Fine-Tuning Your Church’s Culture
The Spirit?Calls, Gathers, Enlightens and Sanctifies God’s People
Fine-Tuning Your Church’s Culture
Do not quench the Spirit, Paul admonished the Thessalonians.?The context makes clear he is talking about their behavior as a gathered fellowship.?Respect those who work among you.?Encourage the timid.?Be joyful.?Whatever you do, don’t put out the Spirit’s fire.?The opposite approach is fellowship behavior that unleashes the Spirit in their midst.?As Paul wrote to Timothy, do fan into flame the gift given you.?
There are behaviors congregations can do that end up quenching the Spirit.?A big one is having such rigid relationships that the Spirit can’t gain much traction to help individuals recognize their individual giftings by the Spirit motivating them to contribute to the common good.?Peter urged his people to “faithfully administer God’s grace gifts in their various forms” (1 Peter 4: 10).?The opposite is to be negligent in such organizing and encouragement.?Such was the case in pastoral leadership until recent generations.?The old way did work.?It doesn’t anymore.
How do you change the behaviors of a congregation in ways that more faithfully unleash the Spirit and fan into flame the work he does to motivate fellowship members??You do that by sending better messages of what members and their congregation can become.
Four Sources of Messages on How to Behave in a Congregation
When I was teaching Organization Behavior, the whole point was to improve the performance of those working in an organization.?I used a scheme that analyzed the sources of messages that determine what a person actually does on the job.
1. Formal Messages are mostly expectations put into writing, like policy statements and job descriptions.?In churches, these can be doctrinal formulations and vision statements.?They are important to have but don’t actually change much behavior in themselves until they are reinforced with other kinds of messages.
2. Informal Group Messages interpret what is really important in a congregation’s life together.?What does a newcomer see others actually doing or routinely ignoring??Consider what they talk about after the formal service.?Do they reflect on the sermon and worship??Do they share experiences with God??Or is theirs the small talk that can be found in any social setting?
3. Technique Messages shape so much of what workers actually do, like now working from home in front of a computer screen with Zoom communication.?Churches employ many kinds of techniques for shaping their life together.?Is prayer done mostly by the pastor reading written words, or is it done informally by many??Is the order of service taken from a hymnal or presented more informally on a screen??Is the music done with an organ or a praise team??Churches have their unique cultures recognized as customs, which themselves are accepted techniques.?Change techniques and you are in the process of changing the culture.
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4. Action Messages are what participants find themselves actually doing.?Words have turned into action.?Does a church care enough about the action of serving others to organize events that actually get participants involved in service projects?
Such action messages are the most influential in shaping behavior, while written formal messages are the least.?Most traditional churches assume the top-down approach and too often never get to action messages.
If you want more open pathways for the Spirit, change what participants actually say and do.?Move beyond just preaching about it.
A Few Principles for Changing Organizational Cultures
In business, the culture of a corporation is a huge topic.?The intent is to introduce changes that will increase productivity or some other outcome necessary for the organization‘s continued success.?Edgar Schein authored the classic analysis in Organizational Culture and Leadership, a text still used in business schools.?He explains how corporate cultures tell their members who they are, how to behave toward each other and how to feel good about themselves.?If these basic functions are true in a business, think how much more they apply to a church, which is all about providing basic identity, values and moral foundations for behavior.?
In short, until words turn into successful actions, not much will change in a declining church.?Preaching and teaching a new emphasis is a good start, especially when it is rooted in Paul’s theology of church and ministry.?But until words result in action, persistence on that theme can turn into nagging that annoys more than motivates.?
Sometimes a growth spurt in a congregation is preceded by an “igniter” event.?Often unplanned, such an event allows the congregation to experience success, which brings about new energy and openness to change.?
One church I know of took on a service project of cleaning up the city park nearby.?A TV crew came to interview them and produced a segment on the evening news.?With this visible success, the leaders were then ready to put more energy into exploring new ideas for ministry.
How can church leaders earn the right to change a church’s culture? How have you seen changes in your own church culture that "ignited" the Spirit's energy and resulted in growth?