I used to
think that every church should have a mission statement – a short and snappy
couple of phrases that everyone can remember and follow. It should be visible everywhere,
on walls, on the website, on the Sunday bulletin. It should be rehearsed at
every board meeting and known by heart.
I’m not so
sure any more. The truth is, most mission statements are not worth the time we
devote to them. Not that there’s anything wrong with mission statements per se.
Some are really effective. The best church mission statement I ever heard was five
words: “More people, more like Christ.” You
know immediately what that church is about. It’s about growing in numbers, and
helping people live more Christ-like lives.
But that’s
the exception, not the rule. A lot of church mission statements are a string of
platitudes that nobody remembers and is rarely, if ever, referred to.
What should
you do if your mission statement is not working for you? One thing you should not do – launch into another time
consuming missions statement writing process! Because chances are, what you come up with
won’t be any more effective than what you had.
Unless your
mission statement is seriously at odds with your church’s values, the best
thing to do is to leave it be.
But make your
current mission statement more useful.
Here are a
few ways to do that.
A Mission Statement is not a box to be
checked. The reason
many churches spend hours writing mission statements is they’ve been told they
should have one. At a recent meeting I attended, someone said, “All the experts
say we need a mission statement, so we’d better write one.” But a Mission
Statement is only useful if you follow it. Karl Vaters, who writes a great
small church blog, says this: “Great mission
statements don’t make great churches – or fix broken ones. We have to do the
mission first. We shouldn’t put anything into words until we’re already putting
it into action.”
More
important than simply writing a mission
statement is honestly and regularly evaluating
your church’s mission.
Focus on the key words. Even if you’re happy with your
mission statement, you should identify the words that really matter. I call
them the “weight bearing words,” the two or three or four essential words that
support the whole statement. Pay particular attention to words that have the
potential to challenge and stretch you, that would change you if followed them.
For example, if your statement contains a word like “hospitality,” have the
courage to dig into that word and ask, “What would it mean for us to be a
community that practiced radical hospitality?” We waste lots of time on trivial
word smithing. We should spend more time talking about the weight-bearing words,
the words that really matter.
Does everyone know what it means? Many church mission statements use
words like “community,” “family,” or “inclusive.” But ask people what those words mean, and they don’t
really know, or they have very different understandings. Noted consultant and
author Kennon Callahan used to say, “All churches are friendly churches – to
the people who attend them.” Likewise, all churches are “inclusive” – for those
who feel included. If you define your church as “inclusive,” ask, “What do we
mean by that word? How do we live it out? What differences of age, income,
education, gender, orientation, race, ethnicity are reflected in our
congregation? What are the limits of our inclusivity? If we welcome and include
everyone, why does everybody look so much alike?”
If you want
to make your mission statement more effective, create as many opportunities as
possible for people to talk honestly and openly about what it means.
Is the word “mission” part of the
problem? Mission is
central to the church’s existence. It comes from the Latin missio, which means “to send.” Jesus said, “As the Father has sent
me, so I am sending you.” (John 20: 21) Our mission is what we are sent by
Jesus to do and to be.
But over the
centuries, the word has picked up a lot of negative baggage. It conjures up
pictures of colonial missionaries imposing over other cultures. It suggests
imposing our beliefs on others. And, for 1500 years, the church’s mission has
been offloaded to professionals and experts so most ordinary people don’t think
it has anything to do with them.
Without
getting rid of the word “mission,” then, can we find other words that work better
– purpose, goal, the difference we’re called to make? Your mission statement should
simply express the purpose for which your congregation exists. If the word
“mission” is getting in the way, find other words to express it.
Remember:
writing a mission statement is not the completion of a task, it’s only the
beginning. It’s not having a mission statement but living your mission that
matters.
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