A couple of months ago I wrote a blog post “Somethings you can do Somethings you can’t” It walks through a brief point of my discovery process of going from a smaller church to a large one.

This news story prompted some new thoughts for me.  I look at the story of our drones getting hacked and I see a group of people who underestimated another group.  Honestly the folks who designed the predators took for granted that, even though they may live in caves, the insurgents have the internet and aren’t stupid.

After the Cold War came to a close the Russian space program and the US space program started exchanging notes.  One of the most telling differences between the two agencies was how they approached problems.  While trying to figure out how to write notes in space (without gravity normal pens wouldn’t work) NASA spent millions of dollars developing a “space-age” pen.  This pen could write underwater – in zero-G’s-in the cold…whatever, where ever this pen could write there.  The russian space agency found the research fascinating – but ultimately concluded their solution to the same problem worked also – they used pencils.

Often times when money, time, or people aren’t an issue folks start to take them for granted.  When you have lots of resources it’s easy to use the unwisely.  I have been blessed in my current position.  It is the first time in many years that I have not had to spend most of my time thinking about fundraising.  I have a budget that is sufficient to do what I need to get done and a bit extra to dream a little.  As I’ve reviewed the budget from past years I have seen purchases and payments for some stuff I would have never dreamed of paying for when I was at a smaller church.  Not just because I didn’t have the money, but because we had figured out a way to do the same thing cheaper.  It was a great training ground for me.  It would be a fun experiment to take a children’s pastor who has been really successful at a church of 100 and move them to a church of 5,000 – there’d be an obvious learning curve; but I’d love to see how they managed their budget…I bet they’d do great.

Sometimes it’s like we try to build a Rube Goldberg Machine to get the most simple tasks completed. We can find ourselves asking the questions: “What’s the hottest way to do this?”  ”What’s the newest techie way?”  ”What’s everyone else doing?”  Without asking the question: “Is this the best way?”  ”Is there a less expensive way to do this?”  Part of being a good steward with what we’ve been entrusted with is asking these questions. This post from NorthPoint is a great illustration of this point.

I think we have to stop and look at things and ask if we’re doing things for the right reason.  1 Corinthians 6:12 “Everything is permissible, not everything is beneficial”  - to me means:  just because you can do it doesn’t mean you should.

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I like the way a well oiled machine runs…there are no problems.  There is no proverbial squeaky wheel – it’s all smooth.  I think everyone prefers to be a part of things that run well.  Given a choice between a new 2010 Lexus fresh off the lot and a 1972 Nova – I’m picking the new Lexus.  I know it’s going to run smoother…

When I was in college I had an advisor who said he considered it a successful midweek service when he could sit in his office and enjoy a cup of coffee.  This sounded like a good thing to me – after all if your ministry could run on auto pilot then you must be doing something right – right?

I think a lot of folks are striving for that perfect ministry that can run like a well oiled machine – they get tired of dealing with problems and want a relief…”When will this end?” They scream!  I’ve had a few moments like that myself…I actually spent time trying to setup a Children’s Ministry that would let me sit in my office and drink a cup of coffee (not that I drink coffee).

I do believe that we need to strive for a ministry that is running well – smoothly even – not constantly in crisis mode.  But in that striving to become a well oiled machine you have to be careful that you don’t hit a plateau.  It’s easy when you are looking for a place to “arrive” – to find a flat spot to rest.  And I’ve got news for you – if you’ve found that spot, you’ve found a plateau.

In ministry we can never stop looking for ways to improve – my Pastor shared a thought with us this week “The first draft is never good enough…” – and he’s right.  If we are doing the same things we were doing last year in the exact same way – we probably aren’t evaluating your program.  I had another advisor in college – he had a little different philosophy than the first.  In a class on ethics we were given an assignment to write a paper on how two books affected our personal ethics.  A girl in the last row of the class raised her hand and asked “What is nothing changed?”  His response is classic and true – “I have read these books 4 times – each time I’ve read them something in my personal ethics has changed.  If nothing changed for you – then you didn’t read them.”

If nothing’s changed in your ministry and it seems to be running well – there’s a good chance you’re sitting on a flat spot and often times of the other side of a plateau is a downhill slope…

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