom God has given us in strategic planning and demographic research, but at the end of the day we have to trust that the gospel is the power of God for salvation (Romans 1:16). Strategic planning done well will get us to the people who need the gospel but then we must rely on the gospel itself to do its work.
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